Kate Gilligan | Dermal Socials
Patients build a picture of you long before they meet you.
Perception Architecture™ makes sure it’s true.
A quieter, more deliberate way to shape the familiarity patients feel before they ever step into the room.
This is not about posting more. It is about understanding what patients are already trying to decide.
The Blind Spot
The first shift is simple, but it changes everything about how practitioners think online.
Patients aren’t asking, “Are you good at this?”
They’re asking, “What would it feel like to be in the room with you?”
The Gap
Two different questions are being answered.
Practitioners naturally present evidence of competence. Patients are imagining the consultation experience. Both matter, but they are not the same thing.
Practitioners present
Proof that they are capable.
Qualifications
Awards
Experience
Patients imagine
Patients still care about competence. But before they enquire, they are also building an emotional picture of the practitioner themselves.
What it actually means
Perception Architecture™ gives the philosophy a name.
It isn’t a rebrand.
It isn’t more content.
It isn’t a personality invented for social media.
It is the deliberate design of familiarity, so the picture patients build before they meet you matches who you really are.
Where patients build that picture
The online experience becomes the room before the room.
Every Reel, Story, carousel, talking head, comment, reply and interaction adds another piece to the picture patients are already building. The rhythm, the mix, what is shown, what is not shown, and the order it appears all contribute.
Rhythm
How often patients encounter you, and whether your presence feels consistent enough to become familiar.
Mix
Order
Voice
Presence
Familiarity
Why Kate sees it differently
A perspective shaped by attention, observation and lived experience.
This way of thinking comes from years of noticing what people reveal before they say it directly.
Ten years in a police control room, listening carefully to what people needed beneath what they said.
Stuart’s Story
Stuart’s story is evidence that the philosophy works because it shows what happens when people become familiar with a practitioner over time. The value is not noise, speed or viral attention. It is patience, becoming known, and attracting the right audience.
Recognition is what turns distance into trust.
Familiarity is what makes enquiry feel safer.
Where patients build that picture
Simple options for practitioners who want their online presence to reflect the way patients actually decide. No pressure, no urgency, no performance theatre.
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