Barbers & salons
A busy chair doesn't leave time to answer DMs, confirm appointments, and chase reviews. We wire up the systems that handle it for you — so you keep cutting.
What's quietly costing you.
Barbers and salons lose hours every week to appointment back-and-forth, no-shows that leave gaps, repeat questions about hours and pricing, and review requests that never get sent. Most of it happens while your hands are full.
What Talver would install.
Practical systems, installed in your existing tools and explained in plain English.
Missed-call text back
When you can't pick up mid-cut, callers get an instant text and a booking link — so the lead doesn't walk to the next shop.
Appointment reminders
Automatic confirmations and reminders cut no-shows and fill the gaps a missed slot leaves behind.
FAQ assistant
Hours, pricing, parking, walk-in policy — answered instantly on your site and socials.
Review requests
After each visit, clients get a friendly nudge to leave a Google review, on autopilot.
Content drafts
Draft social posts from your latest cuts so the page stays active without the evening admin.
The revenue you're leaving on the table.
Recovering even two no-shows a week and capturing the calls you miss mid-cut typically adds hundreds in booked revenue every month — before counting the new clients your reviews bring in.
Barber Automation Package
Missed-call text back, appointment reminders, review automation, and an FAQ assistant.
Build this packagePlaybooks for barbers & salons.
Practical guides with real examples and numbers for a business like yours.
How a barber shop can save 8 hours per week with AI
A busy chair leaves no time for admin. Here's how a few simple automations give a barber shop back a full working day every week.
How missed-call text back saves local businesses money
A missed call is usually a lost customer. Here's how one of the simplest automations turns those calls into booked jobs.
Ready to set this up for your barbers & salons?
Build your package to see pricing in CAD, or book a call and we'll map the first system worth automating.