Paws Claws & Wet Noses | Veterinary Podcast cover art

Paws Claws & Wet Noses | Veterinary Podcast

Paws Claws & Wet Noses | Veterinary Podcast

By: Julie South of VetStaff
Listen for free

The Vet Podcast - Paws Claws & Wet Noses - celebrates all creatures great and small and the fantabulous professionals who look after them all. A combination of interviews and helpful advice for veterinary professionals. Everyone at VetStaff believes that all veterinary professionals (vets and vet nurses) deserve to work in an Employer of Choice Vet Clinic where they're respected, valued and are excited about looking forward to going to work on Monday mornings. Show host Julie South tackles some of the big topics in the veterinary sector, as well as helping vets and nurses find the job of their dreams.© 2023 Paws Claws & Wet Noses | Veterinary Podcast | HaloBiz Limited Career Success Economics Management Management & Leadership Marketing Marketing & Sales
Episodes
  • The skills shortage is real. But it's not why your ad isn't working - the elephant in the room - ep. 278
    Jun 30 2026

    The skills shortage is real. But it's not why your ad isn't working - the elephant in the room - ep. 278

    Two clinics. Same town. Same skills shortage. One's been advertising since-forever. The other has been running a different kind of recruitment programme — and has had multiple suitable applicants within weeks.

    Same shortage. Completely different outcomes. In the third episode of The Elephant In The Room, Julie South talks about the difference between a ceiling and a floor — and which one your clinic is likely dealing with.

    If your ad has been running for a while with little to show for it, this one's for you.

    Episode notes

    The veterinary skills shortage is real — one hundred percent. But this episode argues it's not the whole explanation for why some clinics can't fill their roles.

    The shortage sets the ceiling: fewer vets and nurses available, more vacancies, more competition for the same applicants. That's the same for every clinic in every region.

    What the shortage doesn't explain is why one clinic's applicant pool is smaller than the clinic down the road's. Same ceiling. Different floor.

    The episode looks at why clinic managers and practice owners reach for the shortage as the default explanation — not because they're wrong, but because nobody's ever taught them there might be something else to look for, or where to start looking.

    The answer lies in culture storytelling: giving vets and nurses enough real, specific, current information about what it's like to work at your clinic that they can self-identify — see you as their kind of clinic, and themselves as your kind of people. A generic job ad that sounds like every other job ad can't do that. An ongoing culture story can.

    This is the third episode in The Elephant In The Room — a series examining the things everyone in veterinary knows and almost no one says out loud.

    About your host

    Julie South is the founder of VetClinicJobs and the host of Veterinary Voices. She has been in veterinary recruitment since 2019 and is known for her work in culture storytelling — helping forward-thinking vet clinics build the kind of genuine, specific culture evidence that attracts Their Kind of People long before any job ad runs.

    Julie has spoken on culture storytelling and employer branding at VetEXPO in Melbourne and works with clinics across Australasia and beyond who want vets and nurses to be excited about going to work on Monday mornings — for all the right reasons.

    Struggling to get results from your job advertisements?
    If so, then shining online as a good employer is essential to attracting the types of veterinary professionals who're a perfect cultural fit for your clinic.

    The VetClinicJobs job board is the place to post your next job vacancy - to find out more get in touch with Lizzie at VetClinicJobs


    Show More Show Less
    8 mins
  • Why your job ad gets views but not applications - The Elephant in the Room - ep. 277
    Jun 22 2026

    If you've ever looked at your job ad dashboard and wondered why the views are high and the applications aren't — this episode is about one of the reasons. And it's likely not the one Seek (or other job boards) will tell you about.

    In the second episode of The Elephant In The Room, Julie South looks at the gap between believing a job ad and trusting it enough to act on it — and why spending more for more exposure doesn't close that gap. It just means more people landing on the wrong side of it.

    If your clinic's numbers don't quite add up, this one's for you.

