Gilt & Grace is an eight-chair boutique hair studio in Old Town Scottsdale, built around dimensional color, an unhurried guest experience, and a membership model that turns first visits into standing appointments.
The studio is intentionally small. Eight stations — six color, two cutting — protect the thing chain salons cannot: time at the chair, a consistent stylist, and a room that feels like a private atelier. We do not compete on price; we compete on the appointment you would never cancel.
Scottsdale skews affluent and appearance-conscious, with one of the highest per-capita beauty spends in the Southwest. Demand for premium, dimensional color outpaces the seats available — and the market is split between sterile chains and unpredictable booth-rental suites. The curated mid-room is wide open.
Sofia Marchetti is a master colorist with eleven years behind the chair and a personal book of 280 standing clients — 190 of whom have signed intent-to-follow. Two senior stylists are committed on day one, filling the room from week one.
An SBA 7(a) loan covering build-out, equipment, and the first 90 days of working capital — paired with $65,000 of owner equity for a finished studio and a debt-light launch.
A tightly edited service menu built around color, finish, and the standing relationship. Every guest is paired with one stylist for life of membership; every appointment runs on a generous clock — no double-booking, no rushing a toner. The room is the brand: brass, blush, and quiet.
A typical color guest leaves at a $215 average ticket before retail, on a blended 19% color/product cost. We target a 22% retail attach — take-home care recommended by the stylist, not upsold at the desk.
A $129/month membership bundles a quarterly gloss, priority booking, and 15% off retail. It converts one-time color clients into predictable monthly revenue and lifts annual spend per member by an estimated 1.6×.
Scottsdale is one of the most favorable luxury-beauty markets in the country: high household income, a culture of regular maintenance, and steady inflow of affluent transplants who arrive without a stylist.
Old Town Scottsdale added 1,800 luxury residential units since 2023, each delivering households without an established salon relationship. Comparable premium chairs in the corridor book three weeks out — a clear supply gap at the top of the market.
Membership-led beauty is the fastest-growing segment in the category, rewarding studios that own a recurring relationship rather than a transaction.
The corridor is contested — but split between two extremes. National chains compete on price and speed; booth-rental suites offer talent without consistency or a brand. Gilt & Grace owns the curated middle: senior talent, one unified experience, a recurring relationship.
Eight stations on a hybrid model: senior stylists earn a 45% commission with full studio support; the two newest chairs run as mentored booth rental. The studio handles booking, product, marketing, and brand — stylists handle the chair.
Founder & two senior colorists; the revenue core, fully booked.
Building chairs at mentored rent; ramp to commission by year two.
Precision cuts, styling, bridal — turns faster, lifts retail.
Curated product wall; stylist-recommended, 22% attach target.
Organic-first by design. We budget $1,400/month for content, boosted posts, and a referral credit — well under $14 per new color client against a multi-year lifetime value north of $2,800.
Online self-booking with card-on-file and a 24-hour cancellation policy protects the calendar and the average ticket.
Conservative assumptions — six color chairs at 70% utilization, two cutting chairs, a $215 average ticket, 50 working weeks. Every figure below holds even if we open the back two chairs a quarter late.
Funded by $65,000 owner equity + $110,000 SBA 7(a) loan.
~22% chair contribution margin, before retail and membership, covers fixed costs by the tenth month.
Year-2 growth comes from the back two chairs reaching full commission and the membership base maturing; Year 3 assumes membership at 35% of the book and full retail attach — no new debt.
Gilt & Grace is a focused, talent-led concept entering a luxury market with a proven book already waiting. The capital below is the only thing between a finished plan and an open studio in Old Town.
Lease signed, studio built out, stations installed, brand and site live.
Founder's book transfers; membership and online booking launch.
Cash-flow positive; SBA repayment running on the standard schedule.
All eight chairs at commission; membership base compounding.
The plan reaches break-even in month ten, repays the SBA loan from chair contribution alone, and scales on recurring membership revenue. The $110,000 doesn't fund a gamble — it opens a studio with a book already waiting at the door.