The 8 Most Common Mistakes Salons Make With Ads
… (and How to Fix Them)
Ads can be a secret weapon or mystery box. Many owners throw cash at “getting the word out” only to wonder why their chairs are still empty. It’s clear that advertising is crucial especially for local businesses. So where is the disconnect?
Spoiler alert: it’s not that advertising doesn’t work, it’s that most salons make the same avoidable mistakes over and over.
The good news? Once you know the common slip-ups, they’re easy to fix. Let’s break down eight of the most common ad mistakes salons make, and how you can turn them into bookings that actually stick.
1. Running ads without a clear digital path
If clients can’t easily click, scan, or book, your ad spend might as well be confetti. Be honest. when was the last time you saw an ad and thought, “Wow, I’ll hop in the car right now”? Exactly. That died with Aqua Net and cassette tapes. Today, people grab their phones and search you up. If they hit even one roadblock (confusing website, no booking button, dead link) they’re gone faster than you can say balayage.
2. Not aligning ad messages across platforms
Advertising is like dating: you won’t stick around if you’re sending mixed signals. One day you’re “luxury and exclusive” on Instagram, the next you’re “cheap cuts” in a Google ad, and then your print coupon screams “walk-ins welcome.” Yikes. Clients don’t know which version of you they’re supposed to believe, so they move on to someone more consistent. When your visuals, tone, and offers don’t line up, your brand gets messy. Messy doesn’t sell (unless we’re talking textured bobs).
3. Blending in instead of standing out locally
Generic ads are the fastest way to scream “just another salon.” But you’re not just another salon. You’re a pillar of the community, the place where style meets personality, and maybe the only spot in town where someone can get a killer cut and champagne. If your ads don’t reflect that, you disappear into the noise. Local shoppers don’t want to feel like they’re choosing from a random list. They want to see you as the go-to icon right in their backyard.
4. Promoting deals without a clear upsell
Promos should be like a first date: fun, inviting, and leading to something more. But too often, salons treat them like a one-night fling: client walks in, uses the discount, and poof… that’s the end. Meanwhile, some of those clients are actually ready to get engaged if you just give them the chance. Discounts will get people through the door, sure, but if you don’t show them what else you offer, you’re basically leaving money (and loyalty) on the table.
5. Not training staff to maximize ad redemptions
Your team may know hard gel overlays from a mile away, but do they know what to do when someone walks in waving your latest ad? If not, you’ve got a problem. A smile and a nod might get the client through their appointment, but it won’t turn them into a loyal regular. Worse, it makes your business look unorganized. Nobody wants to trust their look to a salon that can’t even keep its promos straight. When your staff isn’t in sync, every redeemed ad is just a missed opportunity hiding in plain sight.
Fix: Give your team a game plan. Every promo should come with a clear script. Upsell where it makes sense, capture contact info, and point new clients toward your loyalty program. For example:
- “Welcome! Since you’re here for our color promo, would you like to add a gloss treatment? It really makes the results last longer.”
- “While you’re checking in, can I grab your email so we can send you exclusive offers?”
- “By the way, we have a loyalty program. Would you like me to add you in?”
Ads bring them in, but your staff is the reason they stay.
6. Failing to actively prompt reviews
Think about the last time you told yourself, “I’ll remember to do that later.” Did you? Nope. Neither do your clients. We’re all living in a world of constant pings, pop-ups, and push notifications. People forget stuff fast. That includes leaving you that glowing review they swore they’d write on their way out the door. Ads might get new clients in your chair, but reviews are what keep the stream flowing. And unless you nudge happy customers at the right moment, you’re missing out on free marketing gold.
7. Using bland or lifeless calls-to-action
“Book now.” Snooze. Sure, it’s technically a call-to-action, but it’s about as exciting as beige wallpaper. The truth is, most people need a little extra motivation to move. This is especially true when it comes to spending money on themselves. A good CTA isn’t just a button; it’s the spark that gets clients off the couch and into your chair. If your ad doesn’t tell them exactly what to do ( and give them a reason to do it now) it’ll get ignored faster than a spam email.
8. Avoiding feedback
We get it, asking for feedback can feel like pulling off a Band-Aid. What if it’s negative? What if it stings? But here’s the thing: not asking is worse. When clients feel unheard, their thoughts don’t just disappear… they simmer, and sometimes they boil over onto Google or Yelp. At least if you prompt them, you control the timing and show you actually care. Plus, feedback (good and bad) is pure gold. Skip it, and you’ll keep repeating the same mistakes while wondering why your ads aren’t hitting.
Conclusion
Ads don’t have to be purely a a gamble. When you avoid these eight mistakes, and every dollar you spend works harder. Every client feels more connected. Your salon stops being “just another option” and starts being the option. The trick isn’t running louder ads, it’s having smarter processes. Next time you put an offer out into the world, remember: clear path, consistent message, local love, smart upsells, trained staff, review prompts, bold CTAs, and honest feedback. Nail those, and your ads won’t just get attention, they’ll fill your chairs.