


Recovery.com Director of B2B Marketing.




Recovery.com Director of B2B Marketing.
This article summarizes a conversation from the Recovery Reach podcast, hosted by Andrew Averill, featuring Gary Garth, founder of Elev8.io. The episode explores the persistent marketing challenges facing behavioral health and substance use treatment organizations — and how to overcome them with smarter data, stronger strategy, and deeper alignment between marketing and admissions teams.
Garth’s journey into behavioral health marketing wasn’t a straight line. After a successful 20-year career in global digital advertising — working with Google, Microsoft, and thousands of clients — he sold his multimillion-dollar agency to pursue a more meaningful mission.
“I saw incredible clinicians and passionate operators struggling — not because of their programs, but because no one was giving them the marketing support they truly needed.”
When he began investing in treatment centers, he discovered a staggering problem: most facilities had strong clinical programs but no reliable marketing infrastructure. From poor lead handling to weak go-to-market strategies, their census issues stemmed from avoidable operational blind spots. That realization became the foundation of Elev8.io — a behavioral-health-specific growth agency built to help treatment providers reach full census with purpose and precision.
Most facilities equate marketing with lead generation — running pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns or paid listings that capture people at the exact moment they search “rehab near me.” But as Garth explains, that’s just the tip of the funnel.
“Lead generation is the bottom of the funnel — capturing people at a high cost when they’re about ready to enter recovery,” he said. “Demand generation is establishing your brand before they ever make that search.”
Lead Gen = reactive and expensive.
Demand Gen = proactive and sustainable.
A demand-generation strategy builds awareness long before a prospect is ready for treatment. It includes:
When combined, these channels warm up audiences over time — improving trust, conversion rates, and long-term patient satisfaction.
Garth warns that many facilities suffer from what he calls “Google-flation.” Costs per click rise double digits each quarter, sometimes hitting $400–$500 for competitive treatment keywords.
“Every single quarter, the prices go up double digit,” he said. “It’s a lethal strategy to put all your eggs into that basket.”
While Google Ads can drive immediate admissions, they’re volatile and expensive. Smart marketers diversify spend:
Paid media still matters — but only as part of a balanced ecosystem that reduces risk.
One of Garth’s most popular frameworks, the “Maslow’s Hierarchy of Admissions,” reimagines how treatment centers should allocate marketing effort and investment.
At the bottom of the pyramid are low-cost, high-return fundamentals; at the top are paid channels that should be scaled only after the foundation is stable.
The Hierarchy of Admissions:
Facilities that nail the base layers first often fill 30–60% of their beds without heavy ad spend.
Most executives drown in irrelevant marketing data — click-through rates, impressions, keyword rankings — while missing the KPIs that drive profitability.
Garth simplifies success into four key metrics:
“Those are the three metrics we live by,” Garth explained. “Get those right and you’ll have a predictable patient acquisition strategy.”
To measure them effectively, facilities must implement:
Once those basics are in place, you can layer in lifetime value (LTV), average length of stay, and time-to-admit metrics to refine ROI.
Even the best campaigns fail if marketing and admissions aren’t aligned. Garth calls this the most common — and costly — problem in behavioral health.
He looks for answers to questions like:
Without feedback loops, facilities waste thousands on unqualified leads and inconsistent follow-up.
Garth advises introducing weekly cross-team huddles and shared dashboards to improve collaboration.
“You don’t want sales and marketing over here and people saying, ‘Your leads are bad.’ You’re in this together. Celebrate the wins, study the admissions, and use that feedback to improve ad copy and landing pages.”
Some of Elev8’s simplest breakthroughs come from listening to recorded admissions calls. Small but repeated questions from prospective clients often point to high-value differentiators that marketing has overlooked.
Examples Garth shared:
These micro-insights turn into macro-results when reflected in messaging, FAQs, and ad segmentation.
Every marketing tactic eventually feeds into a system — or breaks because there isn’t one.
That’s why Elev8 built three internal divisions:
In Garth’s experience, most facilities buy generic CRMs that don’t understand treatment workflows. A purpose-built system — one that integrates verification of benefits (VOB) software, call tracking, and marketing automation — produces cleaner data and more effective follow-ups.
Even with strong lead flow, conversions stall if admissions reps lack structure.
Garth’s solution: develop a comprehensive admissions playbook.
This includes:
By documenting what works and replicating it, facilities can double conversion rates without spending a dollar more on marketing.
“If you can convert 20% of leads into VOBs instead of 10%, your ROI looks entirely different,” Garth noted.
At the end of the day, sustainable growth in behavioral health marketing comes from patience, data discipline, and purpose. Facilities that chase shortcuts often waste resources; those that measure, refine, and align see steady progress.
Garth encourages leaders to:
“Whether or not we work together,” he said, “I love helping people improve themselves. When they improve themselves, they improve their facilities — and we all win at the end of the day.”
Gary Garth’s message is simple: the behavioral health field doesn’t have a marketing problem — it has an alignment problem. By blending business rigor with mission-driven purpose, treatment providers can reach more people, fill more beds, and ultimately save more lives.
From building an alumni-powered referral base to tracking cost per admit with surgical precision, the future of behavioral health growth lies in strategy, systems, and sincerity — not just ads.
We believe everyone deserves access to accurate, unbiased information about mental health and recovery. That’s why we have a comprehensive set of treatment providers and don't charge for inclusion. Any center that meets our criteria can list for free. We do not and have never accepted fees for referring someone to a particular center. Providers who advertise with us must be verified by our Research Team and we clearly mark their status as advertisers.
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