Well, hey there, friend, and welcome back for another episode of the
Crystal:Your Hair Mentor podcast, where I'm your host and your hair mentor, Crystal Green.
Crystal:And I'm not just a host and a hair mentor.
Crystal:I'm also a human with a cold.
Crystal:So you'll have to excuse my, uh, little nasally voice here.
Crystal:It's been kind of a doozy, took me out, but I'm here and I'm
Crystal:not going to let it stop me.
Crystal:And.
Crystal:Good thing.
Crystal:I didn't have a cold during the interview here that I'm about to share
Crystal:with you because it is pure gold.
Crystal:Um, you're going to love coach.
Crystal:Chris.
Crystal:He's really fantastic.
Crystal:Has a lot to offer.
Crystal:I mean, it's obvious.
Crystal:This guy has been in the industry for a very long time.
Crystal:Um, but he's also kind of at like the forefront of what's happening too.
Crystal:So he's not just like old and crusty at all.
Crystal:Don't get me wrong.
Crystal:Um, coach Chris Barron.
Crystal:Was really really fun to chat with and I actually ended up trimming out a lot of
Crystal:our Conversation that happened before and after the podcast and sometimes I include
Crystal:that in the chat because it's just good stuff But oh my god, we just had so much
Crystal:I need to bring them on for another show.
Crystal:Honestly But not only does he have great things to say, but his
Crystal:actual voice is like buttery and smooth and very easy to listen to.
Crystal:So, I know you're just going to really enjoy this interview.
Crystal:So, I am going to go ahead and introduce you to Coach Chris M.
Crystal:Barron, whoo!
Crystal:Ready freddy.
Crystal:Hey there chris.
Crystal:Hey Thank you so much for coming on the your hair mentor podcast I'm, super happy
Crystal:to have you here today and share this awesome stuff that you're working on Um,
Crystal:and also I just kind of want to know a little bit about your story and how you
Crystal:got to be where you are So would you do me a favor and just kind of give me a quick
Crystal:introduction of like where you're at?
Crystal:And then I kind of want to hear how you got into this industry in the first place
Chris:Well, first of all, uh, Crystal, thanks for having me on.
Chris:Uh, it's a real honor and pleasure.
Chris:Um, now you said one thing that really might throw this a little
Chris:thing off, you said quick, and I've often been introduced as, here's a
Chris:gentleman, uh, that can say in 10 words what other people can say in one.
Chris:So um, so let's, uh, first of all, uh, where did I come from?
Chris:Um, well, um, Um, I came from my background was my
Chris:mother was a hairdresser.
Chris:She anointed me as a hairdresser.
Chris:I didn't necessarily want to be one, but knew I couldn't get fired.
Chris:So I started there.
Chris:And then I had a life changing thing that happened to me where somebody come
Chris:in and said, don't cut my hair today.
Chris:Cause I'm going to Montreal to get a good haircut.
Chris:I'm Canadian.
Chris:If you haven't figured that out and that changed my life.
Chris:And so actually the first two years of my career.
Chris:Uh, was more the thing that, um, uh, as an owner, you wouldn't have wanted to hire
Chris:me because I was interested in partying.
Chris:Uh, it was partying and, uh, staying out till two to three in the morning
Chris:and then coming in probably with a little bit of a headache, uh,
Chris:must've been too much Coca Cola.
Chris:And, um, and, um, my point was, is that I, I wasted pretty much the first two years.
Chris:Uh, then I got, then I got hooked on, I went to Sassoon's and I got hooked on
Chris:haircutting and that became my passion.
Chris:Then, um, and this is the Reader's Digest version of the timeline, um,
Chris:opened a couple salons, um, had, uh, then there was a gentleman that came to
Chris:speak, uh, at a training we were having.
Chris:His name was Blair Singer.
Chris:Uh, he's one of the Rich Dad Poor Dad advisors, speaks on, uh, wealth.
Chris:He also speaks on, um, on, uh, facilitation skills.
Chris:And that changed my life because I can remember him saying, let me back
Chris:it up a second, because before when I would, I would teach on stage.
Chris:I never really taught on stage.
Chris:All I did was I would write my comedy routine and I did more of a comedy routine
Chris:than anything, um, to the point when I asked one person after they sat in my
Chris:class for, you know, A six classes in a row and said to me after every time that,
Chris:you know, Chris, I'd loved your show.
Chris:I laughed and laughed.
Chris:And I said, what did you learn?
Chris:And she said nothing, but I laughed and laughed.
Chris:So I, I had to figure out what this training thing was so that I could
Chris:actually teach the things that I was passionate, passionate about.
Chris:And that's where Blair, um, and since then other people have really helped me
Chris:along people like Jason Everett, who have helped me become more focused on what
Chris:it takes to help to connect to people.
Chris:Because I remember standing up in Blair's class.
Chris:After he talked to us how a good, uh, educator, facilitator, trainer
Chris:connects with the audience.
Chris:And he said, I remember saying back to him and stand up because he asked,
Chris:what did, what did you take away?
Chris:And I said, Blair, from what I heard is it's not what you
Chris:say, it's not the content.
Chris:It's how you say it.
Chris:And that stuck with me forever.
Chris:And that changed my Changed my life and it turned me in probably to who
Chris:I am today where, um, my point now is I just want to give back to people.
Chris:That's
Crystal:awesome.
Crystal:You know, and isn't that a lesson that could be learned for hairstylists
Crystal:talking to their clients too, right?
Crystal:Where it's, it's not necessarily just your hair skills.
Crystal:It's how you present
Chris:them.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:And you know, it's, I'm going to use an old, I didn't, I didn't come up with it.
Chris:We hear it all the time.
Chris:Part of it's true.
Chris:Part of it's not.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:But when they, they say that there's all these people out there that, uh,
Chris:that don't do hair particularly well, but they're fully booked, et cetera.
Chris:So my, and the reason why I say that I don't believe that's partially
Chris:true, I think that it is true because those people are authentic, they're
Chris:caring, they love their clients.
Chris:Uh, and I know this is something you and I talked about before and
Chris:I don't want to steal your lines.
Chris:It was your line that I want to use as references where you make them the hero.
Chris:And, and, um, and I think that's the part that I would like those
Chris:people to think about that.
Chris:What if, what if you did all of that and you really knew how to do hair,
Chris:if you were really skilled at it, how exponential could your growth be?
Chris:Mm hmm.
Chris:And, and I think that's, that's where.
Chris:Um, what's always stood for me is because, you know, uh, with a bit
Chris:of my Sassoon background, no, I would, I never worked for them.
Chris:I was a Sassoon freak and traveled to every show, everything.
Chris:And people like Tony Beckerman and the like of those people really helped me to
Chris:ingrain in what discipline really meant.
Chris:And, and I think that.
Chris:Um, that for all the young listeners and watchers that are out there that
Chris:are saying right now, and we're, we've all went through, we went through COVID.
Chris:We went through all that crap.
Chris:We reevaluated our lives.
Chris:We take a look at what we were doing.
Chris:We said, I want more out of my life and more quality just
Chris:to remember that quality.
Chris:And time is, are not a parallel that exchange for one another.
Chris:In other words, when people say, I want, I want, um, to have balance.
Chris:Balance just means that you're present wherever you are.
Chris:It doesn't mean you give up and you do less of one thing or more of the other.
Chris:So, uh, I always think that for me that that's okay.
Chris:I'm going to give a really controversial statement right now.
Chris:If that's okay with you, bring it on, bring it on, bring it on, baby.
Chris:Um, uh, and I'm, I'm stealing a line from my good friend, um, Stephen Moody
Chris:and, um, and he said, our industry has shot ourselves in the foot.
Chris:Um, and, and don't get me wrong, what we're doing right now makes
Chris:us a ton of money and it's good.
Chris:Um, but we've spent the last seven, eight, nine years, balayaging long
Chris:hair, balayaging is wonderful.
Chris:I love it.
Chris:It makes us money.
Chris:I'm not saying bad things about that.
Chris:I'm not saying bad things about our hair.
Chris:Here's where we shot ourself in the foot.
Chris:Cyclically, it goes long and it goes short.
Chris:It goes long and it goes short.
Chris:We spent so many years on long hair, uh, with retouching, without
Chris:retouching, without the certifiant coming in, needing us every six weeks,
Chris:they've transferred to every three to four, sometimes six months or more.
Chris:And that's where we've shot ourself in the foot.
Chris:Now, here's the reason why you watch in the next two to three
Chris:years, it's already happening.
Chris:Short hair is starting to come back.
Chris:And I remember not everybody's going to have short hair, but the people
Chris:that want short hair are going to come out and they're going to be
Chris:looking for people that can do it.
Chris:Our industry.
Chris:I mean, I'm a part of a group that owns 30 beauty schools.
Chris:And what, what happens is the Students are terrified of short hair and I go to, I go
Chris:to teach in salons where they don't want trend right now, they want me to teach
Chris:them how to analyze a picture so they can duplicate the picture and use a principles
Chris:of haircutting to get what they want.
Chris:And that switch is happening and it's, you know, I beat every cup steep
Chris:and keeps talking about Armageddon and all this stuff that's happening.
Chris:I think the Armageddon that's happening in our industry is it's going to hit us
Chris:with this, this everybody wants short hair, just like in the 70s when Linda
Chris:Evangelista cut off her long hair.
Chris:Everybody wanted short hair.
Chris:Everybody wanted above the shoulders.
Chris:And there was this people flocking into salons.
Chris:And if you knew how to do it, your salon grew and that was the kind of the, uh,
Chris:the separation that happened at that time when it first happened, there was three
Chris:kinds of salons that were out there.
Chris:There was the high end salon, there was a mid salon, and there was a low end salon.
Chris:At that time, it blew away the mid salon.
Chris:Because everybody wanted, they wanted, uh, cost and they didn't want to
Chris:have to pay a lot, or they wanted to pay more and they wanted all the
Chris:things that went along with that.
Chris:And, and I think that's, that's what's going to happen in
Chris:the next few years with us.
Chris:So, I, I would say to, that I don't want to, uh, discourage people by that, but
Chris:what I want to say to them is that's where your education come in, that's
Chris:where your discipline comes in, that's where it's really important that you know.
Chris:All of the skills, not just one or two.
Chris:Mm hmm.
Crystal:Absolutely.
Crystal:You know, I experienced even myself the other day going and getting my hair
Crystal:done in a salon here in Reno, Nevada.
Crystal:And I was, uh, my blowout was done by the Junior stylist.
Crystal:She's not an assistant.
Crystal:She's like a couple years in licensed stylist and she asked me How do
Crystal:you want your hair styled today?
Crystal:And I said, oh, you know, I would love just kind of like a bouncy round
Crystal:brush Blow dry just something simple.
Crystal:It doesn't have to be perfect, but just something with a little oomph to it and
Crystal:she goes You know, i'm really sorry, but I have to tell you I don't know
Crystal:how to use a round brush I was like, oh and I could tell by the way She was
Crystal:blow drying me like she's like i'll try and i'm like cool I can help coach you
Crystal:through it if you want like no pressure, but like you should know how to do this
Crystal:girlfriend Um, she's like well, I mostly just do iron work and I said, okay
Crystal:Well, like what kind of iron do you use?
Crystal:She's like my wand I was like, okay So you fall into that category of like you've got
Crystal:that that beachy wave dialed in and that's all you've got That's all that has been
Crystal:asked of you In the last couple of years, but I'm like, yeah, things are changing.
Crystal:I was like, I got these like little flippy bangs and like, I want some oomph.
Crystal:And she did not know how to do it.
Crystal:And so I walked away going, Oh my gosh, I don't think she's alone.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:No, I agree with you a hundred percent on that crystal.
Chris:And I, you know, I, there's what I love in your title that
Chris:you have is your hair mentor.
Chris:And I, and I think that's where.
Chris:A lot of this is gonna come from right now.
Chris:The mentors that we had right out there have been YouTube.
Chris:So, and that's all wa, that's all watch.
Chris:And again, nothing wrong with that.
Chris:I watch YouTube too.
Chris:I pick up great ideas from them.
Chris:There's some, you know, spectacular people out there, but you can't get
Chris:your foot stuck in one area, you know, because you'll do great when that's there.
Chris:But when a trend, a shift happens, you're gonna get, you're on the outside and it's
Chris:gonna be harder if you get in the inside.
Chris:So the time to train, the time to learn.
Chris:Is when that others is hot.
Chris:It's just one thing that I always mind, and I think the numbers are a little
Chris:skewed from right now to when, uh, when we talked about it in the past.
Chris:But what happened is trends generally happen about, they take about six
Chris:years and we call it two years in two years, hot two years out.
Chris:So they kind of overlap.
Chris:So two years in, it's hot.
Chris:People think it's ugly.
Chris:Well, let me phrase that.
Chris:The, the young kids that are out there, the ones that are cool, the ones that
Chris:are looking at, they go, Oh, that's cool.
Chris:Nobody's doing that.
Chris:I want to do that.
Chris:The mainstreamers are going, Oh, that's ugly.
Chris:You know, just the same thing as when skulls came in, you know, skulls came in.
Chris:Uh, uh, I believe it was Alexander McQueen did, uh, clothing wedding
Chris:dresses with skulls on it.
Chris:And they, they really went, Oh my God, what are you doing?
Chris:What's going on?
Chris:That's that's, uh, that's for Bolton.
