GroomPod 470 Honoring a legend, stinky feet, Zymox and Growing your business transcript
Susy Hello, groomers. You found the groom pod. Welcome to our virtual salon. My name is
Suzy and I'm your host. I'm a mobile groomer from Seattle, Washington. And anybody who
knows me will tell you I love to talk, especially about my job. And one of my favorite people to
talk to is my friend and mentor and the co-star of the show, the curator of ingredients, Miss
Barbara Berg.
Bbird Hey, Suzy. So happy to be with you this lovely Sunday. It's a lovely day here in South
Carolina. And, uh, but I can see outside at your windows that it doesn't look like a too terrible a
day there in my state of Washington. But you're not floating away.
Susy It's ten to eleven, and it looks like it's four in the afternoon.
Bbird Ah.
Susy It's really dark. It's dark. It's not raining right now, but it will be, because that's what
happens here. But I'll tell you what. We have a packed show, Barbara, today. But we have to
start kind of. We're going to start on a heavier note, though. Recently in the grooming world,
we lost a true giant. We're taking a moment to honor the life and legacy of Chris Christensen, a
man whose innovations quite literally changed the way we work at our table. And then after
that, after we pay our respects, we're shifting gears to something a little more pungent. We're
talking about Frito Feet and what causes the corn chip smell and how to manage it in the
salon, and how to help our people at home. And then we're bringing some fresh twenty twenty
six ready ideas on how to grow your client list and build a brand new brand that keeps those
books full. Plus, we're going to be doing a deep dive on Zymox products.
Bbird Yeah, let's get going.
Susy Welcome to episode four hundred seventy of the Groupon. Yay! We wouldn't even be
here if it wasn't for the support of our sponsors. And those sponsors are Best Shot Show
Season, Precision, Sharp Groomer and Stashko. And you guys can sponsor us as well by
going to the podcast website, the podcast, and joining us on Patreon or sharing it with a friend
or liking or, you know, all of those neat little things. But what's new this week is brought to you
by Groomer Software.
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Susy Well, before we move on to our first appointment, I want to take a moment to honor a
true titan in the grooming industry who we recently lost, and that is Chris Christensen. If you've
ever picked up a Chris Christensen t brush or marveled at the finish of a white on white
treatment, you've experienced Chris's genius. He didn't just manufacture products. He
revolutionized the way we think about canine aesthetics. Starting in nineteen ninety, Chris saw
a gap in the market while others were making generic tools. He was obsessing over coat
specific solutions. He treated dog grooming like eye and hair care, focusing on the science of
the follicle and the ergonomics of the brush. Chris was a fixture at trade shows, always ready
to listen to feedback and share. His passion for grooming. World feels a little quieter without
him, but his legacy lives on in every beautifully finished coat and every grooming kit around the
globe. Rest in peace, Chris, and thank you for everything you gave to our community. So I got
to work with him in developing his ear cleaner pretty closely. It was really fun. I got to test the
product and give him feedback, and then he'd adjust things and he'd send it back out to me.
And so I got to know him a little bit that way.
Bbird So what product was that?
Susy It was his ear cleaner when he first came out with it or readjusted whatever he had
before. And it was really fun. I loved to be involved in that kind of product development. I I
know you've done a fair amount of product development yourself. It's fun, it's interesting. It's
neat to see the end product after you've given feedback and they've changed something. But
at the end, he gave me a really cool hairbrush that was made of fancy hardwood from Africa.
Bbird Blackwood, right? Yeah.
Susy Oh yeah, I still use it every day. It's my favorite hairbrush. I've never needed to replace it.
The pins have held in place because that was way back before the newer manufacturing
methods. Oh my gosh, I love that brush. I liked having dinner with him. He was fun to talk to.
He was an interesting hippie guy. And uh, yeah. What? You worked closer than I did with
them? Certainly. Do you want to share any of your feelings?
Bbird It's a loss to our industry, but he's been gone for a few years from the industry, so I. We
knew that it was going to happen, you know, like we thought maybe he would live on forever.
But I had a great year working for. It was my seventieth birthday, and I was going out to trade
shows and speaking sponsored by one of the top companies in the industry. It was like a real
high. I loved it, and then I spent time at the booth selling whatever, you know, selling. I had a
funny experience, though, because I had my own little philosophy of retail that is that I would
coach the customer to choose the right tool for the job. Um, and so one time a customer
picked up a comb and they were telling me about what the the dog's coat was. And I said, well,
no, this is not the comb you want. You want this other comb? Oh, man, I got in trouble for that.
