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Client Retention

Three Messages That Quietly Refill Your Book

By Huy · Owner, Sarang Nails & Beauty · · 5 min read

Every owner obsesses over new clients — ads, Instagram, walk-ins. Meanwhile the clients who already love you quietly drift, not because anything went wrong, but because nobody reminded them to come back. The old retail statistic says a small bump in retention produces an outsized jump in profit, and after watching my own book for a few years, I believe it.

You don't need a 'retention strategy.' You need three messages, sent at the right moments, that sound like you. Here are mine.

1. The day-after thank-you

Sent the morning after a visit. No discount, no upsell — just warmth. It's also the perfect moment to ask for a review, while the manicure is still flawless.

Hi [name], thanks for coming in yesterday — the [service] turned out beautifully. If you have thirty seconds, a Google review means the world to a small shop like ours: [link]. See you next time! — [your name]

2. The cycle reminder — sent before they're overdue

Most services have a natural cycle: fills every two to three weeks, cuts every four to six. The trick is to message just before the cycle ends, while rebooking still feels like staying on schedule instead of fixing a lapse.

Hi [name]! It's been about [X] weeks since your last [service] — right around when most clients like a refresh. Want me to hold your usual spot? [booking link]

3. The 90-day win-back

Anyone who hasn't visited in about three months gets one gentle message. Not five. One. Some come back immediately and apologize like they missed a dinner party; some don't — but the message costs nothing and never reads as desperate if you only send it once.

Hi [name], it's been a while and we miss you at [salon]! If you'd like to come back in, here's 10% off your next visit — no rush, the offer doesn't expire this week or any week: [booking link]

The rules that keep it human

  • Text like a person: lowercase warmth beats CAPITAL LETTER ENERGY.
  • One message per moment. The sequence is three messages across months, not three in a weekend.
  • Always include the easy next step — the booking link, every time.

All three of these run automatically at my salon — the system watches the calendar, drafts in my voice, and I approve. That's the entire trick: the timing is the machine's job, the warmth stays yours.

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