    Episode notes

    This episode argues that high views and low applications often isn't an exposure problem. It's a trust problem.

    Three ways the gap between a job ad and reality can surface are explored:

    • On day one — a vet or nurse who meant to ask about the vet:nurse ratio at interview, didn't, and discovers on the job that the ratio promised in the ad only held true when the clinic was fully staffed
    • At interview — a vet or nurse who does ask about new grad mentoring, and learns the mentor named in the ad left months ago with nobody stepping into the role since
    • Before either of those — a vet or nurse who finds a different version of the clinic's story online, doesn't know which version is true, and quietly doesn't apply at all

    None of these are framed as anyone's fault — but the episode argues they're still the clinic's job to fix, because an ad that was accurate two years ago might not be anymore.

    The episode closes on why peer-to-peer evidence — team members speaking specifically and by name — carries more weight than anything management says about itself, and offers clinics one question to test their own ad against reality.

    This is the second episode in The Elephant In The Room — a series examining the things everyone in veterinary knows and almost no one says out loud.

    About your host

    Julie South is the founder of VetClinicJobs and the host of Veterinary Voices. She has been in veterinary recruitment since 2019 and is known for her work in culture storytelling — helping forward-thinking vet clinics build the kind of genuine, specific culture evidence that attracts Their Kind of People long before any job ad runs.

    Julie has spoken on culture storytelling and employer branding at VetEXPO in Melbourne and works with clinics across Australasia and beyond who want vets and nurses to be excited about going to work on Monday mornings — for all the right reasons.


    Struggling to get results from your job advertisements?
    If so, then shining online as a good employer is essential to attracting the types of veterinary professionals who're a perfect cultural fit for your clinic.

    The VetClinicJobs job board is the place to post your next job vacancy - to find out more get in touch with Lizzie at VetClinicJobs


    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • The reputation that travels everywhere except the job ad - ep. 276
    Jun 16 2026

    There's a clinic not too far from you right now that everyone in the profession knows about.

    The vets know. The nurses know. The locums know. You can see it in the turnover — always hiring, always starting over. And nobody says publicly why.

    In the first episode of a new series — The Elephant In The Room — Julie South talks about the reputation that travels through private chats and late-night conference conversations, but never makes it into the one place it might actually do some good.

    And about the clinics that have done the hard work to change things — and are still being judged for who they used to be.

    If either of those sounds familiar, this episode is for you.

    Episode notes

    This episode explores why veterinary clinic reputations circulate privately — through WhatsApp, Messenger, and word of mouth — but never surface publicly where they could inform a hiring decision.

    Two kinds of clinics are examined:

    • Clinics where the reputation is earned and nothing has changed — where high turnover is the visible signal and toxic behaviour continues to be tolerated
    • Clinics that have genuinely changed — new leadership, new culture, fixed rosters, addressed after-hours loads — but are still carrying a reputation that belongs to a version of themselves that no longer exists

    The episode argues that the only thing that shifts a reputation is evidence: real voices from current team members, captured and published in a form that travels as far and as fast as the original reputation did.

    This is the first episode in The Elephant In The Room — a series examining the things everyone in veterinary knows and almost no one says out loud.

    About your host

    Julie South is the founder of VetClinicJobs and the host of Veterinary Voices. She has been in veterinary recruitment since 2019 and is known for her work in culture storytelling — helping forward-thinking vet clinics build the kind of genuine, specific culture evidence that attracts Their Kind of People long before any job ad runs.

    Julie has spoken on culture storytelling and employer branding at VetEXPO in Melbourne and works with clinics across Australasia and beyond who want vets and nurses to be excited about going to work on Monday mornings — for all the right reasons.

    Struggling to get results from your job advertisements?
    If so, then shining online as a good employer is essential to attracting the types of veterinary professionals who're a perfect cultural fit for your clinic.

    The VetClinicJobs job board is the place to post your next job vacancy - to find out more get in touch with Lizzie at VetClinicJobs


    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet