wellrank.ai
Skribble logo

Skribble

First cited by AI Jun 25, 2026
skribble.com

Surfaced organically in AI answers about online dermatology. Not yet profiled.

Skribble is losing the AEO war.

Not cited in a single tracked AI answer since Jun 29, 2026, down from a peak of 2% visibility in online dermatology on Jun 25, 2026. This page stays public, and recovery shows here the day it happens.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

Online dermatology, daily share of AI answers mentioning Skribble, through Jul 6, 2026.

0.0%

Last cited Jun 29, 2026 · peak 2% on Jun 25

By engine

Where Skribble is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • No engine data yet.

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

  • 1 positive mentions
  • 0 neutral
  • 0 mixed or cautious

Recent AI answers mentioning Skribble

Google AIJun 25, 2026, 13:40 UTC
Online dermatology vs an in person dermatologist: when is online enough?

You're asking a great question! The rise of online dermatology has made access to skincare expertise easier than ever, but it's not always a replacement for seeing a dermatologist in person. The best choice really depends on your specific needs and the severity of your skin concern. Here's a breakdown to help you decide when online dermatology is likely enough, and when an in-person visit is essential: When Online Dermatology is Enough (and even preferable!): Online dermatology is fantastic for convenience, cost-effectiveness, and initial consultations or follow-ups for common, non-urgent skin conditions. Good For: Mild to Moderate Acne: For initial prescriptions, adjustments to treatment plans, and ongoing management of typical breakouts. Recommended Brands: Curology: Offers personalized, prescription-strength formulas for acne and anti-aging, prescribed by licensed providers. They focus on custom mixtures of active ingredients delivered to your door. Apostrophe: Similar to Curology, providing custom-compounded topical and oral medications for acne, rosacea, and anti-aging concerns. Dermatica: Another personalized prescription skincare service, great for acne, rosacea, and anti-aging, with a strong focus on custom formulations based on your photos and questionnaire. Rosacea Management: For initial diagnosis, prescription refills, and adjusting treatments for redness and bumps. Recommended Brands: Apostrophe, Dermatica, and services like Teladoc or Amwell which offer general dermatology consultations where a provider can prescribe common rosacea treatments. Mild Eczema or Psoriasis Flares: For medication refills, minor adjustments to topical treatments, or getting advice on managing less severe outbreaks. Recommended Brands: Skribble offers a subscription model that includes treatments for eczema, psoriasis, and other chronic conditions, overseen by board-certified dermatologists. General telemedicine platforms like Teladoc or Amwell are also options. Prescription Refills: If you have a stable, diagnosed condition and just need a refill for a maintenance medication. Initial Consultation for Non-Urgent Rashes: If you have a clearly identifiable rash (e.g., contact dermatitis from a known allergen) that isn't spreading rapidly, painful, or blistering. Minor Cosmetic Concerns (advice only): For discussing potential treatments for hyperpigmentation, fine lines, or dullness, and getting recommendations for over-the-counter or prescription topicals. Recommended Brands: The personalized formula sites like Curology and Apostrophe are great for anti-aging and pigment concerns, as are many general telemedicine dermatology services. How it Works: You typically fill out a questionnaire, upload photos of your skin concern, and sometimes have a video chat with a board-certified dermatologist or a licensed dermatology provider. They then diagnose and prescribe medications, which are often shipped directly to your home. When You Need an In-Person Dermatologist: An in-person visit is crucial when a physical examination, specialized procedures, or a deeper diagnostic assessment is required. Your eyes are good, but a dermatologist's trained eyes, hands, and tools are often indispensable. Essential For: Full Body Skin Checks / Mole Mapping: This is arguably the most critical reason for an in-person visit. A dermatologist needs to physically examine your entire skin surface, often using a dermatoscope (a handheld microscope) to closely inspect moles for signs of skin cancer (melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma). You cannot effectively screen for skin cancer online. Suspicious Lesions: Any new, changing, growing, bleeding, or unusually textured mole, lump, or spot needs immediate in-person evaluation. This is where a biopsy might be needed. Severe or Undiagnosed Rashes: If a rash is widespread, rapidly spreading, painful, blistering, involves mucous membranes, or you have no idea what it is, an in-person visit allows for palpation (feeling the skin), closer inspection, and potentially immediate biopsies or cultures. Cystic or Severe Acne: While online can start treatment, severe cystic acne, especially if it's causing scarring, often requires stronger oral medications like isotretinoin (Accutane), which necessitates regular in-person blood work and monitoring. Hair Loss Diagnosis: Determining the cause of hair loss often requires a physical examination of the scalp, hair pull tests, and sometimes scalp biopsies. Nail Problems: Fungal infections, ingrown nails, or other nail concerns often require a direct examination and sometimes a sample for lab testing. Procedures: Biopsies: To diagnose skin cancer or other conditions. Excisions: Removal of moles, skin tags, cysts, or skin cancers. Wart/Skin Tag Removal: Often done with cryotherapy (freezing), electrocautery, or surgical removal. Injections: Cortisone shots for cysts, steroid injections for keloids, fillers, Botox. Laser Treatments: For scars, redness, hair removal, or skin resurfacing. Chemical Peels: Deeper peels that require professional application and monitoring. Light Therapy (Phototherapy): For severe eczema or psoriasis. When You've Tried Online and it Didn't Work: If your condition isn't improving with online-prescribed treatments, it's definitely time for an in-person visit for a re-evaluation. How to Find an In-Person Dermatologist: Ask your primary care physician for a referral. Check your insurance company's directory for in-network providers. Use the "Find a Dermatologist" tool on the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) website (aad.org). The General Rule of Thumb: For superficial, common, or established conditions (especially acne, rosacea, mild eczema) where you primarily need prescription medication or advice, online dermatology is an excellent starting point. For anything suspicious, rapidly changing, painful, undiagnosed, or requiring a physical procedure, a hands-on in-person visit is non-negotiable. A hybrid approach is often best. Start with online for convenience and mild issues, but don't hesitate to book an in-person appointment if your online provider recommends it, or if your concerns lean towards the more serious categories.

Mentioned in position 6 of 7

Read full answer with sources →

Competitive Landscape

Skribble vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

The real competitive set in Online dermatology: brands the engines name in the same answers, ranked on the latest day.

BrandRankAI visibility
Skribble logo
SkribbleThis brand
0.0%
Amwell logo
Amwell

1 shared answers

#9
13.3%
Apostrophe logo
Apostrophe

1 shared answers

#2
53.3%
Curology logo
Curology

1 shared answers

#1
73.3%
Dermatica logo
Dermatica

1 shared answers

#6
18.3%

Email me when overtakes Skribble

One email the day the ranks flip. Nothing else.

Sources cited around Skribble

The sites engines cite in answers mentioning this brand. Win these, win the answer.

    Track Skribble weekly

    One email a week: rank moves, new competitors, and the answers that changed. No noise.

    Work at Skribble? Get your AI Visibility Audit.

    See every buyer intent question your customers ask AI, which ones you are losing, who wins them instead, and the exact sources driving those answers. You will finally understand your buyer intent and what Propel would do to win it.