Fill more surgical days with educated, ready-to-book patients.
We pull your best education out of buried videos, scattered reviews, and repeated consultations. Then we put it in front of patients before they compare your surgery to a $3,000 overseas package with a five-star hotel and a VIP limo.
Your overhead stays full even when your surgical calendar doesn't.
One week, your team is buried in back-to-back procedures.
The next, you're carrying the same payroll, technicians, facility costs, equipment, and overhead while your staff spends hours educating patients who still think every hair transplant is the same.
Meanwhile, the overseas clinics are selling a much simpler story:
- A polished influencer video
- A five-star hotel
- A VIP limo
- One low, all-inclusive price
They sell a procedure like a vacation: flip through the cards to see what I mean.
They make risky surgery look effortless, affordable, and aspirational. Your expertise looks complicated and expensive.
Your clinic becomes the safe, blue-chip decision. The overseas package becomes the gamble, with the one asset the patient can't replace: donor supply.
A completely different patient.
Most inquiries arrive unprepared and price-driven. Patient Gravity changes who reaches out, and how ready they are to book.
Typical inquiry
Hi, how much do you charge per graft? I found a clinic in Turkey offering the procedure, hotel, and transportation for $3,000. Can you match it?
Mon · 11:42 PMThese inquiries arrive price-first, with no context, and your staff has to educate them from zero.
Patient Gravity inquiry
I completed your candidacy quiz, and the results said I may be a good fit for the procedure. I watched the videos you sent, read your patient guide, and looked through your cases and reviews. I understand why donor planning and surgeon involvement matter now. Can we book a virtual consult?
Tue · 9:14 AMThey arrive pre-educated, pre-qualified, and ready for a surgical planning conversation.
Price shopping is a clarity problem, not a money problem.
The men flying to Turkey aren’t broke. A lot of them are wealthy enough to pay cash or finance it twice over, and they still pick the cheaper clinic, because when two procedures look identical, the cheaper one feels like the rational choice.
Most patients can’t see the difference between a surgeon designing a long-term restoration plan and a technician following a production-line template, or between careful donor management and aggressive extraction.
Once they understand donor planning, repair risk, and who’s holding the instruments, the cheaper option stops looking equivalent.
So they fly to Turkey, get a botched result, and come home to pay a real surgeon to fix it, which costs far more than getting it right the first time.
They pay for cheap surgery twice.
Most practices don't need more names in a spreadsheet. They need better-prepared patients.
Start with one specific, low-friction improvement. Then connect the rest as the system grows.
Someone’s already educating your patients.
The question is who’s doing the educating.
Make the difference clear before the patient makes a permanent decision.
Find out where patients are leaking out of your practice.
Sixteen quick questions, about two minutes. See where your practice is leaking patients, and what we’d fix first.
Finish it and I’ll personally record you a five-minute video: the biggest leak I can see in your patient journey, and the first thing I’d fix.Tim
What would you most like more of right now?
Question 1 of 16No score, no grade. You don’t need an email to see the findings.