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Hello and welcome to today's episode of the Grow My Salon Business Podcast. I'm your
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host Anthony Whitaker and it's great to have you here with us today. Every week I either
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bring a guest onto the show or I'll dive into a new idea or revisit the foundations
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of what it takes to succeed in the salon industry today. And with every episode I aim to
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bring you practical and actionable opportunities that you can run with in your salon today.
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So with that said, I'm excited for today's episode which is all about one of my favorite
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topics which is marketing. The most salon owners think that they have a marketing problem,
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but the good news is that in most or definitely in many cases they don't. But what they do
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have is a clarity problem, a strategy problem and a consistency problem. And until that changes,
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then nothing else is going to change. So if the productivity of your salon and client bookings
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feels random and in the lap of a hairdressing God so to speak and if you're relying on Instagram
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and boosting a post when you're quiet expecting something to actually happen or even if you've
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just said the algorithm hates me or something to that effect, then this episode is 100% for you.
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Because today I want to talk about what marketing actually is. Not just the hyped up version,
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not the constantly chasing trends version, but the real version of what marketing is all about.
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And why most salon owners are stuck in a cycle of disjointed marketing tactics that is
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quietly costing them thousands and loss revenue, loss clients and lost opportunities.
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You see marketing isn't about hoping and it isn't guessing and it isn't just about posting
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on social although that is part of it. Marketing is understanding how clients actually find you,
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why they stay with you and then building your business around that. So let's start with what I
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refer to as the big marketing fallacy. The fallacy is this. Marketing equals social media.
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It doesn't. Social media is just a tool and it's one of the many tools in your marketing toolbox.
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Marketing is the strategy behind the tool. But here's what I see all the time. A salon gets very
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quiet. The salon owner panics. They start to post more. They maybe boosts them post.
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Perhaps they run a giveaway promotion. Maybe they discount a service. Maybe there's a small spike
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in bookings. But then it drops again. So they rinse and repeat the same thing, hoping for a different
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result. That's activity. But there's no strategy behind it. And activity is not strategy.
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You can be incredibly busy marketing your business and still not have an effective marketing
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system that produces consistent results. You might have heard me talk about the difference between
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image building and business building. Image building is the fun creative stuff like the
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hairdressing awards and fashion week and celebrity clients and doing photo shoots. It's all
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important. But that is all what I refer to as image building. Then there is the business building
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side of marketing. Now maybe that is the boring stuff. It's things like building your database,
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email marketing, SEO, referral systems, rebooking systems, Google reviews, client surveys,
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having a clear pricing strategy and consistent messaging. It's not nearly as much fun or as
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exciting as the image building stuff. But when you're able to combine the image building with
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the business building, then that's what builds profit. Image building activities look exciting,
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but business building activities builds profit within the business. The problem is that most
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salon owners copy what looks impressive instead of building what actually works. So let's talk about
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what marketing is because marketing is not just about posting and it's not just about ads
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and it's not just about great design and clever graphics. Although again, all of those things
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are important. Marketing is understanding why and how you are different to your competition and
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then communicating that difference consistently to potential and existing clients. That's what
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marketing is. And if I break it down even further, there are really four layers. The first layer
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is clarity. That's layer one. You need clarity. Who is your ideal client? Not just anyone with hair,
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but who is your target market and what do they value? What do they spend? What are their needs and
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expectations? And what stage of life are they in? Marketing is about understanding what you
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want to be known for. Is it the best haircuts in town or is it blondes or is it extensions or
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low maintenance color or a luxury experience? So what do you want to be known for? That's clarity.
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Level two or layer two is positioning. Why should someone choose you over the salon down the road?
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Because you can be sure there's a salon down the road. And if your answer is because we're friendly,
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well, so has every other salon. Positioning is about owning something, a niche, a belief,
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standard, an experience. Without positioning, you're often just left to be competing on price alone.
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But when you intentionally position your brand to appeal to a specific target market,
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then you're competing on value and fulfilling the needs and expectations of the ideal client
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that you want to attract. Layer three is all about visibility. And this is a bit that everyone
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often jumps straight to. Visibility, social media, maybe SEO or paid ads, community partnerships,
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email marketing. But here's the problem. Most of them are in a skip clarity and positioning and
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they go straight to visibility. So what happens? Well, they amplify confusion. If you're unclear
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already, marketing just makes you loudly unclear and then you blame the algorithm.
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Layer four is about client conversion. It's the client experience. It's a relationship that you build
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between the salon and the client. It's your website, your consultation process, your price
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infrastructure, your follow-up system, your re-booking system. You don't have a marketing problem
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of people are seeing you. You have a marketing problem if they're not choosing you or not coming back.
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Conversion is where marketing meets the operations side of the salon. And that's where most businesses
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are leaking money. Now let's talk about the real cost of weak marketing because it's not just
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low engagement. It's that you attract people who shop on price alone. You get unpredictable
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bookings. You panic discount. Your team has gaps. Your cash flow fluctuates wildly from week to
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week. And slowly, subtly, you start operating from stress. And here's the uncomfortable bit. When
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you're marketing as weak, you start to blame your team. You say they're not re-booking or they're
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not retailing or they're not productive. And hey, all of that might be true. But two things can
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be true at the same time. And productivity is easier when demand is consistent. You cannot build a
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strong culture on unstable revenue. And revenue is unstable when marketing is just reactive.
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Growth is not just based on luck or you being good at doing here. Growth is consciously
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designed to happen. So what does good marketing feel like? Well, it feels calm. You know exactly
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who you're for. Your messaging is consistent. Your clients refers similar clients. Your average
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ticket grows naturally. You stop chasing trends. You stop copying your competitors. And you make
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decisions based on data, not emotion. Marketing becomes a system. The goal of marketing is not
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just to get more followers. It's to get better clients. So why don't most salon owners fix this?
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Because no one ever taught them about marketing and how to market their business effectively.
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As hairdressers, we spent years learning how to cut and color here. But you haven't learned
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how to position your brand or how to build demand or how to design a marketing plan that ensures
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predictable growth. So instead, you copy, you experiment, you boost, you hope, and when it doesn't
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work, you probably blame yourself. But it's not your fault, but it is your responsibility.
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Over the last 40 years in this industry and the last 30 years working with salon owners in
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over 50 countries around the world, I've seen the same patterns over and over again.
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Good people, talented stylists, hard workers, but no marketing framework. Instead, they just have a
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sort of a hot potch of random tactics. And so without a framework of joined up thinking,
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clear goals and a marketing strategy that's been thought through, everything is
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disjointed and chaotic. And as a result, it's ineffective. So on March 16th, we're running a
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free training. And this isn't a social media hacks session. It's not trends based. It's not how
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to go viral. It's a strategy. It's structure. It's a marketing framework that we teach inside
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our marketing course. I'm going to break down what marketing really means for a salon business.
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We're going to talk about the biggest mistakes costing owners thousands. And we're going to get
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into how to build predictable growth instead of hope-based growth. So if any part of this episode
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has made you slightly uncomfortable, good. That means that you're ready to level up. So register
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for the free webinar. Even if you're not sure, if you can attend live, register anyway, because
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predictable salon growth requires predictable marketing. And predictable marketing starts
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with a plan. So if you want to go deeper and add a structure your salon marketing for real growth,
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then join me on the 16th of March for a free 75-minute webinar titled From Random Tactics
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to Fully Booked, the salon marketing system that gets clients in and keeps them coming back.
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There's a registration link for this free webinar in the show notes of this podcast.
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You need to register to be notified of the dates and times. So do it now before you forget.
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And I'll look forward to seeing you on March the 16th. Bye for now.