Sunday, November 23, 2008

Stacking Services with Massage Therapy

Would you like to be able to earn more money for your work?

The real question is who wouldn’t? There are several ways you can earn more money by increasing the value of your work – making it more convenient, offering better results with advanced techniques, et cetera. Today I’ll talk about stacking you services.

What does “Stacking Services” Mean?

Stacking services means performing more services that you can charge money for within the same amount of time. An example from my spa days was to have a base rate for a one-hour massage and then charge more for add-ons. For instance, you could charge an extra $10 for deep tissue or aromatherapy, or $15 for both together. The key here is that you are increasing revenue without increasing time.

Stacking services is a way to become more efficient with your time. Let’s step into the shoes of a spa manager for a moment. You’d know that you have a certain number of treatment rooms and that you are open for a certain number of hours per day and per week. That means that there is a certain dollar-value in revenue for each room. What stacking services does is to increase the revenue that each room would make every hour.

Doing More with the Same

The same thing applies to large spas or private, individual practices – you have a certain amount of work that can be performed and it is limited. For an individual therapist, that limit would be the number of massages one could do in a week. For a simple example, if a MT can do 20 massages a week and makes $50 per massage then they are limited to a maximum of $1000 per week. In a perfect world, this MT would earn that much, but in the real world we know that they would seldom be fully booked and would be lucky to make 75% of that.

Now if this same MT stacked some services and raised the average profit per massage to $60, then the weekly income would go up by 20% without working any extra hours. Nice improvement!

For a real-world example, at my old spa, we charged an even $100 for our base one-hour service, a one hour Solace Massage (more on branding later), but our average billed service ran $128 for an hour. All due to stacking. Needless to say, this improved our profitability by 28% without any more hours.

What Can I Stack?

The key to stacking is to do more things in the same time frame. It is fairly common for massage establishments to charge more for specialized massage treatments that require additional training – clinical deep tissue, pregnancy massage, manual lymph drainage, hot stone therapy, and so on. This reflects the fact that fewer people know how to do it. Do you have skills that you could charge a premium for? If you are looking to acquire some skills, find a good balance between what you want to do and what your clients are looking for. If you don’t know what your clients really value about your work – find out! Here are some examples of things you can stack easily:

  1. Hot Stone Massage
  2. Aromatherapy
  3. Deep Tissue work
  4. Sports Massage
  5. Reflexology
  6. Body Treatments – Exfoliations & Body Wraps
  7. Eye Zone treatments
  8. Signature treatments (i.e. your specialty scalp massage)
  9. Postural Evalutations

This is by no means an exhaustive list. Do some brainstorming and think about what you can do to add value for your clients. Will they all jump to take advantage of your add-ons? No, but if you really take into account what they want and look to you to deliver, these add-on services can tailor their treatment to even more perfectly fit their needs.

Adding Time

Another relatively easy way to increase the efficiency of your time is to increase the length of your service. I found that when I was doing outcall massage to the hotels in San Francisco that maybe half of the time if the client had booked a one-hour massage and I asked if they would like to go for a 90-minute session they would say yes.

Now this is different than stacking because it actually does take more time, but especially for outcall massage it is more efficient because it maximizes your travel time.

You see, it would take about 30 minutes to get to and from each appointment for me. That meant every appointment actually took me 2 hours for a one-hour massage. However, with the upsell to 90-minutes, I got paid for 90-minutes of 2.5 hours instead of one-hour out of two. That’s 10% better. You’re already there, so why not make more while you’re at it?

The only problem with this one is when you’re already working close to your limits. Adding time isn’t the best option in that case.

Wrapping It Up

Make sure that when you think of these things that you are looking at it from your clients’ perspective. What do they value about your work and how can these add-ons make it better? If an add-on isn’t a win-win for both you and your clients, don’t do it. They’ll resent it and feel you are trying to gouge them if it only works for you. And you’ll resent having to do it if it only works for the client. If you own a massage business, it has to be win-win-win: for you, the client, and for the massage therapist doing the labor.

1 comment:

Tonney Smith said...

I have been through the whole content of this blog which is very informative and knowledgeable stuff, So i would like to visit again. Read More on: Massage Crawley