Selling Strategies
Tips To Make A Good Salon Even Better
Staying on top of the
most-effective sales techniques is key to any business. The difference between a
good salon and a great one results from the successful execution of the
following components.
Education
Not only is education the key to a successful salon, it’s
also a vital part of increasing sales potential. An employee that has been
certified in the basic aspects of tanning—and fully trained on all products
and equipment within the salon—will gain both confidence and credibility. A customer will feel a higher level of comfort when they trust that the
tanning consultant is qualified to help them make a wise purchasing decision. An
employee that understands the benefits of all tanning products, especially which
ones would be good candidates for different tanners, is a valuable asset to any
salon— and every potential customer.
Customer Service
Customer service is essential in all areas of business—and
that holds especially true to the tanning industry. A salon that is kept
spotless, has the most beautiful, up-to-date, well-maintained equipment and a
wonderful location still is not immune to losing customers if those tanners are
not happy with the treatment they are receiving from the staff.
With the growing number of tanning facilities opening every year, it is now
more important than ever to treat the customer as the No. 1 priority. There are
a few options that the salon owner can use to try to evaluate the performance of
the staff when the owner is not on location.
The most expensive method is to install a surveillance system that monitors
everything—from the amount of time and attention that a customer receives to
the day-to-day behaviors of employees, such as cleaning procedures, inventory
control, friends loitering and overall operation procedures.
Another suggestion is to designate a secret shopper. There are professional
companies that can do this work for a charge, but it is usually just as easy to
find a friend or family member who will perform the service in exchange for
tanning and products.
Before the inspection, make a checklist of specific areas to be evaluated—and
tell the secret shopper to fill out the information before they tan so it is
still fresh in their memory. Include questions such as, “Did the employee tell
you about the lotion of the day?” and “Were you reminded of the importance
of wearing protective eyewear?”
The least expensive option available would be to place a comment box in the
salon. Buy one with a lock or the complaints mysteriously will disappear and the
compliments will be plenty.
Post a sign stating that customer service is the top priority of the salon.
Mention that the management would love to hear if the customer had a pleasurable
visit—and if not, they want to know what they can do to improve the service
next time.
In-Room Promotions
A salon owner has to take advantage of the amount of
time that they have the customer as their captive audience. Once a tanner shuts
the door to their room, they spend anywhere from two to five minutes preparing
for their tanning session.
Place a suggestive selling sign or poster in plain view so that the customer
will be exposed to a purchasing idea—before they are exposed to the
ultraviolet light. The information even can be an educational poster that
answers the question, “Why wear eyewear?” or “Why should I use a lotion
when I tan?”
A salon with various types of equipment and levels of tanning can hang
posters of the equipment—along with a description as to the differences—to
try to entice the tanner to upgrade on their next visit.
Another option would be to post images of new products, or the lotion of the
day, week or month. This can be a flier produced by the manufacturer that lists
all of the qualities and properties of the specific products. A tanner that may
not take the time while standing at the counter to let an employee explain all
of the benefits might, when alone, read something—either before or after their
session—that peaks their curiosity.
Combo Deals
To increase SPF sales, create a combo deal for spring
breakers and vacationers. Include a tanning package, an accelerator to use while
tanning at the salon and an SPF to use when they reach their destination. Add up
the total for all three items separately and then offer a discount when the
items are bought as a group.
Make sure to display the savings to show the value of the multiple purchase.
A customer that might not usually buy the SPF at a tanning salon could be
persuaded by the combo deal—when it is promoted correctly. If a customer feels
like they are saving $20, they may not notice that they are spending $16 more
than they had planned.
Employee Motivation
Employee motivation is a very easy and inexpensive
way to increase sales within a salon. Hold a friendly contest that is tracked in
the salon and keep the current statistics visible at all times. One example
would be for the salon owner to pick a lotion and say that the first person to
sell twenty bottles wins. The prize can be as simple as a free tanning product
of their choice or a gift certificate to a popular local restaurant.
