Lynda,Just a word of caution, although I want you to feel encouraged and go in there willing to hop onboard & add your expertise & services to that salon if all goes well. Don't offer free massages to the owner (with the exception of an interview massage if they ask for it... fair custom, by the way.... they need to know your draping techniques & the quality of your work). You will be paying the owner a handsome perceneforum.xxxe for the privelege of working very hard there. That is payment enough. They will be profiting from you, so giving your work away might eventually be a burden.I have always offered the girls I work with (including the owners) half price massages (and they fill my empty appointment slots with terrific regularity! plus they tip me fantasically!). That way they can afford massage & will hopefully tell e-v-e-r-y-b-o-d-y who they work on to give you a try. It's up to you to get them to rebook, etc, from there. When I first get into a new situation (like at my current location), I also offer the stylists/techs/receptionists a free massage for 5 refferals. It's only a one time offer, but they all participate (the receptionists are particularly good at suggestive selling when they want the bodywork! they just say, "Judy, would you like to book one of great massage or spa services before your hair appointment & make a day of it?"). It costs them nothing but some encouragement & putting my flyers or biz cards within their clients' reach. After a few months, I end the offer. They can still have half price massages.As far as the credit & debit charges go, you'll have to do what the other practitioners & stylists do at the salon. I have worked places where we each had our own merchant accounts that got credited to our own bank accounts. Now I get a weekly 'merchant check' from the salon owner for all my previous week's charges. She only charges us 20 cents per transaction: exactly what the merchant bank charges her. If you are being paid on a perceneforum.xxxe basis, you would get your perceneforum.xxxe, minus the standard charges. It is usually a contracted deal with the merchant company & not very negotiable.As far as negotiating your perceneforum.xxxe fees at the salon, have a strong idea about how to artfully negotiate. The salons have a standard commission rate, and don't usually have different policies with each employee. That would be a recipe for disaster and distrust amoung the employees. Try to think like the owner for a second & then try to sweeten the pot for yourself. For instance, if her offer/standard procedure is 50% commission, ask if she would consider ?% since you save her the cost of furnishing the studio (compared to hairstylists who only provide their own small tools, etc). Or negotiate free business cards & advertising, or something else of value to you & your future business.One thing that is a plus to being a commission person is that you are an employee with employee rights. Besides having labor laws on your side, that also means your taxes are partially paid by the employer, and you won't have the added burden of doing your own quarterly taxes, etc. Commission people generally have business flowing to them with little effort on their own if the salon is booming. They are, however, usually required to stay at the salon for walk-ins during their scheduled hours, even when their books are empty, and often participate in group responsibilities like laundry & cleaning, etc. Bottom line: I would see what she is offering, and have other scenarios fully explored beforehand. If it gets a little scary or hairy, you can always say, "how about I call you this evening after I consider the commission rates, benefits & responsibilities?" Expect and sign a work contract that explains all the details and all of the house rules, etc. Remember to do your homework: how many massages per week you expect to reasonably do at first & what cha-ching that translates to for you and the owner. Please post again after your meeting & let us know how you did.Jill/Sagetherapist