fbp

The Business Case for Investing in Support Staff (And Why Outside Support Makes Sense)

Veterinary clinics don’t struggle because their teams aren’t working hard enough.
They struggle because demand has outgrown capacity.

Phones don’t stop ringing. 
Schedules stay full.
Clients expect instant answers.
And internal teams are stretched thin trying to do everything – often at the same time. 

For practice managers and owners, the question is no longer “Do we need more support?” It’s “What kind of support actually makes business sense?”

Increasingly, the answer is outside support staff – especially for front-desk and phone coverage. 

 

The Hidden Cost of Doing Everything In-House

When clinics rely solely on internal staff to handle:

  • Non-stop phone calls
  • Appointment scheduling
  • Client questions
  • Overflow communication
  • After-hours or peak-time demand

…the cost isn’t just payroll.

It shows up as: 

  • Missed calls (aka missed revenue)
  • Long hold times (aka client frustration)
  • Distracted techs and doctors
  • CSRs pulled in too many directions
  • Higher burnout and turnover

In-house teams become bottlenecks – not because they aren’t capable, but because they’re overloaded. 

 

Why Support Staff Are a Revenue Driver, Not an Expense

Outside support staff (Like us!) don’t just “answer phones.”
They protect time – the most valuable resource in your clinic.

When calls are answered consistently:

  • Appointments get booked instead of abandoned
  • Clients feel supported instead of ignored
  • Internal staff stay focused on in-clinic care
  • Workflow runs smoother
  • Revenue leakage decreases

 

Why Hiring More In-House Staff Isn’t Always The Best Solution

Hiring internally sounds like the obvious answer. But in reality, it comes with: 

  • Recruitment challenges
  • Onboarding time
  • Training costs
  • Scheduling gaps
  • Benefits and overhead
  • Limited flexibility during spikes

And once hired, staff still have finite capacity. 

Demand doesn’t follow payroll schedules. 
It spikes unpredictably – Mondays, holidays, weather events, etc.

That’s where outside support changes the equation.

 

The Strategic Advantage of Outside Reception Support

Using a service like Vet Receptionists allows clinics to scale support without scaling stress. 

Outside veterinary receptionists can: 

  • Answer calls when your team can’t
  • Schedule appointments efficiently and accurately
  • Handle overflow during peak hours
  • Provide consistent client communication
  • Reduce hold times and voicemail backlog

Most importantly, they act as an extension of your clinic – not a replacement for your team. 

 

Protecting Your Internal Team Is a Business Decision

When phones go unanswered, internal staff pay the price.

Techs get interrupted mid-procedure, CSRs multitask until mistakes happen, PMs spend their days firefighting instead of leading.

Outside support: 

  • Shields your team from overload
  • Reduces emotional labor at the front desk
  • Prevents burnout before it leads to turnover

Retention is cheaper than replacement. Support protects both. 

 

Flexibility Without Commitment Risk

One of the biggest business advantages of outside support is flexibility.

With services like Vet Receptionists, clinics can:

  • Increase coverage during busy seasons
  • Adjust plans as demand changes
  • Avoid overhiring “just in case”
  • Scale up without long-term payroll risk

You’re paying for coverage, not downtime. 

 

Consistency Improves Client Experience 

Clients don’t care who answers the phones. They just care that someone with veterinary knowledge does. 

Consistent, professional phone coverage:

  • Builds trust
  • Reduces complaints
  • Improves first impressions
  • Increases follow-through on care

When calls are answered promptly and correctly, the entire client journey improves. 

 

The Real ROI: Time, Focus, and Sustainability

Investing in outside support staff isn’t about replacing people – it’s about using resources wisely.

Clinics that leverage external support: 

  • Operate more efficiently
  • Protect their internal teams
  • Improve client satisfaction
  • Reduce burnout
  • Make smarter financial decisions

That’s not an expense.
That’s infrastructure. 

 

Final Thoughts

Vet clinics don’t need to do more – they need to do smarter.

Outside support like Vet Receptionists gives your clinic the ability to meet demand without sacrificing their teams, their standards, or their sanity.

When your phones are covered, your team is supported, and your workflows are protected, everyone wins:

  • Clients
  • Staff
  • Leadership
  • The business itself

Support staff aren’t a luxury.
They’re a strategic investment in the future of your clinic. 

Things I Say to Cats That Make Me Sound Like a Creepy Old Man

Things I Say to Cats That Make Me Sound Like a Creepy Old ManAn ongoing investigation into my own behavior. There’s a very specific version of me that only exists around cats. That version: Speaks in a tone I do not use anywhere else Says things that cannot be...

Things Practice Managers Secretly Think During Meetings

Things Practice Managers Secretly Think During MeetingsStaff meetings in vet med are meant to be productive, collaborative, and informative.And they are.But they are also…an experience. Because while practice managers are leading discussions, reviewing updates, and...

Managing Difficult Employees in Veterinary Clinics: A Practical Guide for Practice Managers

Managing Difficult Employees in Veterinary Clinics: A Practical Guide for Practice ManagersIf you’re a veterinary practice manager long enough, you will eventually encounter a difficult employee. It may be someone who: Resists feedback Disrupts team dynamics...

Patients Who Believe They Are Human: A Veterinary Field Guide

Patients Who Believe They Are Human: A Veterinary Field GuideEvery vet clinic sees them... The pets who have somehow decided - through a combination of confidence, poor boundaries, and enthusiastic owners - that they are not animals at all.  They are people. These...

What High-Retention Veterinary Clinics Do Differently

What High-Retention Veterinary Clinics Do DifferentlyStaff retention is one of the biggest challenges in vet med. Clinics everywhere are feeling the impact of burnout, staff shortages, and turnover that disrupts culture, workflow, and patient care.  Yet some clinics...

“Just One More” Appointment: How Tiny Yeses Break Clinics

“Just One More” Appointment: How Tiny Yeses Break ClinicsIt starts innocently enough.  “Can we just squeeze one more in?”“It’ll be quick.”“They’re already here.”“We don’t want to upset them.” One extra appointment doesn’t feel like a big deal. In isolation, it isn’t…...

Dental Month in Vet Med: The Season of Scaling Teeth and Managing Expectations

Dental Month in Vet Med: The Season of Scaling Teeth and Managing ExpectationsDental Month hits veterinary clinics every year like clockwork. The promos go out, the schedules fill up, and suddenly half the clinic is running on dental charts, extractions, and the faint...

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...

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...

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...

Veterinary Answering Services
You were not leaving your cart just like that, right?

Almost set!

Enter your best email to get assigned a lead to your new account right away.