Staying ahead of seasonal shifts: A guide for veterinary practices
Just like the weather, the rhythm of a veterinary practice changes with the seasons. Spring may bring an influx of patients needing parasite prevention, while summer often slows down as families travel. Winter might increase demand for indoor pet care and chronic condition management, but icy roads and Christmas schedules can disrupt visits.
These seasonal changes don’t have to catch you off guard. With a proactive strategy, your practice can stay productive, financially stable, and fully staffed year-round while continuing to deliver exceptional care.
Here’s how to turn seasonal fluctuation from a challenge into a strategic opportunity.
1. Recognise the seasonal rhythm of your practice
Seasonality in veterinary care isn’t one-size-fits-all; for example, a rural practice in Scotland will experience different patterns than an urban practice in the United Kingdom. The key is to understand your own data.
Practical tips:
- Analyse past appointment volumes by month or week to uncover patterns.
- Look for seasonal spikes in specific services, such as vaccinations in spring or dental procedures in February.
- Review missed appointment rates during holiday periods to understand when pet owner availability drops.
- Use your Practice Management Software (PMS) to build visual reports over the last 2–3 years.
Insight: Some practices use these insights to create an annual “seasonal calendar” for planning campaigns, staffing and inventory.
2. Use seasonal trends to strengthen pet-owner relationships
The quieter times are the perfect opportunity to invest in customer engagement. Instead of waiting for pet owners to call, reach out with timely, helpful, and relevant communication.
- Actionable strategies:
- Run themed wellness campaigns:
- March: “Spring into parasite prevention”
- September: “Back-to-school health checks”
- November: “Senior Pet Awareness Month”
- Send targeted reminders: Use filters in your software to send custom emails to owners whose pets are overdue for flea treatments or vaccinations.
- Educate through content: Offer value via your website or social channels. Short videos or blog posts on “Keeping dogs active in winter” or “What to pack for a holiday with your cat” build trust and drive traffic.
- Stay consistent: Avoid long, silent periods. Even during slow seasons, monthly newsletters or social media updates maintain visibility.
- Run themed wellness campaigns:
3. Build financial resilience through year-round planning
Seasonal dips in revenue can lead to financial stress if not anticipated. Budgeting for seasonality and diversifying your income sources are two critical steps.
How to get ahead:
- Forecast income based on historic trends and create a buffer for slow months.
- Introduce care plans that spread costs for routine care over 12 months, offering stability for both the pet owner and your practice.
- Explore niche services: Nutrition consults, post-op physiotherapy, or behaviour advice sessions can generate extra revenue and improve patient outcomes.
- Pre-book follow-ups during high season to ensure appointment slots stay filled in slower months.
Note: Care plans are particularly effective in Europe, where preventive healthcare uptake is growing, especially in markets like the UK, the Netherlands, and Germany.
4. Adjust staffing without compromising care
Seasonal planning isn’t just about appointments—it’s about your people. Overstaffing during quiet months strains your budget, while understaffing during busy periods can lead to burnout or poor service.
How to stay flexible:
- Offer staff variable hours or short-term contracts during known peaks (e.g. tick season, pre-Christmas).
- Cross-train your team: Equip nurses and receptionists with overlapping skills so they can adapt as needed.
- Plan annual leave smartly: Encourage staff to take their time off during historically quieter months, freeing up availability during peak times.
- Invest in internal development: Use downtime for CPD, training on new software tools, or process improvements.
5. Inventory: plan it like a pro
Stocking the right products at the right time can reduce waste and avoid last-minute panic orders. This is especially true when dealing with seasonal items such as parasite preventatives or special diets.
Inventory best practices:
- Review previous usage patterns before placing large orders.
- Set reorder thresholds in your system to automate essential stock replenishment.
- Negotiate with suppliers for better terms on bulk seasonal orders.
- Clear space by running discounts on slow-moving products before new season stock arrives.
Pro tip: Keep a dedicated section in your storage room for “seasonal essentials” and label it by month or quarter.
6. Add flexibility with technology
Veterinary software can do more than schedule appointments and store patient history—it can help you predict trends, automate communication, and streamline operations.
Look for tools that enable:
- Recurring appointment reminders
- Segment pet owners based on pet type, breed, or age
- Inventory forecasting
- Revenue tracking and reporting by season
Cloud-based software can also support remote work, digital pet owner communication, and even virtual consultations, which are especially useful during holidays or poor weather.
Final thought: Plan ahead, stay ahead
Every veterinary practice experiences seasonal ups and downs – but with the right data, tools, and mindset, those fluctuations can be planned for, not just endured. By anticipating what your year looks like and building systems that flex with your needs, you’ll spend less time reacting and more time growing, improving care, and delighting your pet owners.
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