There’s a moment every med spa owner dreads.
A key employee asks to talk. Your stomach tightens before they even sit down.
And then it lands, “I need more money, how can I grow, what else can I do? Or “I’ve been thinking about leaving and got an offer down the street.”
What follows isn’t just emotional panic, it’s operational math.
Who covers their clients?
How long will it take to train someone new?
How much revenue just walked out the door?
What does this do to the rest of the team?
This moment hits especially hard in a med spa because of who our employees are.
Med spas are overwhelmingly staffed by women. According to U.S. labor data, over 95% of skincare specialists are women, and spa and med spa leadership roles are more than 80% female.¹ ² This is a female-driven workforce, often navigating life stages that include family changes, education, relocation, and shifting financial dynamics.
And in spa and wellness environments, average employee tenure is short. Many roles see employees stay two to three years, sometimes less.³ When someone leaves, it’s rarely a surprise in hindsight—but it often feels sudden in the moment.
Employee retention is not about luck, loyalty, or culture alone.
It is about what you measure—and what you make clear.
Most med spa owners think about retention only after someone gives notice. By then, the decision has already been made.
Retention is built, or quietly eroded while employees are still working for you.
When people don’t know:
They don’t leave suddenly. They disengage first.
Training is not a feeling. It’s a timeline.
Take HydraFacial or any advanced device. Most platforms include:
If training time is not measured, employees never know when they are “done” training—and that uncertainty creates anxiety.
What to measure:
Retention suffers when employees don’t know what good performance looks like for their role.
Estheticians
Basic Esthetician
(Facials, peels, entry-level services)
Advanced Esthetician
(HydraFacial, devices, advanced protocols)
Expecting advanced revenue without advanced training, equipment access, or compensation creates resentment—and resentment drives exits.
Injectors
Injectors are typically the highest revenue producers in a med spa, and their performance must be measured clearly—not emotionally.
A practical industry benchmark is revenue per hour:
This often translates to:
Busy does not equal productive, clear benchmarks reduce comparison, confusion, and burnout.
Poor scheduling quietly destroys retention.
Healthy utilization targets:
Under-utilization creates income anxiety. Over-utilization creates exhaustion. Both lead to disengagement.
This is not just a marketing metric—it is an employee confidence metric.
Predictable rebooking improves income stability and confidence.
This is non-negotiable.
Many owners learn this lesson the hard way: one person believes commission is at one level, leadership believes it’s at another, and nothing is written down. That situation almost always ends the same way, someone leaves angry, leadership feels blindsided, and the business absorbs the loss.
If it isn’t in writing, it doesn’t exist. Period.
Every med spa should have written:
Written clarity protects all and the business.
Employees stay longer when:
Retention improves when confusion disappears.
Employee retention doesn’t start with exit interviews.
It starts with what you measure while people are still there.
If you want to build all of this yourself, training trackers, role-based revenue benchmarks, utilization targets, rebooking metrics, and written compensation plans, you can.
And if you don’t want to?
That’s exactly what Managed Med Spa does.
We help med spas install the systems that improve retention before it becomes a problem—so good employees stay longer, perform better, and grow with the business.
Footnotes / Sources