I have never really charged extra for extra work....but I *do* mention the 
value of the extra work....and "give" it to the client.  If it's someone new 
and I'm "schooling them"...I might casually mention..."Well we did 2 repairs 
today which would be an extra $10, but I usually let you slide on that unless 
it becomes a problem."

I don't set a specific price between 2 week fills vs 3 week fills...because 
some people truly can roll along 3 weeks without any additional effort on  my 
part. But I have never had anyone take advantage of me by continuously 
stretching their services out. If that happened, I would impose a "rebuild" 
fee...lol  Somewhere between a fill price and a new set price.  

My prices are always set at or above what is in the market around me for 
similar work. I don't give a rip what the discount salons charge....and I don't 
apologize for my prices, either. As I'm in a new place, building my clientele, 
I get the odd comment about my prices because there are several discount salons 
within 5-6 blocks of me. When questioned, depending on what I think the client 
will feel is a priority, I just mention the benefits of working with someone 
who can take such excellent care of them and their nails (or skin). Maybe I 
might say that when you cut prices sometimes the first thing to go is safety 
and sanitation. I might mention that I use only the best products.  Or maybe 
I'll say, "high end products for a high end clientele."  Or I might do a wee 
bit of a take away..  "Well my services might not be for everyone...not 
everyone has the inclination to shop at Nordstrom's."  

I structure my prices so that I make around $45 per hour...give or take a bit.  
(UV polish mani-45 minutes, $35 = $46.66/hour,  pedicure-1 hour, $45.  
Brow/lip/chin waxing-$15 per service, but combo price for 2 is $25 and will 
take about half an hour, combo price for all 3 $40 and would take about 45 
minutes).  These are my prices during this building phase. Once I become fully 
booked, I'll give my pedicures a raise because I do "Zero-gravity" pedicures in 
an awesome chair with low lights, music, aromatherapy and organic scrubs.   I 
don't have any regular fill clients right now...if I did, I would tell them if 
they committed to a standing appointment every two weeks, I would give them a 
discount on their fill prices and only charge $35....so that would be my lowest 
price per service, but they are so loyal that I would gladly be happy with only 
$35 per hour. 

Good to think through why I've got things set the way I do once in a 
while...thanks Katherine.

Karen
Grapevine  


From: Katherine Fahrig 
Sent: Friday, November 23, 2012 4:36 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: NailTech:: Re: What to say to clients who think that an NSS salon 
nails are beautiful? Now - pricing structure?


Oh, the gel chips off because I put it on too thin. Thanks, that helps. I still 
need more time to thin down the NSS acrylic and use a concealer pink gel and if 
I have to book an hour and a half I want to be paid for it. 


So this moves into a new topic.


How do you all structure your prices? 


Do you ever charge for extra time or always just for the service? A question 
for those who do charge extra for more work, How do you market your prices? 


I've heard of people charging based on how long it's been between services. 
Anyone want to chime in on that method?


Last part of my question, how do you determine your prices?


These subjects have been discussed in the past, I think it needs to be rehashed 
every now and again.  

Katherine Fahrig 
Nails at Panache
Sent from my iPod

On Nov 23, 2012, at 4:07 PM, "Laura Merzetti" <[email protected]> wrote:


  Katherine I agree with you.  The only way I’ve had any success with gel over 
MMA is to really thin out the enhancement first – which as you know takes a lot 
of time.  I don’t even bother trying to soak it off anymore, waste of time and 
acetone.  Then I apply a liberal layer of gel over it.  You can’t be too thin 
(it chips off).  The nails might end up a bit thicker than you would normally 
do them, but in my experience they grow off and then you can just keep 
rebalancing with gel.    This method has worked successfully for me.  

   

  Laura M. 

   

   

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Katherine Fahrig
  Sent: November-23-12 2:55 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: NailTech:: Re: What to say to clients who think that an NSS 
salon nails are beautiful?

   

  I use Light Elegance gel. It just chips off cheep acrylic. Good brands like 
CND, OPI, Entity, etc are not a problem as long as I use Protein Bond by Young 
Nails between the acrylic and gel. That cheep NSS acrylic is nothing like the 
name brands, it is ridiculous hard to file and ridiculous hard to soak off and 
whatever (MMA?) is in it stops the gel from sticking to it. Maybe if I just 
buffed the gel top coat, but didn't remove it, my gel would stick, but, the 
nails are so thick and ugly shaped that I still don't want my name on them if I 
can't reshape them, thin them out and properly balance the apex.





  Some acrylic companies have gel top coat that is specially formulated to 
adhere to their acrylic, but it is just a top coat, it is not strong enough to 
be used as a fill product and most of them do not have a tacky layer so they 
cannot be used as a base or primer to make the UV gel adhere to the acrylic.

   

  Please, if anyone has found a way to get their gel to stick to cheep acrylic, 
share the trick.


