Search engine optimization, in the context of an optometry practice, is the work required to make your practice appear when a prospective patient types something like "eye exam near me" or "optometrist in [your city]" into Google.
That work falls into four connected areas:
- Technical foundation — Your website loads quickly, works on mobile, and is structured so Google can read and index it correctly.
- On-page content — Your service pages (eye exams, contact lens fittings, pediatric eye care, dry eye treatment) use language that matches how patients actually search, not just clinical terminology.
- Local signals — Your Google Business Profile is complete and accurate, your practice name, address, and phone number are consistent across directories, and you have a steady stream of genuine patient reviews.
- Authority — Other credible websites link to yours, signaling to Google that your practice is a trusted local resource.
These four areas work together. A technically sound website with no local signals won't dominate the Map Pack. Strong local signals paired with thin, unhelpful content won't hold page-one rankings for high-value service searches. The practices that consistently attract new patients from organic search have addressed all four.
One clarification worth making early: SEO is not the same as having a website. Many optometry practices have had a website for years and receive almost no traffic from search. Owning a website means you have the platform. SEO is the ongoing work that makes the platform visible.