Findings in this brief are drawn from two decades of fieldwork and data analysis, working alongside hundreds of multi-site healthcare organizations and watching their marketing operating models evolve through every stage of this arc.
What this brief argues, in six lines.
- 01Urgent care is in a sustained growth cycle. Multi-site urgent care operators continue to gain share of episodic ambulatory visits in the US through de novo openings, expanded service lines (occupational health, virtual visits, primary care bridges), and a steady cadence of tuck-in acquisitions[1][2]. Marketing organizations are scaling faster than their operating models.
- 02The challenges facing urgent care marketing leaders change in kind, not only in volume, at four inflection points as the footprint grows from 5 to 500+ centers.
- 03The expensive failure mode at every tier is the same. Marketing work gets done, but it does not land consistently across centers, on time, on brand, with auditable approvals. Patient visits per center per day (PVPD) is the center-level metric this hits first; market share by trade area and payer mix shift are the portfolio-level metrics that follow.
- 04The capabilities that solve these failures (single-source intake, templated launch playbooks, cross-team visibility, governed asset libraries, structured approvals, capacity planning, and roll-up reporting) are the core surface area of modern marketing project management platforms[5][6].
- 05CMOs and VPs of Marketing who install this operating layer before tier 3 free meaningful leadership capacity from status reconciliation and firefighting, and materially reduce the risk in the next phase of growth, whether that comes from de novo openings, new service lines, or acquisitions.
- 06Use the tier-by-tier framework to locate your organization, the interactive explorer to see the challenges and fixes at your stage, and the self-audit to benchmark your operating maturity against peers at your size.
Urgent care is growing faster than its marketing operating models can.
Multi-site urgent care operators continue to gain share of episodic ambulatory visits in the US through de novo openings, expanded service lines (occupational health, virtual visits, primary care bridges), and a steady cadence of tuck-in acquisitions[1][2]. Mid-market operators that were 25 centers three years ago are 100 centers today, and the largest operators are well past 250. The playbook that worked at 25 is the source of most of the pain at 100.
The marketing function is where this growth stress shows up first and most visibly to leadership. Patient visits per center per day is a marketing-influenced number. Brand consistency across a 250-site footprint is a marketing problem. Launching new centers on time, expanding into a new state, growing the employer occ med book, and folding in the latest tuck-in onto the parent brand inside 90 days are all marketing-led programs. Every one of those is increasingly being run by a team whose tooling and process were built for a much smaller portfolio[3][4].
The expensive failure mode at every tier is the same. Marketing work gets done, but it does not land consistently across centers, on time, on brand, with auditable approvals.
Four tiers of operating maturity, by center count.
Each tier is defined less by headcount or budget than by the operating mode the marketing team is forced into, and the inflection point that breaks it.
Hands-On Marketing
Marketing still feels personal, but the cracks are showing.
A small marketing team of 1 to 4 people supports a footprint that has outgrown spreadsheets but has not yet earned a dedicated marketing operations function. The CMO or marketing director still personally reviews most creative and most paid spend.
When the CMO can no longer name every center manager and every campaign in flight from memory.
The Visibility Cliff
The portfolio outgrew personal knowledge before tooling caught up.
Marketing has scaled headcount and added a regional layer, but tooling and process have not kept up. The CMO starts every leadership meeting answering one question: what are we actually running right now?
When the CMO can no longer produce an accurate, current view of all in-flight marketing work without asking three people.
Industrial Drag
The team produces a lot of work. It just takes too long and costs too much.
Marketing has the headcount, the agencies, and the budget. What it does not have is throughput. Every campaign clears, but slowly, with rework, and at a cost per output that is hard to defend in board reviews.
When marketing operations becomes a named function and the COO or CFO starts asking why throughput per dollar is not improving with scale.
Portfolio Marketing
Marketing has to behave like an industrialized portfolio function.
At this scale marketing is a portfolio function with a marketing operations team, named regional CMOs or VPs, in-house creative production, multiple agencies, and direct visibility from the PE sponsor or parent health system. The job is no longer to ship campaigns. It is to operate a system that ships campaigns predictably across hundreds of sites.
When marketing reporting becomes a standing input to investor and board reporting, and the cost of a single bad rollout is measured in basis points of same-center growth.
Find your stage. See the challenges, the impact, and what fixes them.
Drag the slider to the size of your footprint. The rest of this section reflects the operating challenges most likely to be hurting your team right now, with the corporate and center-level impact, and how a platform like Workzone resolves each one.
Industrial Drag
The team produces a lot of work. It just takes too long and costs too much.
By tier 3 the marketing org has invested in real headcount, named regional leads, and a stable agency roster. The work gets done. The problem is the cost and tempo of getting it done. Briefs sit waiting for approvals. The same asset gets recreated for the third region because no one searched. Reporting on PVPD growth, payer mix, and employer occ med pipeline still requires a manual portfolio reconciliation.
The same work being done two and three times
Two regions, the in-house creative team, and the agency all build a version of the same insurance acceptance flyer, the same flu shot promotion, and the same employer occ med one-pager in the same quarter. Nobody searched first because the search experience is bad.
Real budget evaporates into duplicated work. Per-asset cost stays high even as headcount and tooling investment grow.
Patients see slightly different versions of the same message depending on which center they walk into.
Make the asset library so easy to search that it is faster to reuse than to recreate.
Workzone's central library, with structured tagging and permissioned access, makes the approved asset the path of least resistance.
Score your operating maturity in 2 minutes.
Set your center count, answer 12 yes-or-no questions distilled from the tier challenges above, and get a maturity score, your tier label, and the three highest-impact gaps to close first.