  Katherine

  Nails at Panache

  St. Louis, MO

  Sent from my iPad


  On Nov 23, 2012, at 12:17 PM, Jill in Ky <[email protected]> wrote:

    Your gel won't adhere over cheap acrylic? I'm not a gel tech, but am eager 
to learn more about it, so can you explain to me the chemistry behind WHY it 
won't adhere if you take the shine off the top of the old nail product?

     

    I'd really like to know because I thought you could use a camouflaging pink 
gel to help hide the fill lines. If that's not the case, then maybe I need to 
stick to acrylic where I can custom blend the powder to help hide other nail 
techs fill lines. For all the gel techs out there, jump in to help instruct me 
on this, ok?

     

    Jill W.

    On Thursday, November 22, 2012 5:57:24 PM UTC-6, Katherine Fahrig wrote:

    I understand what you are saying and I agree in principal. However, in this 
situation, that is not going to work. She wears a French Manicure, so the 
yellow acrylic and fill lines show through my crystal clear gel product. 
Additionally, my gel will not adhere to cheep NSS acrylic. So, the problem is 
that the finished nails look horrible with the yellow ac and fill lines showing 
AND they will not hold up. My gel will chip off the top of that NSS ac in less 
than a week. I do not want my name on those nails. I do not want her telling 
everyone that those yellow, fill lined and chipping nails are my work.

     

    Back in the day, when I did acrylic nails, I had an opaque pink that I used 
on clients who came to me with horrid yellow acrylic on their nails and I was 
proud to have my name on my work because I could make the nails look good 
despite the crappy product underneath. Even if I used an opaque pink gel, it 
would still chip off the top of the NSS acrylic. The only thing I could do is 
start doing acrylic nails again. Not going to happen for my own reasons, long 
story that is a whole different thread.

     

    It's not an ego thing, it's a reputation thing. I will not put my name on 
yellow, fill lined nails. That is not what my work looks like. I use top 
quality products that do not yellow and correct (manufacturers) technique that 
does not leave fill lines. I do not view a good work ethic as "ego".

     

    I get what you are saying, but, this situation is not about ego, it's about 
my name on substandard work. I have other clients who get their nails done in 
other states, one who gets her nails done in Vancouver, BC, I have no problem 
doing their nails. No, the work is not as good as mine ( that part is ego ) but 
they all use a quality gel and I can do my work with my gel over it and with 
one appointment I can produce nails that deserve my name on them. I do not bad 
mouth the other salon or manicurist, I like to hear about how things are in the 
other city for my clients who live part time here and part time there, it's a 
fun and exciting life that I can live vicariously through. It's not about me 
having to convince anyone that I'm better than the other manicurist. It doesn't 
matter, I do their nails when they are in STL and the other manicurist does 
their nails when they are there. No competition, we are actually working 
together, sharing the client. I'm cool with that. I'm not cool with someone 
telling a client that they are getting gels when they are getting acrylic and 
then the client expects me to make her yellow, fill lined acrylic look like the 
clear, natural gel nails that I'm known for creating.

    I do not think that anyone should put their name on work that is beneath 
them. Every single set of nails that walk out of my salon meet my standards for 
quality, beauty and durability. That is customer service. That is a full book 
of happy, satisfied clients. That is a reputation in this city that I am the 
best.

     

    Belittling, berating or insulting a client, coworker, manicurist (licensed 
or not) is not good customer service. Doing substandard work over a substandard 
foundation in not good customer service.


    Katherine

    Nails at Panache

    St. Louis, MO

    Sent from my iPad


    On Nov 22, 2012, at 11:03 AM, Jill in Ky <[email protected]> wrote:

      Katherine, I feel your pain & I hate when that happens! It is so 
frustrating, but this is how I've learned to handle it after 25+ years in the 
business- it all boils down to psychology: 

       

       After I've tried to educate someone & they still aren't getting it, I 
stop trying. For me, I can recognize the feeling of being defensive when it 
comes on me & it serves no purpose. I have to reign in that emotion because 
ultimately I do not want to alienate the client (no matter how stupid they 
appear to be). My goal has to be focused on giving her the best possible 
service in the time that she's booked. If that means filling over someone 
else's crappy work, then I'll do my best to make it look right & create a 
stable nail (ultimately it will be her new nail techs problem when her acrylic 
starts to break down). Then I direct the conversation to something else more 
pleasant, the hour goes fast, and then she pays me. It's not easy, but I try to 
take my ego out of the equation. 

       

      Think about it from the client's point of view......by YOU contradicting 
what she's telling you & pointing out her new nail techs flaws, the client is 
being made to feel like SHE made a poor choice in salons because she's 
ignorant. No one want's to feel that way, including ourselves. So then the 
client keeps talking about how beautiful & wonderful the new salon is & how 
great their services are, because that's HER way of trying to convince YOU that 
she DID make a good choice. She has a need for your approval, but she doesn't 
realize that it hurts your feelings & puts you on the defensive, so both of you 
get nowhere. It's frustrating on both sides because both peoples egos are 
involved.

