charges
ย This is just me, but I have always believed in cultivating the client who will pay $100 rather than discounting the 4 clients who will only pay $25.
Many of my friends charge $49.00 for an in-home session, I never charge less than $90 to $100. ย They may see more clients than me, but we net out with the same money. ย I'd much rather work half as much and make the same money. ย
Do your best work, never forget their birthdays, anniversaries, never arrive late, always be having a great day, etc. ย I send cards and thank yous regularly and maintain my clients well. ย It's a service industry and everything matters. ย
I realize I live in L.A. but that's awfully low which is what happens when everyone starts trying to beat each other's prices. ย They just keep going down. ย It's a vicious cycle and one we do to ourselves.
ITA with you! ย This is one giant contrast I see between my friend's business and mine. ย
She offers steep discounts almost all the time for various reasons, and I have often wondered if the many people she sees would go to her if she weren't offering the discounts. ย She sees about 5 more people a week than I do, currently, but at lower prices. ย She still sometimes complains that she is working a lot, but still broke. ย I much prefer having the two clients that make me $200 for the day, and then I have the time to spend it as well. ย Filling up my day with four $50 clients is not my idea of fun, and if I want to last in this business, I think it is important to pace myself. ย I do many two hour sessions also, so at the end of the week, when I am counting up 12 clients, I also began adding up the hours... seeing 20 hours on the books makes me feel much better about the week I had, especially when my friend tells me she's had many more clients. ย This helps me to not have "client envy". ย
ย I suspect when it comes down to it, she and I are still making about the same money.
Another important thing to note is that
not initially reducing my prices brought me a high quality clientele. ย I very recently advertised "1/2 hour free with first visit" for almost a year, and during that time, experienced more sleazball callers looking for happy endings, as well as a general reduction in the quality of individual that walked though my door. ย When I removed that from my ad, the new clients that it generated were of substantially higher quality and better off financially. ย At the risk of sounding elitist, these are the clients I would rather have.
Seasons do bring in slow periods, in which time reasonable discounts for good clients have served me very well, but as a constant, I don't think it's a good idea. ย Recently, I did offer the discounts, and it helped greatly to get me out of that late spring/summer slump. ย I have no discount offers out currently, and yet I am managing to get more than double the amount of clients as I did this time last year. ย The clients who have no problem with paying $100 for a massage enjoyed the $10-$15 discount, and many responded, but would have eventually come in anyway once the weather became too inclimate for outdoor recreation. ย Some came in and gave me my usual fee, anyway, considering the extra a tip.
Keeping in touch during special or stressful times, maintaining a professional attitude, treating your clients well by offering a clean, beautifully appointed office with wonderful smells, music, sensations, and small luxuries are the best ways to keep them coming back again and again. ย They will say, "she charges $10 more, but the place is beautiful, and I love all the little extras, so it's worth it to me". ย
(BTW, my friend also maintains her clients well... I don't wish to imply that she doesn't.)