Blisss said:
Here's another spin on it, if you charged full-price for your massages, you could do just 16 massages per week and make the same amount of money you would, if you gave 20 massages at 20% discount. (This is also true for the buy 4 get 1 free programs, since they work out to a 20% discount overall.)
Nice to see the math for that Bliss.
I'm decidedly anti-discount. My time is my time. I went along with a package request once and have never done it since.
It's interesting to me that we as a profession seem to be continuously striving to gain more respect and appreciation for being an integral part of someone's health care. I personally find that discounts really work against this. Of all the health care practitioners that I frequent - acupuncturist, chiropractor, massage therapist, psychotherapist (lord I sound high maintenance
!), let alone doctor, dentist, hair stylist, etc. NO ONE offers me a discount or a referral incentive.
And I talk these people up all the time. Because they're good. I don't need an incentive to spread the word. When you eat at a good restaurant or see a good movie are you less inclined to tell someone about it because you don't get a referral incentive?
If I really want to thank someone I prefer to do an old-fashioned written thank you note. Other ideas that I'd consider would be small gifts - bath salts, candles, $5 Starbucks gift card, etc.
I personally think it devalues our service (and ME) when it's constantly being discounted. I want clients that rebook because they know it's good for them, not because I have to bribe them with a discount. I think we need to value our service enough to charge full price. Stop apologizing for what you charge by discounting!
I wonder if sometimes even we forget that we aren't just a "luxury".
Now, if someone has financial hardship and wonders if I'd be willing to do sliding-scale I am always willing to work with that. My acupuncturist says she offers this to people if they need to maintain a frequent appointment schedule that's a financial stretch for them. She asks them what would be doable for them and it's always more than what she would have requested which I find interesting.
Lisa