The Veterinary Culture Lab
In this episode of The Veterinary Culture Lab, Andi and Josh take on one of the most common and emotionally charged narratives in veterinary medicine: “Younger generations just do not want to work.” Rather than reinforcing stereotypes or dismissing frustration, this conversation turns to the research. Grounded in a 2016 cross-temporal meta-analysis by Jean Twenge and colleagues, the episode explores what has actually shifted in generational work values — and what has not. The data show no dramatic collapse in work ethic. What has shifted, modestly but measurably, is work centrality and the value placed on leisure and balance. In a profession historically shaped by a “you must attend” mentality, even subtle recalibrations can feel seismic. Through real-world clinic stories, leadership reflection, and practical culture renovation strategies, Andi and Josh explore how redefining commitment — and modeling sustainable boundaries — may be one of the greatest leadership opportunities in modern veterinary medicine. You will hear: * What the research actually says about generational work ethic * Why work centrality has shifted — and why that matters * How confirmation bias fuels generational stereotypes * The difference between self-sacrifice and sustainable commitment * Practical ways leaders can redefine and model commitment * How curiosity can interrupt the “kids these days” cycle This episode invites leaders to move beyond blame and toward design — because thriving veterinary cultures are built intentionally, not nostalgically. Resource Links: Episode Article: Title: Generational Differences in Work Values: Leisure and Extrinsic Values Increasing, Social and Intrinsic Values Decreasing Authors:Jean M. Twenge et. al. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0149206316632058 Flourish Academy - Certificate in Applied Veterinary Resilience [https://academy.flourish.vet/courses/certificate-in-applied-veterinary-resilience-2025--c3694134-8f69-4e06-b811-87781a4997f6/salespage?]World Wide Vets - THRIVE CE Wellbeing retreat in Zimbabwe [https://www.worldwide-vets.org/thrive] All Creatures Great and Small (James Herriot) 1980s TV series (the best one!) [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075472/] Florida Man This Week - Bean Burrito Bandit [https://nypost.com/2026/01/25/us-news/shirtless-florida-man-sendtenced-for-diving-through-taco-bell-window-robbing-place-with-large-rock/] What Do You Think? Reach out to us and let us know at Info@flourish.vet [Info@flourish.vet] Your Hosts: Andi Davison LVT, CAPP, APPC [https://www.flourish.vet/andi] Josh Vaisman MAPPCP, CCFP [https://www.flourish.vet/josh]At Flourish Veterinary Consulting [http://www.flourish.vet] we renovate veterinary cultures. We diagnose what’s working, blueprint what’s next, and train every team member - blending positive psychology with real-world experience - so thriving becomes the norm, not the myth. Timestamps: 00:00 Generational Work Myth 00:44 Meet Josh and Dalia 02:17 Airplane Jokes and Travel 02:57 Zimbabwe Thrive Retreat 04:58 Lazy Young Workers Claim 06:56 Tech Leaves at Six 10:52 Martyrdom Culture Origins 16:05 Work Values Research
22 episodios
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