A quick survey of friends, revealed that only one pays $30 for a trim, saving her money for when she needs colour and then visits a more upmarket salon. Having shopped around at various hairdressers and paying upwards of $80 for a haircut, she concluded that the haircut she paid $80 for, was no different to the one she paid $30 for.
So if we can possibly pay a third less for the same haircut, what makes some of us (myself included) pay more? For some women it’s the experience of the event, rather than the cost. A ritual of pampering, head massages and time away from family, can mean hours happily spent at the hairdresser. I don’t fall into this category, I get really bored after the initial excitement of free lattes and new magazines wears off. Once I was in a Paddington salon for three and a half hours, yes THREE and a HALF hours, I might have got really cranky, I was definitely not expecting to be there for the majority of my weekend. I had cheated on my hairdresser and it was not a pleasant experience. I realised the reason I liked the salon I went to, was because the same person that cut my hair also coloured it and washed it, I didn’t get passed through four sets of hands.
For others its purely psychological, experiencing a newly formed sense of confidence after leaving the salon. I’ve experienced this, people turn to look at you in the street and you flick and nod your head around like you are starring in your own shiny hair commercial. Even if it is short-lived; humidity having flattened it by the time you arrive home or once you’ve washed it, it is never to be replicated again. Still, it’s the sense that this hairdresser, YOUR hairdresser, understands you.