Oh, because that's not how you sell. Yeah. If they pick it up, you ring it up. You don't question
their choices. If it doesn't work out, they'll come and buy another one. So I don't know. So I got
that that was a little bit of a disappointment. So there were ways in which Chris Christensen
and I meshed in ways in which we clashed. And in spite of that, I adored them, and they loved
me. and it was a great fun. Lots of good dinners. Um, and I subsequently was offered a full
time job for them, but I would have had to move to Bumfuck, Texas.
Susy Oh.
Bbird Their their property was on the same lot as their factory, and it was in a very rural small
town in Texas. Totally not my kind of place. No. I, I respectfully refused the job. I just though
they were going to they have a had a double wide trailer on the property that they were going
to let me live there. You know, it was like no rent. No, you know, I could bring my dogs. They
would have a safe yard. All of the it was just a lot of good reasons to go. And, um, I just
couldn't I just couldn't give up my independence and become that dependent on an employer.
So I thank them immensely. They, they other little interesting feature is that they only used me
for one year, because three of the other trade show promoters came to the Chris Christiansen
booth at Inner Groom. It took Chris and his wife, Lisa often, and they advised Chris not to use
me because one time, for example, I wrote a blog post about using dish soap on your shown
dish soap, vinegar and um. I forget what my third ingredient was, but it was before we had
hypoallergenic, uh, shampoos that were really meaningfully hypo, and it had already been like
ten to fifteen years before that. They but you see, I was so threatened by the vendors that the
vendors didn't want me because I had this thing about ingredients should be disclosed. And it
was so threatening that, you know, they all ganged up. My contract was not renewed for further
speaking. And I loved it. I just loved it. I loved working with Chris. He was such a nice guy, just
a genuinely nice guy. And he and Lisa were so passionate about their business and so bright
and with it and cool people. It was really special. And he was a perfect ambassador for our
industry, because he was such a gentleman and so well spoken and so well thought of. It was
great, a great blessing that I got to work for him for a year.
Susy Yeah, it's a real loss. Definitely. They had sold the company prior, so that really doesn't
affect that part of it. But anyone who knew him, probably at some point in time, got a chance to
chat with him at a trade show and recognized what a cool dude he was. And he, like I say, will
be missed.
Bbird Yeah, and I got everything for free. Everything I wanted any scissors that I wanted, any.
Anything that I wanted I got for free for that whole year. Whoa, that that was wonderful.
Susy Ah, it's so nice to be you. It's even nice to be on your coattails. Sometimes I get a little of
that.
Bbird You're getting it. You're getting it. You're becoming famous in your own right, girl. Don't
sell yourself short. You're not just the technical person.
Susy I do like being the technical person, though. But yes, thanks for the recognition there.
Bbird Well, I know, I'm glad you do because I don't like it at all because I, I have meltdowns.
Okay? It's true, I have big meltdowns. But when the when the technical shit doesn't work.
Susy Well, we always survive, though. Here we are. All right, well, let's take a quick.
Bbird Well, thanks.
Susy Thanks. Let's take a quick break, and then we're going to be back with our first
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Ready groomers. Here comes our first appointment. First, we're stepping into a topic that every
pet professional knows all too well. It's that scent that hits you the moment a dog walks onto
your table. That unmistakable salty corn chip aroma that we affectionately call Frito Feet. Eat.
But beyond the funny name, what's actually happening between those paw pads? Why do
some dogs smell stronger than others? And where do we, as professionals, draw the line
between a routine bath and a medical referral? Barbara, I know you've seen it and smelled it,
so let's dive in. What's the science behind the snack food scent? And how can we keep our
clients paws healthy and fresh?
Bbird All right. Tell us, is he.
Susy The Frito smell happens when Pseudomonas and Proteus. Proteus bacteria produce a
yeasty, sweet corn like odor as they break up the sweat and the skin cells. And as you guys
know, dogs have sweat glands in their feet and in their nose. Those are the only two spots on
a dog that actually sweat. So the feet, just by the way they are kind of constructed, encourage
warm and wet That environment, which is what bacteria loves. They warm and wet is their job.
Man and dark.
Bbird That you know, like in between the toes darken there. Yeah.
