Title: Dr. Joanne M. Roesner, DVM DABVP
1SURVIVOR - DVM
2A Day in the Life of a New Grad
Cartoon by M. Pye
3SURVIVOR - DVM
- Picking A Practice
- Managing Your Time and Anxiety
- Bonding to Clients and Staff
- Management Must-Knows
- Promotion, Education and Sales
- Difficult Clients
- BE HAPPY!
4Thank you to our sponsors
5AAHAABVPGVMA, other state VMAs
6Picking A Practice
7A well managed practice is NECESSARY to meet your
financial, medical and ethical goals
8 Picking a Practice
-
- Make a list of your needs, wants and desires and
evaluate each practice in light of this.
Prioritize - All practices will have positives and negatives
- Consider corporate culture and ethics in
evaluating fit
9TIPS for Practice Selection
- Call Specialists in the area and ask what clinics
they like. - Plan on visiting hospitals you are interested in
multiple times. Evaluate different days and
shifts. - Consider utilizing a secret shopper to gain
insight (see Opperman Form)
10- EVALUATE MEDICAL RECORDS
- Type of cases
- Standard of care
- Technological capabilities
- Charting expectations
- EVALUATE APPOINTMENT BOOK
- Fill Rate
- Complexity of case load
- Preferential scheduling
- Efficiency of scheduling
11Cont.
- Corporate culture
- new patient exam (10 minute vs. 40 minute)
- Sanity of scheduling
12- EVALUATE STAFF TO DVM RATIO
- (If not tracked then eyeball them during a
visit) - EVALUATE STAFF
- Are they Trained?
- Happy?
- Do they go to CE?
- What do individuals get excited about in their
jobs? - Look at Customer Service and Animal Care staff,
NOT just the nurses.
13- EVALUATE CLINIC MANAGEMENT TEAM
- If possible, go to a staff meeting
- How often do meetings occur?
- What is management hierarchy?
- Who manages DVMs?
14- EVALUATE DRUG BOX
- Does it contain what you need?
- Are drugs handled legally?
- (See my lecture Death Institutions or
Recovery at ABVP Booth)
15- EVALUATE TECHNOLOGY
- What was the last piece of equipment purchased?
- When was it purchased?
- Compare practices based on existing not promised
technology
16- EVALUATE MARKETING
- Ask about a marketing plan
- What is done internally to ethically promote
products by staff? - What is done to attract new clients?
- What is done to retain old clients?
- What are practices expectations of you for
marketing?
17- EVALUATE FEES and CHARGING POLICES
- Are fees similar between to surrounding practices
with same standard of care? - How do fees compare with income levels in the
community - Is GAT 3.2 3.4 times exam fee?
- How does a clinic discount (on invoice or just
not charged for)
18Cont.
- How often does the clinic discount fees?
- Are associates allowed/expected to do discounted
services?
19Ask about practice financials
- confidentiality agreement
- revenue of associates
- GAT of associates
- How do you know I can pay you
- especially critical in percentage based
compensation
20Managing Your Time and Anxiety
21Remember
- Basic human needs to be heard, validated, in
control of their pet, to feel important - Expectations - Set yourself up to exceed them
- Poise
- Detatch dont personalize
- Avoid power struggles
- Manage time
22Time Management
- 3x5 card with drug doses
- 3x5 card with anesthesia protocols
- Protocols for 10 worst fear cases
- Your reference volumes in your office or trunk
- Turn over exam rooms
- Day case (know book stores, coffee shops in the
area! Consider observation time)
23Cont.
- Multiple problems - set recheck have client chart
symptoms - POOPLOG
24Managing Poise
- Stethoscope trick
- PE in back
- Preview appointment book the night before
- Breed related problems in 1st puppy visit
- Breath
- Say I dont know with confidence and a game plan
to find out
25Cont.
- Sit even if only for 30 seconds
- Shake hands
- Give estimates
26Exam Room Strategies
- 3x5 history card
- Humor me for info screeners or divergent
talkers - Recap Hx and ask if accurate
- Respectfully ask client not to edit (humor me,
looking for multiple problems) - Pet back to owner ASAP
27Cont.
- Exit startegies
- Staff rescue if you are being held hostage
- Pleasant diversions while waiting over estimate
time
28TURN OVER EXAM ROOMS!
29- Strategies for day casing
- Give clients handouts to read in the waiting room
on the problem if they insist on waiting - Give them a kitten to play with
- Give reasonable to long estimate on time and then
exceed the clients expectations by returning pet
sooner
30Misc.
- Never give date ranges
- Prepare client for staff call backs
- Schedule compensated recheck when ever possible
to go over labs (e.g. Bx results and suture
removal at post surgical recheck appointment)
31Cont.
- Leverage staff including customer service and
kennel (introduce by first and last name) - Show clients abnormalities on PE. Give copies of
lab work
32Bonding to Clients and Staff
33 Bonding
- Bonding to staff and clients is YOUR
responsibility. It will not happen with out
effort. - The benefits of bonding are many
- compliance
- loyalty
- warm fuzzies
- referrals
- increased education and awareness
34- Manage and EXCEED expectations
- LISTEN
- RESPECT
- BUILD TRUST
- BOND TO TEAM
35- Staff hate new associates rite of passage
- Treat staff as human beings and valued team
members - Listen
- Introduce all staff (First AND last name)
- Defer when assisting
- Do not hover
- Listen to ideas (Celebrate Praise)
- (e.g. ham to CHF from dog ward attendant)
36- BUY PIZZA Remember Front Office and Kennel
staff - Give time for adjustment and change (acceptance)
- Pick your confrontations carefully
37 NO INVISIBLE STAFF !!
38Client Bonding
39- Greet and love the pet
- Convey trustworthiness eye contact, decent
handshake - Bonded clients are more compliant
- Express interest in their lives (Notes on
Computer) - Convey concern for emotional as well as physical
well being of pet and owner (PE in lap) - Include children
40- Honor Client concerns and fears
- LISTEN, VERBALIZE
- Honor questions
- Notebooks
- Fax backs
- Give a forum
- Leverage/intro staff member
41- Removing Pet from Owner
- Honor Fears verbalize
- Overestimate time (then EXCEED expectations!)