Chris:And, and then so, but every, all the young kids went, that's cool, that's
Chris:new, I I, they jumped on that bag when everybody else thought it was ugly.
Chris:Two years in, everybody was wearing it and the mainstream is now going,
Chris:Oh, Oh, I thought that was ugly.
Chris:It's pretty cool.
Chris:Now, as soon as that hits now, those young kids are going, I don't
Chris:know, mom and dad are wearing that.
Chris:I don't know if I want to do that anymore, you know?
Chris:And then, and particularly when grandma has her knickers with skulls
Chris:on it, they know it's really out.
Chris:Oh my gosh.
Chris:But the reality is, it gets, there's, uh, it's two years in,
Chris:two years out, or two years in, two years hot, and two years out.
Chris:When it's out, the people that have just been holding back for four years
Chris:are finally getting into it, and that's when you go to your hairdresser and they
Chris:go, oh my god, if I had to do one more.
Chris:friend's haircut.
Chris:I'm going to blow my brains out.
Chris:That was, we could cut that last part out.
Chris:You know, is that if they, they see that one more friend's haircut and they
Chris:say, well, I don't want to have that anymore because it's just, it's gone.
Chris:It's, it's, uh, It's passe.
Chris:That's the, see, that's the thing that's happening right now.
Chris:The times may be off.
Chris:I think that what we've had with long hair and balayage has gone
Chris:on for way more than six years.
Chris:It shows how amazing it was and um, but I think that we, we need to
Chris:really understand that haircutting is going to start to make its way back.
Chris:I
Crystal:think so too.
Crystal:I honestly hope so because I love all the different shapes and styles that
Crystal:come with haircutting being a trend.
Crystal:Yeah.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:And it's, I find it really interesting going to a hair show.
Chris:You know, where it's hair shows.
Chris:And then I was, I can't remember which premiere last year, I think we were at,
Chris:and I was walking down the aisle way.
Chris:And I was trying to count the number of really cool short
Chris:heads of hair, uh, that I saw.
Chris:And I counted about eight.
Crystal:Oh my gosh.
Crystal:Out
Chris:of how many people?
Chris:Out of all those people.
Chris:But not, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that those people weren't cool.
Chris:I'm just saying that they're caught in that cycle of.
Chris:Two years in two years hot two years out and and you can tell it with their colors.
Chris:You can tell it with their shapes with what era they get stuck in.
Chris:And I think it's sometimes that because of the psychology behind it,
Chris:they do something they made a change.
Chris:They might have went from, um, one color to Uh, uh, putting some rainbow
Chris:color in their hair and somebody said to him, that looks amazing on you.
Chris:And that anchors in their head.
Chris:And they want to carry that through forever, you know, because
Chris:that was what somebody told me.
Chris:I look good on.
Chris:Therefore, as I change and I grow and I change, my look stays the same.
Chris:And now is it the same response you're getting?
Chris:And if you're not getting that response of, wow, you look great.
Chris:That's one thing I always used to say to my clients is that
Chris:when they'd say, uh, they'd say, well, that I want the same thing.
Chris:And I'd ask them why.
Chris:And he said, because my husband loves it.
Chris:And he said, I said, okay, well, first of all, um, I never say go to the person who
Chris:can't match their socks to, for fashion advice, but I do understand that you
Chris:want your spouse happy and so on, but.
Chris:You know, are your friends complimenting your hair?
Chris:And, and if that's the case, then you're probably still in and looking good.
Chris:But if nobody is saying the thing that they said to you five years
Chris:ago, maybe it's time to have a bit of a change and a refresh.
Chris:Um, oh, sorry, go
Crystal:ahead.
Crystal:I was gonna say, I love this so much because, um, so much of what I
Crystal:preach is, right, the, the client.
Crystal:Is the hero of the story like you mentioned briefly earlier and what that
Crystal:means is you are a contributor to their happiness You're like their guide and
Crystal:their mentor And helping them in the story of their life And so it's so important
Crystal:to ask those kind of questions, right?
Crystal:Like because what are we here to do?
Crystal:We're here to make them feel good We're here to make them look good, right?
Crystal:If they're not getting the input and the feedback that they need from the
Crystal:people in their lives Where they're feeling good about their looks
Crystal:then we need to help them Right.
Crystal:And I love that you bring that up because that's such an important question that
Crystal:I've always asked all of my clients too.
Crystal:Yeah.
Crystal:How are you feeling in this style?
Crystal:Are you still getting what you need out of it?
Crystal:And if not, let me try to make some suggestions and like how out of
Crystal:your comfort zone can we step today?
Crystal:Right.
Crystal:Yeah.
Chris:Yeah, the, um, when you become an expert, people don't pay you for your
Chris:knowledge, they pay for your opinion.
Chris:So when you're going to a hairdresser that's your expert, that helps you,
Chris:that's been growing you, grooming you, helping you evolve, that person
Chris:is paying you for your opinion.
Chris:And your opinion should not be, what do you want today?
Chris:Your opinion should be, your opinion should be, can we have a talk?
Chris:And, and I'm going to give credit where credit is due, uh, a chapel salon out
Chris:of the UK has a really interesting concept that I absolutely love.
Chris:You see, they, first of all, every time somebody comes
Chris:in, they give a consultation.
Chris:So everybody gets a consultation, everybody.
Chris:It's not just a continuation on and I'm not going to belabor the whole
Chris:consultation things and people say that 97 percent of the people that
Chris:are out there that are consumers say they didn't get a consultation.
Chris:And it's the same thing for hairdressers say that they give it, but or I'm
Chris:saying that hairdresser says they give it, but only 7 percent of the people
Chris:that are out there say they get it.
Chris:So it's the quality of the conversation.
Chris:So I'm going to get back to Chapel Salon.
Chris:What they do is they spend.
Chris:Every time they come in portion of their because they pay by the hour, the
Chris:customer pays by time, not by the service.
Chris:And so they spend that time giving a quality recommendation.
Chris:And then here's what I love.
Chris:So they book out sick.
Chris:No, and I don't say book out.
Chris:If you're going to be my customer, we're going to set up six months
Chris:of, uh, six months of appointments.
Chris:And in the spring and in the fall, we're going to book out a
Chris:separate hour that we're going to have a complete consultation.
Chris:And, and in that frame, We're going to talk about the new colors that are coming
Chris:out for fall, the new looks that are coming out for fall, where you want to go
Chris:and how we're going to, now catch this, how we're going to evolve your shape over
Chris:the next six months until we hit spring.
Chris:And then we're going to evolve it again.
Chris:Now you think about the dynamic there.
Chris:Not only that, how you're grooming them, you're evolving them and
Chris:you're building trust with them, but they're not going to anybody else.
Chris:You know, there's, if, if Chris comes along and says, Hey, I can do your hair.