Susy It's a big problem here in the northwest. I mean, a huge problem because the dogs are
constantly if they go outside to pee, they're getting their feet wet. And unless, you know, that's
what the smell is, you don't know that you probably should dry your feet off, dry your dogs feet
off. A lot of people end up having to do that just because they don't want the dogs feet to be
irritated.
Bbird And and you know why that is? Pseudomonas. Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the invisible
enemy of all dog groomers. Because it lives in water. It lives in mud. It lives in rain. It It lives in
the bathtub.
Susy It's everywhere.
Bbird It's everywhere. It's it's it's everywhere. The only thing that keeps us from not surviving
Pseudomonas aeroginosa is that it has some enemies. But that's another podcast. So.
Susy And then their feet get sore, and then what do they do? They lick.
Bbird They. They lick and lick and lick and lick and lick or they itch even before they get sore.
They might itch, you know, like sometimes a dog can itch in a place where it can't reach and so
it'll lick its feet.
Susy I tell people that and they're like, really? And I said, yeah, there's a problem right here on
the dog's butt, but the dog can't get to his butt there. So it licks something it can get to, like the
inside of the thigh or the belly or somewhere where they can get it. So you've got to be a
detective. And the mouth has bacteria too, because it's kind of can be gross with some bad
teeth and stuff like that. So they're introducing more bacteria into the environment, making it
wet. It's constantly being irritated. Uh, what can we do though? What can we do to combat the
whole scenario? And I was always taught that trimming the hair out of there is a good idea. I
don't know how people feel about that these days, though, since it's a little bit like ear hair
where ear hair has a function in that it wicks stuff out of your ear. But if you leave the ear hair
in and it gets no air in there, it doesn't dry out. It can grow the same kind of stuff that the feet
grow. How do you feel about that?
Bbird I think it's important to trim the hair on the feet so it doesn't have unnecessary slippers.
Hello, Cavalier.
Susy Do you dip in?
Bbird We do clean the feet, the bottoms of the feet as groomers. But when I went to Scotland,
I stayed at the home of somebody that had a school of grooming in Scotland, and she told me
that in Scotland they didn't clip in between the pads of the feet because it was considered
protective.
Susy That's exactly what I wonder.
Bbird So excuse me, the Westies are still working dogs in Ireland. But speaking of Westies,
they're one of the dogs that has a bigger chance of getting skin problems. I'm going to be kind
of getting into some of that, uh, now that I've, um, hooked up with Chris Pearson. Searzall. Or
we call her Pert Pierce stole.
Susy I invented that.
Bbird That's your new name? Chris. Susie, accidentally on purpose invented that name
because she started to swallow Chris's name while she was introducing him to y'all. We think
it's a great name for her, because those two names you always getting forgetting which one is
supposed to come first. Because some of her names, one of them's her maiden name and the
other one's her married name. And she kept going back and forth with her husband. She would
take his name and would be Pierce and circle, and, I don't know, it was just. It was. It was
changing.
Susy And this is her new name we heard.
Bbird So this is her new name.
Susy So you're going to do a little bit more in in that stuff. Do you have something coming up
maybe.
Bbird Yeah. Well, yeah, because because Chris and I and some other of the advanced canine
aestheticians that have certification that we're coming out with a online magazine called. The
canine aesthetician.
Susy Cool.
Bbird Say that five times fast. It's going to be an online journal. And, um, there's going to be
several contributors, and I'm going to be contributing a monthly column on ingredients. Uh, of
course.
Susy I got really excited when I heard about this.
Bbird There's going to be an at the tub column, especially for tips and stuff about lotions and
potions to use in the tub. And it's going to be just like, really top notch and also fun. And no
ads. We're not getting paid. It's a labor of love because we love you. Why should I start making
money now at the gotten by?
Susy Well, we I was really excited to hear about this. And then I found out that it's at this point
only available to people who have taken the the course.
Bbird It is to start out. Yeah, I was going to I needed to ask her. That's got to be some others
like guests. You would be my guest or people who have other canine Aesthetician certification,
who certified under Michelle Michelle Knowles.
Susy And you and Chris may be doing a webinar coming up, so stay tuned for that. In
Scotland they don't cut the hair between the pads, do they cut the hair off on the bottom of the
pads? Because I do think that helps an inside dogs. Anyway.
