By Vivienne O'Keeffe, A.A.D., P.E.A., C.I.B.T.A.,
Repeat clients form the heart and soul of the spa and wellness industry. Spas are privileged to share a very personal and special relationship with their core and repeat clientele and many facilities operate under the 20 / 80 principle with these loyal visitors. That is: 20% of their client base generates 80% of the income. This striking statistic deserves the greatest attention; as an analysis of sustained take-up of service by this key group reveals the values which spa service providers ought to best espouse, protect, nurture and ultimately sustain through tenacious adherence to challenging quality standards and vigorous promotional claims. Retention of a reliable core of repeats clients is confirmation that you tend to do things right.
And yet, have you experienced one or more of your core clients leave your facility, never to return - with no explanation and for no apparent reason? You do some sole searching, attempting to discover the cause.
The client / spa relationship is in reality very delicate, one which is vulnerable to inadvertent oversights, indiscretions and erroneous perceptions. Only by providing a structured opportunity for stress-free communication can the situation be addressed.
All clients deserve to be valued and acknowledged and your repeat clients require particular attention. In your eagerness to create a favourable environment to facilitate this aim, you may unknowingly walk the line of familiarity, thereby losing focus on what motivates and attracts this type of client to your facility in the first instance. While much sought-for in spa practitioners personal qualities of empathy and friendliness should not translate as familiarity with the client. Nothing could be further from the desired benefit of the spa experience, as perceived through the eyes of the customer - the integrity of the treatment process is paramount.
The loyalty and trust of your repeat client may sometimes go unacknowledged and without reward by the therapist or provider, creating disappointment and disaffection for the client. Clients may feel taken for granted, or feel that their trust has been violated within the corroborative intimacy of the relationship; their expectations, goals, needs and desires lie exposed and dashed in the disillusion of that awareness. The spa facility itself may lose credibility and be denied the opportunity to redress the situation. The frustration is compounded by the realisation that you may have crossed the line of insensitivity and poor customer awareness.
Spa service providers need to raise the horizons of their client relationships well beyond those of 'companion', 'buddy' or 'friend'. Conversation about personal lives; reciprocal queries for information and indeed service provider's requests for personal advice - all have no real legitimacy within an expensive appointment session.
Choose instead to walk the line of your professional protocol by:
The routine of the client / practitioner interaction could easily degenerate into a ritual of familiarity when the practitioner fails to preserve vigilance and caution. If this happens then the practitioner and establishment have let the ball drop. Walking the line with an assumption that- It is just Suzie; she loves us and she will be fine if we keep her waiting / move her appointment / or change therapists- is a sure-fire recipe for commercial disaster.
A well disposed repeat client will generally see you and your facility in a friendly, familiar context. Yet, the following cannot be over-stressed: this is precisely the situation where a fine balance and constant, vigilant focus is required. It is therapeutically very beneficial for your client to feel comfortable and secure, as comfort and a predictable ritual bring about a 'certainty of situation' for which the consumers of spa and wellness experiences yearn - it provides an antidote to the frenetically paced world of to-day. An excessive degree of familiarity will serve to disturb this critical sense of security and rapidly extinguish the prospect of delivering a worthwhile spa / wellness experience. In truth, the benefits of the spa experience then become non-viable.
Spa service providers forever walk a fine line between being friendly and being familiar; being patronising and offering insincere compliments; being casual and being effective in the discharge of a service within the contracted session time period. Should service providers fail to get the balance of approach right, many valued clients can be lost. As the spa service provider progressively loses focus on the needs and expectations of their repeat clients, the client in turn loses their desire to resume treatments at this facility.
1. Secure the present core clientele: Make a quality decision to step back and regroup before you begin your very next client interaction. Taking the client file and reviewing it before you begin the interaction session with the client can accomplish this.
2. Client Feedback: Set up a client feedback system as a matter of urgency. This may consist of a simple card incorporating an invitational prompt designed to elicit a client's views on projected needs and their prioritisation. Information so recorded is included in the client's file. This brief exercise may occur prior to therapy or at its conclusion. If performed as a prelude, it could fulfil the dual purposes of quickly focussing the therapist and client on the business in hand while also offering the opportunity for pre-preparation and forethought. Feedback records, being relevant and helpful, need to be regularly overviewed by the therapist to ensure continuity, direction and overall cohesion of the service.
3. Accurate Notes: Keep accurate notes on the client file of the last procedure / service / experience. The Client Feedback opinion and information card should now form a permanent feature of this file.
4. Therapist's Query: One of the best refocusing questions for you and your client is, What would you like us to focus on to-day?
5. Articulating Needs: Some individuals may initially find it quite difficult to describe the service they need, over time they will develop the ability to specify their requirements. This exercise is a very powerful one on many levels as it serves to recommit the client to regular uptake of spa and wellness benefits.
If their needs go unnoticed they go to the local department store where these relevant needs are heard and addressed.
6. Conclusion of Service:
7. Design Programs to address the clients specific needs and follow-up on them, i.e. if it is weight loss do a follow-up on their progress with this goal.
It is vital to keep all senses on alert and focused while performing client services as this ultimately benefits the client, the facility and the therapist.
To successfully walk the line and deliver a wellness or spa experience providing product satisfaction and genuine value, it is essential that:
Finally, the line is skilfully walked if you can invest vision, inspiration and the skill of detachment in your work, to best sustain the professional attitude, essential to implementing the service dream of this wonderful industry of ours.