Business guidance should feel as practical as the work itself.
Salon.guide exists to help owners find important information without digging through scattered advice, sales funnels, and generic small-business content. We use “salon industry” broadly: hair salons, barbershops, spas, med spas, nail salons, PMU, brows, lashes, salon suites, and independent beauty professionals.
Built around owner questions
We organize every resource around a real task: calculate a price, understand capacity, set a policy, hire someone, review a metric, compare an operating model, or verify an official requirement. Topics and industry hubs make the library easier to navigate without duplicating the same article across several URLs.
Evidence before volume
Salon Guide will not become a reference by publishing hundreds of thin pages. Every indexable resource needs a distinct purpose, useful body, visible author, real date, appropriate sources, and review proportional to the risk of the subject. Read the full editorial standards and corrections policy.
Verified people and media
Every public image must have an approved media record covering alt text, creator, source, license, consent when applicable, and permitted usage. Unverified foundation images stay outside the published database library.
Editorial boundaries by design
The general portal should not feel like a hidden software funnel. Commercial relationships, affiliates, advertising, and ownership connections belong in visible disclosures and may not change the editorial method or conclusion.
Who is responsible
Every resource links to an author or reviewer profile. The editorial-team byline does not imply licensed expertise. Regulated, clinical, legal, employment, tax, privacy, and sanitation claims need qualified review before being labeled expert-reviewed.