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Practice Managers: How to Stop Putting Out Fires and Start Preventing Them

Because you deserve a workday that doesn’t feel like an episode of “Vet Med: Survival Mode.”

If you’re a veterinary practice manager, chances are you’ve spent at least part of your career running around extinguishing metaphorical flames – scheduling disasters, client meltdowns, staff conflict, inventory surprises, and the moment you discover that someone restocked all the syringes in the wrong sizes again. 

But at some point, the firefighting gets old. 

You don’t want to react all day.
You want to lead.

Here’s how to shift from crisis-response mode to actual fire-prevention – all without losing your sanity or your sense of humor. 

 

Identify Your “Frequent Flyers” (AKA: The Repeat Fires) 

Every clinic has recurring issues that pop up like clockwork:

  • Monday morning appointment overload
  • Staff not completing notes
  • The same client always calling with complicated questions 2 minutes before closing
  • A particular process that always breaks when the clinic gets busy

These aren’t emergencies…they’re patterns.

Fire Prevention Tip: 

Track your most common daily, weekly, and seasonal problems.
Once you see the patterns, you can fix the systems causing them. 

 

Create Clear Protocols – and Make Them Easy to Follow

Your team wants structure. They may not say that, but trust us…they do.

Things that absolutely need written protocols:

  • Triage and scheduling criteria
  • Workflow for prescription refills
  • Client conflict escalation steps
  • Inventory tracking and ordering
  • Sick vs. wellness appointment workflows

If your protocols are:

  • Hidden
  • Outdated
  • Or written by someone who left in 2014

…it’s time for a refresh.

Fire Prevention Tip:

Make protocols visual, simple, and easily accessible.
People can’t follow rules they can’t find.

 

Slow is Smooth, Smooth is Fast (Training Edition)

Most clinic fires happen because someone didn’t know the right step to take.

Slow, intentional training upfront prevents faster, louder, messier problems later.

Even better?
Cross-train your team.

When more than one person knows how to: 

  • Invoice
  • Place orders
  • Run the lab machine
  • Handle euthanasia scheduling gracefully
  • Troubleshoot the phone lines

…you instantly reduce your risk of the “only one person knows how to do that and they are out sick” emergency.

Fire Prevention Tip:

Build a training calendar and stick to it like pet hair sticks to our scrubs. 

 

Give CSRs the Scripts They Actually Need

A huge portion of daily clinic fires start at the front desk – not because CSRs are doing anything wrong, but because they’re expected to do Jedi-level communication without guidance.

Scripts can reduce:

  • Scheduling errors
  • Miscommunications
  • Client escalations
  • Inconsistent messaging

Things CSRs should have scripts for:

  • Same-day appointment requests
  • Unrealistic client expectations
  • Vaccine/parasite guidance
  • “Doctor is running behind” updates
  • Estimate conversations

Scripts don’t make communication robotic – they make it consistent

 

Embrace Boundary-Setting (It’s Fireproofing)

Unclear boundaries at the clinic = daily chaos.

Boundaries you need to formalize:

  • How many same-day fit-ins you actually offer
  • When staff can say “no” without needing manager approval 
  • What behavior is unacceptable from clients
  • How late appointments will be handled

Practice managers often become firefighters because everyone expects them to solve everything.

Setting boundaries gives your team permission to put out their own small sparks before they become raging bonfires.

 

Fix Processes Before Adding More Tasks

You cannot organize your way out of a bad workflow.

Common “firestarter” workflows:

  • Discharging surgical cases during peak lobby hours
  • Allowing techs to be pulled in five directions at once
  • Inventory being handled by “whoever notices we’re out”
  • A doctor handling their own callbacks

Before you add new expectations, fix the old systems.

 

Schedule (and Protect) Manager Focus TIme

If you spend all day putting out fires, you never get to:

  • Review reports
  • Plan schedules 
  • Develop staff
  • Fix broken processes
  • Update protocols
  • Rest your brain

You need uninterrupted time to think – which is nearly impossible if you’re always on-call for micro-emergencies.

Fire Prevention Tip:

Block off 1-2 hours a week labeled “Operations Time.”
During that window, you’re unavailable unless the clinic is literally on fire. 

 

Build a Team THat Helps Prevent Fires With You

Managers don’t prevent fires alone.
The whole team participates. 

Empower staff to:

  • Flag recurring issues
  • Suggest improvements
  • Take ownership of processes
  • Solve problems early
  • Celebrate successes

A team that feels empowered to speak up prevents more emergencies than any protocol ever will. 

 

Final Thoughts

Being a practice manager doesn’t have to feel like standing in the middle of a burning building holding a tiny spray bottle labeled “Good Luck.”

When you step back, identify patterns, build systems, train your team, and set boundaries, you transform your role from reactive firefighter to proactive leader

Less chaos.
More control.
Fewer burnout days.
More time for the work that actually matters. 

And hey – even when things do catch fire…
At  least now you’ll know exactly which cabinet the fire extinguisher actually lives in. wink

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