I am in the process of tweaking and re-writing our referral program. The basic idea is "refer X number of new clients and get X minutes of massage for free".
I regret to say it has been my experience that if there is even a TINIEST loophole in your policy or something is only 99% cut and dry, not 100%, someone will ALWAYS find a way to abuse it. I also must say that the majority of clients are respectful, it's the 1% that leave a bad taste in your mouth after dealing with them and make these policies necessary.
We are a group of independent practitioners and our policies are slightly different. I give 15 minutes for each new client. I had to exclude gift certificates after this Xmas season when a woman arm wrestled me into giving her a 1/2 chair massage for buying 2 1 hour GC's. She was the first one to ever do that and hopefully the last one. I am still mad at myself for not being firm but I have to say that she called at a VERY bad time, on a VERY busy day, when I had 2 other clients standing in front of me. Anywho, the fact that I am still mad means that those $120 I got for the GC's were not worth it.
My coworker recently had a massage party: went to someone's house and massaged this lady and her 3 friends. ALL new clients. Her referral policy is that she will give a 1 hour massage for each 3 clients referred to her. Well guess what. The hostess saw the referral offer and said that she should get a free massage since she referred 3 brand new clients. My coworker got taken aback and at the time they joked about it and she thought that was the end of it. A reasonable person would not take her policy that way. Apparently, the woman took it seriously b/c now she is calling demanding her free massage. My coworker feels that this is not the correct situation since the woman was not an existing client at the time and those 4 women made a collective decision to have a party and get massages. Unfortunately, her written policy did not state that. The MT also waived her travel fee of $45 for those women (they pressured her into that).
We thought we would print off referral cards with referral policies disclosed on the back. Here are the stipulations I came up with.
- You will receive 15 minutes of complimentary massage for each new client who receives 1 60 minute massage or 2 30 minute massages
You will receive a card in the mail within 2 weeks of a qualified referral. Please refer to your card for complete information
- You must be an existing client at the time yoru referral comes in; having received massages from us in the past
- You and your referral must make appointments with the same massage therapist as we are a group of independent practitioners and although we share the same location, out businesses are not related
- We regret that any referrals for gift certificate purchases are not included in the referral program
- Your account must be in good standing in order to collect referral benefits (e.g no NSF checks)
- We regret that late cancellations or no-shows will waive any referral benefits
- If you are hosting a massage party, please discuss any hostess benefits with your therapist
The BOTTOM LINE is that I still want people refer their friends to me, but I don't want to feel taken advaneforum.xxxe of as a practitioner. And if I do want to give any extra perks for referring clients, to someone who wnet an xtra mile I want to be left up to me, not b/c someone argues with me till we are blue in the face!
I regret to say it has been my experience that if there is even a TINIEST loophole in your policy or something is only 99% cut and dry, not 100%, someone will ALWAYS find a way to abuse it. I also must say that the majority of clients are respectful, it's the 1% that leave a bad taste in your mouth after dealing with them and make these policies necessary.
We are a group of independent practitioners and our policies are slightly different. I give 15 minutes for each new client. I had to exclude gift certificates after this Xmas season when a woman arm wrestled me into giving her a 1/2 chair massage for buying 2 1 hour GC's. She was the first one to ever do that and hopefully the last one. I am still mad at myself for not being firm but I have to say that she called at a VERY bad time, on a VERY busy day, when I had 2 other clients standing in front of me. Anywho, the fact that I am still mad means that those $120 I got for the GC's were not worth it.
My coworker recently had a massage party: went to someone's house and massaged this lady and her 3 friends. ALL new clients. Her referral policy is that she will give a 1 hour massage for each 3 clients referred to her. Well guess what. The hostess saw the referral offer and said that she should get a free massage since she referred 3 brand new clients. My coworker got taken aback and at the time they joked about it and she thought that was the end of it. A reasonable person would not take her policy that way. Apparently, the woman took it seriously b/c now she is calling demanding her free massage. My coworker feels that this is not the correct situation since the woman was not an existing client at the time and those 4 women made a collective decision to have a party and get massages. Unfortunately, her written policy did not state that. The MT also waived her travel fee of $45 for those women (they pressured her into that).
We thought we would print off referral cards with referral policies disclosed on the back. Here are the stipulations I came up with.
- You will receive 15 minutes of complimentary massage for each new client who receives 1 60 minute massage or 2 30 minute massages
You will receive a card in the mail within 2 weeks of a qualified referral. Please refer to your card for complete information
- You must be an existing client at the time yoru referral comes in; having received massages from us in the past
- You and your referral must make appointments with the same massage therapist as we are a group of independent practitioners and although we share the same location, out businesses are not related
- We regret that any referrals for gift certificate purchases are not included in the referral program
- Your account must be in good standing in order to collect referral benefits (e.g no NSF checks)
- We regret that late cancellations or no-shows will waive any referral benefits
- If you are hosting a massage party, please discuss any hostess benefits with your therapist
The BOTTOM LINE is that I still want people refer their friends to me, but I don't want to feel taken advaneforum.xxxe of as a practitioner. And if I do want to give any extra perks for referring clients, to someone who wnet an xtra mile I want to be left up to me, not b/c someone argues with me till we are blue in the face!