Every day, update the chart with the progress of each individual employee to
keep the rivalry going. As the contest gets close to the end, it is amazing to
see the sales efforts of the staff.
This same procedure can be used with tanning packages and EFT memberships and
can be held anywhere from a single shift to an entire month or through the whole
year. It is possible to run more than one contest at a time, but don’t over do
it or allow things to get too confusing. Remember to be creative and ask the
employees to help with suggestions for the contest and the prizes.
Trade-Ins Welcome
This final idea can be very effective—not only to
increase sales but also to convert a customer to begin using a product that is
offered in the salon.
When a customer comes to tan and has a tanning product that is not available
on your shelf, offer them a discount to trade it in for a product sold by the
salon. If the customer is reluctant, just inform him or her that it is perfectly
fine if they use up their entire lotion—and when it is gone, bring in the
empty bottle for a discount.
The employee should be able to recommend which product is comparable to the
customer’s current lotion. The staff member should ask questions and be
positive. For instance, the employee could ask the customer what they like and
dislike about the product they currently are using.
Remind employees to be very careful not to suggest that a customer’s
product is not good. They should be sensitive to the fact that a tanner could
feel embarrassed if the suggestion to use a different product is not handled
skillfully. The emphasis should be on explaining the advantages of the
recommended product and the qualities that are similar.
Marketing Basics
According to almost any marketing text, the primary
points to keep in mind in devising a marketing plan can be distilled to four
essential areas or the Four Ps—product, price, place and promotion.
The Product
Before placing an item on the market, a company must conduct
a large amount of research to come up with a product and its accessories.
Product planning involves the entire process of investigation that goes into the
making of a new product. Some of these steps include:
- surveying consumer needs
- design
- buyer expectations (meeting them)
- determined final needs
- brand name
- packaging
- services that
accompany product
The product isn’t just a physical entity to a consumer, it
is a physical entity that suits some purpose and completes some need. Many excellent products have failed because they are clever items but no one
needed them.
Product development is an ongoing affair, and every manufacturer has new
products, products at the height of their maturity and products in decline. Each
of these products experiences a lifecycle that begins and ends relatively
quickly.
In tanning, the first widely used tanning systems were quartz lamps,
initially used for the treatment of disease and later picked up for recreation
and beautification. This product, like any other, went through a period of
popularity and then entered a decline.
Modern tanning began with the introduction of UVA lighting systems and, since
the introduction of modern tanning equipment, the products have gone through
several phases. New models and refinements of old ideas are being changed
constantly for new tanning equipment. They are becoming more efficient and
reliable.
In a toy store, the product is a toy. In a plant store, it’s a plant. In a salon, the product you are selling is the tanning session or any of the
other ancillary services you provide. It isn’t a tangible, concrete item, but
it is a marketable product nonetheless.
When a large corporation decides to begin production of a new product, it
does a great deal of research to determine what features will entice the desired
audience to buy it. It then sets out to design a product with those features
that will be attractive to the audience.
Are you catering to the under-30 age group? To women aged 30-50? To retired
persons? To professionals on their lunch break or on the way home from work? It
is entirely possible to offer services for all of these audiences in one
facility, but the needs and wants of each group will be different.
Those in the first group will be receptive to tanning and to a variety of
fitness and beauty services, but it may take some personal selling to hook them
on some of your other ancillary services.
Professionals at lunch are pressed for time. If they can take the time to
come in, they will be in a hurry and may book appointments well in advance for
quick tanning sessions. They may pass up other services, unless the session time
is short. On their way home, time is often less of a factor. After a busy day, a
stop at your salon may be considered time to unwind. While a fast tanning booth
or a 10-minute bed may be the ticket for lunching yuppies in a time crunch, a
slower bed with a good sound system could be the key to reaching rush-hour
relaxation.
In assembling and re-evaluating the product line of your salon, then, you
need to visualize the prospective audience for each service and then look at
ways to tailor that service to that audience. Certain services will lend themselves to a particular audience and vice
versa.
Price
Price is still one of the guiding factors that companies live by
because it represents the power of logic and marketplace. A product must be sold
at a price high enough for a company to make a profit but low enough to entice
the consumer to buy it. More specifically, a producer will consider a number of factors when
structuring the final price:
- cost of production
- consumer price attitudes
- competition pricing
- laws governing fair pricing
- industry pressures
As a general rule to
fiscal happiness is never regularly sell something for less than it costs. That
is not to say that you can’t give free promotional sessions to boost your
potential customer base, just don’t make a habit of it.
There are other ways of getting new customers into your salon. In figuring what each session costs you, simply add up your costs for a month
and divide by the number of sessions taken. If you take everything into account—including
utilities, space, rent, payments on the machinery, maintenance and payroll—you
should come up with a fairly accurate per-session cost. Include the desired
profit and the result is the target price.
However, your target price may or may not be attainable, depending on many
market conditions. If your competition is charging less for an identical or
similar service, it may not be possible to make the profit you want without
distinguishing your service in some way. In tanning’s early boom phase, price
wars became common and drove many salons out of business. The principle at work
was that the more business a below-cost price generates, the more it hurts the
company.
Think about it. Suppose salons A and B are both losing $1 per session because
of their price war. If A is “winning” and is running 150 sessions per day to
B’s 75 per day, salon A is losing $150 a day to B’s $75. They’re both
cutting their own throats; salon A is just doing a better job of it.
On the other hand, if salon B combated the price war by selling sessions at
cost and lost another 25 sessions to salon A because of the price difference, it
would be running 50 sessions per day and breaking even. However, salon A would
be tanning more customers than ever, but paying $175 every day for that
privilege.
Maximum price will vary by region. Generally speaking, the going or market
price will stabilize at a value determined by the community as a whole. If every
salon in your area is asking $7 for a tanning session, you may have difficulty
charging more unless the service you offer is perceived to be better or special
in some way.
For example, if you can offer a first-rate service in correspondingly elegant
surroundings, and you can communicate this to the right clientele, you may be
able to persuade them that the difference is worth a higher price.
Pricing Strategies
There are a number of other ways to price services and
products. Loss leaders (normally supermarkets) take a loss on some items in the
hope that the consumer will come in and buy other items on which the retailer
can make a profit. Salon owners try this on a temporary basis by giving
inexpensive tanning sessions and then making up the short fall on more expensive
packages.
Flexible pricing means that the unit cost of an item is negotiable. That is,
the manufacturer can afford to sell the same product at different prices to
different levels of the retailing chain.
For example, a manufacturer of tanning equipment can afford to sell its
equipment to a wholesaler at a reduced price but would only sell at a higher
price to an actual salon owner. There are two actual prices, but only one for
each market.
Multiple unit prices are like quality discounts—the more you buy, the less
you pay per item. Two effective strategies are skimming and penetration pricing.
Skimming means getting the most profit from a product or one with limited
competition. The policy quickly changes when demand lessens or competition
enters the scene. Penetration pricing is charging an artificially low price
(similar to loss leaders) and hoping to make up for it with dramatic sales. The low profit margin discourages competition and provides
substantial benefits to consumers.
Both skimming pricing and penetration pricing have been applied to tanning
with mixed results. When many salons opened, there was little competition and
several salons took advantage of skimming prices to maximize their profit.
Competition hit these salons hard and forced many into competitive price wars.
Other salons that later entered the market tried penetration pricing but found
it difficult to service heavy client loads and maintain an adequate profit
margin.
Commercial tanning systems equipped with various options will run anywhere
between $2,900 for entry-level units to $40,000-plus for high-end units. When
examining equipment costs, take into consideration the return profit potential
that the system is able to produce. Average session costs vary from $5 to $12
for low-pressure tanning. Generally, equipment with a longer recommended exposure
time such as a tanning bed would have a higher cost factor when establishing a
pricing schedule. Therefore, the shorter the recommended exposure time, the
easier it is to establish more competitive pricing and the greater the profit
return.
Based on a 15-minute session time at $5 a session, it would take 1,200
sessions to recoup a $6,000 investment. Realistically, this could be
accomplished easily in less than two months, providing your service is promoted
properly.
Place
Once the manufacturer decides what to produce and how much to
charge for it, he has to get it to the place where a potential customer will buy
it. Among the considerations for product placement are the following issues.
- Where will customers shop for the product?
- What is the best perceived location?
- Does location affect the quality appeal of the product?
- Will consumers know to look for it here?
- Are there other locations that are overlooked that could be suitable
locations for the product?
Whatever location or locations a manufacturer chooses, the main point about a
place is the consumer’s expectations. In the past, consumers have bought
products like the ones they’ve bought before, by looking for the product in
the locale where new and old products are grouped according to category.
The process of placing the tanning service is a difficult one because the
salon owner must select a location that will draw in the most tanning customers.
Attractive display shelves and point-of-purchase displays within the salon warn
the consumer that this is an opportunity to purchase. One way the manufacturer
places his goods is with a wholesaler who in turn distributes them to locations
where they will get the best attention.
Convenience is very important in our society, and unless a product or service
is important to people, they won’t go out of their way to purchase it.
Therefore, having decided on your primary audience and what will appeal to them,
you must find a way to offer it in a location that is convenient to them. That
may mean that it is near their home, their work or other places they frequent.
It is also important that the location mesh with the other facets of the
marketing plan. If rent is prohibitively high and will push the cost of offering
the service beyond your target audience’s reach, the convenience of the
location is irrelevant. Or, if the salon is in a seedy part of the downtown
district, and your target audience is young female professionals, it doesn’t
matter if it is close to their work or if the rent is low.
The particular requirements of the services that you offer also must be
considered in choosing a location. At the very least, minimum space requirements
must be met. If you anticipate a bright future, you should make sure there is
room for expansion.
If your service is unique or is perceived to be more desirable than that of
your competition, you may be able to get away with operating in a less
convenient location that accommodates those features that make your services
distinct.
As long as your potential customers know about you and will go out of their
way for what you have to offer, the location may not be a major handicap.
In choosing your location, keep in mind the overall image you want your salon
to portray. If you’re aiming for an upscale, elegant salon, you’re going to
have to locate in similar surroundings. Its decorating style also will have to
be correspondingly tasteful. Even with an existing salon, you must be aware of
how the location is working to sell your product. In any service industry, it is
imperative that the space be clean and attractive and promote the type of
atmosphere you want your salon to convey.
Promotion
The act of promotion is creating an interest in your product by
a variety of methods. Many excellent products languish because they lack the
proper promotion. They never capture the public’s attention, and therefore,
never reach a broad market. Specific means of promotion include:
- advertising
- packaging
- branding
- personal selling
- sales
manuals
- dealer cooperation (displays/rebates, etc.)
- coupons/premiums
Most salons have small budgets for advertising, if they have any budget at all. It makes sense then to try to ensure that those few dollars are spent as
wisely as possible.
Before you pick up the phone to call the local newspaper and arrange for an
ad, stop and think. Do the customers you want to attract read the paper? In what
section will an ad reach them in the right frame of mind? What should the ad say
to get their attention and then make them want to come into your salon? Is a
local radio station a favorite of the desired audience? Might fliers distributed
at a local mall work as well? Can you get hold of a mailing list specific enough
to make direct mail pay off?
After you choose and run an ad, make sure the dollars were well spent. Get in
the habit of asking new customers where they heard about you and keep track of
their responses. You’ll begin to see patterns indicating the effectiveness of
different promotional efforts. Keep those patterns in mind in future advertising
decisions and you will see results without wasting advertising money.
A fifth “P” inherent in making decisions about each of the other four is
People. Meaningful marketing decisions always must take the desired customer
into account. The four Ps, then, are the basis of any effective marketing scheme. The
effective and efficient interrelation of them may not guarantee success, but it
goes a long way in that direction.
|