Pulse November / December 2019 | Page 16

Pulse PoInts by erIC Callaghan LABOR AT LAST: Employment Numbers are Finally Looking Up the sPa industrY's ongoing labor shortage has been the dominant story to emerge from recent iSPa research. in the 2018 iSPa U.S. Spa industry Study compensation Supplement, it was reported that the number of unfilled service provider positions in the spa industry was estimated at 35,480. the 2019 iSPa U.S. Spa industry Study compensation Supplement did show that that number is decreasing; however, the number of unfilled service provider positions is still estimated at 28,420. While this remains a large figure, it shows that the industry is moving in a positive direction in terms of filling vacant positions. this trend continues in the 2019 U.S. Spa industry Study when it comes to industry-wide employment numbers. total employees rose from 372,100 to 377,900 emPloyment numbers total emPloyees 2019 (mAy) total emPloyees 2018 (mAy) 377,900 372,100 uP 1.6% uP 0.6% 173,900 170,900 uP 2.6% 178,500 172,000 uP 0.4% 27,400 27,300 full tIme 14 PULSE Part tIme ■ ContraCt full tIme novEmbEr/dEcEmbEr 2019 Part tIme ContraCt when comparing the figures in the 2018 report to this year’s data—an increase of 1.6 percent. full-time employees remained mostly the same: 170,900 in 2018 compared to 172,000 in 2019 (an increase of 0.6 percent), though part-time employees increased 2.6 percent from 173,900 to 178,500. these figures show that the spa industry is employing more people than ever, though there is still plenty of room for improvement. one major sign that employment figures will continue to show improvement is the record growth reached in the other Big five statistical categories aside from staffing levels: total revenues, spa visits, average revenue per visit, the number of spa locations. When asked about their recent experience in the six months prior to the survey (September 2018 to march 2019), over 70 percent of spa respondents said spending per visit and total revenue had increased compared to the same period in the previous year. on top of this, only 12 percent said that spa visits had decreased in the six- month period prior to march 2019. With spa visits remaining mostly unchanged or increasing, and average spend per visit on the rise, this may mean good news for employees in the spa world looking ahead. as noted previously, employment figures are already showing signs of improvement, with one in four spas (25 percent) saying they had increased staffing levels in the last six months compared to the same period in the previous year. Decreasing staffing levels were reported by just 10 percent of spas, with the majority (65 percent) saying that their staffing levels had remained unchanged in the six months before march 2019 compared to the same period in the previous year. the 2019 iSPa U.S. Spa industry Study and compensation Supplement both indicate that while there is still work to do, employment figures in the industry are showing signs of improving in the near future. n