Chris:No, Crystal's been doing my hair and she's got a whole plan for my next six months.
Chris:I'm sorry.
Chris:I just can't go there.
Crystal:I've committed myself to a membership with this
Crystal:person that I'm going to see.
Chris:Yes.
Chris:Bingo.
Chris:Bingo.
Chris:I've just bought a subscription.
Chris:Yes.
Crystal:I love that.
Crystal:So much that is incredible and I bet you Like when if something happens
Crystal:apocalyptic recession wise, whatever those sort of businesses are going
Crystal:to survive They are going to thrive they're going to make those people feel
Crystal:so special and they're going to their clients and their customers and their
Crystal:Consumers are going to be willing to cut budgets elsewhere so that they can still
Crystal:be taken care of there because there's
Chris:loyalty And that's what did happen in in the great recession that happened.
Chris:I mean, I wasn't alive for it.
Chris:But in the 30s, when they had that people were still making themselves good.
Chris:They were making themselves look good.
Chris:That was the whole part about it.
Chris:That's the only thing that they had that they could.
Chris:Feel good about at the time.
Chris:Yes.
Chris:Yes.
Chris:So my
Crystal:mom tells me.
Crystal:Yeah.
Crystal:Right.
Crystal:But you know, you see it in other countries too.
Crystal:Like, you know, you don't need money to have like a pride
Crystal:of ownership necessarily.
Crystal:You just, you focus on certain things and a lot of people want to have their
Crystal:home look clean and tidy and they want to look good themselves because that boosts
Crystal:their spirits and makes them feel like, you know, nice contributing members to
Chris:society.
Chris:Yeah, no, I agree.
Chris:A hundred percent.
Chris:I love
Crystal:that.
Crystal:Um, okay, Chris, I want to ask you about your, um, Salon Associate Accelerator
Crystal:program, because we chatted about that beforehand, and I feel like we
Crystal:could tie this in really well here.
Crystal:So can you tell us kind of what that is a little bit?
Chris:Well, yeah, I would love to, but let me give you kind of a,
Chris:a forerunner, a precursor on this.
Chris:Okay.
Chris:Is, um, the need that, that, uh, our team saw was, um, there's two kind of things
Chris:that I hear from, from salon owners.
Chris:Everywhere is two things.
Chris:Number one is, um, my, I'm training my people and they leave, excuse me.
Chris:I train my people and they leave.
Chris:And the other one was this new generation of people.
Chris:I just can't relate to them.
Chris:They don't want to work.
Chris:They don't want to do anything.
Chris:Um, both are true.
Chris:Um, I want to deal with the first one first is, and just with a little
Chris:story that, um, I remember hearing this story of, This, uh, there was a
Chris:corporate meeting and, uh, the CFO, the chief financial officer and, uh, was
Chris:meeting with the team and the chief, um, financial officer said, look at our
Chris:training that we're doing with all of our people is costing us too much money.
Chris:It's a big line on our budget.
Chris:And, um, I want to, I want to pose to people like, uh, you know,
Chris:that we reduce the training and reduce, stop training them so much
Chris:because what if we train them?
Chris:And then they just leave and go to another company.
Chris:And the chief executive offer, the CEO said.
Chris:Well, okay, that might work if we, you're worried about if we
Chris:want to train them and they leave.
Chris:But what if we don't and they stay?
Chris:So the reality is, is that when, when you're going to train people, it's
Chris:our obligation as an owner to train.
Chris:Here's the problem that, that generally happens is the
Chris:owner does all the training.
Chris:And then they're working, they're trying to get the vision of their business
Chris:going, they're trying to do all the work, uh, they have a family just like
Chris:everybody else, they're cutting out their time, they're often the highest
Chris:ticket earner, and because nobody wants to work after hours nowadays,
Chris:they have to do the training during the salon, they do the training during
Chris:salon hours, so now they have two factors that are in there financially.
Chris:Number one is, I've taken myself away from the station.
Chris:So therefore I'm I'm not generating revenue.
Chris:And if you think about what that is, and let's just say that it's an average ticket
Chris:is 100 an hour that and they've taken.
Chris:Let's say just even two to four hours to train time, that's 400.
Chris:And then you times that by, even if you're just doing one training
Chris:a week, times 50 weeks and so on, you know, I'm not the math guy.
Chris:So anybody listening and watching right now, you can get out
Chris:your calculators and do that.
Chris:None of us are.
Chris:It's okay.
Chris:No.
Chris:So, but the reality is, is the time that it takes and ends up with either the
Chris:owner and or an educator that you have on board, if they're doing it all themselves.
Chris:They burnt out and then it doesn't happen.
Chris:And then the promise that you made of training up the people
Chris:doesn't get met and they leave.
Chris:And it's this cycle.
Chris:It's like this, like the, the, the, the front door Bergdorf Goodmans.
Chris:When you, you take that, you walk in and if you keep going, you just jump back out
Chris:rather than getting into the good stuff.
Chris:And it's the same thing that happens in the salon.
Chris:So that's the first part about what if you train them and they leave.
Chris:And then the other part is the, the young kid that's out there, they want balance.
Chris:They went through all this stuff.
Chris:They, they, they want balance in their life.
Chris:But more than anything, if you look at them right now, they're cause driven.
Chris:So what are you doing to create a cause for your salon, for the
Chris:vision of where you want to go?
Chris:People will buy into a vision and money is not a vision.
Chris:No.
Chris:So, but they will buy into your vision.
Chris:I'm not saying you shouldn't be compensated, you should be compensated
Chris:a lot for it, but is what are you doing to create something that
Chris:those kids want in the future?
Chris:It's funny just on this last, uh, just a couple of days ago, I was speaking and
Chris:somebody came up to me after and he said, your, your, your definition of want versus
Chris:goals is, was it really impactful for me?
Chris:And, and what I, uh, this came from a training that I did, and I was
Chris:trying to find out what this, this particular person wanted as a goal.
Chris:And it went just down this dark hole and I couldn't pull them out of it.
Chris:Uh, so I have a, a teacher, uh, that clears people.
Chris:You know, clearing just means when you have issues in your head
Chris:and they help you talk about it and get through it and so on.
Chris:And she said to me this, that it was really interesting.
Chris:Um, uh, you know, it's funny when she told it to me, I wrote it and I have
Chris:it every time right near me here.
Chris:And she said, and I mark this, goal setting often brings up a negative charge.
Chris:Because if we didn't get the goal in the past, we'd set a goal, we
Chris:didn't get it, doing whatever.
Chris:So we feel we're failed at our goal.
Chris:So there's that negative charge.
Chris:So the emotions come up.
Chris:And so that's what happened from past fails goals.
Chris:But if you, instead of saying that it's a goal, if you say, what do you
Chris:want, it brings it into the future.