Bbird Well, and I think, I think there, there are times that just as with plucking of ears, there
are times where you look at the inside of a dog and you know that that is icky. There's cactus
in there or something.
Susy A big rock, a mat, a solid mat in there that probably feels like the dog's walking on a rock.
Those have to come out and sap is another one. If you've got sap in there, that's got to come
out. But as a rule, don't dig in there, maybe and irritate that area if you don't have to, because
then the licking starts and then the moisture and it becomes like an avalanche.
Bbird There are two things that I would tell. There are three things I would. I would tell the pet
owner a few things.
Susy And they are.
Bbird And I'll and I'll think of them in just a minute. It's so fun being eighty six years old. Yeah.
No, I would I would ask the owners to put the dog on a good probiotic supplement for dogs
because there is an undeniable, scientifically established, reestablished, reconfirmed
connection between the health of the biome in the gut and the health of the biome of the skin.
So there's a gut skin connection, and it starts with the gut. It doesn't go from the skin out. It
starts with the gut. And if the gut is lacking in, uh, the right kind of micro biotics, it can't send
any messages or anything through the bloodstream to the skin. I don't know how the skin is
signaled by the gut, but somehow there's a traffic pattern. And what you want on both places is
a a real diverse, just like the kind of environment I want. I want a diverse environment, I want
people. I want little people. I want big people. I want every color. I want different languages. I
want. I loved living in San Francisco. Susie was that I could walk down a city street and hear
these different languages being spoken. I loved that. Anyway, what am I saying?
Susy Tangent.
Bbird Oh, put the dog on probiotics and put an Elizabethan collar or some kind of a non
chewing mechanism on the dog. Don't let it lick its feet until the itching and everything stops,
until the feet heal. Because otherwise they'll just go right back to it. They won't leave it alone.
And it's just for a couple of weeks out of their little lives.
Susy So what's the third thing? So probiotic protect the area with an e-collar or a barrier of
some sort like socks.
Bbird To to do something that, that humectant kind of a lotion or potion to moisturize the skin
and help it return to a healthy balance. And if I think of a if I think of my original third number,
I'll, I'll let you know.
Susy Okay. So I think when you bathe that dog and your shop, you do the feet separately with
either chlorhexidine or an antibiotic antibacterial shampoo on the feet. Do that when the dog's
in bath. But I don't think you need to do the whole dog in an antibacterial or antifungal
shampoo. But I would do that myself and wash it out really well.
Bbird Yeah, let's talk about that Because I think you're right on that. If people are using a
chlorhexidine because the chlorhexidine can really kill too much of the good stuff that's on
there. And although it doesn't seem to be a total disinfecting for one application or even
several applications, the skin biome takes a big hit when you use chlorhexidine, and it's just
will keep the dog skin always working. Just trying to keep up with the inability of the good
bacteria to do their job. That killing off too much of the good stuff along with some of the bad
stuff.
Susy I'll counterpoint that there's an overgrowth. There's an overgrowth in the in the pads. I
think that you do need to kill some of that off, because chlorhexidine doesn't kill everything.
And we're not talking about doing it every day. We're talking about a dog that comes through
your shop, and you notice that the feet are inflamed, or one that has been at a vet hospital,
and you've been instructed by the vet to use a specific type of thing on the feet if they've gone
to the vet for that. But then super important after the bath and after the antifungal is like you
were saying, put something moisturizing in there. Also, I think gold bond medicated powder
might help in the pads of the feet in the in-between time. What do you think of that? They won't
like to lick it.
Bbird I don't like it for feet because they lick their feet. Unless you can just promise.
Susy Well, if you're already using an e-collar or a barrier on the feet, maybe a little gold bond
instead of, uh, instead of the.
Bbird Instead of the chlorhexidine.
Susy Either instead of chlorhexidine or instead of chlorhexidine and the moisturizer because
the wet environment, the moisturizer is going to keep it moist in there. If you put the gold bond
in, then it's got a little antifungal kind of an action in there, and then it would also dry it out just
thinking out loud. I don't know. That's why I'm posing the question. So you guys will have to
come up with your own thoughts on this. I'm asking Barbara because she has more sciencey
knowledge than I do. I've got more vet in my ear kind of stuff, so that's why I'm thinking drying
it out rather than moistening it up. But I understand the need.
Bbird I am anxious to tell you about the Zymox shampoo. Um, what a great segue. I kind of
wish that we had that conversation first.
