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Q. I love going to the salon, but
the prices sometimes seem very high just for a simple manicure or pedicure. A.
Hopefully I can answer your question about why we charge what we charge. We
are in no ways trying to gouge anyone of money. I hope these numbers make sense
to you an perhaps you can appreciate the cost and enjoy the service.
The main reason is we have to earn a wage just like you do at your job. The
easiest way to understand this it might cost you $3 to do your own manicure at
home. I am going to assume you have a job, are you willing to work 10-12 hours
everyday for $3 an hour? Now lets switch it up a little an
say your self employed like the majority of nail technicians. We work 12 hour
days 6 days a week, don't take a lunch and your weekly rent is $100. You do a
client on the hour every hour. That's 72 clients a week at $3 a client = a
whopping $216 a week. Subtract your rent and you average $1.61 an hour or $116 a
week or $464 a month for a standard 4 week month. Now subtract at least 20% for
taxes as we have to pay our own taxes an you get $371.20. $371 a month to live
on, to pay rent or mortgage, utilities, groceries, fuel, car payments, cell
phone, insurance, an normal day to day living expenses as well as pay for day to
day business expenses that run almost as much as living expenses.
To even get that $371 a month we have to have a full book minimum 144 clients
who come every two weeks no exception, with no cancellations, no "no-show"
clients, or late arrivals, our work better be spot on perfection as we will have
no room for repairs or adjustments. Don't plan on having much of a social life,
marriage, or children, and our health better be perfect cause there is no time
for being sick or doctors visits. We can't count tips as any generated income
because there is no rule stating all your clients will or have to tip us, it's
something we earn, not expect.
Colleen, C.R. Nails, Safford, AZ We absolutely love what we
do, day in & day out. Generally we love the interaction with our clients, making
them feel better about themselves after their service - we all have that one
client who makes us wince when we see them on our books today!. In addition to
the math lesson (above) Colleen gave a consumer that wandered into the
professional area, she did not even touch on the cost of school ($2-8,000
depending on if their license was for full cosmetology or specializing in nails
only) or the additional expense of trade magazines, trade shows, and classes to
keep current on products, techniques, health concerns and more. So with that in
mind, using Colleen's math lesson, at those rates it would actually be costing
us money to work every day. |
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