Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Aloha Barber Collective

70 members • Free

39 contributions to Aloha Barber Collective
The Real Reason Your Content Isn’t WorkingšŸ“ø
Everyone says they don’t know what to post. But ideas aren’t the real issue. The real problem is starting strong… then stopping when the views don’t come fast enough. Content isn’t about creativity it’s about discipline. The barbers who win aren’t posting because they feel inspired. They’re posting because it’s part of their system. You don’t need better ideas. You need fewer excuses and more reps. Question for the group: What causes you to stop posting lack of ideas, or lack of patience?
0 likes • 22d
Howdy yall! Can’t wait for tomorrow’s meeting. Lack of ideas. How should I organize my video? Any suggestions for beginner barbers ?
1 like • 17d
@Justin Llanes I would love to!!! I get my new guards today!
Issues
Did anyone else have issues logging on to the live a & a or is it just me ?
Issues
šŸ’ø The REAL Difference Between $5K Months and $10K Months (Read This)
If you’re stuck around $4–6k/month, it’s usually not your skill. It’s your systems and standards. Here’s what actually changes when barbers break into consistent $10k months ā¬‡ļø 1ļøāƒ£ They Stop Getting Paid Like a Worker $5k barbers trade time for money. $10k barbers control the terms. That means: - Clear pricing (no ā€œhook upsā€) - Firm time slots - No over-servicing for the same price šŸ‘‰ You don’t need more clients you need better structure. 2ļøāƒ£ Every Week Is Planned (Not Reactive) $5k months happen by accident. $10k months are scheduled. Top earners: - Know their weekly income target - Know how many clients it takes - Know what days MUST be full No guessing. No hoping. 3ļøāƒ£ They Protect Their Energy Burnout keeps you broke. $10k barbers: - Cut faster (without rushing) - Don’t entertain time-wasters - Stop letting clients control the chair Energy = capacity. Capacity = income. 4ļøāƒ£ They Stop Hiding You don’t need to be ā€œfamous.ā€ But you do need to be visible. $10k barbers: - Post even when views are low - Talk about business, not just fades - Position themselves as the go-to, not the cheapest Visibility compounds. Silence doesn’t. 5ļøāƒ£ They Raise Standards Before They Raise Prices This is the part most people skip. Before charging more, they: - Improve consistency - Improve conversations - Improve the experience Price increases stick when the experience matches. āš ļø Hard Truth: If you’re doing the same things that got you to $5k/month… they will not take you to $10k. Something has to change: - Your systems - Your mindset - Or your environment šŸ’¬ Let’s Talk: What do YOU feel is holding you back right now? šŸ‘‡ Drop ONE thing in the comments: - Pricing - Consistency - Confidence - Systems - Time management I’ll respond and help you tighten it up. This is what we break down inside the community. No fluff. Just results. šŸ¤
0 likes • 22d
I love these ideas. What’s holding me back is consistence and time management.
Built from Scratch or Borrowed from the Shop? Let’s Be Real About Clientele Building šŸ‘‡
Alright barbers, let’s stir the pot a little this one’s gonna hit home for a lot of people. There are two types of barbers in this industry: 1ļøāƒ£ The barbers who build their clientele inside someone else’s shop riding off the walk-ins, foot traffic, and brand that the owner already established. 2ļøāƒ£ The barbers who start from zero, build their name, create a brand, market themselves online, and bring their own clients through social media, reputation, and hustle. Now here’s the question… When you left the shop to open your own suite or your own shop did you build your clientele, or did you borrow it from the environment that created it? Be honest. There’s no hate here just real talk. Because there’s a massive difference between being busy in someone else’s system and creating your own system that makes you busy. Let’s hear your thoughts šŸ‘‡ Would you rather start from scratch and learn how to build a brand and clientele on your own or work your way up inside a shop and then branch out once you’re packed? Which path do you respect more and why?
0 likes • Nov '25
I respect barbers who start from zero. It takes true hustle to turn nothing into something, especially when it means approaching strangers to sell your skills. Barbering is tough, like nurturing a plant—it takes time and care. I started in my living room, then moved to my garage, and during the pandemic, I rented a room in a beauty salon that had closed. I gained clients through social media for braids and dreadlocks, but I felt lost when it came to haircuts since I was unlicensed and scared of messing up. After getting my barber license, I gained the confidence to give decent cuts, even if I'm not yet great at fades. I see working in a shop and then branching out as borrowing clients. It feels like stealing from another barber. The industry is saturated, and the competition can be fierce, which can create a toxic culture. But I believe in the hustle and respect those who build their clientele from the ground up.
Community Shoutout: Betsy Espinoza
I just want to take a moment to give a huge shoutout to @Betsy Espinoza I’m super excited for her growth and success in this industry! Betsy is an amazing Loctician who’s recently ventured into barbering, and the growth she’s showing has been incredible to watch. Her consistency, willingness to learn, and participation here on this platform are what this community is all about. Keep going, Betsy your passion and dedication are going to take you far in this industry. šŸ’Ŗāœ‚ļø Thank you for being a part of the Aloha Barber Collective Ohana! 🌺
1 like • Nov '25
Got my barber license TODAY!!!
0 likes • Nov '25
@Ethan Mortenson thank you!! It was ROUGH!!!
1-10 of 39
Betsy Espinoza
4
87points to level up
@betsy-espinoza-1999
San Francisco native obsessed with building self esteem for my clients.

Active 17d ago
Joined Mar 14, 2025