Susy How about if we have it right now?
Bbird Well, we're going to have it right now.
Susy Well, we were going to do another topic in there, but we don't have to. We can just go
straight into the zymox right after this. Let's do that.
Bbird Okay.
Susy We're going to just take a quick break right now, and then we'll be back with, uh,
Beaver's classroom. Hey, grumpy listeners, clear your calendars for March twelfth. The
legendary show season ten sale is back in Tucker, Georgia, and it's bigger than ever. We're
talking free door prizes for everyone, massive raffles from Utsumi and Groomers mall, and a
chance to win a canine two dryer from Electric Cleaner Company. Learn from the best with live
demos by award winning masters Nathan and Katie Austin. Plus enjoy free shipping on all
show season brand orders placed at the event. Coffee and lunch are on the house, but you
must RSVP for a ticket. Head to show Season grooming right now to register for free. See you
at the tent. Groomers, take your seats. It's time for bird's classroom. So one of our people
asked about Zymox shampoo. Barbara. Let's talk zymox.
Bbird Oh, I'd be glad to talk Zymox because I very much enjoyed taking a deeper look at this
brand, and I really wish I had done it sooner because I was very impressed. I first of all, I'm
impressed with their marketing because they don't they don't overblow it. You know, they they
it's like show season, just pretty much straight descriptive terms that you understand and not a
lot of Fluff and hype. Um. Practically none. It's just straight on. So a long time ago, I used the
zymox ear stuff to clear up a nasty yeast infection in a dog. Either that I groomed or was one of
mine. I can't remember right now, but it worked really well. And I've used it several times on on.
Kind of like nipping dog ear infections in the bud. And I knew it was enzyme driven because
the name hello Zymox Zyme ox. So I bought I said, oh God, I need to take a look at this. And
I've got dogs, two dogs that have got this strange skin thing going on. Right. And so I bought
the shampoo and the conditioner. One thing I loved about the conditioner, Susie, is that you
could use it as a leave in a rinse through, or a salve.
Susy That's nice.
Bbird So I can put this stuff, which is it's basically a conditioning conditioner, but it's just made
so that it can be safe staying on the skin. And it's actually good for staying on the skin because
it's got this enzyme system which is three enzymes.
Susy This is very applicable for the feet thing. I think that's pretty cool.
Bbird They've got a foot product that I'll get to.
Susy Oh cool. Well let me just say this. If you, um, tell your owners to dry the feet. That's one
thing. When they come in from the wet, the other thing is if it gets bad, send them to the vet.
Bbird So Zymox has these three enzymes that work together. I'm going to just tell you what
they do. They work together to make it be antibiotic and antifungal. They work together. They
are the same enzyme system found in mother's milk, colostrum, that protect the baby, the baby
skin from popping out of the womb and freaking out and getting a dysbiosis. Right.
Susy A who? What?
Bbird Dysbiosis means an imbalance. Dysbiosis. Biological dis biologically. Something went
wrong. Osis right. Dysbiosis. Got it.
Susy That's a good one.
Bbird Vocabulary word for the day. There'll be a test of. The three enzymes that are called the.
Like the L3 system.
Susy Uh-Uh.
Bbird Lysozyme, an enzyme that works as a natural biotic by breaking down the bacterial cell
walls. That's a good way to go if you're a bacteria. Okay.
Susy Effective.
Bbird It's effective. It's quick. It's there. They're out of there. Lactoferrin. Lactoferrin is a protein
that binds iron, making it unavailable to bacteria. And it also has direct bactericidal and antiviral
properties found then again found in the baby's milk And lactoperoxidase is an enzyme that
generates potent antimicrobial compounds. The lactoperoxidase is the peroxide that works
with the other two to make the antibiotic magic. The stuff has been researched. It does not
disrupt the natural skin biome. It doesn't. It's proven. It's scientific. It's established that there's
very little upset. Maybe a little teeny spillover. Whoops. I accidentally killed you. Sorry. Um.
Don't get me dramatizing the podcast. Be another whole thing. Okay, so, hey, then in addition
to the to the L3, the big three, they also utilize vitamin D3, which is a moisturizing vitamin, and
oatmeal which oat extract not oatmeal, but oat extract, which is a really decent moisturizer for
the skin. So this product, it has just a very kind of complicated, upscale cleansing mechanism
using Peg eighty, Sorbitan, Laurate and a bunch of other things. It's a very good cleansing
system with a couple of other things for the formula and added this L3, the three enzymes with
the oat extract and the vitamin D3.
