I did this when I owned my salon and never had a problem with it.  If
anything it made the techs work harder to improve their skills.  Most
clients were veey encouraging and happy for the techs wnen they earned a
price increase.
Sherri

On Mar 6, 2011 10:02 AM, "Angela R Wingerter" <awinger...@sbcglobal.net>
wrote:

I think it is a fair idea! From the clients perspective if I had to pay the
same price for the newbie vs. the vet tech, I would just wait for the vet.
If it was cheaper I would have to make a choice based on my financial
situation. If I had a daughter going to a dance, or a friend that wanted
nails but didn't want to pay what I pay then I would recomend your
sister. Even if the customer doesn't come back when the price goes up it is
giving her experience and making some money in the meantime. I say yes, I
wouldn't set her prices to far off from yours, maybe 5 dollars cheaper. Then
it isn't so hard to raise her prices later. Then run specials for her so
they could get it even cheaper but not expect it next time.

Angie


 ------------------------------
*From:* Jill in Ky <jnai...@hotmail.com>
*To:* NailTech <nailtech@googlegroups.com>
*Sent:* Sun, March 6, 2011 10:39:29 AM
*Subject:* NailTech:: Re: Pricing levels?


I've worked at corporate run salons with tiered pricing and never saw
anything negative about it. A...

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