It's not a chat. It's an unopened toolbox.
I see three types of veterinarians right now regarding AI. The conversation is only the entry point to building automations and recovering hours.
Articles, tutorials and news about veterinary AI
Reflections from the PROPET 2026 congress on the state of AI in veterinary medicine, the profiles that worry me, the value of time, and where the sector is heading.
I see three types of veterinarians right now regarding AI. The conversation is only the entry point to building automations and recovering hours.
Social media builds loyalty, but it doesn't attract new clients. The correct flow is website first, capture, self-service. Discover how a well-made website generates appointments without you having to pick up the phone.
The SOAP format has been the standard for documenting clinical consultations for decades. But between one patient and the next, who has time to write them properly? AI changes the game.
Veterinary clinics miss between 3 and 5 calls a day. That translates to hundreds of potential clients per year going to the competition. Immediacy is no longer a luxury — it is a demand.
Language models can transform how you manage your clinic, but using them without a method is like operating without a protocol. Learn to distinguish when to use an LLM and when you need a specific clinical tool.
Decision-support AI gives you clinical superpowers without replacing you. Discover how to combat cognitive biases and dedicate yourself to what only you can do: the Hero's Work.
From smart documentation to AI agents: the complete automation toolkit that can give you back up to two hours of administrative work every day.
What Artificial Intelligence really is, what it is not, and how to evaluate it with professional judgment so you don't fall into either paralysis or the impulsive purchase of tools.
Price transparency, hyper-informed clients, and the management systems revolution: the three waves of change every veterinarian needs to understand to adapt in time.
AI is not a distant wave on the horizon. Discover why the real driver of change in veterinary medicine is not technology, but the client, and how to prepare for what is already happening.