Salon Marketing Plan Strategy: Has the Gorilla Got You in its Grip?

Salon Marketing Plan Strategy: Has the Gorilla Got You in its Grip?

Is it little wonder that so many in the hair and beauty business find themselves in more trouble than a blind, one-legged dog?

Every week, our fax machine pours forth with a stream of ‘HELP’ letters, from hair stylists and estheticians who’ve suddenly found themselves owning a salon, with not a clue about a marketing plan for their salon or how to generate business.

Like this one:

“Dear Greg, My name is (name withheld), I’ve just purchased a cute little hair salon in (location witheld) on the Gold Coast – it settles in two weeks. “The lady I purchased it from has let the salon run down, she has only been taking about $2,500 a week. I’m so worried that there will be no clients in chairs when I open my doors on June 2nd. I have very little money to play with so I was just going to do a discounted mail drop and hope for the best.
“I have just watched your DVD and I don’t know what the hell to do – I feel sick now, knowing that my mail drop won’t work. I think I have bitten off more than I can chew. I’m keeping the apprentice on but I don’t know how I will pay her if I don’t get bums on seats.
“Please, please, please can you help me so I don’t fail before I start.”

Without wishing to sound like a broken record (I do) I’ll keep nagging until I’m blue in the face. Fancy fit-outs, expensive equipment, swish furniture, state-of-the-art software systems, up-market products, pretty pictures on the walls, flat screen TVs…. NONE of that stuff matters a damn unless you know how to get customers.

Has your salon turned into a gorilla?

Has your salon turned into a gorilla?

In an average, garden variety day, we interview at least half a dozen applicants for Inner Circle membership. And I kid you not, nearly half of those fall into the category above – having bought or in the process of buying themselves a job because ‘I always wanted to own my own business’, and only too late discovering that the business owns them, clasping them ever-tighter to its breast like a hairy, grumpy gorilla intent on squeezing the life out of its prey.

Far too many stylists and aestheticians fall victim to the romantic notion of ‘being my own boss’, without for a moment employing what I call ‘accurate thinking’ – e.g., “I need X clients per week/month, each spending an average of $Y, to pay the bills. Then I need another Z of those clients in order to give me a profit. How do I get the extra clients I need?”

There is ONLY one way of getting extra clients. And that’s simply a marketing plan. (And before you diss me for failing to mention ‘referrals’ – what are referrals if they’re not word-of-mouth marketing???)

Treat your business like a 10,000 pound gorilla. Your very FIRST priority is to feed it a never-ending smorgasbord of juicy, ripe customers. Every single day. Then shut the door while it eats, and go get some more.

And you can’t be out hunting for customers while you’re inside the beast, working on the tools, digesting the food your gorilla is swallowing.

 Check out My Social Salon here!


Salon Marketing Plan Using Salon Template SMS to ‘Raise the Dead’

 Using Salon Template SMS to 'Raise the Dead'
Text message marketing can get great results…but it still comes down to the OFFER

Salon Marketing Plan Using Salon Template SMS to ‘Raise the Dead’

WSM member Ian Simonsen from Gallery Hair Design in Auckland, New Zealand, wanted to get more clients in the door.

In particular, he wanted old clients back in, and to fill some empty appointments Monday to Wednesday. To keep the marketing cheap we created a very powerful offer that was NOT discounting, and Ian sent this salon template offer in a text message to 500 clients he hadn’t seen in 3 months or more. The offer went out on a Friday afternoon.

The promotion to ‘raise the dead’ has had spectacular results – and a brilliant return on investment.

Within three days Ian’s salon marketing plan had booked in 26 clients for a cut and color on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. This promotion cost Ian about $100 (at 20 cents per text message). Talk about great results for his marketing dollar…he made over $5,000 from this single Inner Circle promotion. 

But why spend money on test messaging – when you can send promotions via Push Notifications in your Mobile Phone App for FREE!

More Info On Salon Templates!

 

 

Salon Marketing: $300 Hair Salon Ad Turns Into $9,200 in new Sales and 15 New Customers

ChrisBurkinshaw.jpg

Chris Burkinshaw

Salon Marketing: $300 Hair Salon Ad Turns Into $9,200 in new Sales and 15 New Customers

Inner Circle member Chris Burkinshaw of Turning Heads in Wagga, New South Wales, reports terrific success from a cheap little ad he ran in the free newspaper in his town last week. 

Chris took a salon template from the WSM system (see My Social Salon here), modified it to suit his salon, and booked space in the paper last Wednesday to test the offer.

Within two days, 7 bookings. By Monday of this week, another 8 bookings. And still coming in.

Ad cost: $330

Total sales so far: $9,200! (In a week.) That’s a gross return on investment of 27 to 1.

Plus, at a new to frequent client conversion rate of only 50%, and average annual client value of $1000, his salon marketing adds up to an extra $7,500 of extra annual revenue. Do only that every week, and you’re adding $390,000 to your annual turnover, in a year.

As Chris says, “We’ve never, ever had this kind of response from our newspaper advertising before.”

Now, only Inner Circle members will find this salon marketing ad in their email in-boxes in the next few days, but I will tell you what the ad DIDN’T have in it.

It didn’t have glossy pictures of glamorous young things sporting impossible-to-maintain hair styles that only have a place on the catwalk. It didn’t have vast acres of blank space, or clever tag lines. What it DID have was LOTS of text, a great OFFER, a simple, compelling headline, a guarantee that would make most salon owners vomit with fear, a Call to Action – and the name and contact number of the salon at the bottom of the ad, where it belongs, not the top of the ad, where most business owners would put it.

(NOTE to Members: watch out for this ad in your in-box. Feel free to use it.)