Coaching vs. Discipline: How Practice Managers Can Make the Right Call
Because not every mistake deserves a write-up – and not every issue can be coached away.
Managing people in a veterinary clinic means navigating one of the trickiest leadership challenges:
Knowing when to coach…and when to discipline.
Lean too far toward coaching, and standards start to slip.
Lean too far toward discipline, and you risk creating fear, resentment, and disengagement.
The goal isn’t to pick one approach – it’s to use the right one at the right time.
Here’s how to tell the difference.
First: What’s the Actual Issue?
Before reacting, step back and ask:
- Is this a skill gap or a behavior choice?
- Is this the first time or a repeated pattern?
- Was the expectation clear?
- Was the employee set up to succeed?
These questions will usually point you in the right direction.
When to Coach
Coaching is appropriate when the issue is related to:
- Lack of knowledge
- Skill development
- Unclear expectations
- New responsibilities
- Situational mistakes
Common Examples in Vet Med:
- A CSR struggling with triage questions
- A tech is still learning a workflow
- An employee misses a step they weren’t fully trained on
- Someone handles a difficult client but could improve communication
What Coaching Looks Like:
- Clear, constructive feedback
- Demonstration or retraining
- Setting expectations for next time
- Offering support and follow-up
Key Indicator:
The employee is willing – but not yet equipped.
Coaching helps people grow.
And in many cases, it prevents future problems.
When to Discipline
Discipline is appropriate when the issue involves:
- Repeated behavior after coaching
- Disregard for policies
- Unprofessional conduct
- Negative impact on team or clients
- Lack of accountability
Common Examples in Vet Med:
- Chronic tardiness
- Ignoring established protocols
- Disrespectful communication
- Refusal to follow direction
- Repeated mistakes after training and feedback
What Discipline Looks Like:
- Formal documentation
- Clear explanation of the issue
- Defined expectations for change
- Consequences if behavior continues
Key Indicator:
The employee knows what to do – but chooses not to do it.
At that point, coaching alone is no longer effective.
The Gray Area (Where Most Managers Struggle)
Not everything is clearly one or the other.
Some situations fall in between:
- Inconsistent performance
- Partial understanding
- External stress impacting behavior
- Mixed signals from leadership
In these cases, a blended approach works best:
- Start with coaching
- Clarify expectations
- Set a clear timeline
- Outline consequences if improvement doesn’t happen
Think of it as coaching with accountability built in.
Why Avoiding Discipline Backfires
Many managers hesitate to discipline because they want to:
- Be supportive
- Avoid conflict
- Give people the benefit of the doubt
But avoiding discipline when it’s needed can lead to:
- Resentment from other staff
- Inconsistent standards
- Reduced trust in leadership
- Worsening behavior over time
Accountability protects your team – not just your policies.
Why Over-Disciplining Doesn’t Work Either
On the other hand, jumping straight to discipline can:
- Shut down communication
- Create fear
- Discourage growth
- Damage morale
If employees feel like mistakes are punished instead of addressed, they stop speaking up – and that creates bigger problems.
How to Make the Right Call (Quick Guide)
Ask yourself:
- Do they know how to do it?
- No -> Coach
- Yes -> Continue
- Have we addressed this before?
- No -> Coach first
- Yes -> Continue
- Is it a repeated pattern or a one-time issue?
- One-time -> Coach
- Pattern -> Discipline
- Is it a behavior choice or a skill gap?
- Skill gap -> Coach
- Behavior choice -> Discipline
What Practice Managers Should Remember
- Coaching builds capability
- Discipline reinforces standards
- Both are necessary for a healthy clinic
Strong leadership isn’t about avoiding tough decisions – it’s about making them thoughtfully and consistently.
Final Thoughts
Your team doesn’t expect perfection.
But they do expect:
- Fairness
- Clarity
- Consistency
- Accountability
When practice managers know when to coach and when to discipline, they create an environment where:
- People can grow
- Expectations are clear
- The clinic runs more smoothly
Because at the end of the day, it’s not about being strict or lenient.
It’s about being effective.
The Difference Between a Busy Clinic and a Broken One
The Difference Between a Busy Clinic and a Broken OneVet clinics are busy by nature. High demand, emotional cases, packed schedules, and limited staffing are part of the profession. But there’s an important distinction that often gets overlooked:Busy does not...
Expanding CE Beyond the Exam Room: Investing in Your Front Desk
Expanding CE Beyond the Exam Room: Investing in Your Front DeskWhen people think about continuing education (CE) in vet med, the spotlight usually lands on vets and techs. Clinical skills, medical updates, licensing requirements - it all makes sense. But one role is...
A Vet Med Betrayal List
A Vet Med Betrayal ListA completely unserious ranking of things that have absolutely turned on us. Inspired by that viral Kanye betrayal list that shook the internet, we present the vet med edition - a dramatic, emotional, and slightly unhinged inventory of things we...
Returning to Vet Med After Loss: Navigating Grief in an Emotionally Demanding Position
Returning to Vet Med After Loss: Navigating Grief in an Emotionally Demanding PositionComing back to vet med after a loss - whether it’s the death of a loved one, a pregnancy loss, a traumatic event, or any other kind of life-altering experience - can feel...
What Veterinary Practices Should Leave Behind in the New Year
What Veterinary Practices Should Leave Behind in the New YearBroken processes, burnout culture, and unrealistic expectations included. The start of a new year is often framed as a time for fresh goals and big resolutions. But in vet med, sometimes the most...
The Twelve Strays of Christmas: Wild Things Clients Bring in During Winter
The Twelve Strays of Christmas: Wild Things Clients Bring in During WinterBecause nothing says “holiday spirit” like unexpected wildlife in a cardboard box. Winter in vet med is magical…in the sense that strange things magically appear at your clinic door every...