Boulevard widget entry links, Book Now buttons, scheduler-like destinations, and booking script clues on public pages
Boulevard booking widget
Check whether your Boulevard booking widget still opens for patients.
Boulevard is often part of the most valuable path on a med spa website: the moment a patient taps Book Now or starts a consultation. That path can still fail from the public site if an embed changes, a widget entry link expires, a location route moves, or a sticky mobile element covers the action before the calendar opens. SiteLeak checks the public page and the booking path around the widget so the free scan can show whether there is a real repair to buy.
Visitor paths this page checks
Provider response, redirect, status, and final URL evidence from safely checked Boulevard booking paths
Treatment, membership, injectables, laser, campaign, and location pages that should open the booking widget
Mobile first-screen evidence for the widget entry point, backup consultation action, call path, or contact CTA
Paid handoff details for the affected URL, observed behavior, exact change request, repair owner, and retest path
The widget can fail while the page still looks fine
A med spa homepage may load normally even when the booking widget behind the button returns an error, opens the wrong location, or fails only on a treatment page. The public path matters more than a visual check.
What to hand to the person fixing it
A good finding says where the widget was found, what destination or embed was checked, what happened, and which path should be retested after the change. That keeps the repair focused.
Why this deserves its own page
Someone searching for a Boulevard booking widget problem is already close to the pain. They need a fast public check, not a broad website score or a long education page.
What this page helps you decide
Use this page when a med spa uses Boulevard and wants to verify that the public booking widget path still opens from Book Now, treatment, or location pages.
Practical fixes after the scan
Replace stale Boulevard widget entry links with the current public booking destination.
Repair treatment, membership, campaign, and location CTAs that point to old widget routes.
Move the widget entry point or backup consultation CTA higher on mobile when first-screen evidence is weak.
Rerun the scan after provider, embed, or CMS changes are published.
Use weekly monitoring when provider settings, page templates, or campaign links change without one controlled release.
Evidence examples
Boulevard widget entry link returns an error
The public booking CTA resolves to a Boulevard-like destination that does not load successfully during checked requests.
Fix: Update the widget entry URL or restore the embed route, then retest the public booking page.
Mobile treatment page does not show the widget entry point
On the checked mobile treatment page, the first screen does not show a clear way to open the Boulevard widget or request a consultation.
Fix: Add the Book Now or consultation action near the treatment content and rerun the mobile check.
Old booking-widget route remains on a location page
A sampled location-page link with booking intent resolves to a missing or unavailable public route.
Fix: Redirect the old booking route or update the location page to the current Boulevard path.
Paid access
Use paid access when the scan finds a repair-ready issue.
The free scan is the decision point. If the result matters, the Fix Packet adds the exact affected path, repair brief, owner and technical PDFs, and retest checklist.
Questions this scan can answer
Is SiteLeak affiliated with Boulevard?
No. SiteLeak is not affiliated with Boulevard. It checks public med spa pages and booking paths that visitors can reach.
Can SiteLeak fully test a Boulevard booking flow?
No. It does not create appointments, choose times, submit patient details, or log into private booking tools. It checks public evidence before those steps.
What Boulevard issue should I scan first?
Start with the public Book Now button or treatment page that opens the widget, especially if ads or social posts send visitors there.