Myrrha said:
If you are concerned about honesty...
If you are concerned about honesty, then you might want to reconsider the relationship.
They are in a space rented by you -- meaning you are liable for all goings on -- and will have unsupervised access to a great many things, including your clients who may call or drop by.
Myrrha said:
one way to keep them honest, is maybe to implement a minimum and/or a maximum rent....
It might make book keeping a little more complicated, but it means that the therapist might be less likely to fudge the number of clients they see if they know they are responsible for a minimum rent, and will keep 100% if they reach the maximum.
Minimum rent does not help accurate reporting. The minimum means it does not matter if they see 1 or 100 clients, and have no incentive to report everything. They pay the same, regardless.
% rent favors underreporting. Our spa lease is on a % rent basis, with the landlord having the right to audit receipts and look at sales tax and income tax returns to verify accuracy of reporting, and can fine/evict for underreporting.
Your best shot at getting an accurate count of services is to put into place several simple, but overlapping control mechnisms.
1) Make this person an IC, with a simple but well thought out contract (with legal help) that includes a clause about the consequences of under-reporting. As our friendly beat cop tells our spa employees -- that constitutes theft and is prosecuted as such in this city.
2) All payment goes through your office, and you pay out on a scheduled basis against receipts provided (signed by client confirming tip, total and method of payment)
3) All appointments are registered in a common log/appointment book
4) Provide linens, and track usage against services reported
Honest people have nothing to worry about.
Cheaters cheat. You may not catch one the first time, or even the 2nd or 3rd, but ultimately you will. Which is why you need a breach of contract clause in your IC agreement.