LinkedIn Outreach for Peptide Clinics SEO AEO Optimization: A Step‑by‑Step Campaign Guide (2026)
Tactical LinkedIn outreach guide for selling SEO & AEO services to peptide clinics. Copy‑paste templates and send from Origami's built‑in sequencer — 2026 edition.
Founder @ Origami
LinkedIn Outreach for Peptide Clinics SEO AEO Optimization: A Step‑by‑Step Campaign Guide (2026)
Quick Answer
Origami isn’t just a list‑building tool — it has a built‑in LinkedIn sequencer. This guide shows you exactly how to run a LinkedIn outreach campaign targeting peptide clinics that need SEO and Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) services, using Origami’s AI agent and sequencer to find, refine, and message leads from one platform. If you already have your prospect list (built with the prompt from our previous post), you’re ready to put it to work. Let’s get into the sequence.
Most guides tell you what to say. Few tell you how to actually send it without juggling three tools. Here’s the full playbook — from refining a list of peptide clinic prospects to launching a 3‑touch LinkedIn sequence that lands calls — all inside Origami.
If you haven’t built your list yet, start with how to build a list of Peptide Clinics SEO AEO Optimization. That post walks you through the exact prompt to pull 100‑500 verified contacts in minutes. Come back here once you have a list. We’ll focus on what happens next.
Step 1: Build the List in Origami (Recap)
Even if you’ve already built your list, a quick recap so we’re speaking the same language.
Inside Origami, you describe your ideal customer in plain English. For peptide clinics that need SEO and AEO, you’d type something like:
Find peptide therapy clinics and anti‑aging practices in the US that have a website and appear to be cash‑pay. Filter for clinics where the website lacks structured data, doesn’t rank for local peptide terms, or is not optimized for AI‑driven search overviews (AEO). Return owner, marketing lead, or medical director contacts with verified emails and phone numbers.
Origami’s AI agent scrapes the live web, chains data sources, enriches each contact, and serves a qualified list — names, titles, company details, verified email addresses, and LinkedIn profiles.
The free plan gives you 1,000 credits (no credit card), so you can test the whole workflow before spending a dollar. If you need more volume, paid plans start at $29/month.
Step 2: Refine and Qualify Your Peptide Clinic Prospects
Building the list is the appetizer. Refining it stops you from burning outreach credits on clinics that will never buy.
Open your Origami project and scan the leads. Ask three questions:
Does the clinic actually own the decision?
- A solo practitioner with a small cash‑pay patient base is a better fit than a large hospital system where SEO is outsourced to corporate.
- Look for titles: Owner, Founder, Medical Director, Marketing Director, Practice Manager. Avoid “IT Manager” or “Staff Physician” unless they’re the sole decision‑maker.
Is there a visible SEO/AEO gap?
- Check their website quickly (Origami often surfaces a preview). Signs of a gap:
- No Google Business Profile (or unclaimed listing).
- Missing FAQ schema or product‑specific pages for peptides like BPC‑157, Thymosin Alpha‑1, CJC‑1295/Ipamorelin.
- Homepage title is just the clinic name, not “Peptide Therapy | City Name”.
- These are the clinics that hemorrhage patients to competitors who rank in Google’s AI Overviews or voice search.
- Check their website quickly (Origami often surfaces a preview). Signs of a gap:
Are they a “cash‑pay” practice?
- Insurance‑based clinics care less about local SEO because referrals come from in‑network channels. Cash‑pay peptide clinics live and die on patient self‑discovery. If their site mentions “out‑of‑pocket” pricing, “VIP memberships,” or “concierge medicine,” they’re gold.
What “qualified” looks like for this audience: A peptide clinic owner who is actively seeing patients, takes cash, offers multiple peptide protocols, and has a website that isn’t ranking for local “peptide therapy” queries. That person feels the pain of missing patients — but doesn’t know how to fix it. That’s who you’re writing to.
Segment your list into two buckets: “High intent” (clear gaps, owner roles) and “Warm” (marketing manager, might need a warmer opener). You’ll use the same sequence but may tweak the first line for each.
Step 3: Create Your LinkedIn Sequence
Origami gives you two ways to build the sequence — paste your own templates, or let the AI agent write personalized messages for every lead.
Option A: Paste Your Own Templates
You write a 3‑touch message once, set the delays (I like Day 1 connect, Day 3 follow‑up, Day 7 final nudge), and Origami sends it to everyone in the list. Saves you hours and keeps your voice consistent.
Option B: Let Origami’s Agent Write It
Alternatively, you can ask Origami’s AI agent to generate a personalized 3‑day LinkedIn sequence for all leads automatically. The agent reads each lead’s profile data — title, company, industry — and writes messages that feel hand‑typed. A medical director hears different words than a marketing coordinator, even though the offer is the same.
