All any pet parent wants for their furry companions is to ensure that they live the longest, happiest and healthiest lives possible. As a…
Read moreDr. Thom Jenkins·9 May 2026
We can do well by doing good, but doing good alone is not enough in practice...
"Do well, by doing good!"
It’s a phrase that feels instinctively right in veterinary medicine. It reflects why many people entered the profession in the first place. It suggests that clinical excellence and commercial success are not in conflict, but fundamentally aligned.
The problem is that, left unexamined, it becomes a comforting half-truth.
Because sometimes you can do good and not do well. And sometimes you can do well without doing much good at all.
If veterinary leaders fail to acknowledge that tension, they don’t have a strategy—they have a belief.
The most successful veterinary businesses are not simply built on good intentions. They are built on systems that intentionally align high-quality patient care with financial sustainability, operational efficiency, and long-term trust.
Instead of treating “doing well by doing good” as a principle, treat it as a veterinary practice management problem.
Ask two questions of every part of your clinic:
Are we doing good? (Clinical quality, patient outcomes, integrity of care) Are we doing well? (Financial performance, sustainability, team wellbeing)
This creates a simple but powerful framework for evaluating veterinary operations.

This is where great veterinary practices thrive.
Clinical outcomes and business performance reinforce one another, creating sustainable value for patients, clients, teams, and the practice itself.
Examples: Preventive care plans that improve patient outcomes while creating recurring revenue Clear client communication that improves treatment compliance and retention Convenient access to care that leads to earlier intervention and better case progression Efficient workflows that reduce stress while improving service quality
This quadrant is not simply “nice to have.” It is the strategic core of a healthy veterinary business model.
Action: Invest Aggressively
Double down on these areas:
Train teams Improve systems Allocate resources Standardise successful processes Scale what works
Everything else in the practice should ultimately support this quadrant.
This is where many veterinary clinics quietly struggle.
The care is excellent. The intentions are good. But the business model fails to capture or support the value being delivered.
Sometimes this is inevitable. Veterinary medicine often involves doing the right thing regardless of immediate financial return.
The danger comes when this becomes the dominant operating model.
Examples: Long consultations priced below their true value Extensive follow-up work that is never billed High clinical standards that clients do not fully understand or perceive Team members carrying emotional and operational loads without support
The instinct in this situation is usually to work harder.
But increasing throughput inside a broken system rarely fixes the problem.
Action: Redesign the System
Focus on:
Pricing strategy Service packaging Client communication Workflow design Visibility of clinical value
The issue is not that you are doing too much good.
The issue is that your veterinary practice systems are not designed to sustain that good work.
This is the uncomfortable quadrant.
Most veterinary professionals did not enter the field motivated primarily by financial gain. Yet intentionally or unintentionally, some systems drift into this space.
Practices in this quadrant may appear financially successful, but the integrity of care is compromised.
Examples: Over-servicing without clear clinical justification Cutting corners to increase appointment throughput Revenue-first decision-making Ignoring staff wellbeing to maximise productivity
This approach can work temporarily.
But veterinary medicine depends on trust:
Client trust Team trust Professional trust
Without that foundation, long-term sustainability erodes.
Action: Challenge and Realign
Veterinary leaders must either:
Bring financial success back into alignment with ethical care Or accept the long-term reputational, ethical, and commercial risks
The best practices choose alignment.
These activities neither improve patient care nor support business performance.
Yet many veterinary clinics tolerate them simply because they are familiar.
Examples: Legacy administrative processes Inefficient manual workflows Services that consume time without meaningful impact “We’ve always done it this way” operational habits
If that phrase exists in your practice, you may already be operating in this quadrant.
Action: Eliminate Ruthlessly
Remove:
Low-value tasks Redundant processes Operational clutter
Free up capacity for work that genuinely improves care, profitability, or team wellbeing.
The Biggest Problem in Veterinary Practice Management
Most veterinary teams never explicitly map their work this way.
Instead, they default to:
Reacting to pressure Trying to satisfy everyone simultaneously Doing what feels morally right in the moment Making decisions without strategic visibility
That creates hidden trade-offs:
Excellent care delivered unsustainably Financial performance achieved at the expense of trust Teams trapped between competing priorities Burnout disguised as dedication
In this context, the phrase “we can do well by doing good” becomes less of a strategy and more of a justification for avoiding difficult decisions.
A More Honest Version of “Doing Well by Doing Good”
A more useful version of the idea is this:
Doing good is not a strategy. Designing a veterinary system where good care leads to sustainable success is.
That requires veterinary leaders to:
Make trade-offs explicit Align pricing with value delivered Ensure good care is visible and understood by clients Build workflows that do not depend on heroics Create operational systems that support both clinical and commercial outcomes A Practical Test for Veterinary Leaders
Take any part of your veterinary practice and ask:
Are we doing good here? Are we doing well here?
If the answer is not “yes” to both, diagnose the gap.
If it’s good but not working:
Redesign it.
If it’s profitable but not good:
Challenge it.
If it’s neither:
Remove it.
If it’s both:
Protect it, strengthen it, and build your veterinary business strategy around it.
Veterinary medicine does not have to choose between ethics and economics.
But alignment between the two does not happen automatically.
If veterinary practices want to truly do well by doing good, they must design for it deliberately, consistently, and sometimes uncomfortably.
That is what creates sustainable veterinary businesses, resilient teams, loyal clients, and better patient outcomes over the long term.
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