Chris:So if, if the salon owner would just, we advise this in our salon
Chris:associate accelerator is before you even start your training, sit down
Chris:and sit down in a want meeting.
Chris:And the want meaning can be very fast.
Chris:We have, we have, um, sheets that we get them to fill out where you
Chris:fill out the things that you want for personal development, um, for,
Chris:or just to improve for your career.
Chris:What do you want personally?
Chris:I want to buy a new house.
Chris:I want to buy a new car.
Chris:I want, uh, I want to get out of my rental unit or I want whatever that is.
Chris:And then what is it that you want, uh, for yourself for the future?
Chris:Like I, I You know what's about for family.
Chris:I want I want to have take my family on a European trip, or I
Chris:just want to be able to pay my own.
Chris:We're going to Europe in two years, and I want to have enough of this.
Chris:And if that owner can take a look at what are your wants help you to get that.
Chris:If that just means taking a little bit of money out every, uh, month, every
Chris:week, just to set aside, to set up a, a bank account for that person so that
Chris:now you see, now what you're dealing, dealing with here is you're building up a
Chris:loyalty or a trust in that in the person.
Chris:'cause I'm not just looking at how much money can you make me.
Chris:I am investing in your future.
Chris:And that would that cause driven effect.
Chris:I don't know about you, but I'm getting goosebumps up right now.
Chris:But if you can invest in that person's life and you can make a
Chris:change to them where they grow, they attribute that to you.
Chris:My, my, my, uh, I learned that inadvertently from Bill Ross, who was,
Chris:um, my, one of my very first, not my first salon owner, but the first salon
Chris:owner that made a difference in my life.
Chris:And he would do that with me, inadvertently, it wasn't
Chris:called that then, but he said, look, Chris, what do you want?
Chris:What do you want to go?
Chris:What do you want to do?
Chris:And I had no money.
Chris:Um, uh, and I said, I want to go to Sassoon's and he said, look,
Chris:well, let's make that happen.
Chris:Here's how we're going to do it.
Chris:And so on.
Chris:And so that what that was pivotal in my, in my life career, and if I
Chris:wouldn't have had somebody that would help me along on that, I would, I would
Chris:not say I would have never got there, but I wouldn't have got there sooner.
Chris:And, and so to this day, I, I trust, I respect, uh, that person changed my
Chris:life, even though when I said, look it, I want to leave, um, and, and, but I
Chris:want you, I want, I would just assume you and I made a partnership together.
Chris:And he said, okay, let's do it.
Chris:And then, but then he said, no, Chris, you're better on your own.
Chris:And you know what he did?
Chris:He took me to the bank and he explained to the bank why, at that time, I was
Chris:a bad risk, why I was a good one.
Chris:And when I left, he said, Chris, here's your three months bookings that you have.
Chris:I've all told him where you work.
Chris:You know, and amazing.
Chris:And so it's when you do that for people, when you do that for the
Chris:young kid, if you're going to do that, I can, for those of you listening
Chris:right now, I've got this grizzly old white beard and hair and so on.
Chris:So I'm not, you're probably going, who the hell is this?
Chris:But I've learned that, um, You've got to help people along, you've
Chris:got to help them in their mission of what they want to get a life.
Chris:And if, and it's an old, old saying, but if I give you what you want,
Chris:then you'll give me what I want.
Chris:It's not the other way around.
Chris:I've got to give first,
Crystal:man, Chris, as I'm listening to you describe all of this, I can't
Crystal:help, but literally consider what you did, what you just described as.
Crystal:It's all the same principles and the same ideas, right?
Crystal:Like earlier how I said, Oh, you put the client with the, with the stylist
Crystal:and the client interaction, right?
Crystal:The client is the hero of the story.
Crystal:I always tell people to, um, to figure out what their desires are.
Crystal:their wants, just like you said, right?
Crystal:Where do they want to go in their life with their hair?
Crystal:How can you help them?
Crystal:How can you set the stage for this is our relationship that we're having together?
Crystal:It's literally the same thing, but it's the salon owner putting the stylist
Crystal:as the hero of that story, right?
Crystal:And they're the mentor and they're the guide.
Crystal:And so I just, I love this so much because I feel like you
Crystal:can step back so many layers.
Crystal:Right?
Crystal:And the same principles apply, but we try to just get in our heads
Crystal:and get all confused about stuff.
Crystal:And it's like, it's, it can be so beautifully simple.
Crystal:So I just had to share that, that like, as you're describing
Crystal:this, I'm like, Oh my God.
Crystal:Yes.
Crystal:Yes.
Crystal:It's a, it's a consultation.
Crystal:It's literally a consultation.
Crystal:It's a life
Chris:skill, you know, is that is if you want to get things out of life, you have
Chris:to know how to communicate to people.
Chris:It's just like, um, and, you know, again, I'm a hair cutter.
Chris:So for the people that's scary right now, uh, just, you know, listen to me anyway.
Chris:Uh, but.
Chris:I always knew that I had an eye where I could tell what looked great on
Chris:people, but I wasn't so bold and so in your face that I would say, this is the
Chris:only thing that is going to help you.
Chris:This is what you must do.
Chris:So in other words, I had no, no problem.
Chris:Somebody had long hair and I saw them with short hair.
Chris:I knew that that's what, where they needed, but I also know that some
Chris:people want to do it right away.
Chris:And some people need steps.
Chris:So I would never go to somebody and say, you should wear your hair
Chris:short because if they said no, well, then I'm kind of out in that field.
Chris:But if I could say to them, listen, I've got, I've got some ideas
Chris:and I've got about three, four ideas that I want to run by you.
Chris:And, uh, I'll, I'll talk to you about them.
Chris:And then I'd love to know.
Chris:Which one excites you the most and then you can go anywhere you want, you know,
Chris:I can talk about, listen, I want to go like, I'm just making stuff up right now.
Chris:I'm coming from the University of MSU making stuff up.
Chris:I don't usually that word, but that making stuff up as well.
Chris:You can put any S word you want in there.
Chris:But I would say to them, look at, uh, you know, I'd love this is what
Chris:I really, this look, et cetera.
Chris:This is what it would do to you, but also, okay, good.
Chris:That's one side.
Chris:Let's set that aside for a minute.
Chris:And then I would talk about something that was more medium or how we could transfer
Chris:this, this link from one to the other.
Chris:And, uh, and, and, and inevitably.
Chris:I would always get them to the end game because I planted the seed
Chris:and some would bite right away.
Chris:Say, look, take it off because they trusted me.
Chris:The others would say, I want to go from three to two to one and
Chris:I get them there eventually.
Chris:Or I might've just get them to two.
Chris:That might be the only place that they ever, they ever, that was their,
Chris:that was their stop line in, uh, in where their taste and where their.
Chris:Uh, the fear level was so comfort.