       

      Obviously, the other salon is exciting to her because it's new. She was 
probably excited about your salon back when she became a new client, too. The 
new tech probably strokes her ego in ways that you don't anymore, because we 
all get familiar with long time clients & thus, the honeymoon phase goes out 
the window. It's only natural that it will eventually happen with this new 
salon, too. Then when you eventually see her she'll start to complain about 
them.

       

      I wouldn't turn her away or insist that she soak off for a new full set, 
but that's just me. I wouldn't want her to leave my salon with hard feelings 
because SHE won't understand why after all these years YOU are giving her the 
boot, plus she will tell everyone in town about how she was so rudely dismissed 
as a long time client by you. And what if she doesn't have the money in the 
budget to pay your prices for a full set? She'll be forced by YOU to take her 
business elsewhere then. We're in business to make money & HERS would be gone. 
What purpose would that serve?

       

      If she were my client, I'd mentally prepare myself for when she comes in 
(keeping my body language relaxed- not on the defensive) bragging about her new 
salon & then I'd just let her talk it out of her system. I'd keep my head down, 
fixing those crappy nails so they look good, & occasionally at the right points 
in the conversation, I'd interject the little words that will mean so much to 
her.... "uh-huh" & "is that right?" & "no way!" & "you go, girl!". I'd be 
taking my ego out of the conversation & using psychology to make the client 
feel validated. Eventually, she'll run out of steam & you can direct the 
conversation to other things that are important to HER. Aaaahhh, the honeymoon 
phase is returning! 

       

      It's a challenge in acting & psychology, but for me it's also satisfying 
when it works because everyone leaves happy. One great thing about being in the 
South is that you learn how to sugar coat phrases which have underlying 
meanings. The best one to remember is "Well, bless your heart!", which sounds 
very nice on the surface, & you can interject it into your next conversation 
with her when she says what a great nail job her new tech did. But what you 
really mean by that phrase is "Well, you are dumb as a rock"! 

       

      Jill Wright

      Event Coordinator & Nail Tech

      www.nailtechevent.com

       

       



      On Tuesday, November 6, 2012 1:55:18 PM UTC-6, Katherine Fahrig wrote:

      Hey Techies, 

      I have a client who used to be a regular gel client until she moved to 
Florida last year. She now comes to me 3 or 4 times a year. It wasn't a problem 
until this visit. She showed up with NSS, substandard, horrible acrylic nails 
that are yellowing and have fill lines. She went on and on about how she found 
a new salon that is so beautiful and the guy she goes to is so up to date on 
all the latest things and does such beautiful work. I'm looking at horrible, 
yellow, fill lines and acrylic ( she was told that it was the new powder gel 
that they were using ) and I want to scream! I pointed out the yellowing and 
the fill lines, she acknowledged them and then said something about "taking it 
all off" for her fill. I told her that she would have to soak them off for 
about an hour and then I would do a full set, for the price of a full set. She 
said that they just pulled them off, no hour wasted soaking them off. I had to 
keep my head down so she could not see the horror on my face. 

      What do you say to someone when presented with this kind of mess? I did 
not have the time to soak them off and do a full set, so, I did not push her to 
do so. I told her that it was acrylic on her nails and she said that it was 
powder gel, didn't I know about it? I explained that it was not powder gel it 
was acrylic and she still insisted that they said it was gel so it is gel. I 
stopped short of telling her that they are lying rat finks because she went on 
and on about how much she liked the salon and the "guy" who does her nails and 
the conversation was quickly turning into an argument with my client defending 
her "guy's" flat out lies! 

      I'm still trying to get my hormones in balance so I could use some advice 
as to what to say and what not to say. In general I do not bad mouth anyone 
else's work, but, what do I do when someone is lying their but off and the 
client believes them over me? I have certificates on the wall that prove my 
advanced education and she's heard me go on and on about all the conventions, 
continuing education, this mailing list, industry web sites and trade 
publications that I've gotten all my information from for 25 years and she 
still believes that lying sack of *~#t!!!!! Sorry, I fell into name 
calling.....not sorry he is a lying sack of _____. 

      She was a good client for about a year before she moved to FL, I educated 
her while she was in my chair and now she seems to have forgotten all of it. On 
her way out she saw my old ProFinish two hand uv lamp and exclaimed, "that's 
what they have, the new two hand lamp! What do you use it for?" I told her that 
that lamp is a least 15 years old and useless except to get regular polish 
clients to sit still for 4 minutes. She looked confused, but, said nothing 
more. 

      I thought about booking 2 hours for her next appointment and soaking the 
ac off and putting on a new set of gels so she would be reminded of how they 
should look, but, if I'm doing all that work, I'm getting paid for a full set 
and she would not agree to that. Besides, she saw my nails and the clients 
before and after her with beautiful, clear, non yellow, no fill lines, gel 
nails. Maybe she listened and noticed more than she admitted to and she will 
find a new salon in FL that actually does gels, not acrylic (that turns yellow) 
with a gel overlay. 

      So, Techies, I did a little venting, now, what do you all say to clients 
who come in with NSS nails and tell you how beautiful that are? 

      Katherine 
      Nails at Panache 
      St. Louis, MO 
      Sent from my iPad

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