29 June 2011

Know any Senior staff with bad attitudes?

Presenting a bad attitude may be good if you are Lady Gaga, in fact it can enhance your reputation andfollowing if you are talented and famous. However only thinking that the world revolves around you in a salon is not good for team spirit and for the Salon as a whole.


Who runs your staff room? There is sometimes an unofficial leader who is often a senior stylist who may be well established. They may say yes to your face but take every opportunity to undermine you when your back is turned. When you try and introduce new things they often try their hardest to undo the good work you have done.


These characters live on their past reputation and salon experience but often do not want to progress. They will negotiate the best deal for them and then sit on it, not contributing or offering anything back in return. They will only do their set hours and use attack as their best defence if you question anything.


They will talk a good game and appear as everyone's friend in public as life is a show, but do they actually get much done. Quite often they appear busy but when you look at their figures they are not that effective.


When you take everything into account such as paying them a high basic, low productivity, me me me attitude, undoing your good work and their unwillingness to progress you have to question if you should keep them in the job.


If you have tried so many times it's driving you mad, sometimes you have to stand tough and let them go for the good of everyone.


Introducing a Performance Management System is a good way to develop an open environment where team member loyalty, performance and great customer care are all rewarded in a fair way. It gives a true picture of what's going on and stops Stylists being able to hide behind their old reputation.


It lets people know where they stand, what the boundaries are and what they have to do to get on. You will find that good stylists will thrive and bad ones will move on.


For more information about how we help salons introduce a Performance Management System visit http://www.nexusrevolution.co.uk

9 June 2011

Is your salon setup to make a Million?

One of the salon business tools Nexus Revolution use to take the guess work out of your salon's potential to profit is our Salon Calculator.

The Salon Calculator works out:
  1. How many active clients you need on your database to produce your desired income.
  2. How many of these need to visit each hour for your team's column productivity
  3. How many Full/Part Time team members you need to service these clients based on your opening hours
  4. What your return on income is after basic wages for your length of trading hours
Take a look at the results of this sample case study; to see what the salon would need to do to make a £1,000,000 turnover.

Salon 1 – Has 10 cutting stations. Opens 5 days, for 8 hours a day. 60 minute appointment times are allocated to deliver a £45 cut and finish. The team average being booked out 80% of their available time. (This means there is 96 minutes unallocated in each column to schedule rest breaks throughout the day without reducing productivity further.)  On average the active clients in the salon database return every 8 and 2/3 weeks, which is 6 visits a year (52 weeks ÷ 8.67 weeks between visits = 6 visits a year). Full Time team members are employed 8 hours a day, 5 days a week for 46.4 weeks a year to allow for 5.6 weeks paid annual leave. The average pay rate for the members doing the £45 cut and finish is £8.00 per hour.
  1. To turnover £1,000,000 based on £45 cuts across an active clientele returning an average 6 times a year, the salon would need at least 3704 clients such as these.
  2. However at £45 for every 60 minute appointment slot the salon would need to see 14 clients in salon per hour. Unfortunately this salon only has 10 cutting stations. (Even if the team worked at 100% productivity the whole year, the salon would still need to see 11 clients each hour!) 10 stations limit the salon to £748,000pa based on this most performed service at the current price, duration and total trading hours.
So what is the best thing to do assuming the salon itself can’t be made to fit the 4 additional stations required?

OPTION A – Increase service price?
OPTION B – Decrease service time?
OPTION C – Increase trading hours?

If the salon changed nothing and reached its current revenue ceiling of £748,800 it would need to employ at least 10 Full Time and 1 & 1/8th Part Time qualified members costing £166,400 in basic wages before bonuses. Income after wages will not exceed £582,400.


Option B – Decrease service time in this example returned the most income but must be weighed against the extra pressure on staff to run to time without reducing the quality or service experience of the client.

Reducing service times is not always an option. Had the service most performed be a 45 minute massage service that occupies a treatment room with a 60 minute appointment slot, we cannot expect to service more than 1 client per hour in this work space. In which case Option A – Increase prices should be considered before opening longer and significantly increase your wage bill.

Whilst on the topic on service times, it is worth noting that increasing the popularity of profitably priced 30 minute services will have the effect of halving the number of team members required. For example in the above example, £45 cuts completed in 30 minutes, would require only 4 Full Time and 3/8ths Part Time qualified members (that is a casual employed 3 hours for every 8 hours trading) grossing £1,048,320 at a basic wage cost of £66,560 to return £981,760 after wages.

A Nexus Revolution Salon Setup Benchmark Review would also input your other cost centers of Rent, Stock, Operations, Marketing etc to forecast your profit potential. Follow the link below to arrange a no obligation consultation.


© 2011 Wayne Kranz & Nexus Revolution Trust http://www.nexusrevolution.co.uk

8 June 2011

The training balance - Outstanding business vs. outstanding services

In an industry known for cutting edge fashion, glamour and beauty there's no question of the importance of focusing on technical training and development to ensure the standards and skills of our beauty therapists, nail techs, stylists and colourists.

Investment in recognised NVQ qualifications and advanced apprenticeships are a must for hair and beauty career makers and landing a position in a salon or spa where attention to constant education and updating of skills, should be high on a budding professionals' agenda.

For salon owners, training is a considerable cost in both time and money, especially when combined with preparing members of the team to enter industry awards and competitions. Let's not forget also, the outlay in fitting out the salon in the first place to provide a creative space, both fun to work in and pleasurable to experience as a client.

Without doubt, the high profile of the industry can only be maintained by excellence in training. It's the reason our industry exists. People are attracted to salons and spas because the core trade skills practiced there provide clients with service results they can't otherwise receive, just as hair and beauty professionals are attracted to the industry because of the rewards achievable that interest them.
The reward for owning a salon business is that you can profit from it, - although I do come across a lot of owners running not for profit operations albeit unintentionally, as they personally subsidise haircuts and beauty treatments to their local community with their own sweat and tears!
Business owners need to be equally mindful, that supporting your team with education and great workplaces that engage in plenty of opportunities for industry recognition, is only addressing essentially what is the by-product of the business. Providing outstanding services, i.e. Great hair, fantastic nails, stunning tans, excellent treatments etc., is simply the result of having applied the training and skills. It's their trade; it's what professionals do in exchange for pay.

If we were in a different trade the by-product of our applied training and skills results in what that trade does. Mechanics - well running motors, Farriers - properly shod steads, Bakers - lovely buns.

How good they are at their trade is only half the story whether the by-product of their labours will result in an outstanding business and yet when it comes to placing an equal focus on training and skills to run the business itself, I see many salon owners neglect investment in this vital area. It's focus in this area that determines the business' profitable success.

Nexus Revolution salon management and consulting at http://www.nexusrevolution.co.uk exists as a resource to salon owners to fulfil this training and education requirement, by supporting salon teams with the foundational skills and tools necessary to run all parts of a salon operation in easy to implement, accountable steps.


By Wayne Kranz

6 June 2011

First Impressions Count


When was the last time you looked at the front of your salon?


You may walk through the door everyday but when was the last time you really looked at your salon from outside, which is after all what all clients see whether new or regular.


Check the following to see if it’s still up to scratch:



  • signage

  • paintwork

  • pricelist

  • front door, door furniture, door mat

  • plants

  • window display

  • glass

  • imagery


Make it a regular task to check it's in tip top condition to ensure you are keeping up appearances!


To ensure all those attention to detail things that clients really notice get done check out http://www.nexusrevolution.co.uk 


by Ryan Fox