Med spas doing ~$750K–$2M/year are in a very specific “messy middle.” You’ve proven demand, but you’re not yet operationally mature enough to scale efficiently—so marketing becomes volatile, inconsistent, and expensive.

Here are the top marketing challenges I see in that revenue band (and why they happen).

1) Lead volume exists… but conversion is leaking badly

Symptom: “We’re getting leads, but bookings are inconsistent / no-shows are high / consult-to-treatment is weak.”

What’s actually happening:

  • Inbound leads are not being contacted within 5 minutes
  • No structured multi-touch SMS/email cadence
  • Front desk lacks scripts + follow-up discipline
  • Weak “bridge offers” to convert cold leads to a visit

Reality: At this stage, the #1 growth unlock is rarely more leads—it’s conversion infrastructure.

2) Marketing attribution is unclear (so decisions feel like gambling)

Symptom: “Meta works sometimes… Google works sometimes… we’re not sure what to scale.”

Root causes:

  • No clean tracking (GA4, Tag Manager, offline conversions)
  • CRM isn’t integrated (Boulevard/Millennium/etc. not passing revenue data back to ad platforms)
  • Too many campaigns running simultaneously without isolation

Impact: Owners either:

  • kill campaigns too early, or
  • keep spending out of fear of slowing down

3) Paid ads performance is unstable due to offer weakness

Symptom: Cost per lead goes up and down; one month is great, next month is a disaster.

Why this happens in this revenue range:

  • Offers are generic (“20% off Botox”) and not differentiated
  • Promotions are built around discounts instead of value stacking + urgency
  • No campaign planning rhythm (monthly themes, quarterly pushes, seasonal strategy)

The fix isn’t “better ads.” It’s a better offer + conversion pathway.

4) Brand is not strong enough to support premium pricing

Symptom: You attract price shoppers, deal seekers, and Groupon-like behavior.

Common causes:

  • Inconsistent aesthetic + messaging across web/social/ads
  • Weak authority proof: limited provider authority, minimal outcomes content, light testimonials
  • Limited “why choose us” differentiation (device list isn’t differentiation)

Result: You compete on price even when your quality is premium.

5) Website underperforms (low conversion, low trust, low ranking)

Symptom: Good traffic, but low form fills and low bookings.

Typical issues:

  • The site is pretty, but not built for CRO
  • Not enough before/after proof, reviews, outcomes-based copy
  • Confusing service architecture and menus
  • Slow mobile performance

This is massive in this tier because you’re spending more on traffic—so every point of conversion matters.

6) Content production is inconsistent and not systematized

Symptom: Social posts come in bursts; performance depends on motivation.

Reality:

  • Med spas need consistent proof content: before/after, provider expertise, client stories
  • Owners/providers are busy—so content must be captured in batches

Without a system: even the best strategy dies.

7) Internal team alignment breaks marketing execution

Symptom: “Marketing says one thing; front desk says another; providers don’t promote.”

In this revenue band, marketing problems are often organizational problems:

  • No marketing calendar tied to staff training + incentives
  • Providers not aligned on promos and messaging
  • No “what to say” scripts in consult

Marketing is only as good as the clinic’s ability to deliver the promise.

8) Reputation + local search aren’t fully optimized (free money left on table)

Symptom: Competitors dominate “med spa near me” despite your higher quality.

Common issues:

  • Google Business Profile not fully optimized
  • Reviews inconsistent (not automated)
  • Not enough service-location pages / local SEO structure
  • No map-pack strategy or city/zip targeting

At $750K–$2M, local search should be one of the highest ROI channels, yet it’s usually underbuilt.

9) Lack of lifecycle marketing (they keep reacquiring the same customer)

Symptom: You’re busy but retention is weak; growth requires constant new leads.

This tier often lacks:

  • Membership strategy
  • Reactivation campaigns
  • VIP / top-client segmentation
  • Email/SMS automation tied to services + timing

Med spas win when they turn marketing into a retention machine, not just a lead machine.

10) Scaling becomes limited by capacity constraints

Symptom: When marketing works, the team breaks: booking delays, no consult availability, bad client experience.

Typical bottlenecks:

  • Not enough appointment slots at the right times
  • Consultation structure not efficient
  • No provider utilization management
  • Marketing pushing services that the clinic can’t deliver consistently

Scaling marketing without capacity planning increases churn and refunds.

The big picture: the “750K–$2M medspa trap”

Most med spas in this band are experiencing one or more of these simultaneously:

  • Paying for leads
  • Losing leads in operations
  • Not tracking what drives revenue
  • Running promos without strategy
  • Undervaluing retention
  • Operating without a predictable monthly marketing system