Chris:Yeah, their comfort.
Chris:Yes.
Chris:So, but anyway, that's, that's kind of what I feel is that's
Chris:a life skill that's in there.
Chris:And if you can use that in your associate program prior to telling
Chris:them what they need to do to get up to what, and here's the biggest thing
Chris:that I think that it's the hardest part for trainers, um, is that.
Chris:They, they have internally, they have a benchmark of what work should look like.
Chris:Just like, you know, to use your example, you said I went into a salon, I wanted
Chris:a round brush with a nice bouncy curls.
Chris:But if that girl doesn't know what round brush, round brush, bouncy waves curls
Chris:are, and what she has to meet up to.
Chris:Then she's floundering.
Chris:That's why she had to go.
Chris:Well, I usually use an iron and I can get something similar out of that.
Chris:The point is, what is the salon doing to identify what is the
Chris:minimum salon standard for a bob?
Chris:What is the minimum salon standard for for a curling iron?
Chris:It might be a root tongue or a spiral tongue or beach waves or what or or or
Chris:or and what are all those disciplines and what is your minimum salon standard?
Chris:If you can apply that, even if it's just use an old fashioned look book, you
Chris:know, in our, in our, in our program, sort of our next step that we're adding
Chris:into it is templates where you take your pictures, you put them on your template.
Chris:And that is, I won't say the minimum salon standard, but that's a standard
Chris:that you expect anybody to reach before they earn a spot at a chair.
Chris:And I'm going to repeat that again, earn a spot.
Chris:At a chair.
Chris:It's not an entitlement.
Chris:I didn't hire you to do this.
Chris:You have to meet the salon standards.
Chris:And if I can train you as quickly as possible to get up to that salon
Chris:standard, I'm helping you grow.
Chris:And it doesn't work the same.
Chris:Like when, you know, a few years past, it was, you went under a six
Chris:month to three year apprenticeship, making nothing, sweeping the floor.
Chris:That taught me a lot.
Chris:Sure.
Chris:But what if I, what if I could work ahead?
Chris:What if I'm an ambitious young person, and I, and I know that there's only one or two
Chris:training nights a week or training days, um, in the week, I do not subscribe to,
Chris:that was a slip of tongue, what I used to do when it was allowed, train after hours,
Chris:but nowadays you can't do that, you've got, they should come in, they need to
Chris:be paid, your educator needs to be paid, and you train them, but you get them up
Chris:to speed as quickly as possible, however, As an associate, if I'm ambitious and I
Chris:want to work ahead, then I can do that.
Chris:And, and that's where the difference was, Crystal, is what I find that people want
Chris:right now is, and what burns educators and salon owners out, is I'm teaching the
Chris:same thing and then I get somebody on the floor and they either get caught in that
Chris:revolving wheel and they go out and I got to train another one or I grow my business
Chris:and I got to train another one and I'm not doing the things that I love to do.
Chris:Apply, you know, apply the vision that I have for my business and doing hair.
Chris:And we all know that training happens in what's called a see do environment.
Chris:I've got to see it.
Chris:In other words, you know, uh, Salon Owner X has to show me how to do
Chris:that bouncy blow wave and blow dry, blow out, and then I've got to do it.
Chris:And I have to practice it a few times until I get my standard up to
Chris:at least what that is or exceeded.
Chris:Then, then any, but then the owner can go, Hey, listen, I'm doing a haircut and
Chris:how I can just go and do another haircut.
Chris:You can do the blow dry and the stylist, the consumer is just
Chris:as happy as when you did it.
Chris:I mean, for those of you right now, my, I have had, uh, two trigger, trigger
Chris:fingers that have, you know, from braiding and braiding and braiding
Chris:and doing these avant garde looks that I, I screwed up two of my fingers,
Chris:my hand, I just had surgery on them.
Chris:But when I went there.
Chris:The, I was in there for three, uh, I think it was three and a half hours.
Chris:Uh, everybody else took care of me.
Chris:There had people filling out files, doing all these things, doing this thing.
Chris:I only saw, I didn't even, when I went under, I didn't even see
Chris:the, uh, the, uh, the doctor.
Chris:He talked to me for two minutes before we went in and no regrets.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:But when, when, um, I never saw him at the end, they checked me out.
Chris:So out of that three hour or four hour procedure.
Chris:He, he did the operation.
Chris:The operation lasted about 20 minutes.
Chris:Everybody else took care of me, you know, and that's the way that you turn
Chris:people into six figure stylists is you can't do every one of those stages.
Chris:And, and say, Oh, look at what I did.
Chris:It's how do you compartmentalize?
Chris:How do you, or departmentalize what that's happening?
Chris:Train my associates so that they can do the blow dry.
Chris:They can do the root retouch.
Chris:They can do, uh, they can do whatever I need to do so I can move
Chris:on to my next higher ticket item.
Chris:That's the way we make money, you know, and
Crystal:then, you know, in the medical field, just to relate this
Crystal:back, like they have, what's known as a standard of care, right?
Crystal:So there's an assumption that every nurse, every person that worked on you,
Crystal:they understand the standard of care.
Crystal:So you're going to get the same level of care from everybody and
Crystal:it's interesting that we don't Employ that more in the salon, right?
Crystal:A typical standard of whatever you want to call it, standard of hair, right?
Crystal:Oh, that's kind of a
Chris:cool.
Chris:Yeah.
Chris:Well, it's, it, it comes from, I'm, I'm wondering, and this
Chris:is not, not based on fact.
Chris:It's not based on anything else other than, you know, I think
Chris:that we've come, we've lived in an industry where it's so competitive.
Chris:It's my it's about look at my work as opposed to the salon quality of work.
Chris:So if I do, I can do an amazing haircut and that's what I want to do, then I
Chris:can do that for those people that just want to do if they're only doing color.
Chris:Great.
Chris:Do the color.
Chris:I realize nowadays, everybody's switching back and forth, but it is
Chris:stay to what, you know, you don't know it and you want to know it, learn it.
Chris:But the reality is whatever you're doing that cut and color, that's
Chris:what they came here for you for you.
Chris:You know, they came for you the highlight.
Chris:They didn't come to you for the retouch.
Chris:You know, the retouch can be done by any way.
Chris:That's just maintenance, the creativity, the, the spark.
Chris:Came from you to do the transition of the Balayage, the highlights, the custom color
Chris:that whatever, but you know, you can get somebody else to apply all those things.
Chris:Do the apprentice.
Chris:That's now.
Chris:Now they're contributing back to what their finances.
Chris:We did a little study just a little bit back for this, for the show.
Chris:And we were looking at what the average associate costs you.
Chris:And, and, uh, I, I based it on that.
Chris:If you had, uh, if you had to pay.
Chris:Okay.
Chris:Your, uh, we always tell the owners should not teach you if
Chris:you got to do at the beginning.
