AI Ophthalmology Marketing

Peter J Polack MD

This is the AI ophthalmology marketing podcast for independent practices that refuse to be out-gunned by shrinking budgets and private equity pressure. We break down the real ideas, tools, and frameworks - what works, what doesn't, and what to do next - inside Visionary Marketing Lab, our online, members-only community. It’s smart, candid, and occasionally irreverent. Come for the insight, stay for the camaraderie. Because when independent ophthalmology practices collaborate, share tools, and think together, power multiplies.

Episodes

  1. Jun 24

    Lab Talk #3 The New Marketing Reality

    Most practices don't have a marketing problem. They have an engineering problem."Most ophthalmology practices are doing more marketing than ever before.More software.More vendors.More channels.More AI tools.And yet many practices are discovering that growth feels less predictable, not more.In this inaugural episode of The New Marketing Reality Podcast, ophthalmologist and practice partner Dr. Peter J. Polack joins marketing strategist and framework author Becky Smith to discuss why the rules of growth are changing and why service line competition has become one of the defining challenges facing independent practices.The conversation explores why competitors are no longer coming for your entire practice. They're coming for your cataract service line. Your LASIK service line. Your aesthetics service line.In other words:They are not coming for your practice.They are coming for your service lines.Together, Peter and Becky introduce the "New Marketing Reality" framework and explain how practices can move from reactive growth to engineered growth, one service line at a time.Topics discussed include:• Why marketing feels harder than it did ten years ago• Hunted versus Hunter practices• Why systems outperform heroics• The concept of Service Line Domination• Why sequence matters when creating growth• Opportunity as the common language of growth• AI Brand Signal and the rise of AI-driven discovery• Marketing Triage and fixing leaks before scaling• The Polack Protocol and optimizing opportunity• Revenue Science and predictable growth• The 7R Scorecard and measuring dominationThis episode serves as an introduction to the overall architecture of The New Marketing Reality. Future episodes will explore each pillar in greater detail, beginning with AI Brand Signal.Whether you're a physician partner, practice administrator, marketing director, or independent practice leader, this series is designed to help you understand what's changing, why it's changing, and how independent practices can continue to thrive in an increasingly competitive environment.––––––––––––––––––––ABOUT THE HOSTSPeter J. Polack, MD is a cornea, cataract, and refractive surgeon and practice partner who has spent more than two decades navigating the changing landscape of ophthalmology practice growth.Becky Smith is a marketing strategist and developer of The New Marketing Reality framework, helping practices move from reactive marketing to engineered growth.––––––––––––––––––––COMING NEXTPart 2: AI Brand SignalBefore patients choose your practice, they increasingly have to be able to find you, understand you, and trust you.––––––––––––––––––––Learn more and join the conversation inside VisionaryMarketingLab.comBecause the future belongs to practices that engineer growth, not simply chase it.

    43 min
  2. Apr 9

    Lab Talk #2 Who Owns Your Retirement?

    1. The Hidden Assumption: “My Practice Is My Retirement” Main Takeaway: Peter J Polack MD and Becky Smith explore a deeply ingrained belief among physicians—that the value of their practice will naturally convert into retirement. While this is often true in concept, the episode reveals that ownership of the process that turns equity into cash is what actually determines whether that assumption holds up. 2. Independent Practice and the Risk of No Exit Plan Main Takeaway: Even when physicians fully own their practice, the absence of a clear succession or buyout plan can undermine its value. Without a defined pathway to liquidity, years of accumulated equity may never be fully realized. The risk is not external disruption, but internal inaction and lack of planning. 3. Private Equity: Trading Control for Liquidity Main Takeaway: Private equity offers upfront financial gain and the promise of scale, but shifts control away from individual physicians. Equity is converted into ownership within a larger platform, where transparency, debt obligations, and growth pressures influence outcomes. The retirement story becomes dependent on financial structures physicians do not control. 4. Corporate Acquisition and Loss of Visibility Main Takeaway: As private equity-backed groups are acquired by large corporate entities, physicians may find themselves further removed from decision-making. These acquisitions often occur at scale, without individual input, transforming physicians into employees within vertically integrated systems. The original value may remain on paper, but access, influence, and clarity diminish significantly. 5. The Illusion of Stable Value Main Takeaway: Across all scenarios, the valuation figure—such as two million dollars—does not necessarily change. What changes is the story behind that number: who controls it, how it is accessed, and under what conditions it is realized. The perceived stability of the number can mask significant shifts in actual financial outcomes. 6. Reframing the Question Main Takeaway: Rather than asking “Should I sell?”, the conversation suggests a more fundamental question: “Why would I give this up?” If external buyers are willing to invest heavily and hold these practices long-term, it may indicate that the intrinsic value of independent practices is greater than many physicians realize. 7. Control as the True Determinant of Retirement Main Takeaway: The central theme of the episode is that control—not just valuation—determines retirement outcomes. As ownership structures evolve, physicians must understand who ultimately controls the asset, the decision-making, and the path to liquidity. For more in-depth analysis, join us at VisionaryMarketingLab.com