100 centers · Tier 3 · Industrial Drag
Mark each statement yes if it is true today, no if it is not.
- 01Critical at T1
Marketing requests come in through one front door with a structured brief, not Slack DMs and hallway conversations.
- 02Critical at T2
Anyone on the leadership team can see what marketing work is in flight at the corporate and practice level.
- 03Critical at T1
New center openings run from a templated launch playbook with pre-wired owners, dependencies, and dates against a fixed days-to-target-PVPD curve.
- 04Critical at T2
System-wide campaigns reliably go live on the same day across every center.
- 05Critical at T1
There is one governed asset library where the latest approved version is the easiest to find.
- 06Critical at T1
Compliance, clinical, and legal reviews happen in a structured workflow with named approvers and a per-version audit trail.
- 07Critical at T2
External reviewers (outside counsel, partner clinical leads, agencies, employer occ med clients) can review on the asset itself, not over email.
- 08Critical at T3
The CMO or Head of Marketing can show committed work versus team and agency capacity in real time.
- 09Critical at T3
Executive and sponsor reporting on marketing throughput, campaign status, and de novo launch progress across the portfolio is a query, not a manual reconciliation.
- 10Critical at T2
Acquisition rebrand spins up from a templated program on day one of close, not improvised per deal.
- 11Critical at T2
All agency and freelance work is visible in the same workspace as in-house work, with scope and status.
- 12Critical at T3
A new marketer can land and contribute in their first two weeks because processes, owners, and templates are documented in the system.
- 13Critical at T3
When a marketing initiative misses deadlines or budget, we can clearly identify the root cause of the variance at the corporate and site level.
- 14Critical at T3
We can accurately forecast initiative timelines, budgets, and resource needs as the initiative progresses.
The operating layer that resolves these challenges.
Most of the failures above are not creative team failures, and they are not strategy failures. They are coordination failures: work done in the wrong order, by the wrong people, with the wrong context, and proven by the wrong artifacts. They resolve when an organization installs a deliberate marketing operating layer.
The seven capabilities below are what platforms like Workzone deliver. They map directly back to the tier-by-tier challenges above[5][6].
A single front door for marketing requests
Standardized intake forms by request type with required fields for site, region, audience, due date, and compliance flags. Nothing enters the queue half formed.
Templated playbooks for repeatable work
Reusable project templates for new center openings, acquisition rebrand, payer rollouts, occ med program launches, flu and back-to-school pushes, so every program starts from a baseline plan that has worked before.
Cross-team visibility dashboards
Live views by region, service line, and campaign, so the CMO, regional VPs, the CFO, and the PE sponsor see the same status without manual reconciliation.
Governed asset library
A central, permissioned, versioned library where the latest approved asset is the easiest one to find, with locked old versions and audit trails per asset.
Structured approval workflows
Sequenced reviews with named roles, deadlines, parallel where possible, online proofing with pinned markups and annotations directly on the asset, comment threads attached to the file, and a permanent audit trail of who marked up and approved which version when.
Capacity and resource planning
A forward view of committed work versus team and agency capacity, so the CMO can negotiate tradeoffs instead of absorbing every new request.
Roll-up reporting across portfolio
Standardized campaign status, throughput, and on-time metrics that aggregate from project to region to portfolio. PVPD, cost per visit, and payer mix continue to come from the EMR, queue tool, and analytics layer; Workzone produces the marketing operations half of the board view as a saved query rather than a weekend.
Why we publish on multi-site healthcare.
Workzone is project management software built for marketing, operations, and IT teams, with more than 23 years of real-world deployment experience and a 7-year average customer lifetime. We focus on the multi-site, multi-stakeholder organizations where marketing has to land consistently across many locations and many reviewers.
Multi-site healthcare (urgent care, dental support organizations, behavioral health platforms, ABA, and physician groups) is one of the categories where that focus matters most. These organizations have real compliance review, regional autonomy, an aggressive expansion cadence, and visit-throughput pressure all running through the same marketing team.
We publish briefs like this one because the operating-model conversation is, in our experience, the highest-leverage one a multi-site CMO can have, and it is rarely had with the specificity it deserves.
See what a multi-site urgent care marketing operating layer looks like in Workzone.
Book a 30-minute walkthrough with a Workzone multi-site specialist. We'll map the framework above to your current tier and show you the specific workflows other multi-site healthcare teams use.
"We were getting things done, but our team was getting crushed. There was no work-life balance. Everything was a ‘just do it’ project—we called them ‘Nike projects.’ Workzone helped us get out of survival mode. Now we’re working smarter, prioritizing better, and aligning with what really matters to the organization."
Sources.
- [1]Urgent Care Association (UCA): Industry white papers and benchmarking on the US urgent care market. https://urgentcareassociation.org/
- [2]Journal of Urgent Care Medicine (JUCM): Operational and growth reporting on multi-site urgent care. https://www.jucm.com/
- [3]Definitive Healthcare: Urgent care market sizing and operator landscape. https://www.definitivehc.com/resources/healthcare-insights
- [4]Becker's Hospital Review: Urgent care consolidation and PE activity coverage. https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/
- [5]Healthcare Success: Branding Checklist for Multilocation Providers. 7 Things to Consider Before You Start. https://healthcaresuccess.com/blog/healthcare-marketing/branding-checklist-for-multilocation-providers-7-things-to-consider-before-you-start.html
- [6]EnticEdge: Creating and Ensuring Brand Consistency Across Multiple Healthcare Facilities and Digital Channels. https://www.enticedge.com/blog/how-to-ensure-brand-consistency