Website for EMDR therapists
How EMDR therapists should structure a practice website — positioning, service pages, trust signals, and search-ready content for trauma clients.
Read guideSpecialty library
Each guide explains how to structure a practice website for a specific modality or population — search examples, must-have pages, positioning moves, and architecture notes.
New to AI-ready visibility? Start with what an AI-ready therapist website is, then use the readiness score or checklist on your current site.
How EMDR therapists should structure a practice website — positioning, service pages, trust signals, and search-ready content for trauma clients.
Read guideHow couples therapists should structure a practice website for conflict, disconnection, infidelity recovery, and emotionally specific search intent.
Read guideHow trauma therapists should build service pages and site structure for PTSD, complex trauma, and safety-first search intent.
Read guideHow anxiety therapists should structure websites for high-functioning anxiety, panic, OCD overlap, and emotionally specific client searches.
Read guideHow grief therapists should structure websites for loss, ambiguous grief, and clients searching for emotionally safe support.
Read guideHow LGBTQ+ affirming therapists should structure websites for identity, safety, and trust-first search intent.
Read guideHow perinatal and postpartum therapists should structure websites for pregnancy, postpartum, and reproductive mental health searches.
Read guideHow therapists serving men should structure websites for stigma, emotional language, and search intent that avoids traditional therapy framing.
Read guideHow adolescent therapists should structure websites for teens, parents, and referral sources searching for specialized youth support.
Read guideHow OCD specialists should structure websites for obsessions, compulsions, ERP, and clients searching with fear and specificity.
Read guideHow ADHD specialists should structure websites for executive function, late diagnosis, rejection sensitivity, and adult ADHD search intent.
Read guideHow somatic and body-based therapists should structure websites for nervous-system language, trauma, and search intent beyond talk-therapy framing.
Read guideHow eating disorder specialists should structure websites for safety, fit, and ethically precise search language.
Read guideHow neurodivergent-affirming therapists should structure websites for autism, ADHD, sensory needs, and identity-affirming search intent.
Read guideHow substance use and addiction counselors should structure websites for recovery, harm reduction, and trust-first search intent.
Read guideHow DBT specialists should structure websites for emotion regulation, distress tolerance, and clients searching for skills-based support.
Read guideHow Internal Family Systems therapists should structure websites for parts work, self-leadership, and trauma-informed search intent.
Read guideHow CBT specialists should structure websites for anxiety, depression, behavioral change, and evidence-based search intent.
Read guideHow family therapists should structure websites for parent-child conflict, blended families, and multi-person search intent.
Read guideHow therapists treating bipolar disorder should structure websites for mood episodes, stability, and ethically precise search language.
Read guideBook a 30-minute strategy call. We will review your current site together and talk through what a stronger signal could look like.