clever–tenacious–precise

Healthcare Digital Marketing: Special Considerations for Medical Practices

Pharmacist holding a smartphone displaying an online pharmacy message, representing healthcare digital marketing, patient engagement through mobile devices, and compliant digital marketing strategies supported by Scorpion Five Technologies.

Key Takeaways

  • Digital marketing for healthcare organizations requires strict compliance with HIPAA, FDA guidelines, and state regulations that don’t apply to other industries

  • LegitScript certification is essential for medical practices wanting to run outbound advertisements for prescription-related services

  • Successful healthcare marketing strategies require both inbound marketing (SEO, content) and outbound marketing (paid ads) while maintaining regulatory compliance

  • Medical practices must use HIPAA-compliant analytics tools and marketing platforms to protect healthcare consumers’ data while measuring campaign effectiveness

  • Platform-specific policies from Google, Meta, and other advertising networks create additional compliance layers beyond federal and state regulations

Intro: Special Considerations for Healthcare Digital Marketing

Digital marketing for healthcare organizations operates in a uniquely complex regulatory environment that sets medical practices apart from marketing in virtually every other industry. When healthcare organizations venture into digital marketing, they must navigate a landscape governed by everything from HHS HIPAA regulations, to FDA rules about drug and treatment claims, to various state and local regulations that simply don’t exist for other businesses.

While navigating these considerations can be challenging, the effort is absolutely worth it. Healthcare digital marketing offers cost-effective patient acquisition, improved patient engagement, measurable ROI, and competitive advantage in an increasingly digital healthcare landscape. Perhaps most importantly, your practice cannot afford not to engage in digital marketing, because your competitors certainly will be.

In this comprehensive guide, we’ll explore the types of digital marketing available to the healthcare industry, examine the specific considerations for both outbound and inbound marketing strategies, discuss how analytics and marketing tools must meet privacy requirements, and look at measuring success in this regulated environment. We’ll also touch on emerging trends that will shape the future of healthcare marketing.

If you’re a new business that’s just starting out in digital marketing, we recommend reading this guide to gain a strong basis of digital marketing knowledge.

Types of Healthcare Digital Marketing

The fundamental types of digital marketing approaches in the healthcare industry are the same as any other industry, with inbound marketing and outbound marketing being the two primary categories. However, what makes digital healthcare marketing unique is the additional layer of regulatory considerations that must be addressed at every step.

Inbound marketing includes strategies where healthcare consumers organically seek out your practice, such as search engine optimization (SEO), content marketing, and organic social media presence.

Outbound marketing involves proactive outreach where your practice initiates contact with healthcare consumers, including paid search ads, social media advertising, and email marketing campaigns.

For example, when a patient searches “orthopedic surgeon near me” and finds your practice’s website through organic search results, that’s inbound marketing at work. Conversely, when that same patient sees your targeted Google Ads or Facebook ad about joint replacement services, that’s outbound marketing.

While these digital channels are fundamentally the same for all businesses, healthcare providers face regulatory factors at both state and federal levels, plus platform-specific policies and standards that must be followed. These additional requirements make healthcare digital marketing significantly more complex than marketing for less regulated businesses.

The following sections will break down healthcare-specific considerations for both outbound and inbound marketing, making it easier to understand how to implement compliant and effective digital marketing strategies for your medical practice.

Considerations for Outbound Marketing

Outbound marketing for healthcare practices involves paid promotion that is subject to a myriad of regulations, including HIPAA requirements from HHS, FDA rules about drug and treatment claims, and applicable state or local laws. The complexity increases significantly when you consider that each advertising platform has its own policies designed to protect users from potentially harmful or misleading medical advertising.

In the following sections we’ll provide an overview of the platform-specific rules and certification requirements that medical practices must content with to succeed with outbound healthcare digital marketing.

If navigating these compliance requirements becomes overwhelming, Scorpion Five Technologies has extensive expertise in digital marketing, and in complex compliance for regulated industries like defense, finance, and healthcare. You may also enjoy reading this case study, where we provided a holistic and compliant technology plan for our client, covering everything from digital marketing to cybersecurity and web development, demonstrating how proper implementation can drive results while maintaining full regulatory compliance.

