Hairdressing in the UK · AI course

Fill your quiet days with a quick promo

Got a slow Tuesday? Draft a tasteful, time-limited offer that fills the chair without cheapening your brand.

Intermediate10 minWorks with ChatGPT, Claude

What you’ll do

  1. Name the quiet slot and what you'd like to fill it.
  2. Ask for a tasteful, time-limited offer.
  3. Post or text it to the right clients.
Try this prompt
My [Tuesday afternoons] are quiet. Write a tasteful, time-limited offer to fill them that doesn't cheapen the salon — short enough to text or post.
The payoff: A ready-to-send promo for whenever the diary looks thin.

Common questions

How do I write an offer that fills Tuesday afternoon without making it sound like I'm desperate?

The key is framing it as a genuine good-timing opportunity, not a discount sale. The lesson shows how to position it — 'we've had a last-minute opening this Tuesday' — so it feels like a lucky window for the client, not a sign the salon is struggling.

Won't offering promotions train regular clients to wait for a deal instead of booking normally?

Only if you offer them too broadly or too often. The lesson covers how to target the message — sending it to clients who haven't been in a while, or to a short list of people likely to appreciate the timing — so it fills gaps without signalling that waiting pays off.

Does AI send the promo for me or post it to Instagram?

No. It drafts the text. You decide where to use it — a story, a post, a text to a few clients — and you send or post it yourself.

Can I use this for specific services — like filling gaps in my colour column on a slow day?

Yes, and the more specific you are, the better the draft. Tell it exactly what service you want to fill, the approximate window, and who you're trying to reach, and the wording will be much sharper than a generic 'available slots' message.

How long should the message be?

Short — four to five lines at most for a text, slightly more for a post. If you have to explain why it's a good deal, the deal isn't framed right. The lesson shows how to make the offer obvious and easy to say yes to in seconds.

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