We’re pleased to announce the launch of a new feature on our blog. Each month, we’ll sit down with one of the leaders in the beauty and wellness industry to find out more about their business, their insights on the industry and their predictions for the future. This month, we spoke to Chris Brown, vice president of marketing for 18|8 Fine Men’s Salons and owner of two 18|8 salons in Ohio.
1. Thanks again for agreeing to be our first customer profile. Tell me more about 18|8 and your role in the company.
18|8 is a franchise concept with about 80 locations across the country, in every major city. Itβs a high-end menβs salon, designed to give men the experience that many women are used to receiving when they go to a salon, but that men donβt often get. When you come in, youβre going to get a drink and get comfortable in the waiting area, with nice chairs and TVs that probably have sports on while you wait. Every haircut is very customized β they come with a hot towel, a massage, two washes and conditioning. We have barbers under the same roof as stylists, so we can do straight-razor shaves and some other salon-type services, like facials and manicures. Weβre really trying to set ourselves apart as a place for men that goes beyond just a haircut. I own two salons in Ohio and I have also responsibilities on the corporate side as the vice president of marketing for 18|8.
2. Youβre in a really unique position to own a couple of their franchise locations and also serve as their corporate VP of marketing. Can you tell me how that came about?
I started off as an 18|8 franchise owner. I own the Cincinnati location, and it became the no. 1 18|8 location in the country in terms of guest count. As a franchise owner, I began talking to Scott [Griffiths], who is the CEO of 18|8, and eventually developed a good relationship with him. My background is in marketing at Procter & Gamble. I spent 15 years doing that. So, I was having success with my Cincinnati location, and corporate needed some help on the marketing side and I had a background in that, so it was a good fit for all of us. Iβve since acquired the Columbus location, so now I split my time 50/50, basically, between running my salons and my role as VP of marketing.
3. It seems like those are both full-time jobs. How do you balance those obligations?
It is a lot of work. I mean, itβs probably at least a job and a half so Iβm working a lot of hours. But as a franchise owner, once you get into a good flow, you donβt have to be as hands-on, especially if you have good management. The Cincinnati location is getting to that point so I can focus on the business side versus always being there. Thatβs helped out a lot. I donβt know if I couldβve done it when I was first starting out.
4. What do you think of as the difference between a menβs salon versus a barbershop, especially as more barbers offer more types of services?
There are definitely some barbershop concepts stretching into more of what we do as well. But, traditionally, a barbershop focuses on haircuts, and itβs just going to be staffed by barbers. At 18|8, we have cosmetologists and barbers all under one roof, which is one big difference. Barbers and cosmetologists are trained differently in how they cut hair. But we do a lot more than just haircuts. We do scalp treatments, solutions for thinning hair, and manicures and pedicures β which barbershops really canβt do β and facials, which they donβt usually offer. Our locations feel much more like a salon than a barbershop. Barbershops tend to have open environments whereas we have semi-private stations that create more of a one-on-one experience for our guests.
5. What led you to open your first 18|8 location?
One is my background in marketing. I worked in skincare, so I had experience in the beauty industry and I saw where some trends were going with menβs grooming. The other piece was Iβm kind of the core consumer. I was the guy weβd go after. You know, the guy who is probably going to a female salon but doesnβt really feel at home there because itβs not really designed for him. The salon chairs are more designed for women. Heβs probably the only guy in there at the time. He goes there because he gets a better, higher end experience than he does somewhere like Great Clips, but itβs not really an environment or experience designed for him. I did that myself for about 15 years. So when I discovered 18|8 and it delivered all of the things I liked about salons, but was just for men, it really resonated with me.
6. If you had to choose the most important things youβve learned about the industry since you opened your first salon, what would they be?
The biggest thing is that itβs a people business, both the guests and the stylists and barbers themselves. If you donβt have the right stylist and barber team, itβs just not going to be successful. You can have the prettiest, nicest location, up and running perfectly, all the marketing going, but if you donβt have good people that you can retain and grow with, itβs just not going to work. Particularly for an owner like myself who canβt cut hair, people are the product. If you donβt have the right people or you have a lot of turnover, then youβre going to be out of stock on the product. A really huge part of success in this industry is building and retaining a really strong team, and I spend a lot of time working on that. The other piece on the people side is the guests. Youβve got do something that sets you apart. Thereβs probably a barbershop or a salon almost every mile of this country. And many of them donβt stay open for more than a year. Itβs because theyβre not doing something to set themselves apart. While I knew that on some level because of my background in marketing, as a salon owner you really have to live that. We donβt compete on price. A lot of places do. Weβre offering probably the most expensive haircut in the city, so all of the other things about the experience are really important for the guest. The guest is the king. So, the beer, the interior, the way the music is playing all matter. Thatβs where Zenoti comes in. You know that a lot of why Iβm so excited about Zenoti is because itβs something that sets us apart that not a lot of other places have. A lot of barber shops still run cash only. Or maybe they offer a really simple chip reader for credit card payments. But with Zenoti, guests have the ability to schedule appointments in the customer app, check themselves in and out, and stylists can view their schedules on their employee app, and look at their guest profiles and notes. Thatβs all very differentiated and sets us apart from everybody else. Itβs really the key when thereβs just so much competition.
7. You mentioned how important it is to retain employees. How do you build an employee culture that keeps people around?
Part of it is giving them the things they canβt get at other salons. Salary and pay is obviously a big consideration for anyone in any career, so you have to make sure youβre competitive there. But salary isnβt the only way to set yourself apart as an employer. It can be things like the Zenoti stylist app that helps them be better at their craft too. Itβs also important to constantly check in with your staff. Letting them know you care. Helping them work through issues, helping them on the work front, but also on the personal side at times. Giving them a lot of opportunity for training, career progression and growth.
8. What do you think is going to change in the beauty industry, particularly in the menβs market, over the next one to two years?
I think technology will be a bigger part of everything we do. Some of this youβre already doing at Zenoti with the stylist and customer apps, online booking and mobile payments, but itβll become more prevalent in the industry. I also expect retail subscription models to be really big. If you think of Dollar Shave Club, Stitch Fix, and all of these different subscription models that people are signing up for, e-commerce is changing the game in retail. I think subscriptions are a big part of that, but we also have a high-touch environment with salons so we have to be thoughtful about how we roll them out. We just partnered with a him to provide this type of subscription service. Guys can sign up for him in our salon and get access to prescription-type hair products shipped to their houses. Thatβs the type of intersection of the salon and e-commerce that I think is going to be big.
9. Do you think thereβs anything different about where the industry is going for men versus women or do you think itβs more about rolling men into some of these models that are already working with women?
I think itβs got to be customized towards men. Everything 18|8 is doing is designed for men. But I think men are getting more and more concerned about their grooming needs and their haircuts. Theyβre just not willing to settle for bad experiences in the salon industry anymore.