Barbershop business guide
Barbershops often operate at the intersection of walk-in demand and scheduled capacity. The right model depends on service time, chair count, neighborhood demand, barber availability, and the experience clients expect.

The operating questions behind the services.
Should the shop prioritize walk-ins, appointments, or both?
What revenue can each chair reasonably support?
How should barbers be scheduled and compensated?
Start with the essential reading.

How to open a salon: licenses, costs, location, and launch
A practical path from concept and licensing to location, equipment, systems, and opening day.
What does it really cost to open a salon?
Plan rent, buildout, equipment, inventory, permits, software, and working capital without hiding the assumptions.

A practical system for reducing no-shows
Use deposits, reminders, clear policies, and follow-up without making clients feel unwelcome.

Salon commission structures explained
Compare flat commission, tiered commission, hourly pay, and hybrid compensation models using the same assumptions.

How to hire and onboard salon employees
A repeatable hiring process with interview prompts, role expectations, onboarding, and first-30-day goals.

Client retention and rebooking for salons
Measure repeat visits, improve the checkout conversation, and create useful follow-up without constant promotions.
Calculate it, document it, and adapt it.
Salon service pricing calculator
Turn time, product cost, overhead, commission, and target margin into a transparent suggested price.
No-show cost calculator
Estimate the monthly and annual revenue blocked by missed appointments and late cancellations.
Salon break-even calculator
Estimate the monthly sales and appointments needed to cover fixed and service costs.
Salon commission calculator
Compare provider earnings, business share, and payroll before choosing a compensation percentage.