Susy That complex of things is in everything.
Bbird It's in everything. And they have an oral product for bad breath. They have a foot, they
call it. Oh, let me read to you. I've just ran into a really interesting statement about topical use
of vitamin D3. Vitamin D3 offers benefits like reducing skin inflammation, boosting immunity,
promoting skin repair, and fighting signs of aging. As if a dog cares by improved barrier
function, improving the barrier function, they aids in cell turnover and protecting against
oxidative stress. this vitamin D3 is one hard working additive vitamin that I can get behind.
They use it in their shampoo. They use it in their conditioner that you can use as a topical
lotion, and they use it in the foot stuff. I think they use it a lot, and I think that there again, bad
itching is often a result of really dry skin. If the skin is inflamed and licked, it's going to have a
lot of moisture loss. TSW Transepidermal Moisture loss.
Susy This is cool. So their foot thing is called Funky Paws.
Bbird Yeah. Funky paws.
Susy Also for the folds on the Bulldogs and the bloodhounds and the. Yeah. And all that stuff.
So I want to try some of this stuff now. I remember getting a sample from them somewhere
along the lines and liking it, but I've never actually bought the product, so I might have to look
into that.
Bbird Of all of the things that I've used on my dogs to try to clear up this scaly, you know, like
they don't smell like Fritos or. But there again, when it comes to my dogs, I have sometimes I
don't smell them.
Susy Nose blind.
Bbird And nose blind, or either that or I, I automatically hold my breath.
Susy I think I call that a grooming survival skill. Sometimes you just have to do that.
Bbird The shampoo. I've given little to baths, but the first bath boom! I was way down the road.
The overnight the lesion started releasing some scabs, you know, releasing scales that are
formed, the scab that covers the. The inflamed skin. So I, I really like that. Two days later, I
was able to comb out a whole lot of little scabs. And Marco, I used the conditioner as a salve
on the lesions. And he also cleared up right away. Still got a little bit happening, but, uh, they
probably need two or three baths of this, but it's very good stuff. And it's been tested and
discovered that it does not kill off the friendly bacteria and microbes that live on your skin. That
is the important part we're just getting to appreciate the importance of the skin biome. More
and more as it's being studied and the science is coming out. So what's really going on there?
It's fascinating.
Susy Very cool.
Bbird Well, for me. But then again, I'm old.
Susy All right.
Bbird I love this stuff.
Susy Now let's just briefly discuss things we can do in twenty twenty six to get more clients.
Because now that we've tackled the science of the skin, let's talk about the backbone of any
successful salon or shop or mobile. And it's the schedule. We all want a fully booked sign in
the window. But in twenty twenty six, getting clients isn't just about putting a flyer out on the
coffee shop corkboard. It's about branding and community and wow factor that keeps people
coming back. How do you attract your dream clients and more importantly, how do you make
sure they never want to go anywhere else? Barbara, I think my favorite thing that you can do to
set yourself apart is have a specialty. I am a specialist in that. I'm super duper good at
customer service and I am good with difficult dogs. I am not a scissor. I don't have special
breeds. I do better than others. I do special temperaments better than others. So that's where
my area of specialty is. Do you think specialties help set you apart?
Bbird I do, but don't become a go to Rome. Expert, because you'll get stuck with those dogs
that hate grooming and have the weirdest coats in the world. And I made that mistake. That's
funny. But in my earlier days, uh, for. For a number of years, I was be shown Specialist. But of
course I did all Aubrey's welcome Fide master groomer with his own specialty. And but then I
realized that that was not exactly a model for profit because we take so long to do, and I was
doing them all in little abbreviated show trims, you know? And people loved it because they
loved their fluffy dogs. But I couldn't do as much work per day and make as much money
especially it was okay when there was just like one a day, but when there was just like three or
four a day, I had to say, oh, another one of my specialties was standard poodles.
Susy Oh, Barbara, that's crazy. I guess what Barbara is saying is choose your specialty wisely.
Bbird A good thing to do is sort of like cruise around your neighborhood or your community for
a while and get a sense of what dogs are are popular, what's showing up in your neck of the
woods and then specialize in that?
Susy That makes sense.
