Operations
The latest in operations for medical-aesthetics practice owners.
Operations The Second-Location Decision: The Financial and Operational Signals You're Actually Ready
A second location doubles your overhead and your complexity on the promise of doubling your revenue. The signals that you're ready aren't about ambition — they're about whether your first location is genuinely maxed and your systems actually transfer.
Operations The Pricing Power Audit: How to Raise Prices 10–15% and Keep Your Patients
Most med spas are underpriced and terrified to fix it. A disciplined increase, framed and sequenced correctly, raises margin far faster than new patients ever could — and you lose fewer people than you fear.
Operations The RN-Injector Comp Arms Race: Structuring Pay to Retain Without Destroying Margin
Experienced injectors are scarce, mobile, and increasingly expensive, and consolidators are bidding them up. Structuring compensation to retain your best without torching your margin is one of the defining challenges of the moment.
Operations Patient Financing Done Right: Cherry, Wisetack, PatientFi, and the True Cost of 'Free' Financing
Financing turns a $4,000 'no' into a manageable monthly 'yes' — and quietly takes a cut of every transaction. Used deliberately it expands your market; used reflexively it discounts your whole book.
Operations No-Show and Cancellation Economics: Deposit Policies That Cut Losses Without Killing Bookings
Every no-show is a room-hour you can never resell. The right deposit and cancellation policy recovers that lost capacity — but a policy that's too aggressive costs you more in deterred bookings than it saves.
Operations Inventory and Vial Shrinkage Control: Where Product (and Money) Actually Disappears
In a cash business built on small, expensive vials, product walks out the door in ways that never show up as theft. Controlling shrinkage is one of the cleanest margin recoveries you'll ever find.
Operations Reading Your Own P&L Like an Aesthetic CFO: The Benchmarks That Flag a Sick Practice
Revenue hides everything. The owners who survive read their P&L as ratios — COGS by service line, payroll load, and the room-utilization number that predicts whether you should expand.
Operations Chair and Room Utilization: The Single Metric That Predicts Whether You Should Expand
Owners decide to add a room, a device, or a second location off a feeling. The number that should drive that decision is utilization — and most practices that expand are running it lower than they think.
Operations Cost-of-Goods Targets by Service Line: What Your Injectable, Laser, and Skincare COGS Should Be
A blended COGS number tells you nothing. Broken out by line, it tells you exactly which service is healthy, which is leaking product, and which you're quietly subsidizing.
Operations Seasonal Demand in Aesthetics: Planning Inventory, Staffing, and Marketing Around the Calendar
Aesthetic demand isn't flat across the year. Practices that plan inventory, staffing, and marketing around the predictable rhythms avoid the shortages, idle capacity, and missed pushes that catch the unprepared.
Operations Gift Cards and Pre-Paid Strategy: Cash Now, Liability Later, and How to Handle Both
Gift cards bring cash in the door and a deferred obligation onto your books. Used well they aid cash flow and acquisition; mishandled, they're an accounting and service headache.
Operations Managing Your Manufacturer Reps: Getting Value Without Being Managed by Them
Reps are a useful source of products, support, and intelligence — and they're salespeople whose job is to influence your decisions. Getting value from the relationship means staying in control of it.
Operations When to Add a New Service Line: The Discipline Behind a Bigger Menu
Every new service promises more revenue and adds cost, complexity, and compliance surface. The signals that an addition is worth it — and the trap of menu sprawl.
Operations Staff Retention Beyond Injectors: Keeping the Team That Runs the Practice
Injector retention gets the attention, but the front desk, coordinators, and support staff who run the practice matter just as much — and turnover among them quietly costs more than owners realize.
Operations Handling Refund and Walkout Requests: Policy, Judgment, and Protecting the Relationship
Refund requests test your policy and your relationships at once. A clear policy applied with judgment protects both your margin and the patients worth keeping.
Operations Cash-Flow Management for Med Spas: Why Profitable Practices Still Run Out of Money
Profit and cash are not the same thing, and the gap between them is where growing, profitable med spas get into trouble. Managing cash deliberately is what keeps the doors open.
Operations Online Booking: Reducing the Friction Between Interest and Appointment
Every extra step between a patient's intent and a booked appointment loses some of them. Frictionless online booking captures intent that a phone-tag process lets slip away.
Operations Injectable Inventory Management: Par Levels, Expiration, and Capital Efficiency
Injectable inventory ties up cash and carries expiration risk. Managing it with deliberate par levels balances availability against waste and trapped capital.
Operations Provider Compensation Models: Hourly vs Commission vs Hybrid and How Each Warps Behavior
You don't pay for hours or treatments — you pay for behavior. Every comp model quietly trains your providers to do more of something, and the wrong incentive shows up in your margin and your chart.
Operations Handling the Unhappy Patient: Turning Complaints Into Retention (or at Least Avoiding Escalation)
How you handle a dissatisfied patient determines whether they leave quietly, leave loudly, or stay loyal. The response matters more than the original problem.
Operations Treatment Room and Practice Flow: Designing Space for Efficiency and Experience
How your space is laid out affects both operational efficiency and the patient experience. Deliberate design of rooms and flow pays back in throughput and impressions.
Operations Designing the Patient Experience: The Differentiator That Survives Price Competition
When treatments and prices converge, experience is what patients remember and refer. Designing it deliberately is one of the few durable advantages in a commoditizing market.
Operations The Front Desk Is Your Highest-Leverage Hire: What to Train and Why It Pays
Your front desk converts consults, books rebookings, captures leads, and shapes the patient experience. Undertrained, it quietly leaks revenue from every one of those.
Operations Treating the Needle-Anxious Patient: Comfort as a Conversion and Retention Tool
A meaningful share of aesthetic patients are anxious about needles. How a practice handles that anxiety determines whether they book, return, and refer — or quietly avoid treatment.
Operations Financial Benchmarks by Stage: What 'Healthy' Looks Like as a Practice Grows
A startup, a stabilizing practice, and a mature one have different healthy financial profiles. Judging yourself against the wrong stage's benchmarks leads to bad decisions.
Operations The Med Spa KPIs Worth Tracking: The Handful of Numbers That Actually Run the Business
Most owners drown in data or track nothing. The practices that scale watch a tight set of operating numbers — and act on the trend, not the snapshot.
Operations Aftercare That Drives Results and Retention: The Underused Touchpoint
Aftercare protects clinical results, prevents avoidable problems, and creates a follow-up touchpoint most practices waste. Done well, it's care and retention at once.
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