How a 1-star veterinary app became a 4.9-star product with 93%+ subscription renewals, using the team already building it
App Store rating
across 781 global reviews
Basic subscription
renewal rate
Parent company
subsequently acquired
Client: Plumb's Veterinary Drugs (VetMedux / Clinician's Brief family)
Industry: Veterinary publishing and clinical reference, 40-year heritage
Product: Mobile app used daily by veterinarians to reference drug monographs, dosages, and prescribing information
Engagement: Product Diagnostics and Fixes: customer research, product strategy, product redesign, development oversight
Timeline: Approximately 4.5 months end to end: 6 weeks of Product Diagnostics followed by 3 months of Product Fixes
Headline result: App Store rating from 1 to 4.9 stars across 781 global reviews. Basic subscription renewals above 93%. Pro subscription renewals exceeding the company's own revenue forecasts. Parent company VetMedux subsequently acquired by Instinct Science (Mainsail Partners)
Plumb's is an institution in veterinary medicine. For 40 years, their drug monographs have been the reference standard for practising veterinarians: detailed records covering dosages, usage data, side effects, and prescribing guidance for every drug a vet might use.
The mobile app was their first step into digitising that reference. It carried the full library into a single product serving general practice vets, emergency clinicians, and specialists, each with fundamentally different workflows and pressures.
The company decided to redesign the app using a small internal marketing team and an outsourced development partner. The development team were skilled at building software, but nobody in the process had product strategy or customer insight expertise. The marketing team made visual decisions. The development team made structural decisions. Nobody connected the two to what customers actually needed.
They redesigned the app without ever speaking to the veterinarians who used it every day. The result was a product that looked different but was actually harder to use than what it replaced.
When the update launched, App Store reviews dropped to 1 star. Customers were threatening to cancel subscriptions. The internal team's response was that people just don't like change. They'd learn how to use it.
A strategic advisor already working with the business saw it differently. The problem wasn't customer resistance. It was a product built without any understanding of its customers. He brought us in to find out what had actually gone wrong.
We needed to understand why the redesign had failed, not just that it had. Phase 1 runs our Dual Lens approach (Customer Intelligence and Product Efficiency), building on what the business already knew about its customers and adding direct research to find the why behind the numbers.
The core insight: The redesign had been driven by visual preferences and technical capability, not by any understanding of how veterinarians actually use a clinical reference tool under pressure. Social media-style scrolling patterns had been applied to a product where speed, precision, and reliability in high-pressure clinical moments are what determine whether customers renew their subscriptions.
This is where Customer Intelligence does the work that analytics can't: speaking directly to real-world customers to understand the why behind the numbers. Analytics can tell you what's happening inside the product. They can't tell you what's happening around it: what vets are actually doing in a consultation, the pressures they're under, the conditions they're working in, and where this product needs to fit into a clinical day that has very little room for friction. What we found:
The second lens turns the camera on the product itself: a systematic review of how the product is structured, how information is presented, and where the experience helps, gets in the way, or silently costs the business. What we found:
Neither lens alone would have been enough. Together, they gave the business something it hadn't had before: the customer segments defined by what each actually needed from the product in the moments that mattered, and exactly where it was helping, falling short, or silently losing revenue, all in one view.
The conclusion was unambiguous: the product needed to be rebuilt around how veterinarians actually work. We developed a product strategy informed directly by the Customer Intelligence findings, working alongside the existing team to re-prioritise the roadmap around speed of access, readability in any environment, and a structure that matched how vets think about drug information and how they actually serve their clients day to day in practice.
The strategy translated into specific, evidence-backed product decisions:
Before anything went into development, we prototyped and tested with real veterinarians. This confirmed the strategy was working and caught additional issues before committing to development. We then oversaw the development process to ensure what had been designed and validated was actually delivered in the final product.
Within months of launch, the metrics confirmed the strategy was working.
App Store rating across 781 global reviews
Basic subscription renewal rate
Pro subscription renewals dramatically exceeded company projections
VetMedux subsequently acquired by Instinct Science
The fixes were built by the team already in the business. No new hires. No new technology. The product decisions changed, and the numbers followed.
Renewal rates are the number a PE investor screens for first in a subscription business. The shift from mass cancellation threats to 93%+ renewals represented a fundamental change in the product's commercial profile. The App Store rating, now at 4.9 stars across more than 3,000 reviews, confirmed that the strategy didn't just fix the immediate problem; it compounded.
The product strategy and customer research that rebuilt Plumb's contributed directly to the commercial profile that made the business attractive for acquisition.
“We have 781 global reviews in the iOS App Store with an average rating of 4.9 and strong comments as well. Plumb's Basic renewals have increased to over 93% this past month, and our Pro renewals are dramatically higher than forecast. Our team really appreciates your strategic insight and the product strategy development work on Plumb's. It is truly making a difference for our users.”
Elizabeth Green, CEO & Founder, VetMedux
VetMedux was subsequently acquired by Instinct Science, a veterinary software platform backed by growth equity firm Mainsail Partners. The acquisition consolidated Plumb's into a PE-backed SaaS portfolio, with Elizabeth Green joining the combined leadership team as President of VetMedux.
Plumb's is not unusual. In PE-backed subscription businesses, the product is rarely a lever in the value creation plan at all. The commercial fundamentals are sound, the customer base is loyal, but nobody has connected what customers actually need to the product decisions that determine whether they renew. When that connection is missing, reviews are the first number to show it. Renewal rates follow, and they're harder to recover.
When product metrics stall, the instinct is to build more, redesign, or hire more people. But without understanding what customers actually need (from their own words, in their own context) every product decision is a guess. Phase 1 reveals what's broken and tells you exactly where to invest for the highest commercial return. Phase 2 turns those findings into the specific product decisions the team can ship.
This applies to any technology business with a strong underlying asset where product experience is an underused lever in the value creation plan.
Plumb's illustrates Product Diagnostics and Fixes applied to a subscription business: 4.5 months from diagnosis to delivery, using the team already building the product, taking Basic renewals to 93%+ and Pro renewals dramatically above forecast. The same team, the same technology, the same data. What changed was the quality of the product decisions, grounded in what customers actually needed.
We're now applying this approach with PE-backed tech portfolio companies. A focused intervention sized to deliver a clear commercial multiplier inside the hold period, working alongside operating partners and management teams to move the metrics that determine valuation. For subscription businesses, that starts with the product decisions that drive reviews and renewals. Plumb's shows what's possible when product experience becomes a lever in the value creation plan.
About: Building Great Tech is a two-person consultancy bringing 30+ years of combined product and technology experience to a single PE-focused practice. This case study describes work led during a product consultancy engagement with Plumb's (predating BGT as a vehicle), and illustrates the Product Diagnostics and Fixes methodology we now apply with PE-backed tech portfolio companies.
Building Great Tech | Plumb's Veterinary Drugs Case Study