womanthismonth.com | OCTOBER 2025 BEAUTY 74 Salon owners often hire a manager but still hover over every detail. That one habit quietly destroys the manager’s authority and drains the life out of the business. Salon Owner: Stop Micromanaging – Let Your Manager Lead Every month, we invite readers to pose their own questions for Badia to answer in her next column. Make sure to ask your own by emailing [email protected] A k Badia Your Monthly Guide to Salon and Spa Success ? A Visit I Won’t Forget I once walked into a salon where the manager stood silently in the corner while staff clustered around the owner, firing off requests: “Can I take extra time off?”, “Can we have a meeting?”, “Can we buy this?” The owner snapped back, scolding about dirty stations, missing coffee and waiting clients. The manager didn’t say a word. Everyone could see who really ran the place, and it wasn’t her. When that happens, the results are predictable. Staff lose respect for the manager, decisions take longer and morale drops. Eventually, your manager burns out or quits. Even clients pick up on the tension and service suffers. Growth halts when no one knows who’s truly in charge. How to Give Power Back Start by making leadership clear. If you’ve never properly introduced your manager, do it now. Call a short meeting and say: “From today, all daily operations go through the manager. I’ll focus on growth and planning. You can still come to me for serious matters, but for salon issues, please report to her first.” This simple step defines the chain of command and reminds everyone that you’re still involved, just not in the day-to-day. Then, learn to visit without controlling. Greet clients, observe quietly and resist the urge to issue orders or make sudden changes. Avoid WhatsApp group messages that bypass your manager; they only sow confusion. Your energy should go into the bigger picture: future services, marketing, finances and growth, not micromanaging rotas or coffee supplies. Keep your leadership strong behind closed doors. Meet privately with your manager to review goals and guide performance rather than stepping in to fix things yourself. Write down her responsibilities; staff schedules, stock control, promotions and clarify what remains yours. Finally, recognise and reward leadership by tying part of her bonus to teamwork, client satisfaction and smooth operations, not just sales. Mistakes are the best teachers. Set clear goals, meet weekly and correct privately. Use a clear job description and regular assessments. Remember, no one runs a salon alone. Success always comes from a united team. Smile and say: “Please ask the manager – she’s in charge.” Repeat it until everyone believes it. The Bottom Line Stand beside your manager in public, then step back. A salon grows only when everyone knows who leads every day. What if my manager makes mistakes? How do I check her work? Staff still come to me for answers.
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