Health

How do I turn down a nail client with chemical sensitivities?

December 05, 2012 | Bookmark +

I did a LivingSocial deal and I have this client who has cancelled her appointment due to a migraine, which she gets frequently. Also she apparently has chemical and environmental allergies. I think it would be better for her not to get her nail service. How do I go about telling her this?

Answer

Unfortunately, having a customer cancel due to illness has to be an excused absence or you’re going to look like a mean and uncaring person. In our business it needs to be all about the customer and strong customer loyalty is built when they know you care. I had the same problem just this week with a customer. I had a regular customer cancel three times in one week! Ouch. When she called the third time I suggested that she wait until she felt better to set up the next appointment. I also promised that if she waited to the day she felt better I would be sure to get her in or have one of my staff service her that day. As a migraine sufferer myself I understand that she never knows if tomorrow will be better. As far as suggesting that she should stop getting her nails done, well, I am not sure that’s our place. If her doctor tells her to stop and she doesn’t stop, then I think you should tell her that it’s time to hang up the nails. But I would also suggest to her that another service, perhaps a wonderful healthy manicure using scent-free products, would be in order. 

— Shari Finger is the owner of Finger’s Nail Studio in W. Dundee, Ill. 

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What’s the cause of the pinkish-red oval area on the pad of my client’s toes?

I have a client who has a recurring problem with her fourth toes during the winter months. Both of her “ring finger” toes develop a pinkish-red oval area on the pad. Then a month later, when I see her again, the skin has become dry and hard like a callus, with the layers of skin peeling away to reveal a deeper, dark epicenter.  It’s extremely painful for her and, needless to say, we do not touch it. But it clears up in the summer when she’s wearing open-toed sandals, so I suspect it has to be due to the boots she wears in the winter. Plus she never puts lotion on her feet or uses a foot file in between visits. What do you think causes this?

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What are the big white spots on my natural-nail client’s nails?

I have a client who has been with me for about two years. She used to wear acrylic nails but has been a natural nail client for eight months or so. She has these white spots on her nails — big spots that are dry, but not flaky, right in the middle of the nail. I did try to buff them lightly but they do not come off or grow off. I had a new client come in last week who had the same on her toenails. She said it started after she had a pedicure done at another salon. Can you help?

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