Search engine optimization — SEO — is the process of making your website and online presence more visible when people search Google for the services you offer. For a senior care provider, that means showing up when a daughter in your city types "assisted living near me" or "memory care in [your town]".
What SEO is not: it's not paid advertising. When you stop paying for Google Ads, your ads disappear. SEO builds organic visibility — rankings that persist because your website and reputation have earned them. It's also not a one-time fix. It's an ongoing practice of improving your site, your content, and your local presence so Google consistently sees your facility as a credible, relevant result.
It's also worth being direct about what SEO cannot do on its own. It won't fix a facility with staffing problems or poor survey results — families research thoroughly before placing a loved one. SEO brings people to your digital front door; what they find there still determines whether they call.
For senior care specifically, Google classifies your content under what it calls YMYL — Your Money or Your Life. This means Google applies stricter quality standards to senior care websites than it does to, say, a hobby blog. Your site needs to demonstrate expertise, trustworthiness, and clear authorship. That's not a technicality — it directly affects whether Google ranks you or a competitor instead.