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Between a Rock and a Rude Place: The Practice Manager’s Dilemma

When protecting your team means risking a client – and keeping a client means risking your team.

If you’ve managed a veterinary clinic for more than 5 minutes, you’ve probably found yourself stuck in one of the most frustrating, emotionally draining positions in the field:

Caught in the middle.

Between your team’s tears and a client’s tantrum.

Between your loyalty to your staff and fear of a bad Google review.

Between doing what’s right – and doing what won’t get you in trouble with upper management and/or the client.

 

In short:

You’re stuck between a rock and a rude place.

 

You’re Trying to Protect Your Team…

Because you see it:

  • The CSR who flinches every time the phone rings.
  • The tech who cried in the supply closet after getting screamed at for taking too long.
  • The vet who second-guesses every conversation for fear of “sounding too cold” when they’re simply delivering medical facts.

You know what client abuse does to morale.

You know it leads to burnout, resentment, and turnover.

You’ve watched great employees walk away – not because they couldn’t handle vet med, but because they couldn’t handle being treated like garbage for just doing their job.

 

But You’re Also Managing the Business Side…

  • You need those appointments to hit monthly goals.
  • You worry about that 1-star review blowing up on social media.
  • You’re fielding pressure from upper management to “keep the peace” and “retain clients.”
  • And let’s face it – some clients have been around forever. They bring multiple pets and always sign off on treatment estimates with little pushback. They’re known. They donate to your rescue fund.

So what happens when that client is also the one causing chaos?

 

The Impossible Middle

 You try to mediate.

You sugarcoat the confrontation.

You privately tell your team, “I agree with you, but my hands are tied.”

You hope the next appointment will go smoother.

You hope they won’t yell next time.

 

And sometimes, that works.

But most of the time, the cost is quiet. It’s invisible. It builds. And suddenly…

  • You lose your CSR to another clinic – or a completely different industry.
  • Your techs stop volunteering for shifts.
  • Your team pulls away from clients, emotionally distancing themselves to survive.
  • Your culture slowly cracks.

 

So What Do We Do?

 There’s no perfect formula, and every practice is different.

But it starts here:

1. Name it

Client abuse is not part of the job. Say that out loud – in staff meetings, in hiring interviews, and to clients if needed.

2. Create a clear, written policy

Have a client code of conduct. Post it. Enforce it. Refer to it when problems arise.

3. Support your staff in real time

If a client is being inappropriate, step in immediately. Back them up. Don’t just fix the problem – protect your people.

4. Empower your team to speak up

Make it safe for them to say, “That interaction was not okay,” and trust they’ll be heard.

5. Know when to let a client go

Sometimes the cost of keeping a client is higher than the revenue they bring in.

 

You Don’t Have to Choose Between Your Clients and Your Team

Good clients will respect boundaries.

The right ones will appreciate being in a practice where staff feel safe, valued, and supported.

And the rest? Let them go.

Because you can’t build a thriving team if you’re constantly patching up emotional damage from people who don’t know how to behave like mature, respectable adults.

You’re not just managing appointments, invoices, or social media drama.

You’re managing humans – real people who give their hearts to this work.

And they need you to stand between the rock and the rude place – and choose them.

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