Anonymous wrote:I do not get high end haircuts because the few times I did, the tipping was stressful. I saw people tip the "greeter". I saw people tip the shampoo ladies and of course the stylist themselves. Can't be 20% to each? Went back to a small shop where one person does the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You are already paying for their skill, time, and product. I would not tip an extra $60 plus for 2 hrs of service. I would leave a $20-30 tip. Servers are making $3/hr, food service in a restaurant is not comparable
Wrong! They could have had 4 customers in those 2 hours and would have made way more than $20-$30 in tips! I would not keep you as a client if you used my time and tipped that way.
My stylist frequently works on other clients while my hair is "processing". He also makes a shit load of money as a high-end stylist. I tip 15%. The only person I tip 20%+ are wait staff or someone who is older and might be depending on the money to feed their family. As it is, many of the restaurant/shop owners that I know are pretty loaded so they shouldn't expect me to subsidize their employees income while they take impressive vacations. All of you who routinely tip 20%+ are either super wealthy or just showing off....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You are already paying for their skill, time, and product. I would not tip an extra $60 plus for 2 hrs of service. I would leave a $20-30 tip. Servers are making $3/hr, food service in a restaurant is not comparable
Wrong! They could have had 4 customers in those 2 hours and would have made way more than $20-$30 in tips! I would not keep you as a client if you used my time and tipped that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You are already paying for their skill, time, and product. I would not tip an extra $60 plus for 2 hrs of service. I would leave a $20-30 tip. Servers are making $3/hr, food service in a restaurant is not comparable
Wrong! They could have had 4 customers in those 2 hours and would have made way more than $20-$30 in tips! I would not keep you as a client if you used my time and tipped that way.
This is an honest question... why don’t you just charge what you think your time is worth? Your clients may tip 0-20%. Some tip extra at Christmas. Some don’t. Just charge $450 for a haircut and accept a tip as an extra is you get one?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You are already paying for their skill, time, and product. I would not tip an extra $60 plus for 2 hrs of service. I would leave a $20-30 tip. Servers are making $3/hr, food service in a restaurant is not comparable
Wrong! They could have had 4 customers in those 2 hours and would have made way more than $20-$30 in tips! I would not keep you as a client if you used my time and tipped that way.
Anonymous wrote:No. You are already paying for their skill, time, and product. I would not tip an extra $60 plus for 2 hrs of service. I would leave a $20-30 tip. Servers are making $3/hr, food service in a restaurant is not comparable
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious what you tip for expensive color, cuts or keratin. I just went in for a $425 hair appointment that lasted two hours - am I supposed to tip 15% on that??