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Archive for January, 2010

5 Useful Tanning Bed Maintenance Tips

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

A tanning bed inside your tanning salon that needs repair or is not functioning is a direct loss of revenue for the salon. Check out these useful tips for keeping your tanning beds in top condition.

1. Be sure to stock small components known to fail every now and then. This will save you from having to lose revenue while waiting for a replacement part to arrive.

2. Learn maintenance basics such as removing the acrylics and replacing lamps and lamp holders. Why pay someone else to do it when you can do it yourself?

3. That said, call the service technician if there is any uncertainty about how to make a repair. A small mistake can create a bigger and more expensive problem. As Ben Franklin said “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure”.

4. Keep your equipment clean so it runs more efficiently for a longer period of time.

5. Make up a daily, weekly and monthly maintenance sheet and add it to your salon’s procedure handbook. Keep this sheet handy and note the date that each task was completed.

5 Things To Remember When Choosing New Tanning Equipment

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Choosing the right tanning equipment is one of the most important decisions a tanning salon owner will make. By investing in new equipment, you can take advantage of cutting-edge features, ergonomic interiors and eye-appealing exterior designs. Consider the following when selecting new equipment:

1. Choose a vendor that offers a complete line of tanning equipment and backs it with service and tech-support. Don’t be afraid to ask questions and expect real answers.

2. Offer multiple levels of tanning. This allows you to upgrade low-pressure tanners to medium-pressure beds, and your medium-pressure tanners to high-pressure units for a minimal charge.

3. Look for equipment with varied tanning times such as 8-, 10-, 15- and 20-minute exposure schedules. This allows for a staggered customer flow and turnover in tanning rooms.

4. Consider units with appealing features and eye-catching graphics and designs to enhance their marketability.

5. Don’t undercut your profits. You can’t sell upgrades if people are used to getting something for practically nothing. Price on the merits of your equipment and the tanning experience they provide.

8 Great Tips To Help Tanning Salon Owners Succeed

Thursday, January 7th, 2010
Today’s tanning consumer demands high-quality products that are affordably priced. They’re also very savvy and tend to ask a lot of questions before they make an educated purchase. The following are important variables in your retail success as a tanning salon owner:

1. Set a standard for quality at your salon and only purchase those products that meet this standard. Discuss your quality concept with the staff, making sure they understand what you look for in a product.

2. Carry product lines or brands that are familiar to the consumer and have good reputations. Brands are those labels that are easily recognized by the consumer and are manufactured according to the strictest of quality guidelines.

3. Ask your customers the right questions to determine what lotions or skincare products are appropriate to their skin type and what their tanning expectations are.

4. Offer a range of tanning products that will have a wide appeal with your clients, and be sure to train your staff well so they can explain the features, advantages and benefits of all your products. Pass this knowledge on to your staff because their product knowledge will help sell more as well as provide you with feedback in terms of which products are not meeting your quality standard based on client responses.

5. Be confident in the products you are selling. If you’re not, consider changing or dropping lines. If you don’t believe in and stand by what you are selling, you will never be able to increase your retail profits.

6. The closer products are to the point-of-purchase the better. Customers do not want to have to go far to find and purchase something that interests them. Displays of products placed near the point-of-purchase are beneficial because they encourage impulse spending and make it easier for your staff to soft-sell or cross-sell different products. It also makes it easier for your staff to answer questions the customer may have about products.

7. Make your reception sales-oriented. To sell lotions and other retail products, salespeople are needed. Hire customer-oriented, outgoing staff members with a sales background and educate your existing staff on how to sell.

8. Set goals and offer commissions. Sales goals should be established for the salon by month and employee. Break the goal up into weekly and daily amounts. As with any sales goal, the numbers should be reviewed in a salon staff meeting. Review how the goal was reached, why lotions sales are important to the salon, how customers benefit from the right lotion advice and how being an expert builds client confidence (resulting in increased sales) and referrals. Set your prices on the merits of your equipment and the tanning experience they provide.