
TIP OF THE WEEK #24
MISCELLANEOUS By Vicki Peters
I made the mistake of asking Diana Bonn
(LOL) to give me some suggestions for
the Tip Of The Week and she gave me so many I thought I would
address them in
a miscellaneous category and write about a few topics.
HOW TO TEACH A NEWBIE ABOUT ACRYLIC
So where do you start on this one because there are so many issues.
I would work on liquid to powder ratio and would not let them
near a client
until they had control. Control starts with how to hold the clients
hands
with confidence. Make sure their wrist on resting on the manicuring
station
and is not suspended. Make sure they know how to use the fulcrum
finger for
balance.
Then I would work on brush control.
Dipping into the dappen dish, keeping
the brush to a point and knowing just how much liquid is in the
brush. How
to wipe on a table towel gently, how to bring the brush back to
a point, etc.
Make sure the dappen dish is Â12 to 3/4th full and is stationary
and does not
move as they wipe.
Then work on them picking up a ball
of product and placing it on a tip glued
to a dowel or clothespin. Draw on the dowel a cuticle line and
teach them a
three-ball zone area and the different consistencies in each application.
Do
this with clear or pink before moving on to a pink and while nail.
SANITATION AS A MARKETING TOOL
If your not educating your clients about what you do for sanitation
you are
missing the boat. Most clients assume you are disinfecting, tell
them what
you do and then show them. Especially for the first time client.
This is one
of the reasons you charge more. Bottom line.
EDUCATING THE PUBLIC ABOUT DISCOUNT
SALONS
You can tell them all about the horrors of a discount salon, but
I suggest
one thing if they have been to one. Ask them if the manicurist
washed their
hands before they did their nails. That should to do it!
I ONLY WANT TO DO ACRYLICS â¤|I
CAN'T MAKE MONEY WITH MANICURES
This is a foolish manicurist who thinks this. It is all about
setting your
prices so no matter what you do you are making the same money
for every 15
minutes of work. So let's say you charge $24 a fill that takes
you an hour.
That breaks down to $6 per 15 minutes, there is your base. A manicure
takes
you 45 minutes you should be making at least $18 or more. What
do you do
with that extra 15 minutes - tighten up your space, move clients,
take a
break or schedule a repair.
Then go read Janet McCormick's Spa Manicuring Book it will teach
you how to
make more money at manicures than acrylic work.
Vicki Peters
DISCLAIMER
Any products mentioned in the "Tip Of The Week by Vicki Peters"
is not an
endorsement of any kind.
The Peters Perspective
"When you stop learning your career ends and your job begins"
Visit my new web site: http://vickipeters.com