Patients Research Their Skin Concerns at Night. Your Front Desk Isn't There.
Someone in Edina notices a new mole on a Tuesday evening. A patient in St. Paul has been dealing with a persistent rash and finally decides to find a dermatologist at 9pm. A 38-year-old in Minneapolis has been reading about laser treatments for sun damage and wants to know if she's a candidate. In all three cases, they pull out their phone, search for a dermatologist nearby, and land on someone's website — after hours.
What they find on your website determines whether they become your patient or your competitor's.
If they find a "call us during office hours" message, they'll close the tab and try the next result in their search. If they find a chatbot that can tell them whether you accept their insurance, what your new patient wait time looks like, and how to book a first appointment — they'll book. Right there, while they're motivated and seeking answers.
Dermatology practices across the Twin Cities are in a quiet acquisition war. The practices growing fastest aren't necessarily the most skilled dermatologists — they're the ones making it frictionless to become a new patient. An AI chatbot is how you win that war when prospective patients are searching between 8pm and 8am.
What a Dermatology Chatbot Actually Does
Handles new patient intake questions. "Are you accepting new patients?" is the single most common question a dermatology chatbot receives. The bot answers honestly and immediately — yes, you're accepting new patients, here's the onboarding process, here's how to book. If you have a waitlist for certain providers, the bot explains that and offers alternatives or waitlist signup. No patient should have to call during office hours just to find out if the door is open.
Answers insurance coverage questions. Insurance is the make-or-break question for most new patients. "Do you take Blue Cross?" "Are you in-network with Aetna?" "Does insurance cover acne treatment or is it cosmetic?" The bot handles these based on your actual accepted plans, explains which services are typically covered versus cosmetic, and flags when a patient needs to verify in-network status with their insurance directly. This one capability alone eliminates dozens of front-desk calls per week.
Explains conditions treated and services offered. Dermatology spans medical, surgical, and cosmetic — acne, eczema, psoriasis, skin cancer screenings, mole removal, Botox, laser treatments, chemical peels. A patient searching for help with rosacea needs to know you treat it. A patient interested in Mohs surgery for a basal cell carcinoma needs to know you perform it. The bot maps patient concerns to your actual capabilities and prevents the scenario where someone books thinking you offer a service you don't.
Sets expectations for the first visit. New patients often don't know what to expect from a dermatology appointment. Do they need to bring a referral? Should they arrive without makeup for a skin exam? Will the doctor address multiple concerns in one visit? The bot answers these questions proactively, reducing no-shows and improving first-visit satisfaction — which directly drives reviews and referrals.
The Questions Your Dermatology Bot Must Know
Accepted insurance and billing. Which plans are you in-network with? Do you see patients on Medicare or Medicaid? Do you offer self-pay rates for uninsured patients? These answers determine whether a prospective patient picks up the phone to book or navigates away.
New patient wait times. How long until you can see a new patient for a medical concern? Is there a shorter path for urgent concerns — a suspicious lesion, a rapidly changing mole? Many patients don't realize dermatologists can triage urgency. The bot can guide them to mention urgency when booking, which may accelerate their appointment.
Provider specializations. Do any of your providers specialize in pediatric dermatology, hair loss, psoriasis, or surgical procedures? Is there a specific provider patients should request for cosmetic services? Helping patients book with the right provider the first time reduces transfers and rescheduling.
Cosmetic treatment candidacy. "Am I a good candidate for this treatment?" is one of the most common cosmetic dermatology questions. The bot can give general candidacy information — "laser resurfacing is typically recommended for patients with [skin type/concerns], and a consultation helps us confirm fit" — without diagnosing or promising outcomes.
The Minneapolis Dermatology Scenario, Made Concrete
Call her Sarah. She's 42, she lives in Wayzata, and she's been dealing with adult acne that's getting worse. Her primary care doctor suggested she see a dermatologist. She has BCBS through her employer and she's never seen a dermatologist before. She searches on a Sunday evening at 8:30pm, finds three dermatology practices in the Minneapolis metro area, and starts clicking through websites.
The first practice has a phone number only — "call to schedule." She doesn't call at 8:30pm. The second has a patient portal but she'd have to create an account first. She's not doing that tonight.
She hits the chat on your website.
Without a chatbot: same story — a form that says "we'll be in touch." She closes the tab and gets distracted.
With a chatbot: the bot greets her, asks how it can help. She asks if you take BCBS — the bot confirms yes, and that you're in-network for most BCBS plans. She asks how soon she could be seen for acne. The bot tells her new patients are typically scheduled within 2–3 weeks for medical dermatology, and walks her through your online booking link. She books a Thursday appointment at 10am. Sunday night, 8:47pm.
On Monday morning, your front desk sees a new appointment confirmed, insurance pre-verified, and a chief complaint already documented. No phone tag, no missed opportunity.
The Economics
A new dermatology patient generates $250–$600 in revenue at their first visit, and ongoing value of $800–$2,500+ per year for patients with chronic conditions or who return for cosmetic treatments. A Minneapolis-area practice converting three to five additional new patients per month through the chatbot is generating $10,000–$50,000 in incremental first-year patient value.
The front desk bottleneck is real: staff can answer a finite number of calls per day, and after-hours inquiries are routinely lost. A chatbot is fully parallel — it handles 50 simultaneous conversations at 9pm with the same quality as one.
At $200–$400 per month, the chatbot pays for itself with the first additional new patient it books.
How to Get It Live
Setup starts with your website and your services list. The bot learns your accepted insurances, provider bios, conditions treated, and booking process. Connect it to your online scheduling system, add one line of code to your site, and it's live. Most dermatology practices are fully operational within 48 hours of starting setup.
Bottom Line
New patient acquisition is the growth lever in dermatology, and new patients increasingly make their decisions after hours. An AI chatbot answers the insurance question, explains what to expect, and books the appointment while the patient is motivated and on your website.
Your clinical skill retains patients. Your chatbot is how they find you and choose you first.