Bbird Boy, you you could make money in Tucson, Arizona. Just specializing in Chihuahuas up
here.
Susy It would be doodles, unfortunately. I'm sure that's kind of the case everywhere, but I think
variety is the spice of life, which is why I choose a temperament type of a specialty, because I
like to do every kind of dog out there. I like to try them all, although I'm definitely better at some
than I am at others.
Bbird I landed well after I did be shown in Standard Poodles for years. I did back to my original
which was terrier breed profile and so it wasn't showed terriers or anything like that, but it was
like adaptations of the breed, standard trim on pets. And that was a big that, that really it made
me stand out. And it also kept clients with me.
Susy For sure. And there's variety in that.
Bbird And there was variety. There's much more variety interiors, and generally speaking, they
didn't take as long to do as be shown or standard poodles.
Susy You could also do start to finish grooming. There's a lot of different ways you can do it.
Uh, but having a specialty, it helps people to find you. You also need to be able to be found
online because in today's world, people are going to Google dog groomer near me and see
what's out there. Yeah. Yep. So that you don't have to pay for that. But you do need to talk to
someone who is an expert at the search engine and what's important and keywords and all
that, and focus on that. I like to tell my clients that I'm looking for people, and when you tell
your clients what kind of people you're looking for, you can get pretty specific. So you could
say, I'm looking for terriers. Do you have any friends that have terriers that are looking for a
groomer or something like that? Because your clients really are your best advertising word of
mouth between your clients?
Bbird Yeah, if you can get referred by a vet. Vet referrals are gold. You know, they're they're
just golden. Even if you don't have a high expectations to go around to all of veterinary
establishments and and introduce yourself because just being a known face, you know, and if
you have to go every month and see how your cards are doing, and fill up the holder again and
talk to the receptionist person who books the appointments. Yes.
Susy And they love to have someone to refer to as a former vet receptionist. You get asked
those questions a lot. Where do you go for training? Where do you go for boarding? Where do
you go for grooming? And a lot of that hospitals know that having grooming is oftentimes a
bigger hassle for them than it is a benefit, although it can be fantastic if you train the groomers
right to spot things and to to get vet care when needed. That's how the vets make their money.
But I'm a proponent of bribes. I like to bribe. One of the ways I have always bribed these
people to mention me is by doing some free grooming. I will groom the receptionist dog for
free, or I will groom the vet owner type dog for free and let them know you know have some
personal experience with the way I do things. And then I will always show up with cookies or
donuts or pizza when I go over to talk to those people because they remember that. Totally
remember it. Add the cards given to the receptionist, given with a box of cookies, and that will
make an impression. And then they will always remember you when that phone call comes in.
Make your community connections for sure. Include the pet stores and the boarding places
that don't do their own grooming. Uh, you know, sometimes if you're mobile, you can work
something out with boarding kennels where you go by and do the dogs there once or twice a
week or something. It's also important to use the internet by making Insta moments for your
Instagram, or little reels for Facebook, or things that get the dogs out there, or your services
out there, or your face out there so that those pop up when they search for the groomer near
me as well. And then lastly, I think pre-book your regulars so that you know how many people
you actually need. Make sure they're coming back and also telling their friends and that's it.
Barbara, anything you want to add to that?
Bbird You have to use a shotgun approach. Unfortunately, one single thing isn't going to do it.
You have to keep doing. It's your work. When you don't have the work, got to put in the time.
The better you know your community and have contacts and network around you, the more it
will bring people in. Because just putting up a sign, unless there's like nobody within miles, it's
not going to do much of a difference because there's a lot of groomers out there doing their
own thing. What's different about you? Well, what's, you know, special.
Susy Oh, she brought cookies. That's oftentimes all you need is a receptionist.
Bbird The cookie creamer. Yeah.
Susy That lady that brought the cookies or that dude that brought the cookies. Yeah, definitely.
Okay, cool. Well, I think we can call this a show and box it away and set it in line to be edited.
And I'm happy to say, for those of you who don't know, which is most of you, Barbara is having
surgery tomorrow on her knee. We'll just leave that at that then. Well, thanks for being here,
everybody. Thanks for supporting our sponsors. Thanks for supporting us at the website.
Remember to share us with your friends. Hit that like button and happy grooming everyone.
We'll see you next time on the groom pod.
Bbird Bye now and take care of yourselves because you know we love you.