Platform-Specific Rules

All major advertising platforms require advertisers to operate within the limits of federal and state law. For example, you cannot make claims that a medical product or service can accomplish things not approved by the FDA, and you must always balance promotional benefits with appropriate risk information. Additionally, marketing materials must never unduly entice someone to seek medical treatment, such as suggesting they could only achieve happiness, health, or beauty through a specific treatment or medication.

However, each platform implements protections differently, creating unique compliance challenges for healthcare marketers.

Meta (Facebook and Instagram) requires both prior authorization through a formal request process and third-party certification before allowing advertisements for medical services, with particular emphasis on any content that mentions or alludes to prescription drugs. According to Meta’s healthcare advertising policies, this certification requirement is designed to ensure only qualified, compliant medical providers can advertise prescription-related services.

Google Ads takes a different approach, allowing certain healthcare ads to run without certification as long as they don’t include prescription drug names in the ad copy shown to searchers. However, Google will additionally limit ad visibility based on the search terms used by your potential client—ads will only appear for queries that do containing specific prescription medication names.

The next section explains how website certification provides the best path to unlocking the complete outbound marketing potential for healthcare digital marketing, allowing medical practices to advertise across all relevant channels without these platform-imposed restrictions.

The Role of Certification Registrars Like LegitScript

Major advertising platforms will not generally allow you to advertise medical offerings involving prescription medications without proof that you’re qualified to provide such services. This isn’t a reactive enforcement approach – it’s an implicit deny situation where Google explicitly states you cannot advertise prescription drug services without certification.

To clarify with a specific example: if a dermatology practice or medical spa hasn’t received approval from Google Ads to advertise prescription products but wants to promote wrinkle treatments, Google Ads will show their ads for search terms like “wrinkle treatments near me” but would not display them to people searching for “Botox near me” because Botox is a prescription medication.

While it’s theoretically possible to present evidence directly to ad platforms proving your compliance and qualifications, this approach typically involves an uphill battle with inconsistent results. The most reliable path to advertising success is obtaining third-party certification for your practice.

Although several certification registrars exist, LegitScript is by far the most widely recognized, and achieving this certification makes it significantly easier to get medical-based outbound marketing campaigns approved across all major platforms. For Meta advertising specifically, only LegitScript certification is recognized.

You should also know that Meta is one case where you cannot present your own case for compliance and qualifications—you must have a third-party LegitScript cert, or proceed no further.

It’s important to note that LegitScript has limitations on certifying brick-and-mortar-only clinics and Medical Spas that don’t provide online pharmacy or telehealth services. However, Scorpion Five Technologies has extensive experience in cybersecurity compliance and can help such practices establish compliant telehealth programs to meet certification requirements.

In a nutshell, LegitScript certifies that your website and content comply with legal requirements, that you’re properly licensed, and that you’re operating ethically within all required compliance frameworks.

The LegitScript certification process begins with an initial evaluation that produces a gap analysis, showing exactly where you are and aren’t compliant with relevant federal and local regulations.

Once you address identified issues, you can receive certification, after which LegitScript periodically scans your content and reanalyzes your operations to ensure ongoing compliance. The process works as follows:

  1. Pay an initial application fee, which initiates the comprehensive evaluation

  2. Once gaps are addressed, pay your first annual certification fee and receive certification

  3. Pay yearly certification fees and address any unfavorable content scans that arise throughout the year

This systematic approach ensures your outbound advertising campaigns can run across all major platforms while maintaining the highest standards of regulatory compliance.

Considerations for Inbound Healthcare Digital Marketing

Inbound healthcare digital marketing encompasses strategies that organically draw people to your practice, and generally faces fewer restrictions and automated approval checkpoints compared to outbound advertising campaigns. But this ease is diminishing by the day, and there are still numerous compliance details that healthcare marketers must carefully consider.

It is unwise to rely on a single digital marketing channel for patient acquisition, making it vital for your entire digital presence to maintain regulatory hygiene. While the risk of inbound channels being completely blocked for non-compliance is lower than outbound restrictions, the possibility certainly isn’t zero, and compliance violations that originate in the inbound channel can have cascading effects across your entire marketing ecosystem. For instance, if LegitScript scans find compliance issues on your website after publishing some new articles to draw in more traffic, this can restrict your access to paid advertising channels across multiple platforms.

