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Voice commands can get misunderstood. Don't just hope it worked. Immediately use another method—call the salon, message on WhatsApp, or check their app—to get a proper written confirmation. Never trust a voice booking is final until you have proof.
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This is common and frustrating. The app might be showing an old promotion, or the salon's prices went up but the app wasn't updated. To avoid surprises, always confirm the final price on the same channel you're using to book by asking directly.
It's not recommended as it makes a mess of your records. If you absolutely have to, tell the salon person clearly to combine your information from both places. For keeping everything straight, it's best to pick one booking method and stick with it for the entire process.
According to the blog, beauty apps often struggle with the nuances of Indian skin and hair. They typically put users in broad categories without understanding specific variations like wheatish vs. other complexions, or how different hair types (like 2C waves vs. 3A curls) require different treatments. The apps lack the personal observation that professionals use to make accurate assessments.
The blog suggests that beauty apps generally don't account for environmental factors like Delhi's October humidity or monsoon conditions that affect hair frizz. Unlike human professionals who adapt treatments based on seasonal changes, apps work from static databases that may not consider local weather patterns and their impact on skin and hair.
Following an app's pre-bridal package timeline can be risky because apps often cram treatments together without allowing buffer days for skin recovery. A professional aesthetician would space out treatments appropriately, especially for sensitive skin, and adjust the schedule based on individual reactions and needs.
The blog recommends using apps as idea generators or menus rather than diagnostic tools. You should research suggested treatments, then discuss them with a human professional during a consultation. Look for salons that offer free skin or hair analysis and check real reviews from platforms like parlourtime to find professionals who take time for proper consultations.
No. It doesn't do marketing. It tries to organize the bookings you already get, making those empty slots more visible and bookable for your existing clients.
It digs into your past data. It looks for services that are popular but shorter—like threading or a men's haircut—that could fit into a gap without messing up the big, time-sensitive appointments.
You should never let it just manage. It should suggest. You or your manager need to approve everything. The computer doesn't know that a certain stylist is best with curly hair or that a client is nervous.
Letting bookings happen outside the system. If half your clients still call you, the AI only sees half the picture. Its predictions will be wrong, and you might get double-booked.
A couple of months, usually. It needs to see a few cycles—regular weeks, a holiday week, etc. It needs enough real data on bookings, no-shows, the works.