Beauty Schools Prepare You to Be Your Own Boss

When you graduate from beauty school and become a licensed cosmetologist, you’ll have nearly a 50/50 shot of being self-employed rather than working for someone else. In 2007, 46% of the 1.7 million active professional cosmetologists worked for themselves, according to “Job Demand in the Cosmetology Industry,” a report released late last year by the National Accrediting Commission of Cosmetology Arts & Sciences (NACCAS).

That figure includes salon owners and freelancers but primarily what we refer to in the industry as “independent contractors.” When you work independently within a salon, if you do hair you lease a station with a chair; for nails, you have a table; and if you’re an esthetician you rent a room. Regional trends play into this, with west coast cosmetologists most likely to be self-employed.

Beauty schools are responding to this reality by offering more business-related courses. For example, the Empire School in Shamokin Dam, Pennsylvania, has partnered with nearby Bucknell University to hold business classes onsite at the cosmetology school to provide students with the skills they’ll need to run a small business. That includes everything from negotiating a lease, securing insurance and following government regulations to marketing your business, handling the accounting and purchasing products and equipment. And what if you become a salon employee instead? You may not be buying furniture, but you’re still in charge of getting business into your chair or your room. Any business training you receive will be a huge help to you, I promise.

Print | posted on Sunday, August 03, 2008 10:06 AM

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