    41 min
  3. Feb 16

    Conversations on Generative AI Realities

    In this wide-ranging conversation, Peter J. Polack, MD interviews his son Peter J. Polack, PhD - AI researcher, algorithm specialist, and former Forensic Architecture investigator - about the real state of generative AI. What’s hype, what’s real, and what’s quietly changing beneath the surface? They explore: • Why generative AI is rapidly improving—but still fundamentally probabilistic • What “drift” and “hallucinations” really mean • How AI feedback loops may degrade model precision over time • The tradeoffs behind always-updated models like Google Gemini • Why AI systems are becoming too complex to fully understand • How medical practices should think about using AI responsibly • Why verification matters—especially in patient education • The growing environmental impact of data centers • Rising AI costs and the quiet shift toward tiered, premium access • Whether artificial general intelligence (AGI) is realistic • AI as convenience tool vs existential threat • And the philosophical question: are we living in a simulation? This is not a hype session. It’s a grounded discussion about incentives, trade-offs, costs, and practical realities. If you’re using AI in medicine, marketing, education, or development, this episode will help you think more clearly about what these systems are - and what they are not. The takeaway? AI is evolving fast. Costs are shifting. Capabilities are expanding. And responsible users must think a little like statisticians—verifying outputs, understanding probabilities, and staying aware of the broader implications. Visit www.visionarymarketinglab.com for related AI-augmented ophthalmology marketing content.

    21 min
  4. Feb 8

    Lab Talk #1 Patient Education Armageddon

    1. The Invisible Risks of AI-Generated Patient Education Content Main Takeaway: Peter J Polack MD and Becky Smith highlight that while AI can generate plausible and professional-looking patient education materials, there is a risk in "outsourcing authorship" without realizing the potential inaccuracies or misleading information. The content may seem credible on the surface, but practices might unknowingly introduce errors or omissions, especially in nuanced medical topics. 2. Recursive Delegation and Loss of Authorship Main Takeaway: The conversation introduces "recursive delegation," where responsibility for content quality is continually handed off—from staff to agencies to freelancers—often through multiple layers, each potentially using AI. This chain of delegation means no one truly takes ownership of verifying medical accuracy or educational appropriateness, increasing the likelihood of flawed or outdated content reaching patients. 3. Plausibility versus Accuracy in AI Outputs Main Takeaway: AI-generated content is dangerous not because it’s obviously wrong, but because it’s plausible—it sounds correct, is well-formatted, and doesn’t set off obvious alarms. This makes it harder for non-experts to identify subtle inaccuracies, especially when careful, rigorous checking is bypassed in favor of efficiency or volume. 4. Content Drift and Conflation (“Hallucination”) Main Takeaway: Two major pitfalls with AI text generation are explained: “drift” (where content subtly moves away from the intended message over iterative prompts) and “conflation” (where distinctions between related but separate medical concepts blur). Both are gradual and often undetectable errors that can misinform patients if not rigorously managed. 5. Need for Rigor, Verification, and Accountability Main Takeaway: The solution isn’t just reviewing AI outputs after the fact, but building proactive, systematic, and rigorous structures for content creation—using validated sources, clear authorship, control documents, and technical validation steps (like structured prompts and master documents). Practices must ensure they, not the AI, are the true “authors” accountable for what patients learn. For more in-depth analysis, join us at Visionary Marketing Lab

    29 min

About

This is the AI ophthalmology marketing podcast for independent practices that refuse to be out-gunned by shrinking budgets and private equity pressure. We break down the real ideas, tools, and frameworks - what works, what doesn't, and what to do next - inside Visionary Marketing Lab, our online, members-only community. It’s smart, candid, and occasionally irreverent. Come for the insight, stay for the camaraderie. Because when independent ophthalmology practices collaborate, share tools, and think together, power multiplies.