Archive for the ‘Website’ Category

Double Bay Vet Clinic Launches Social Media Site

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Today marked an historic day, the publication of my third generation vet website. A site that I hope will allow vets to benefit from the astonishing and rapid development of social media, arguably the most important communications advance in history.

Readers may not be aware, but this blogger has been researching and managing websites for over a decade. In fact if you have a website built by one of the largest mainstream vet website providers then you’ve probably been benefiting indirectly from my consulting input for years.

In the early days (1998-2002) the web was seen as something weird and techy for most vets. As a conservative profession, we failed to see the potential business benefits of being online. But a brave few did venture into cyberspace, which was largely a trip into indulgent ego land. But at least they were playing with a new idea.

Vetsite One – Promotional

Version one then was about turning the clinical and sales language around and learning to give useful, understandable information that clients found engaging and useful. It was about ‘stickiness’ and ‘eyeballs’ or, put another way, getting clients to come back for more.

We took things a step further and introduced email collection forms and an email newsletter. And it worked! New clients began to register with the practice and seemed happy to give out an email address. Though it was hard to measure an impact on the business the general feeling was that the site was a worthwhile investment.

Vetsite Two – Supporting

Parkvets.com 2008Three years down the line, version two was slicker but simpler. Better structured, this site was all about supporting the crucial roles of the business. From generating new clients, to handling feedback it complimented the core objectives. We even added ecommerce. This time we hired a designer to bring the plans to life. The advent of new technology allowed better monitoring of performance, so we could measure the impact and demonstrate a return on the investment. X new clients per month. Y additional product sales through the ecommerce site.

Vetsite Three – Being Connected

Double Bay Vet Clinic June 2010So what’s new? Two words – Social Media. (Yes they do deserve to be capitalised.) There are some out there who still doubt that the Internet is even useful to vets. They will either change that opinion or stop work soon (either through retirement or lack of business).

Most accept that the Internet is a normal part of life. Few, however, have yet noticed that the rules have changed again. But if you choose to investigate you’ll find that they’ve changed for the good.

How Social Media is Changing the Rules

Think about this. When could a practice ever have afforded to make its own videos? (Let alone broadcast them to the world for free.) When would it have taken ten minutes to send out a traceable newsletter to your clients without involving the mass printing and stuffing of envelopes? When was it possible at the click of one button to potentially engage millions of pet owners with images, sounds, videos – all for free?

The answer is never. The ability to connect with millions of people at zero cost has always been the promise of the Internet. Social media is simply the set of tools that has finally unlocked this power. It may be a source of irritation to find nurses and vets (even on occasions yourself) distracted by sites like Facebook. But what these huge networks of people are doing is talking with friends and colleagues about things that affect them.

They’re talking about holidays and eating out. They’re talking about pubs, clubs and sports events. They’re sharing clinical info. They’re collaborating, planning, building, even destroying…..all with the minimum effort taken to log on. And your vet business isn’t immune. Treat staff badly, it’ll be on Facebook. Treat your clients and pets well and they might just Tweet about it.

Like it or not, people are talking and if you want to have your say then you need to learn about social media.

Dave’s Tuppence-worth

Having a Facebook page or twitter account won’t make your practice cool or hip or better any at fixing pets. But it will help you engage with and deepen relationships with new and existing clients. In other words it will help bond your clients – more effectively in my opinion than any promotional or cost based gimmicks you attempt. Humans are programmed to seek out and interact with each other. Social media allows this without travel or expense.

The Double Bay Vet Clinic website is more than just our e-brochure, it’s our cyber handshake. It’s our Google pumping, client-engaging relationship machine. I’ll keep you posted. But in the meantime why not sign up as a friend either of Double Bay Vet Clinic (to get tips) or follow me (@dave_nicol) on twitter.

Learn More…

Ethos – A Defining Moment

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

A few sharp eyed readers have now spotted and, quite rightly, commented upon my rather bare looking personal ethos page.

“Is it that I have no ethos?”, “Am I devoid of morals and substance?” they ask. I can think of some that might (quite wrongly) agree!

Well the reason (dear reader) I’ve not yet published the page is not for lack of effort. In fact I’ve written and rewritten this page more times than I expected. The problem is that ethos is such a nebulous, ethereal thing to try and define. And it’s also something I think changes a little each day as well. It evolves slowly but significantly as my experiences and horizons expand.

I have fleeting moments of clarity and think “yep, I’ve got it” and start writing, but just like waking up from a dream, the clarity fades as I write. ‘It’ seems to shroud itself in the mists of my mind.

I know the words I would use but I’m struck by paralysing dyslexia and they don’t seem to fit. My definition doesn’t do it justice, so I stop.

This morning however a break through, walking to the tube station a thought struck me. Perhaps the reason I’m struggling with the concept is that ethos is something better defined by actions than words. In fact even considering writing a page about it may have been a dumb decision in the first place. After all, my ethos defines me – not the other way round.

If ethos is about actions then I’m more than a little tempted to leave the page unfinished; a testament to the near, yet far nature of ethos. Instead I’ll let my actions speak for themselves.

What are your thoughts? How does your ethos drive your daily decisions and actions?

I’ll think some more about it, but for the time being I’m off to Sydney for a research holiday!