Pulse May 2020 | Page 72

MONEY MATTERS BY BRANDON ROBINSON How to Really Calculate ROI for Your Spa The question people ask me the most is: “Iowa...why Iowa?” IN 2014, I OPENED MY FIRST MEDICAL SPA, Skin Body Soul, in West Des Moines, Iowa. This was followed by additional locations in Ankeny, Iowa; Seattle, Washington; Dallas, Texas; and Portland, Oregon. make you millions of dollars and grow your business. Imagine that a sales rep tells you that a new piece of equipment will only cost you US$608.44 per month to own, and that you will make a profit on that equipment with only Yet, I actually live in Sacramento, California. Prior to 2013, I had never stepped foot in the state of Iowa. How did I do it? How—and why—did I open a spa in a city that I had never visited? The answer is simple: math. What I loved most about Iowa was the math. I calculated that the cost of goods would be the same in California as they were in Iowa, but in Iowa, the fixed operating expenses of a spa would be incredibly low. I’ve written this article to tell you one thing: that math should be at the forefront of all your purchasing behavior. You should always be crunching numbers when deciding what equipment to buy, when to purchase that equipment, or where and when to add a new location to your business. Let’s be clear: I don’t mean the “basic” math you see from sales reps trying to sell you a device or service for your clients. I’m talking about real math. The math that will four clients per month at a rate of US$199 per treatment. I’m here to tell you that that number is likely not accurate be- cause there is no way for the sales rep to know your operat- ing costs. Without knowing that, you cannot accurately calculate when something will be profitable. Don’t fall victim to “basic” math without running the numbers yourself first. The kind of math every spa operator should be doing is what I like to call “baller” math—the kind of math that ex- poses the real expenses of operating a new machine or add- ing a new service. Once you’ve mastered “baller” math you will no longer be running an ordinary business: you’ll be running an extraordinary one. Breaking down “baller” math isn’t even difficult. It takes four steps. These are steps that any spa director or owner can take to make proper decisions on what services they should be adding or removing from their spa. 56 PULSE ■ MAY 2020