Nº 001 · For solo veterinarians
You are the doctor, the receptionist, and the follow-up call.
Loop handles the last one.
When you are running everything, follow-up is the first thing to slip. Loop puts it back into the day without adding software to your morning.
Sign in, schedule your first loop the same day.
Nº 002 · What gets dropped
What follow-up looks like in a one-doctor practice.
You care about every patient. The day just refuses to leave room for the call.
- 01
Back-to-back, all day
Between consults, drug ordering, and the front desk, the post-visit call rarely happens, even when it would change the outcome.
- 02
Client retention suffers without follow-up
When there is no contact between visits, the relationship cools. The next booking happens by chance, not by routine. Client retention in a solo practice depends entirely on whether owners feel remembered.
- 03
Care quietly breaks at home
Antibiotics stop on day three. The e-collar comes off on day five. You only find out if it gets bad enough to come back.
- 04
No bandwidth for systems
You do not want to learn a new dashboard. You want one less thing to remember, not one more.
Nº 003 · How Loop fits
What changes with Loop on day one.
Loop fits the way solo practices actually run: almost no setup, no daily check-in, real signals when you need them.
- 01
Zero-setup follow-up
Hand Loop your appointment list once. Upload the EMR and Loop reads it the way a vet would. Calls go out automatically. You do nothing on day two.
No daily dashboard.
- 02
Owners do not need an app
Loop calls them on the phone. No portal login, no install, no friction.
SMS or text confirm. Then a real call.
- 03
A clean note in your inbox
A short, structured summary, not a transcript. Skim in 30 seconds, sign off, move on.
15 seconds · per loop closed.
Nº 004 · The shape of it
One recovered recheck a week pays for the subscription.
The point is not the math. The point is that you get to practice the way you were trained to, with continuity, not just episodes, without working another two hours a day.
- Fig. 01 1 / wk
recovered recheck per week, on average, is enough to cover Loop. Anything beyond that is improved care and recurring revenue.
Nº 005 · Heard on a Loop call
The owner had stopped the antibiotics on day three. I would never have known until the recheck.
Nº 009 · The next step
See Loop on your own caseload.
A 20-minute call. Show me a recent patient, and I will walk you through what a Loop follow-up would have looked like.
Early access slots are limited.