A booking page that never closes. They pick a service and a slot; a deposit can hold the chair.
Share one link in your bio and the DMs go quiet. The late-night “are you free Saturday?” becomes a booking that’s already on the calendar — service chosen, deposit paid — before you’ve woken up. Clients open your page, pick a service, see only the slots you actually have, and confirm with just a name and phone number — no app to download, no account to make. You decide the rules once: which services show, how long each takes, whether a deposit holds the chair and how close to the hour someone can cancel. From then on the page does the front-desk work while you do the actual work.
Revenue, what's upcoming, who's next, hours booked — one calm screen, no setup.
Open it with your first coffee and the day is already laid out: what you’ll take, who’s coming in, and where the gaps are. No notebook, no mental math — just today, in order. The dashboard reads like a morning briefing: today’s expected takings, your next client by name, how many hours are booked against how many are free. A new booking that came in overnight is simply there, slotted where it belongs. When someone cancels, the gap shows up the moment it opens, so you can decide what to do with the hour. There is nothing to configure and nothing to update — the screen rebuilds itself from the calendar, every time you look.
Every chair, every staff member, every day — in step on web and phone the moment anything changes.
When the front desk books someone in, it’s on every phone before they’ve hung up. Days off, buffers and the fear of two clients in one chair simply stop being your problem. Each staff member has their own column and their own working hours, so the page only offers slots that person can actually take. Drag an appointment to a new time and the change lands everywhere at once — web, phone, and the client’s reminder. Block out a holiday or a late start and those hours quietly disappear from the booking page too. One calendar, one truth, whether you’re a chair of one or a floor of six.
Who they are, what they had last time, what they like — open before they sit down.
The formula from three visits ago, the way they take their coffee, the note about a sensitive scalp — all there when they walk in. Every regular feels remembered, even on your busiest week. Each profile builds itself from the bookings: every visit, every service, every photo you chose to keep, in one running history. Add a note in the chair — two words is enough — and it’s waiting for you next time, on whichever device you open. The list quietly sorts itself too: who’s new, who’s returning, who hasn’t been in for a while. When a name pops up on tomorrow’s calendar, the whole story is one tap away.
Booked, reminded, followed up — automatically, so fewer no-shows and no chasing.
A confirmation goes out the moment they book, a reminder lands the day before, and a quiet “we miss you” finds the ones who’ve drifted — all without you ever reaching for your phone. Email does the steady work: booked, confirmed, reminded, each message sent at the hour you set. You choose the timing once — say, a day before and again that morning — and the schedule holds for every appointment after that. If you want messages arriving by text under your own business name, branded SMS is there on the Pro plan. The result reads simply in the calendar: fewer empty chairs, and no afternoons spent chasing confirmations one client at a time.
Revenue, top services, returning clients — and when payments land, takings split fairly across the team.
See which services pay the rent, who’s rebooking and who isn’t, and what next month is shaping up to be. The trends behind the busy days, without a spreadsheet in sight. Revenue is charted over weeks and months, so a slow Tuesday reads as a pattern rather than a panic; top services and returning-client numbers sit beside it, plain enough to read between appointments. And when payments land in the app, the same view will split takings fairly across the team — that part is on its way, and the reports say so honestly instead of showing made-up numbers. You get the truth of the month, a little earlier than the bank statement.
The six above are the working-day story — here's the whole platform, page by page.