That said, starting with a battle‑tested template and letting the agent adapt it is the sweet spot. Below is the exact sequence I’ve used to land consults with peptide clinics. Copy, tweak, paste.
Full 3‑Touch Sequence: Peptide Clinics SEO & AEO Optimization
Touch 1 – Connection Request Note (Day 1)
No subject line here — just the 300‑character note that accompanies your connection request.
Hi , noticed offers peptide therapies but isn’t showing up in local search for things like “peptide therapy near me”. I help clinics fix that so patients actually find them. Worth connecting.
Why it works: Calls out a specific, likely pain point without being accusatory. It’s short enough that mobile users read the whole thing.
Touch 2 – Follow‑Up Message (Day 3)
Subject: Peptide search visibility in your area
, quick thought after connecting: Google’s AI Overviews now pull clinic data directly from structured content. If your BPC‑157 or CJC‑1295 pages aren’t schema‑marked, a competitor who is gets featured in the AI answer. That’s patients you never see.
I help practices like yours rank for “peptide therapy + city” in both traditional search and AI‑generated results. Open to a 10‑minute call to see if there’s a fit? No pitch, just a conversation.
Why it works: Brings a concrete, technical reason (schema markup → AI Overviews) that clinic owners rarely hear, and lowers the commitment with “10‑minute call”.
Touch 3 – Final Message (Day 7)
Subject: Last attempt (worth the shot)
, I know you’re busy running a practice. If your peptide clinic is fully booked from organic search, ignore this — seriously. But if you think you might be leaving patients on the table because they can’t find you on Google or in voice search, I’ve put together a fast video review that shows what’s missing. No pitch, no commitment.
Want me to send it over?
Why it works: Puts the ball in their court without pressure. The offer (a free video audit) feels low‑risk and specific, and the soft close lets them reply with a simple “Yes”.
All three messages stay in the 50–100 word range. No fluff, no jargon that a busy clinic owner has to decode.
Step 4: Send the Sequence Directly from Origami
Here’s where the platform difference shows up. Most list‑building tools force you to export a CSV, import into a sequencer, and pray the sync works. With Origami, you never leave the dashboard.
Once your list is refined and your sequence is set, you hit Launch. Origami’s built‑in LinkedIn sequencer sends the connection requests and follow‑up messages with configurable delays between touches (Day 1, Day 3, Day 7 — or whatever cadence you choose).
Sending & tracking: Opens, clicks, and replies all appear in the same project where you built the list. While looking at a contact’s activity, you can still see their enriched profile — title, company, tools used, website gaps — so you remember why you reached out in the first place.
Automatic un‑enrollment: If someone replies, they exit the sequence immediately. No accidentally sending a breakup message after a booked meeting.
The sequencer is free on all paid plans. You pay only for the credits used to enrich leads, not for the sending itself. That means you can launch multiple campaigns without watching a send‑count meter.
Expected Response Rates and When to Iterate
For peptide clinic owners, expect:
- Connection acceptance: 25%–40% if you’re targeting owner roles with a personalized note. Clinic founders are more receptive than the average LinkedIn user because they’re bombarded with fewer SEO pitches than, say, SaaS CTOs.
- Reply rate to follow‑ups: 12%–18% on a tight, industry‑specific sequence like the one above. The “peptide search visibility” subject line works well because it’s not something they hear every day.
- Meeting conversion: Roughly one qualified meeting for every 50–70 touches (connection + messages sent). That’s a 1.4%–2% booking rate on total audience — solid for a cold niche.
When to iterate on messaging: If reply rates drop below 8% after 100 touches, swap the Day 3 angle. Maybe test a “competitor audit” angle (“I looked at 3 peptide clinics in your city — here’s what you’re not doing”) or a direct ROI line (“Missing just 3 patients a month costs you $9k in recurring peptide revenue”).
When to iterate on the list: If connection acceptance stays below 20%, your audience might be too broad. Go back to Origami and tighten the prompt — filter for solo practices, clinics with fewer than 5 employees, or locations where a single Google Business Profile dominates the peptide query. Then run a fresh batch.
Next Steps
If you haven’t built your prospect list yet, I’d recommend reading the companion post: how to build a list of Peptide Clinics SEO AEO Optimization. It gives you the exact Origami prompt that pulls 200+ verified peptide clinic contacts in under 10 minutes.
Once the list is in Origami, follow the steps above — refine, craft (or let the agent craft) the sequence, and launch. One platform, from search to sent. No CSV exports, no syncing headaches.
This is the same system I use when I sell SEO & AEO retainers into niche medical verticals. It works because it’s simple and because the messaging respects the audience’s time and intelligence. Now go run it.