Dr. Salzsieder has been a practicing veterinarian for 29 years, a practicing veterinary consultant for 27 years and a member of the bar in Washington and Oregon for 14 years. He does employee contracts, practice valuations, management consulting and facilitation of practice sales. Dr. Salzsieder is one of the founders and former president of both the AVMLA and the AVPMCA, and has owned seven mixed or small animal practices (only four at one time). He was a corporate manager for VetSmart, now Banfield, and was the first VetSmart charter practice owner. He is also a Veterinary Economics Editorial Advisory Board member and a founding member of the Washington State Bar Association Animal Law Section, formed in 2002. Dr. Salzsieder is the owner of one three-doctor small animal practice and owns one golden retriever, Buddy, and two cats, Tigger and Moma Kitty.
Footing the bill when adding on to a leased veterinary practice
July 25th 2014Q: I opened a new practice three years ago in a leased building. I love how the design turned out, but we're rapidly growing and I'd like to put on a small addition. My landlord doesn't have the funds for it; I'm willing to cover the costs, but is it too risky to do it on my own, especially since I don't own the building? How should I handle this situation?
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Q&A: The trouble with helping needy employees
January 1st 2011A hard-working veterinary assistant at my practice is having money troubles and turning to payday loans to make ends meet. Our salaries are fair and reasonable for our area and our economy. I'm worried this is a poor personal financial decision on his part. What should I do?
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Veterinary employment contracts should be a win-win agreement (Proceedings)
November 1st 2010Employment contracts exist even if they are not in writing. The problem with oral contracts is in trying to enforce them. Contracts require a meeting of the minds of two persons followed by some form of payment for enforceability. Employees, although commonly intimidated, must realize they are on equal footing with the employer.
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Practice buy ins: entrance strategy or early exit strategy (Proceedings)
November 1st 2010Exit strategy or practice succession planning can include every aspect from financial planning for retirement to where will I find a buyer. This retirement financial aspect would include planning for the future practice sale value. That is another session not covered in this topic.
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Multiple owner agreements to prevent litigation (Proceedings)
November 1st 2010A buy-sell agreement or shareholder's agreement or operating agreement is a written statement of plans about how owners can slow down or get out of the practice at a set time or occurrence. It is the shareholder's agreement for a corporation or an operating agreement for an LLC.
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How to make a practice purchase with reduced risk and capital requirements (Proceedings)
November 1st 2010A lower risk practice purchase means the buyer and seller both win and the practice sells. It may be obvious that win-win is best, but sales are made that are not win-win or low risk. The practice sale may be to an independent third party or to an inside person, usually an associate doctor.
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The time for a practice sale depends on the following items: timing, personal health, interest in work, motivation for work, age, stress, funds, alternative investments and alternative activities. Some say you need 15-20 times your current earnings in investment funds for retirement.
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Non-DVM practice ownership: to support staff and management (Proceedings)
November 1st 2010Non-DVM practice ownership has long been the standard in most states. This is because the practice acts require it in slightly more than half the states. The remainder of the states may or may not allow non-veterinary ownership of a veterinary practice, but do not directly address the issue in their practice acts.
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How do I manage my practice to generate practice cash? (Proceedings)
August 1st 2009Practice management involves managing staff (the HR issues), managing client and patient care (the quality and control compliance issues) and managing the practice profit, or more importantly, managing the practice cash flow.
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Avoiding an age-discrimination suit
June 1st 2006A longtime staff member who's in her late 50s is having trouble learning our new computerized billing system. We don't want to fire her, but we need to replace her with someone who can handle our new technology. If we asked her to retire, would we risk an age-discrimination suit?
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