A holistic technology plan that includes compliance considerations across all marketing channels, along with all other technology supporting your practice, represents the best strategic approach. You can see this comprehensive strategy in action in this Scorpion Five Technologies case study, where we implemented integrated compliance across all digital marketing channels alongside broader practice technology needs, like business analysis and cybersecurity.

The following sections break down specific considerations for website/SEO optimization, content marketing, and social media to help you understand how to maintain compliance while building effective inbound marketing strategies.

Website and SEO Considerations for Healthcare Digital Marketing

In our experience working with healthcare practices, the risk of losing organic search rankings due to regulatory or community guideline violations is generally lower than encountering advertising restrictions on paid platforms.

This disparity exists primarily because inbound search traffic represents people actively seeking information from your practice, rather than you proactively promoting content to them. Additionally, search ranking algorithms have historically focused more on technical optimization and authority signals than regulatory compliance.

Search engine optimization success has historically been based on technical optimization and signals that demonstrating your site provides authoritative, helpful information, and generally irrespective of compliance with regulations or guidelines. In short, SEO can often be achieved without strict regulatory compliance. However, this landscape is rapidly changing in ways that healthcare marketers must understand.

AI-powered search experiences have become a vital part of modern inbound strategies, and while traditional search engines haven’t historically scrutinized regulatory or community standards heavily, AI-driven search represents a fundamentally different scenario.

Artificial intelligence can interpret content meaning and intent far more sophisticatedly than traditional keyword-based algorithms, making it much more likely to identify and potentially penalize non-compliant healthcare content.

Furthermore, AI technology has quickly become integrated into how traditional search algorithms operate on platforms like Google and Bing. This means we should expect even standard search results to develop the intelligence needed to devalue potentially non-compliant medical websites.

It’s also highly likely that healthcare regulators will recognize AI’s capabilities and demand that search platforms use these tools to enforce compliance standards more rigorously in SEO.

Content Marketing Considerations for Healthcare Digital Marketing

Content marketing includes any entertaining or educational materials you create hoping to attract potential patients while establishing your practice as a trusted expert source. This encompasses everything from YouTube educational videos to detailed blog posts explaining medical procedures and treatment options.

Since content marketing utilizes various digital platforms, your materials become subject to specific platform community standards and content policies, similar to how advertising operates. However, while platform-specific rules matter, the most critical consideration is ensuring your content first complies with federal and local healthcare regulations.

Generally, maintaining compliance in healthcare content marketing requires careful attention to four key principles:

  1. Avoid claims beyond FDA-approved uses – Never make statements about medical devices, procedures, or medications that extend beyond or contradict their officially approved applications and indications.

  2. Balance benefits and risks – Carefully present both the potential benefits and known risks of any treatment or procedure in your content, avoiding one-sided promotional messaging.

  3. Avoid undue influence – Ensure your content doesn’t pressure or manipulate potential patients into seeking treatment by suggesting they can only achieve happiness, health, or beauty through specific medical interventions.

  4. Avoid dramatic outcome claims – Don’t claim or depict medical results that could be considered unrealistic, dramatic, or outside the normal range of expected outcomes for the treatment discussed.

Following these principles helps ensure your content marketing supports both patient education and practice growth while maintaining the ethical and regulatory standards expected in healthcare marketing.

Social Media Considerations for Healthcare Digital Marketing

Social media marketing for healthcare practices carries inherent risks because content moderation decisions often rely on individual platform employees or automated systems making subjective judgments about policy violations. These decisions can significantly impact your practice if you rely heavily on social media platforms for patient acquisition and engagement.

Generally, social media platforms aim to protect their users from undue influence and potential harm, particularly regarding medical content. While it’s impossible to cover all the ways platforms implement these protections, understanding the concept through specific examples helps illustrate the compliance challenges.

Consider Meta’s community standards, which forbid before-and-after photos showing dramatic changes following medical treatments. Interestingly, their advertising policies completely prohibit before-and-after photos in paid ads, meaning while such content might be permitted in organic posts if the changes aren’t too dramatic, the platform generally disfavors these types of medical images.

While this protection seems logical and well-intentioned, enforcement ultimately depends on individual Meta employees or automated AI systems determining whether specific images show “too dramatic” a change. This subjectivity creates significant risk for healthcare marketers, as policy interpretation on a single post could result in account restrictions or complete suspension.

This subjective enforcement reality makes developing marketing strategies that don’t rely too heavily on any single platform essential for healthcare practices. Diversifying your digital marketing approach protects against the possibility that one subjective policy review could undermine your entire patient acquisition strategy.

User Analytics and Marketing Tools Meet Privacy and Data Protection

User analytics data can indeed be valuable for healthcare digital marketing optimization, but with important caveats that distinguish medical practice marketing from other industries.

For example, using anonymized and aggregated data for campaign optimization is perfectly acceptable and can provide valuable insights for improving patient engagement and marketing campaign effectiveness.

Conversely, healthcare marketers cannot use specific user conversion data for retargeting campaigns, because those conversions occurred on pages that would allow presumption of medical conditions. This restriction exists because the combination of browsing behavior and conversion actions could reveal protected health information about individual patients, violating HIPAA privacy requirements.

The marketing tools themselves must also undergo HIPAA-required risk assessments within your practice, and practices must also implement appropriate policies and staff training for these tools to ensure compliant use. Understanding HIPAA compliance basics is fundamental knowledge for practice leaders implementing any healthcare digital marketing program, as its tenets reach farther than you might expect.

Additionally, healthcare practices must take exceptional care when designing privacy policies and consent mechanisms for digital communications. Unlike other industries where broad consent for marketing communications is often sufficient, healthcare organizations must implement granular consent processes that respect patient privacy, while still enabling effective digital marketing strategies.

This complex intersection of marketing effectiveness and privacy protection requires specialized expertise to implement correctly, ensuring that patient data remains protected while still enabling the analytics and personalization that drive successful digital marketing campaigns. If you need help, Scorpion Five Technologies can help you navigate these complexities.

Measuring Success and ROI in Healthcare Digital Marketing

Healthcare digital marketing success requires tracking key performance indicators (KPIs) specifically relevant to medical practices, including patient acquisition cost, patient lifetime value, and appointment conversion rates. These healthcare-specific metrics provide more meaningful insights than generic digital marketing metrics because they directly relate to practice growth and patient care outcomes.

Analytics tools and platforms used for measuring healthcare marketing performance must be HIPAA-compliant, requiring careful vendor selection and proper configuration to protect patient data while providing actionable marketing insights. This compliance requirement often means using specialized healthcare analytics platforms or carefully configuring mainstream tools that provide HIPAA business associate agreements to meet privacy regulations—read this article learn more about business associate agreements in HIPAA.

Over time, healthcare marketing processes can become highly refined, incorporating sophisticated techniques like attribution modeling for multi-channel patient journeys that track interactions from initial awareness through appointment scheduling. This level of analysis helps practices understand exactly which marketing efforts drive the most valuable patient relationships.

Healthcare-specific metrics that enable precise marketing optimization include:

  • Patient acquisition cost (PAC) by channel and campaign type, helping identify the most cost-effective marketing investments

  • Patient lifetime value (PLV) and retention rates by acquisition source, showing which marketing channels attract the most valuable long-term patients

  • Appointment booking conversion rates from website traffic and campaigns, indicating how effectively your digital presence converts interest into action

  • Cost per consultation and cost per procedure based on marketing attribution, providing direct ROI calculations for different marketing activities

These healthcare-focused metrics enable precise revenue tracking and ROI calculation methods for healthcare marketing investments, allowing for data-driven refinement of digital marketing strategies over time. The result is increasingly effective patient acquisition that balances cost-effectiveness with regulatory compliance.

Future Trends in Healthcare Digital Marketing

Artificial intelligence integration is already transforming healthcare marketing through everything from chatbots that handle patient inquiries to personalized content recommendation systems that deliver relevant information based on patient interests and needs. These AI-powered tools can significantly improve patient engagement while maintaining compliance when properly implemented.

Voice search optimization is also becoming increasingly important for healthcare practices supporting local practice discovery. As more patients use voice assistants to find nearby medical services, optimizing your digital presence for voice queries like “find a cardiologist near me” or “urgent care open now” becomes essential for patient acquisition.

Video-first content strategies offer tremendous benefits for healthcare practices. Telehealth integration allows patients to preview providers and understand services before booking appointments. Patient education videos help explain complex procedures and build trust, while virtual consultation previews can reduce patient anxiety about new treatments or providers.

Privacy-first marketing approaches will become increasingly important as data protection regulations continue expanding. Healthcare organizations should consider working with expert firms that understand the complete marketing and technology landscape, like Scorpion Five Technologies, to ensure their digital marketing strategies remain both effective and compliant as regulations evolve.

Digital marketing for healthcare organizations continues evolving rapidly, and staying current with emerging trends is crucial for maintaining competitive advantage. We recommend following Scorpion Five Technologies on LinkedIn and visiting the Scorpion Five Technologies Blog to stay updated on the latest developments in healthcare marketing technology and compliance.

Conclusion

Digital marketing for healthcare organizations demands a level of precision, regulatory awareness, and technical sophistication that far exceeds what most industries face. Yet when executed correctly, it becomes one of the most effective digital marketing strategies available to healthcare providers—strengthening patient acquisition, improving patient engagement, and building a trustworthy healthcare brand in an increasingly digital environment.

By aligning outbound and inbound digital marketing efforts with HIPAA requirements, platform policies, and patient privacy expectations, healthcare organizations can deliver relevant content, reach the right target audience across digital channels, and measure campaign effectiveness without compromising compliance.

As digital platforms evolve and patient demographics shift, practices that adopt a disciplined, strategy-driven approach will be best positioned to engage consumers, support the patient journey, and meet the needs of both current and future patients.

FAQ

What’s the difference between healthcare digital marketing and regular digital marketing?

Healthcare digital marketing operates under significantly more regulatory constraints than marketing for other industries. Healthcare organizations must comply with HIPAA privacy regulations, FDA guidelines for medical claims, state medical board advertising rules, and platform-specific healthcare policies. Additionally, healthcare marketing must prioritize patient trust and education over aggressive sales tactics, requiring a more ethical and evidence-based approach to content and advertising.

How long does the LegitScript certification process typically take?

The LegitScript certification process usually takes 4-8 weeks from initial application to final approval, assuming no major compliance gaps are discovered. The timeline includes an initial review period, time to address any compliance issues identified in the gap analysis, and final verification. Practices with existing compliance frameworks may complete the process faster, while those requiring significant policy updates or operational changes may need additional time.

Can small medical practices afford effective healthcare digital marketing?

Yes, small medical practices can absolutely afford effective healthcare digital marketing by starting with foundational strategies like local SEO optimization, Google Business Profile management, and basic content marketing. Many tactics like improving website user experience and encouraging patient reviews require more time investment than financial resources. Practices can gradually scale to paid advertising and advanced analytics as they see results and grow their patient base.

What happens if a medical practice violates digital marketing compliance requirements?

Compliance violations can result in multiple consequences depending on the severity and type of violation. Platform violations may lead to suspended advertising accounts or restricted organic reach on social media. HIPAA violations can trigger federal investigations, significant fines, and mandatory compliance programs. Medical board violations might result in professional sanctions or licensing issues. Perhaps most importantly, compliance violations can damage patient trust and practice reputation, making prevention far more cost-effective than remediation.

How can medical practices track ROI while maintaining patient privacy?

Medical practices can effectively track digital marketing ROI by using aggregated and anonymized data rather than individual patient information. This includes tracking overall new patient numbers, appointment booking rates, and revenue increases correlated with marketing campaigns without linking specific patients to marketing touches. HIPAA-compliant analytics tools and proper configuration of tracking systems allow practices to measure campaign effectiveness while protecting patient privacy throughout the analysis process.

Picture of Eddie "Hildy" Hildebrandt

Eddie "Hildy" Hildebrandt

Hildy Hildebrandt is the founder of Scorpion Five Technologies, specializing in advanced software engineering, cloud development, and cybersecurity solutions. A U.S. Army veteran and enterprise systems architect, he is dedicated to helping businesses and government agencies achieve technological excellence.

how would you like to connect with us?

Use the button below to open our booking page and select a time that works for you. 

Privacy Policy

This Privacy Policy (“Policy”) applies to scorpionfivetech.com, and Scorpion Five Technologies (“Company”) and governs data collection and usage. For the purposes of this Privacy Policy, unless otherwise noted, all references to the Company include scorpionfivetech.com. The Company’s website is a business site. By using the Company website, you consent to the data practices described in this statement.

