You’ve got your certification in hand, your makeup kit built, and you’re ready to take the professional scene by storm! People are interested in your makeup artistry and you can’t wait to put your skills to use. There’s only one problem: you haven’t priced your services!
Many new professionals feel nervous about pricing their services and building service packages. It’s a fine balance of charging enough to make a living, but not so much that clients lose interest. Your packages should offer a full range of services without including ‘extras’ that clients don’t need.
Putting time and effort into building great makeup artistry services and packages and pricing them well is one of the most important steps to start your professional career off on the right foot! Check out these key steps for doing just that!
Step 1: Define your services
Dissect your talents and figure out what you actually have to offer your clients. Are you primarily a bridal makeup artist? Do you also do high fashion, glamour, airbrush or special effects makeup? Perhaps you’re even trained in extra services like hair styling and nail design! Lay your skills on the table and analyze exactly what you have to offer your clients.Step 2: Create appealing combinations
Now that you see what you’re capable of, assess how you should market each service. Choose combinations of services that go well together and build packages based on which combinations might interest your target clients most. For example, if you want to offer bridal makeup services, you can have different packages such as a basic service (makeup for the bride and bridesmaids), a more advanced option that also contains an airbrush application for the bride, and a third where you combine hair styling with the makeup services. You probably won’t, however, offer a bridal package that includes your best prosthetic work on the list. Special effects will fall into a different package in order to appeal to different clients. Here’s where it gets fun: You’ll want to name your packages in a way that grabs clients’ attention while being informative on what they offer. In the three “bridal” services listed above, for instance, you could call them “Wedding Party Makeup” (for the first one), “Wedding Party + Airbrushed Bride” (for the second) and “Full Wedding Coverage” (for the third that includes hair styling). Ideally the more expensive combinations will sound prestigious, while the less expensive ones will have names that make them sound more basic.Step 3: Get creative with your extra services
You can do more than put together standard packages. In fact, creating fun “themed” or seasonal packages is a great way to attract new clients and boost interest in your different skills. Think about combining various services to offer packages for special events like:- Girls’ night out makeovers
- Valentine’s Day or date night makeup
- Halloween packages
- Glamour makeup for portraits and professional photos
Step 4: Research your local industry
Once your packages are built, it’s time to think about pricing. Your prices should be competitive, meaning that they’re similar to the “going rate” or the standard price on your area. Pricing competitively benefits both you and the rest of your local community.- By pricing too low, you could drag the going rate in your area down by forcing other makeup artists to lower their prices to compete with yours. This causes everyone to make less money.
- By pricing too high, you could drive the going rate up. This sounds like a positive thing at first, but people won’t really make more money if local services become too expensive and clients lose interest in the industry.
Hi I’m all the way in South Africa and I wanted to enroll for online make up class, is it possible to do so?
Hi Zandile, I’ve sent you an email with some more information 🙂