Originally featured on the Recovery.com Recovery Reach Podcast
I recently had the chance to sit down with the team at Recovery.com to talk about what actually works when it comes to marketing teen and adolescent treatment programs. It was a wide-ranging conversation, but the thread running through all of it is something I come back to constantly: the families searching for teen treatment are not the same audience as adult self-referrals, and your marketing needs to reflect that.
A few of the things we got into:
- The parent is the decision-maker. Teen treatment marketing is almost entirely family-driven. The messaging, the landing pages, the ad copy: all of it needs to speak to a parent in crisis, not a clinician and not a teenager.
- Trust signals matter more than volume. Parents researching residential programs for their child are doing deep due diligence. Reviews, accreditations, staff credentials, and outcome transparency carry more weight in this space than almost any other vertical in behavioral health.
- The search landscape is different. The keywords, the intent, and the competitive dynamics in teen treatment look nothing like adult SUD or mental health. Programs that try to repurpose their adult strategy for an adolescent audience almost always underperform.
- Ethical marketing is not optional. This is a vulnerable population. The line between reaching families who need help and exploiting fear is one that every program should take seriously, and it shows in how you run your campaigns.
If you work in adolescent or teen behavioral healthcare, I think you'll find some useful takeaways in this one. And if any of this resonates with challenges your program is facing, feel free to reach out.