Collection of your Personal Information

We do not collect any personal information about you unless you voluntarily provide it to us. However, you may be required to provide certain personal information to us when you elect to use certain products or services. These may include: (a) registering for an account; (b) entering a sweepstakes or contest sponsored by us or one of our partners; (c) signing up for special offers from selected third parties; (d) sending us an email message; (e) submitting your credit card or other payment information when ordering and purchasing products and services. To wit, we will use your information for, but not limited to, communicating with you in relation to services and/or products you have requested from us. We also may gather additional personal or non-personal information in the future.

Sharing Information with Third Parties

The Company does not sell, rent, or lease its customer lists to third parties.

The Company may share data with trusted partners to help perform statistical analysis, send you email or postal mail, provide customer support, or arrange for deliveries. All such third parties are prohibited from using your personal information except to provide these services tothe Company, and they are required to maintain the confidentiality of your information.

The Company may disclose your personal information, without notice, if required to do so by law or in the good faith belief that such action is necessary to: (a) conform to the edicts of the law or comply with legal process served on the Company or the site; (b) protect and defend the rights or property of the Company; and/or (c) act under exigent circumstances to protect the personal safety of users of the Company, or the public.

Automatically Collected Information

The Company may automatically collect information about your computer hardware and software. This information can include your IP address, browser type, domain names, access times, and referring website addresses. This information is used for the operation of the service, to maintain quality of the service, and to provide general statistics regarding the use of the Company’s website.

Security of your Personal Information

The Company secures your personal information from unauthorized access, use, or disclosure. The Company uses the following methods for this purpose:

SSL Protocol

When personal information (such as a credit card number) is transmitted to other websites, it is protected through the use of encryption, such as the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.

We strive to take appropriate security measures to protect against unauthorized access to or alteration of your personal information. Unfortunately, no data transmission over the Internet or any wireless network can be guaranteed to be 100% secure. As a result, while we strive to protect your personal information, you acknowledge that: (a) there are security and privacy limitations inherent to the Internet that are beyond our control; and (b) the security, integrity, and privacy of any and all information and data exchanged between you and us through this site cannot be guaranteed.

Right to Deletion

Subject to certain exceptions set out below, on receipt of a verifiable request from you, we will:

Delete your personal information from our records; and

Direct any service providers to delete your personal information from their records.

Please note that we may not be able to comply with requests to delete your personal information if it is necessary to:

Complete the transaction for which the personal information was collected, fulfill the terms of a written warranty or product recall conducted in accordance with federal law, and provide a good or service requested by you, or reasonably anticipated within the context of our ongoing business relationship with you, or otherwise perform a contract between you and us;

Detect security incidents, protect against malicious, deceptive, fraudulent, or illegal activity; or prosecute those responsible for that activity;

Debug to identify and repair errors that impair existing intended functionality;

Exercise free speech, ensure the right of another consumer to exercise his or her right of free speech, or exercise another right provided for by law;

Comply with the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act;

Engage in public or peer-reviewed scientific, historical, or statistical research in the public interest that adheres to all other applicable ethics and privacy laws, when our deletion of the information is likely to render impossible or seriously impair the achievement of such research, provided we have obtained your informed consent;

Enable solely internal uses that are reasonably aligned with your expectations based on your relationship with us;

Comply with an existing legal obligation; or

Otherwise use your personal information, internally, in a lawful manner that is compatible with the context in which you provided the information.

Children Under Thirteen

The Company does not knowingly collect personally identifiable information from children under the age of 13. If you are under the age of 13, you must ask your parent or guardian for permission to use this website.

Email Communications

From time to time, the Company may contact you via email for the purpose of providing announcements, promotional offers, alerts, confirmations, surveys, and/or other general communication.

Changes to This Statement

The Company reserves the right to change this Policy from time to time. For example, when there are changes in our services, changes in our data protection practices, or changes in the law. When changes to this Policy are significant, we will inform you. You may receive a notice by sending an email to the primary email address specified in your account, by placing a prominent notice on our Scorpion Five Technologies, and/or by updating any privacy information. Your continued use of the website and/or services available after such modifications will constitute your: (a) acknowledgment of the modified Policy; and (b) agreement to abide and be bound by that Policy.

Contact Information

The Company welcomes your questions or comments regarding this Policy. If you believe that the Company has not adhered to this Policy, please contact the Company at:

Scorpion Five Technologies

Louisburg, North Carolina 27549

Email Address: privacy@scorpionfivetech.com

Effective as of May 24, 2024