Pricing
🐾 Veterinary Clinic · Testimonials

Your clients have incredible stories to tell about your practice — they just need to be asked

A pet that recovered. An anxious dog that finally had a calm vet visit. A senior cat whose quality of life improved because of your diagnosis. These are the stories that convert potential clients. Here's how to collect them systematically.

97%
of consumers say reviews and testimonials influence their purchase decisions
source ↗
72%
of patients view online reviews and testimonials when selecting a new healthcare provider
source ↗
32.8%
of new vet clients first heard about the practice from a fellow pet owner — testimonials replicate this at scale
source ↗
84%
of people trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations from friends
source ↗
Two different tools

Google reviews vs. testimonials — and why your veterinary clinic needs both

These are different tools that serve different stages of the client journey. Google reviews help people find you. Testimonials help people choose you once they do.

Think about the decision process. Someone moves to a new city and needs a vet. They Google “veterinary clinic near me,” see three results with ratings, and click on the one with 4.8 stars and 120 reviews. That's your Google reviews at work — they determined whether you appeared in the shortlist at all.

Now they're on your website, evaluating whether to actually book. That's where testimonials do their work. A video of a real client talking about how Dr. Chen handled their anxious rescue dog is more convincing than any marketing copy you could write. It's social proof from someone with no financial stake in the outcome — just a pet owner who wanted to share their experience.

You need both working together. Reviews get people to your website. Testimonials convert them from visitors to booked clients. A practice that neglects either one is leaving meaningful conversion on the table.

Google reviews vs. testimonials at a glance
Where it lives
Google Business Profile
Your website, social, materials
Who controls it
Google (you can't remove)
You (owned content)
Primary purpose
Local search ranking + discovery
Website conversion + trust-building
Format
Text only (under 4,096 chars)
Video or text, any length
When to collect
Immediately post-visit
3–8 weeks post-visit
Reusable in ads?
Not typically
Yes, with client permission
Google review
Testimonial
Where they go

Where testimonials actually get used in a veterinary practice

💻
Website homepage
Your highest-traffic page. A rotating carousel of video or text testimonials near the top of the page answers the first question every visitor has: 'Can I trust these people with my pet?'
📋
Service pages
Someone on your dental cleaning page wants to see testimonials about dental cleanings. Someone on your surgery page wants to see surgery success stories. Categorized testimonials on service pages increase conversion.
📱
Instagram and Facebook
Short video clips (15–30 seconds) from longer testimonials work extremely well on social media. Real clients talking about their pets get high engagement — especially for visually compelling stories.
📺
Waiting room screen
A screen in your waiting room playing client video testimonials serves double duty: it reassures nervous clients and introduces new clients to your team and services while they wait.
📧
Email newsletters
A monthly client spotlight or a 'this month we helped...' story with an embedded testimonial keeps existing clients engaged and gives you newsletter content that doesn't feel promotional.
🎯
Google and Facebook ads
With client permission, testimonials become ad creative. A real client talking about their experience is more credible than any ad copy. Video testimonials in social ads typically outperform branded creative.
Video vs. text

Video vs. text testimonials — which works where and when to use each

Both have their place. The short answer: video testimonials are more emotionally resonant and more trusted; text testimonials are easier to collect at scale and more versatile to use.

Video works best when the story has an emotional dimension — a pet recovery, an anxious animal that was handled with exceptional care, a family dealing with end-of-life care who felt supported. These are the stories where you want to hear the person's voice, see their face, and sense the genuine feeling behind what they're saying. A 60-second video of someone talking about how your team supported them during their dog's final days is infinitely more powerful than the same story in text.

Text testimonials work well for shorter, more specific praise. “The wait time was always reasonable, the estimates were clear, and Dr. Patel remembered details from our previous visits every time.” That kind of specific, operational feedback is easy to collect at scale and easy to display in a website grid or email newsletter.

For a veterinary practice, the ideal collection is a mix: 8–15 video testimonials covering your key service categories and emotional stories, plus a larger collection of text testimonials (30–60) that demonstrate breadth and consistency. Spokk lets clients choose which format to submit when they tap the testimonial link.

Timing the ask

When in the client lifecycle to ask — and why later is usually better

Google reviews and feedback should be collected quickly — within hours or days of a visit. Testimonials are different. A testimonial asks clients to reflect on their experience in a more sustained way, often to record a video, and to articulate something meaningful about your practice. That requires distance from the visit and a sense of outcome.

For most veterinary visits, 3–8 weeks post-visit is the sweet spot. By this point, if the pet had a health issue, the client has seen the outcome of the treatment. If it was a routine wellness exam, they've had time to appreciate the thoroughness. They have a complete story to tell, not just a fresh impression.

For significant events — a difficult surgery, a successful cancer diagnosis and treatment, end-of-life care — you might wait longer. Asking a family for a testimonial about euthanasia two weeks after the event is tone-deaf. But asking 6–8 weeks later, when the grief has softened and the gratitude has crystallized, often results in the most powerful testimonials you'll ever receive.

In Spokk, you add a testimonial request step to your automation sequence at whatever timing fits your practice. The smart deduplication system ensures no client is ever asked twice — once they've submitted or been asked, they're permanently excluded from future testimonial requests.

How Spokk works

How Spokk's testimonial collection works for veterinary clinics

1
Create a testimonial link
In Spokk, create a testimonial link with your branding, instructions, and field configuration (star rating, name, email, video or text mode).
2
Add it to your sequence
Insert a "Send testimonial request" step in your SMS automation — choose when it fires (e.g., 30 days post-visit for most clients, or later for specific service types).
3
Client records or writes
The client taps the link in the SMS. They choose video or text. If video, they record directly in the browser — no app, no upload. If text, they write and submit.
4
Available in your dashboard
All testimonials appear in your Spokk dashboard immediately. Download the video, copy the text, embed on your website, share on social — you own the content.
Strategic use

How to use testimonials to pre-sell specific veterinary services

Generic testimonials (“great clinic, highly recommend”) have limited conversion power. Service-specific testimonials are dramatically more effective because they address exactly the question the potential client is asking.

