fbpx

Barber Shops and Salons can sell inventory on-line, offer educational videos with tips for personal care
Check this out:
Everyone’s buzzing about virtual haircuts
Last month, Greg Isenberg was a tech entrepreneur who sold a messaging app to WeWork. Then, on April 5, he launched You Probably Need a Haircut – within a day, he was the new master stylist of the virtual haircut economy.
For the people kicking themselves for not scheduling a hair appointment in early March, the day of reckoning has come: It’s finally time to stop avoiding it.
You have to cut your hair.
Popular haircut scissors are selling out, hair-dye panic-buying has begun, and companies are racing to crimp and curl a virtual haircut industry that basically did not exist 3 weeks ago.
Sorry, toilet paper: corona-economics has entered its hair-care phase
You Probably Need a Haircut has a simple pitch: For a starting rate of $18, you can pick from around 2 dozen freelance barbers who will walk you through the ins and outs of the self-cut on video chat.
Rest asheared, YPNAH isn’t the only option.
For a modest fee, regular salons are tangling with Zoom and Skype appointments, too.