
Meet the author
Rasmus Østergaard is an editor and journalist at Just Add People. Rasmus is responsible for making useful information about the hairdressing profession and the beauty industry easily accessible to everyone.
Startup
09. September 2025
When we talk salon haircare, the conversation usually lands on ingredients, techniques and price. But your products also shape the interior, set the mood, and tell the story of your brand (who you and your salon are). Clients see, smell and touch them – that’s why product choice deserves the same care as chairs, mirrors and lighting.
Try to see your salon through a client’s eyes. They step in and feel the light, the colours – and then the shelves. Is it a chaotic “brand zoo” in every shape and shade, or a curated selection that fits your style? Bottles, pumps and labels are, in practice, small design objects. Matte, sand-toned packaging says something very different from glossy, metallic finishes. Both can be right—the question is what’s right for you.
Scent matters more than we admit. That first shampoo is where most clients exhale. A signature scent – clean, herbal, warm or truly neutral – can become part of your experience (that’s branding). Too much perfume, on the other hand, can clash with a minimalist, “clinical” aesthetic or trigger sensitive clients. Let the fragrance profile support the feeling you want to create: spa-calm, fashion-fresh or nature-leaning. Texture tells a story too – a rich, creamy mask signals something different than a light, almost watery lotion.
There’s a value-layer to this as well. Do you want to present as sustainable, performance-obsessed, allergy-friendly, vegan or a blend? Clear positioning makes communication easier, but it does mean choosing intentionally. Also remember: not every client cares as much as you do. If your salon is built for high throughput, labels may play a smaller role in the day-to-day.
Clients listen for coherence. If you speak “gentle and calm” but your shelves shout in neon, the message gets muddy. A small, deliberately chosen accent line (say, a styling range with more edge) can add personality without confusing the story. Think consistency between backbar/colour bar and retail too. What the client experiences at the wash-basin should be what they can take home – the same scent, same feel, same quality. Fewer ranges you fully believe in will always beat fifteen you only half-know. When you and your team know the lineup deeply, recommendations become warm and genuine instead of scripted.
Drip-free pumps keep the basin tidy, and labels that don’t peel stay professional longer. A considered display – maybe the same tone/texture as your reception, or shelf lighting that doesn’t distort colours – elevates both the products and the room. A small exercise: set up three alternative shelf scenarios, step back and look at which layout feels most you. Sit in the styling chair and look in the mirror: what does the client actually see?
Economics and brand are linked. A pricier, iconic line can carry a luxury profile and lift average retail; a more accessible range can support an inclusive brand where “everyone’s welcome”. Neither is inherently “right”. The point is to match your vision.
Products aren’t “just products”. They speak to senses, confirm your style, and become part of your reputation and brand.
Rasmus Østergaard is an editor and journalist at Just Add People. Rasmus is responsible for making useful information about the hairdressing profession and the beauty industry easily accessible to everyone.