Standing up for the veterinary profession
08 Aug 2024
18 Feb 2021 | Leigh-Anne Brown
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Leigh-Anne Brown describes the ways her practice has varied working contracts to flex around the needs of individuals, to maximise their enjoyment of work and their ability to live their lives outside of it.
Ive owned my practice since 2008 and during that time weve tried lots of different ways to cover our trading hours. The needs of the business have evolved and changed, as have the needs of the team. The recruitment market has changed and become more challenging, so to attract and retain the best candidates, we have had to be open to some creative tweaks. Not all of them have worked out long term if the needs of the business or the team have changed, but weve had the pleasure of working with some excellent people and learned a lot.
When I qualified twenty years ago, vets seemed to work full time and that was that. Reception and admin teams often had shorter contracts and might work evenings or weekends only, but the vets and RVNs I knew all worked full time and mostly did on call as well. Speaking with friends of my own vintage now, virtually none work a traditional forty hour, five day week, with or without on call. Reading posts on online forums, its clear that there are many veterinary professionals who want to do bits of things other than vetting.
On my team, people have needed to bend the rota to accommodate their side gigs like a baking business, surfing lessons, evening classes, post graduate studies, second jobs and family commitments. People change; Ive needed to reduce my workload when I sailed close to burnout; sometimes someone might need protected time for weekly appointments for a while. Families change, as toddlers go to school and parents get elderly, and we need to be responsive to keep good people. If we cant accommodate peoples passions, they will seek a post that can, or worse, be lost to the profession. With a bit (ok a lot) of juggling of the diary and rota, and a collaborative approach we can usually reach a workable compromise. Having a team who will flex for each other makes for a happy workplace.
For a while, we opened extended hours seven days a week because our local out of hours provision changed and we felt we needed to be here for our clients. The antisocial hours tapped into a different pool of candidates and we had vets, nurses and admin colleagues who only wanted to work from 6pm onwards or on Sundays, and they became key members of the team. Over time we realised that the client demand just wasnt there and gradually weve pulled back to more traditional hours, but the culture of tailoring working patterns to the teams needs has stuck. At interview, we always ask candidates: What would your ideal working pattern be?. We cant always accommodate it, but if we can we will.
We have people who compress full time hours over 4 days, to earn the week day off they need for their hobbies or to get maximum value and minimal environmental impact out of their commuting time. People who are night owls struggle with early starts and that works for those of us that love an early finish. It wouldnt work if we were all the same. Some of us work more, shorter shifts, which works well for a new grads steep learning curve, and for me as my stamina isnt what it was. This means plenty of contact time for us to work together through the PDP. The practice manager likes to be in before we are open to eat the frogs of the day before the phones start going, and she enjoys her evenings to herself. The reception team leader started working a few hours a week after having twins, and as the boys have grown is able to flex her hours around school and her childcare network. 泭We love when the boys wave at us as they pass the front door on their way home from school!
Success depends on the team all being collaborative. We find regular one to ones are essential to ensure there isnt any quiet resentment brewing and to make sure we know how life is going for everyone. Its not uncommon for people to decrease or increase their contacted hours. My top tips to make it work are:
Managing the diary is a never ending challenge with careful consideration to bookings so we have the right people in the right places - Ive compared it to Tetris because fitting lots of different shaped bricks together is an ever changing puzzle. Without that frog eating practice manager it would be daunting, but the time spent is worth it to have a happy team.
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Take a look at our Good workplaces policy position and resources.泭
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