- Assure client you will stop if pet is stressed
- Assure client they are in control and you wont
do anything without permission - Have staff member check back with client
- If their pet vocalizes, have staff member go back
in and tell client (also if not their pet)
42- WORK THE WAITING ROOM TO BOND WITH NEW CLIENTS
43Management Must Knows
44- Dont distain Management!
- Good Practice Management
- stable human and financial resources
- Good Management Knowledge
- better ability to evaluate potential practices
and negotiate better packages
45- Pre-Tax vs. Post Tax Income
- Revenue Produced to justify salary expense
- Bench marketing WTA, AAHA, Vet Econ and others
- (See my lecture Compensation and Employment at
ABVP Booth!)
46- Gross Revenue per Provider
- Gross Average Transaction
- What are they?
- How are they used?
- What do they mean to you as an associate?
47- Staff Leveraging
- How to make it palatable to clients and staff
- Why it is important
48Misc.
- Client retention
- New client numbers
- DVMSTAFF ratio
- Accounts receivable
49Promotion, Education and Effective Sales
50Selling
- Effectively convincing clients to purchase goods
or services in the best interest of pets! - Education!
- Not cheesy or about getting over on clients
- Approach lifetime of pet, educate clients on what
to expect, how to prevent or recognize
51Sell Benefits NOT Features
- DO NOT assume you know a clients answer, ASK.
- Offer goods and services uniformly. DO NOT be a
bigot and judge clients - Respectfully explore client objections (Can I ask
what your objectives are to checking a thyroid
level today?) - Determine what is limiting clients ability to
comply and help solve it. EDUCATE (e.g. timing
and care credit HWP 40 years ago, relatives
experience with chemo TX)
52- Know WHY you want to run a test or prescribe a
treatment and communicate it!
53- Set clients up to celebrate if results are
negative.
54- Share your experience personally
- E.g. The Memi plan of care
- My cat Fish
- Toodles
55- Effective promotion involves the whole team
56- Use visual aids
- Let clients touch masses
- Send home (or give while taking x-rays, ect.)
reading material (Life Learn Handouts)
57- Consider community services as a form of
advertising - Promote your practice personally. (My LHAC
t-shirt at the gym or greenway)
58Difficult Clients
59- All humans have needs to be valued, to feel
important, to feel validated and to be heard. - Honor these needs!
60- Complaints about fees are often an issue of
perception of value or lack of communication - Determine the real issue
61- Listen with an open mind (step back and join the
client) - Communicate you are listening (eye contact, nod,
ect.) and ask Is that accurate? at the end - Do not presume you know what a client wants as a
solution ASK - What would you consider as a solution here?
- What can I do to help you?
- Enroll yourself as the clients ally
- I hear your concerns and am trying to help you
here.
62- Understand that there are legitimately dishonest
and unpleasant people in the world but they are
uncommon
63- Do not overcompensate for your newness to
practice.
64- If you are not the person who can solve a
problem, be responsible for getting it to the
correct person. Follow through and own problems. - In cases of omission or error, own it tactfully
and with dignity. Make amends and move on. - Do not prostrate yourself. Learn
- Be truthful and clear, dont obfuscate!
- If any doubts exists on how to proceed, call AVMA
Professional Liability Carrier. They are on our
side.
65- Client confrontation as a tool
- Needy clients VS truly difficult clients
- The best defense against self doubt and criticism
are defined values and consistent behavior
(integrity) - Solicit feedback from your support community
- See BE HAPPY! section
66BE HAPPY!
67- Happiness is not a passive gift which will fall
from heaven - It is a state which must be cultivated and
nurtured - Joy is attainable by all and involves a choice to
acknowledge the positive - Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional
68- Realize you make choices about your time and
actions - Time diary as a tool
- Pro and Con list
- Evaluate consequences of your choices and own them
69- Figure out why you work
- Figure out what YOU LOVE and want in your life
- These answers allow you to pursue appropriate
choices and understand your emotional responses
(e.g. me and approval) - MISSION/VISION STATEMENT
70Acceptance
- Necessary before you can move on, learn or grow
- Accept deficiencies in training, become a life
long learner - Adopt an attitude of curiosity and enthusiasm not
lethargy and shame for not knowing - Accept you will make errors
71Cont.
- Perfectionism is grandiose and arrogant
- Groveling is self serving
- Life is very gray, people have many effective
methods and styles
72- Build community invest energy in personal and
professional relationships - Get feedback and support in times of uncertainty
or criticism
73- Pursue excellence in CE
- Feed your professional passions
74- Take time to bond with animals
- Room of woobies
75- Find tools that help you center and ground (e.g.
imagery, visualization, books, ect.)
76- Establish rituals of self care
- Embrace Activity
- Spirituality
77- Maintain humor and a larger perspective
- How important is this moment in a 40 year
veterinary career or an 80 year life?