Chris:Great.
Chris:But you train somebody else so they can take that over.
Chris:And then we said if that high ticket item, let's just say they were 100.
Chris:Uh, that your average ticket price with everything included,
Chris:and I know it's far more than that, but let's just keep it low.
Chris:That's 400 a week, times say, 50 weeks.
Chris:That, there's that cost.
Chris:Then, what do you, that's what you just have to, that's your lost revenue that
Chris:you would be losing if an educator or the salon owner is teaching the lesson.
Chris:Then, then you have to add into that, so you do that plus your 42 weeks,
Chris:I think it came to, I can't remember what it was, like, I had the fingers
Chris:here, but I'm just gonna let it go.
Chris:Uh, then you have to pay your minimum wage or whatever that you're going to pay for
Chris:your associate just for those four hours.
Chris:And then you have to think about what is it that, um, uh, that
Chris:you, what are you missing out on?
Chris:What are the wages you have to pay for both those people?
Chris:And it ranged.
Chris:Anywhere between 16, 000 and 29, 000 to train an associate over six months.
Chris:Wow.
Chris:So, you know, our mission is how do you get them on the floor contributing faster
Chris:so that they're paying for themselves?
Chris:You're not having to go out of pocket and to me, that's the, that's the biggest
Chris:thing about the associate programs.
Chris:So we help to train them on what's your, uh, what's the standard of
Chris:the shampoo that you're doing?
Chris:What's the standard of being able to, um, even for, uh, for rinsing out a foil and
Chris:a, uh, and a retouch at the same time.
Chris:So you're not mixing together for your blow dries.
Chris:What is it?
Chris:And then as you consider past, we always say, We don't, we don't feel that you
Chris:should train haircutting in at least the first month or so of your training.
Chris:It should be all on the standards for the minimum services that they
Chris:can contribute to financially, then get them on their cutting program.
Chris:I had an interesting conversation with a, with a young lady out of Alabama just
Chris:the other day, who's using the program, and she says that we also do, uh, before
Chris:they can graduate onto the floor, what we do is we have opportunity days.
Chris:And Saturday is our Saturday is our slowest day.
Chris:That still freaks me out because in my era, that was always the busiest
Chris:day, but she said that that's our opportunity day because it's the slowest
Chris:day and that's where we put our juniors on the floor and they have to do.
Chris:At least just a minimum of two clients a week in order to graduate, you have
Chris:to, and these are people you have to bring in to the fold and then, uh,
Chris:and, and they're paid for services.
Chris:They're just at a lower rate, et cetera.
Chris:So in the, in the program that we have, we have quizzes that so you, we can
Chris:tell that, you know, the information and you've gone through the information.
Chris:So the C do that we do instead of you doing the C and the
Chris:associate doing the do the repeat.
Chris:Okay.
Chris:We do it with the videos where you we train them on the videos in some, uh,
Chris:in segments of what you do, they do it.
Chris:And then all the owner or the educator has to do is check their work.
Chris:So they're still behind the chair.
Chris:They're still earning.
Chris:So the main income that you have to worry about is just how do you get them
Chris:on the floor quickly so that they're taking over service that the educator
Chris:is, or that the senior stylist is doing so that pays for their wages.
Chris:Wow.
Chris:Yeah.
Crystal:Chris, all of this is so great.
Crystal:Um, I've, I've enjoyed all of this conversation.
Crystal:I do feel like some of it is a little bit.
Crystal:high level thinking, right?
Crystal:And like, it's kind of hard to wrap our brains around if this is the
Crystal:first time we've heard this kind of conversation and information happening.
Crystal:So I would love for you, like if I have some listeners that are
Crystal:like associate curious, right?
Crystal:Like maybe they're independent stylists that are ready to take on an assistant
Crystal:or maybe they're salon owners that are like, Hey, this sounds pretty awesome.
Crystal:What would be like step one to dip their toes in something
Chris:like this?
Chris:Uh, now you're referring to step one as if you want to take on an associate.
Chris:Is that what you're saying?
Chris:Yeah, or
Crystal:like if you're yeah, if you're gonna take on an associate,
Crystal:what's like the best first steps here?
Chris:Yeah, well the to me is is um assessment Um, you know usually and this
Chris:is what I hear from so many people right now that I They're people are having such
Chris:a hard time hiring That they, they want them just to pass the mirror test, you
Chris:know, put a mirror underneath your nose.
Chris:If it fogs, you got the job problem is you're bringing in all of the other
Chris:problems that they've had before.
Chris:That makes sense.
Chris:So what we say is you need to assess.
Chris:And that's one thing about the training program that we have is that we
Chris:build in assessments, one of which is what we call a new hire assessment.
Chris:And inside there, you would, I would hire them.
Chris:Because you, they, they're going to come from a variety of sources.
Chris:They're going to come from a school.
Chris:They're going to come from another salon, uh, or wherever.
Chris:But you need to know what their level is from the minimum
Chris:salon standard that you have.
Chris:So before you hire them, you know where they stand.
Chris:Now, so many people will say to me, Chris, Uh, you handsome devil.
Chris:Um, see everybody laughs when I say that too.
Chris:So we'll just say, so Chris, um, and what I'd say to them is look at
Chris:get up, you know, is get them to do come in and on their first visit,
Chris:they should do, um, a haircut.
Chris:That includes, uh, you know, a iron work or and a blow dry
Chris:and, and here's the kicker.
Chris:Did they sell any retail?
Chris:Did they talk about retail?
Chris:Did they purchase it or not?
Chris:And when we bring this up, we have a.
Chris:We have a form that you fill out and you just grade them.
Chris:Now, this to many is going to sound like, oh, they did bad, so I don't hire.
Chris:And that's not what this is at all.
Chris:It's an assessment, so you know what to train on.
Chris:And you ask, you can ask them at the end, is Are you willing to go through this?
Chris:Cause this is going to be your training program.
Chris:So just hiring and getting somebody to do stuff can set it up for a
Chris:consumer, the person that's coming in.
Chris:And if you're getting them to jump in and do the color service, the blow dry,
Chris:the whatever, and it doesn't meet your standard, that could be a bye bye notice.
Chris:You know, client goes, Oh, well, I'm not, you know, crystal is just
Chris:now pawning me off on somebody who doesn't do as good a job.
Chris:Therefore, my trust and my loyalty has gone away.
Chris:So the first step that I would say, assess, simple assessment, do it on one
Chris:visit, where they bring in a customer, they bring in a client, they do the cut,
Chris:the color, the iron work, the retailing.
Chris:And you grade them on it.
Chris:Secondly, they come back for a second visit.
Chris:And they bring in a color client.
Chris:Could be the one that they did the week before.
Chris:They have to do, uh, uh, a retouch.
