Why San Diego Veterinary Practices Choose WETYR
The San Diego market demands excellence. Your brand needs to compete with well-funded competitors. Your marketing needs to cut through noise. Your operations need to support growth without breaking. WETYR handles all of this as one coordinated program.
What We Provide
- Branding & Creative
- Marketing & Advertising
- Social & Media Production
- Executive Recruiting
- Business Funding
- MSP / IT Management
- Cybersecurity & Cloud
- AI Automations
Get a Free Growth Assessment
Tell us about your business and we will send you an honest evaluation of your brand, marketing, operations, and growth potential within 48 hours. No cost. No obligation.
We Buy. We Sell. We Help You Grow.
WETYR is your scaling advisor for the full business lifecycle. We buy your business outright, we help you buy another business, and we run rollups that exit when the multiple makes sense. When you retain us as your scaling advisor, every consulting service we provide is delivered complimentary toward the business goals we set together. One operating partner. One aligned incentive structure. One brand for entering, scaling, acquiring, and exiting.
- We will buy your business when you are ready to exit. Direct, cash at close, operator-buyer.
- We will help you buy a business and structure the rollup. Sourcing, QoE, deal terms, post-close integration.
- We will exit your rollup at the multiple expansion point. Strategic sale or platform transition.
- We are your scaling advisor. Branding, marketing, AI, cybersecurity, recruiting, funding - all complimentary to retained clients toward agreed business goals.
San Diego For Veterinary Practices: Why It's Different
Generalist san diego firms treat every client the same. WETYR treats veterinary practices as its own discipline because the buyer landscape, multiple drivers, and operational levers differ substantially from other industries. Veterinary Practices currently transact at 8-15x EBITDA platform with active acquirers including Mars/VCA, Banfield, NVA, Pathway, driven by pet care spending growth and recurring patient base. Owners and operators who engage advisors fluent in the specific niche consistently outperform owners using generalists.
The work itself involves four pillars: strategy, execution, measurement, iteration. Each pillar is calibrated to the veterinary practices context. For example, the customer-acquisition math, owner-dependency profile, and recurring-revenue percentages that drive multiples in veterinary practices are dramatically different from SaaS or e-commerce — and a generalist advisor running the same playbook across all three industries will leave value on the table for two of them.
Engagement Phases
Phase 1 — Diagnostic and Pre-Engagement (weeks 1-3): valuation range, multiple drivers identified, 90-day work plan agreed. Phase 2 — Active Work (weeks 4-12): the four pillars worked sequentially with weekly accountability. Phase 3 — Quantification (weeks 13-16): KPIs reported against enterprise-value lift. Phase 4 — Optional Continuation: most veterinary practices clients renew because the work compounds, especially when an exit window is 12-36 months out. WETYR can also stay engaged through transaction support.
What Owners Get Wrong
Three patterns repeat across veterinary practices owners. First, going to market without preparing — owners who skip the 12-24 month preparation window typically receive 30-50% lower offers. Second, hiring a generalist broker — brokers under $2M EBITDA work for some deals, but most veterinary practices platforms benefit from M&A advisors with category fluency. Third, accepting the first LOI — running a structured process with multiple buyers consistently produces 20-40% premium over a single-buyer negotiation.
If you own or operate a veterinary practices business and want to understand what a structured san diego engagement looks like, WETYR offers a complimentary 30-minute call. We will tell you whether the gaps we see in your specific situation warrant a paid engagement, refer you out if not, and never sell the wrong service.
Authoritative Sources & Further Reading
WETYR works alongside primary sources, regulators, and industry data providers when advising owners and operators. The references below are the same sources our advisory team uses when modeling deals, benchmarking multiples, and stress-testing assumptions. We encourage every owner, buyer, and operator to verify any data point that materially affects their decision against the underlying primary source.
Primary Federal Sources
- U.S. SBA — 7(a) Loan Program for acquisition financing eligibility, terms, and lender list.
- SEC EDGAR for public-company comparables, 10-K disclosures, and recent strategic acquirer filings.
- IRS — Sale of a Business on Section 1060 asset-allocation reporting and tax treatment of asset vs stock sales.
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Industries at a Glance for wage, employment, and growth data by NAICS code.
- U.S. Census Economic Census for industry size, firm counts, and revenue distributions.
- Federal Reserve Economic Data for prevailing rate environment underwriting.
Standards & Reference Bodies
- AICPA for Quality of Earnings methodology and CPA standards governing transaction-related financial work.
- FINRA Rules and Guidance for understanding when a transaction crosses into broker-dealer territory.
- NACVA business valuation credentialing body and standards (CVA designation).
- USPAP — Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice for valuation engagement standards.
- Investopedia — EBITDA reference page for definitional alignment with our glossary.
- Harvard Business Review — Mergers and Acquisitions archive on integration and post-close value creation.
For deeper transaction-specific data, the GF Data and PitchBook private-company transaction databases publish quarterly multiple ranges by industry size band that we cross-reference against our own pipeline benchmarks. Owners considering a sale should also review the Pepperdine Private Capital Markets Report (free, annual) for current cost-of-capital and lender appetite data across the lower middle market. Buyers underwriting search-fund or holdco theses commonly pair Stanford GSB's Search Fund Study with the IBBA Market Pulse report, which tracks multiples for sub-$50M transactions quarterly. None of these sources replace deal-specific advisory, but they give owners and operators the same reference points professional acquirers are using on the other side of the table.
Related WETYR Resources
Every WETYR resource ladders into a structured engagement framework. Whether you are diagnosing readiness, modeling a number, or preparing for a specific transaction phase, the resources below cover the most common owner and operator workflows. All tools are free; all guides are operator-written; all engagements start with a confidential conversation.
Engagement Pillars
Decision Tools
Operator-Written
Glossary & FAQ
Checklists & Templates
Niche Coverage
If you are not sure where to start, the Exit Readiness Score takes about four minutes and produces a one-page diagnostic on the value drivers most likely to compress your multiple. From there the natural next step is either a long-form guide covering your specific situation, a focused glossary term lookup, or a confidential introductory call with our team to discuss whether WETYR's advisory or operator-buyer engagement is a fit. Our team responds to every inbound inquiry within one business day.