Once Collaborative, Now Rigid / Top‑Down - Cultural Shift Is Hurting Hospitals - Recensione dipendente - Veterinary Technician presso VetEvolve

1,0
12 feb 2026
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

The employees who are actually doing the work and producing the revenue - The strongest part of the company is the talent at the ground level. There are many compassionate, dedicated veterinary professionals in local hospitals who support one another despite ongoing challenges. Veterinary professionals are smart, capable, and trying hard to deliver results while leadership churns through it latest "vision." Several local hospital leaders remain committed to excellent medicine and strong client relationships Plenty of change...whether you want it or not - If you enjoy waking up to a new priority every day, this is the place. You'll love finding out all of the marketing deals when your client walks in and tells you about it. My favorite was the $75 off your visit deal - we only charge $65! I guess we are paying our clients to come in now?

Svantaggi

1. Shift to a One‑Size‑Fits‑All Corporate Model The company has moved from a collaborative, hospital‑centered approach to a rigid, top‑down structure. Even high‑performing hospitals must adopt standardized initiatives that may negatively impact their local patient flow, client satisfaction, and financial results. High‑performing hospital managers were informed that recent company‑wide initiatives were created to lift poor‑performing hospitals, even if doing so negatively affects the strongest sites. The message has been that reduced performance at top hospitals is an acceptable outcome as long as overall company averages improve, even though a far more effective approach would be to preserve what works at top performers and focus improvement efforts on struggling hospitals so that the organization’s true average success rises rather than its strongest contributors being held back. 2. Near‑Total Turnover in Regional Leadership The regional leadership team has experienced near‑total turnover, creating instability and a significant loss of veterinary‑specific operational expertise. Because the C‑suite has limited veterinary background, hospitals rely heavily on the regional team’s practical industry knowledge to guide decisions and support operations. The recent pattern of replacing experienced veterinary leaders with individuals who come from more traditional corporate environments has raised concerns that the organization is moving away from valuing on‑the‑ground veterinary expertise at a time when it is needed most. 3. Departure of Strong Managers Respected, high‑performing managers recently left -removing trusted support during a period of major organizational change. 4. No Internal Career Growth Paths Internal advancement is extremely limited. Instead of promoting capable team members, the company brings in external hires “who already have the title.” 5. Low Confidence in CEO’s Veterinary Leadership Experience Many hospital teams feel the CEO has not yet built trust or demonstrated a deep understanding of a profession rooted in compassion, client relationships, and high‑quality medical care. There is a widespread perception that her focus is centered on reinforcing her authority and proving her effectiveness to the Board, rather than engaging meaningfully with the teams who deliver care every day. Her insistence that every hospital adopt her initiatives — even when there is little to no buy‑in from those responsible for executing them — is creating long‑term trust issues across the organization. Team members increasingly feel treated as operational resources rather than people whose expertise and insight are valued. 6. Perception That Financial Goals Outweigh the Mission There is a growing belief that company direction is driven more by financial targets than by helping people and pets. Teams strongly believe doing the right thing medically and achieving financial success can coexist — one does not need to be sacrificed for the other. 7. Budgeted 2025 Capital Investments Ignored or Delayed Hospitals with long‑standing facility issues were denied renovations that were already budgeted for 2025. These delays impact staff working conditions, patient safety, and the client experience. 8. Ineffective Centralized Initiatives Recent Initiatives, using off-site resources, lack veterinary‑specific training, leading to incomplete triage, inaccurate scheduling, and substantial rework for hospital teams. Despite claims that these resources increase new‑client bookings, many hospitals have seen: Fewer new clients Higher no‑show rates (likely due to confusing or negative customer experiences.) 9. Hospitals and Partners Cannot Opt Out Even when the company-wide initiative harms operational outcomes or client trust, hospitals and partners — including those with earnouts — are required to use it. 10. Cultural Decline Reflected in Motto Change The former motto, “happy starts here,” once reflected a people‑first culture. When employees raised concerns about the shift toward authoritarian leadership, the motto was omitted instead of addressing the underlying morale issues. 11. The benefits are expensive and the deductibles are bankruptcy worthy. If we were a people first company, like our former values suggested, benefits wouldn't be a GLARING weakness. 12. Burnout is treated like a personal resilience issue instead of an organizational weakness. 13. Beware of recent 4-5 star reviews - likely PR cleanup. The CEO has a 10% approval rating, so the quote "Keep the C-suite leadership in place" is fishy. When praise comes from the people hired directly into the leader's orbit, it doesn't reflect the company, it reflects the proximity to power.

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Risposta di VetEvolve
3mo
Thank you for taking the time to share this perspective and for the many years you’ve spent supporting patients, clients, and your hospital team. We hear the concern that the organization has felt more top-down and less collaborative, and that the pace and consistency of change have created disruption at the hospital level. As we continue to grow, decisions need stronger practice input, clearer testing before scale, and more consistent follow-through so change supports teams and patient care rather than adding friction. We know trust is rebuilt when issues are surfaced early, addressed directly, and improved over time. Feedback like this helps guide how we continue strengthening leadership, change management, and support for our hospitals going forward. We appreciate you sharing your experience and perspective.

Esplora altre recensioni su VetEvolve

5,0
27 mag 2026
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

Vetevolve has given our staff great benefits. For me they have given a great support system. Any questions I have get answered in a timely fashion from each department. I have gained more knowledge and great relationships with other practice managers. They also provide support for any issues that may arise at the clinic level. Overall transition was easy and smooth.

Svantaggi

Clearer Leadership roles and descriptions from very beginning would have been nice. I understand that they try to keep things as normal as possible as the clinic level but if a practice manager is previously expected to be on floor at all times and then they are expected all these new tasks for the Vetevolve business side of things it can be a big shift for those involved in leadership within the clinic. Also role out of promos last minute can cause chaos within the clinic level. More time to plan would be nice.

1
1,0
25 mag 2026
Dipendente anonimo
Consiglia
Gradimento del CEO
Pronostico commerciale

Vantaggi

Learned how to survive in the most dysfunctional work environment imaginable. Colleagues became lifelong friends thanks to a little workplace trauma bonding.

Svantaggi

The company is led by someone who seems far more interested in the title and funding her lifestyle than leading effectively. It’s hard to take leadership seriously when conference calls include showing off a pool, walk-in pantry, or wine collection — completely tone deaf and honestly bizarre. Turnover is constant, whether through firings or people quitting. If you disagree with the CEO or fall out of favor, you either end up on the chopping block or treated badly enough that you start looking for another job. Integrity often takes a back seat because most employees are simply trying to survive the environment.

4
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