Chris:You're gonna ask them to do a foiling.
Chris:You know, and that, they could do that on a mannequin as well.
Chris:You know, if they can't find somebody to do it.
Chris:Because you want them to do a couple of different patterns.
Chris:So you find out what their blow dry skills, uh, what their, what their foiling
Chris:skills are like, and again, not to hire, not to fire, but to grade so that you
Chris:know what your training schedule is with.
Chris:And here's the other thing, is so many people will bring somebody on and say,
Chris:you have to know everything before I'm going to grant you access to something.
Chris:Right.
Chris:At least that's the way when we trained, you had to be good at cutting.
Chris:You had to be able to do it.
Chris:All of this, you had to have your 10 haircuts that you had
Chris:to do, and you had to do them.
Chris:Well, uh, they had to be repeated 10 times so that you showed you were consistent.
Chris:And, um, you can't do that anymore.
Chris:You've got it.
Chris:They want to be on the floor.
Chris:They want to get to it as quickly as possible.
Chris:So if they can do a shampoo as, and you graded them on their
Chris:shampoo, they can do it, get them doing the shampoos right away.
Chris:If they can do a color.
Chris:Excuse me.
Chris:I don't remember eating that.
Chris:Um, okay.
Chris:Old jokes.
Chris:Old jokes.
Chris:Um, if they can do a, a, a, a proper.
Chris:Uh, retouch that meets your standard, get them doing it right away.
Chris:You know, you, they don't have to wait the two weeks, the three weeks.
Chris:Get them to do the skills that they do really well, get them on
Chris:the floor, get them participating financially, and then train on the rest.
Chris:Simple.
Chris:Yeah.
Crystal:Man.
Crystal:It's so funny because when you describe it, it sounds so simple, but if you've
Crystal:never even thought about this before.
Crystal:Like, I've had assistants before too, right?
Crystal:And it was like, I didn't know what I was doing.
Crystal:I just had someone that was curious and wanted to come learn from me.
Crystal:So I was like, sure, come on in.
Crystal:I didn't have any systems.
Crystal:I didn't have any processes.
Crystal:It was just like winging it the whole time.
Crystal:And it was kind of clumsy.
Crystal:And it took a long time.
Crystal:So I love that.
Crystal:Um, Chris, I would love for you to tell me if my listeners would like to get ahold
Crystal:of you and learn a little more from you.
Crystal:Where can they find you on this?
Crystal:Big wide internet.
Crystal:Yeah.
Chris:Well, first of all, thank you.
Chris:And, and the, the best way to do is, uh, is, uh, go to, um, trainers playbook.
Chris:com trainers playbook.
Chris:com.
Chris:And that will give you all of the assets that we do.
Chris:And we have on there.
Chris:And if they want to go inside there, then, uh, inside there, that'll
Chris:talk about the salon associate.
Chris:Program that we have.
Chris:So, uh, and I believe, um, we have a short site, a shortcut to that.
Chris:Um, and I think if it's just.
Chris:Uh, I'm afraid I'm going to give the wrong information,
Chris:but I know there's a bitly bit.
Chris:ly slash, um, slash trainers playbook, I believe is what it's called.
Chris:And they can go there as well.
Chris:It's a shortcut to get to it, but it'll tell it gives all the stuff
Chris:that we do on there, but that'll take them right to salon associate
Chris:training and it's on there.
Chris:And what we've done is we figured out that based on if you look at that, somebody
Chris:is training anywhere between 16, 000 and.
Chris:Um, and 29, 000 to train over six months.
Chris:And if you can do that and do that for a price that's marginal on that,
Chris:then it makes it worth your while to have somebody else to do the training
Chris:and then free up your own time.
Crystal:Amazing.
Crystal:I will make sure to have links to those in the show notes here
Crystal:to make it simple for everybody.
Crystal:Um, and then last quick question for you here on social media, do you, are you
Crystal:the one that handles your social media?
Crystal:Like if someone sent you a DM, is it you, or do you have an assistant doing that for
Chris:you?
Chris:Yes.
Chris:I mean, first of all, you're a parent and you take a look at my, my grizzly
Chris:beard, my white hair and you went, no, he probably doesn't do his own.
Chris:Uh, you're very correct on that.
Chris:I have, I have my peeps look after a lot of that.
Chris:I do get into some of it when they, when they get to it because, uh, they
Chris:deal with it much faster than I do.
Chris:But if they DM even at, um, even at, at coach Chris Barron.
Chris:And that's, uh, C-O-A-C-H-C-H-R-I-S and then B-A-R-A-N.
Chris:Then that'll get right to this, either myself or people, and my
Chris:peeps will take care of them.
Crystal:Wonderful.
Crystal:Well, Chris, this has been such a pleasure to have you on here, and
Crystal:I feel like we could just spin in circles about this stuff all day long.
Crystal:'cause like I'm just nodding the whole time as you're talking.
Crystal:Yeah.
Crystal:I'm like, yes.
Crystal:I love it.
Crystal:I love it.
Crystal:It's obvious that you have.
Crystal:Um, experience in this industry and that you have some great stuff to share.
Crystal:So I can't wait to get this episode out there for you.
Crystal:And again, just thanks so much for coming on today.
Chris:It was absolutely my pleasure.
Crystal:Awesome.
Crystal:Okay, well, we'll be in touch and uh, I guess I'll see your
Crystal:peeps on Instagram, . Thank you.
Crystal:Okay, bye-Bye.
Crystal:I mean, did he, or did he not deliver?
Crystal:That was fantastic, right?
Crystal:I mean, thanks again to.
Crystal:Coach Chris Barron for coming on the show and sharing those
Crystal:little nuggets of wisdom with us.
Crystal:Um, I truly feel like conversations like this are going to change and shape
Crystal:our industry for the better, really.
Crystal:So excuse me and my cold.
Crystal:Uh, I hope that you got some helpful insights and little nuggets to carry
Crystal:with you of ins inspiration and information, um, moving forward.
Crystal:And also, if you enjoyed this podcast episode, friend, I have an ask of you.
Crystal:Will you share this with a fellow stylist that you think would enjoy it and gain
Crystal:something from it and, um, pass it on?
Crystal:Maybe send it in a text message.
Crystal:I know when I send my friends Text messages with links to podcasts.
Crystal:I usually get responses from them.
Crystal:And when they do it to me, I actually go look.
Crystal:So, um, what I'm trying to say is tell your neighbor, tell your friends, if
Crystal:you liked this, it definitely helps share the message, spread the joy if
Crystal:we share it with more stylists, right?
Crystal:So, um, thank you so much for listening.
Crystal:It's always a pleasure for me to be here as your hair mentor.
Crystal:And as I always love to say, Have a wonderful hair day my friend,
Crystal:and I'll see you next time.
Crystal:K bye!