Someone whose dog needs a dental cleaning is worried about: is the anesthesia safe? Will my dog be in pain? Is the cost worth it? A testimonial from a real client who had their dog's dental done — “I was nervous about the anesthesia but the team called me during the procedure, and my dog's breath improved immediately. The estimate was exactly what they quoted.” — addresses every one of those concerns more powerfully than any FAQ you could write.

To use this strategically: when collecting testimonials, ask clients to mention the specific service they came in for. And then place those testimonials on the corresponding service pages of your website. Your dental page should feature dental testimonials. Your surgery page should feature surgery recovery stories.

This approach works for service categories that are anxiety-generating for pet owners — surgery, cancer treatment, exotic animal care, senior pet management — because social proof is most persuasive precisely when people are most uncertain. That's where a real client story moves the needle.

FAQ

Common questions about testimonials for veterinary clinics

What is the difference between a Google review and a veterinary testimonial?
A Google review is posted publicly on your Google Business profile and affects your local search ranking. A testimonial is owned content you collect and display where you choose — your website, social media, waiting room screen, or email. You need both: Google reviews for discoverability, testimonials for conversion once someone finds you.
How does Spokk collect video testimonials from veterinary clients?
Spokk creates a testimonial link you can add as a step in your SMS automation sequence. Clients tap the link and record a short video or write a text testimonial directly in their phone browser — no app download needed. Video is hosted via Mux. All testimonials appear in your Spokk dashboard ready to download and use.
When is the best time to ask a veterinary client for a testimonial?
Later is usually better than sooner for testimonials — unlike feedback, which needs to be collected while the experience is fresh. Wait until the client has had a chance to see the outcome of the visit (their pet recovered, the vaccination course is complete, the dental cleaning made a visible difference). 3–8 weeks post-visit is a good window.
Do clients actually record video testimonials on their phones?
Yes — especially for vet clients, who are often emotionally invested in sharing their pet's story. A client whose dog recovered from a serious surgery, or whose anxious rescue cat finally had a calm vet visit, is often genuinely motivated to share that experience. The key is making it frictionless: a direct browser-based recording link, no app, under 2 minutes.
Where should I use veterinary client testimonials?
On your website homepage and services pages (where potential clients evaluate you), on social media (especially short video clips for Instagram and Facebook), in your email newsletters, in your waiting room on a screen or framed print, and in any new patient onboarding materials. Video testimonials on a homepage can increase conversion rates significantly.
Will Spokk ask the same client for a testimonial multiple times?
No. Spokk tracks which clients have already been asked for or submitted a testimonial and excludes them from future requests. No client will be asked twice.
How do I use testimonials to pre-sell specific veterinary services?
Tag and categorize testimonials by service type — dental cleanings, surgeries, senior pet care, anxious animal handling, etc. When a potential client lands on your dental cleaning page, show testimonials specifically about dental care. When they're on your senior pet care page, show those testimonials. Specific testimonials convert better than generic ones.
What makes a good veterinary client testimonial?
Specific stories beat vague praise. 'Our dog had emergency surgery here and Dr. Patel stayed an extra hour to make sure he was stable before we took him home — we'll never forget that' is far more powerful than 'great vet, very caring staff.' Encourage clients to describe their specific situation and what specifically made the experience stand out.
Can I use client testimonials in my Google or Facebook ads?
Yes — with written client permission, which Spokk collects as part of the testimonial submission. Client permission authorizes use across your marketing channels. Always check with a legal advisor about specific disclosure requirements in your jurisdiction.
How many testimonials should a veterinary clinic aim to have?
There's no magic number, but variety is more important than volume. Aim to have testimonials across your main service types (wellness, surgery, dental, emergency, etc.), across pet types (dogs, cats, exotics if applicable), and across the different life situations that bring clients to you (new puppy owners, senior pet owners, anxious pet owners). 20–40 well-varied testimonials is a strong collection.

Starter

For solo operators & small teams

$49/month

Billed $588/year

250 customers / month

Unlimited SMS included

  • 250 customers / month
  • 1 manager + 1 staff member
  • Unlimited locations
  • Dedicated toll-free SMS number (US & Canada)
  • Full automation sequence
  • AI review response drafts
  • Loyalty & referral programs
  • Feedback forms & QR codes
  • HubSpot integration & API access
  • Buy additional customer top-ups

Growth

For growing businesses & teams

$82/month

Billed $984/year

500 customers / month

Unlimited SMS included

  • 500 customers / month
  • 2 managers + 2 staff members
  • Unlimited locations
  • Dedicated toll-free SMS number (US & Canada)
  • Full automation sequence
  • AI review response drafts
  • Loyalty & referral programs
  • Feedback forms & QR codes
  • HubSpot integration & API access
  • Buy additional customer top-ups

Pro

For high-volume businesses

$166/month

Billed $1992/year

1,500 customers / month

Unlimited SMS included

  • 1,500 customers / month
  • 3 managers + 5 staff members
  • Unlimited locations
  • Dedicated toll-free SMS number (US & Canada)
  • Full automation sequence
  • AI review response drafts
  • Loyalty & referral programs
  • Feedback forms & QR codes
  • HubSpot integration & API access
  • Buy additional customer top-ups

All plans include a 14-day free trial. No charge until your trial ends. Questions?