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Andre Salon and Spa Island Lake IL spa closed after vehicle crash

January 5th, 2009

Andre Salon and Spa, 113 E. State Road, Island Lake, is closed until Friday because a vehicle slid on the ice and crashed through the front door and window Sunday, said owner Debbie Calvin.

“Thanks goodness no one was in here,” Calvin said. “We were closed. It was on a Sunday. And the gentleman just tried to stop and couldn’t and went through the door and front window.”

The accident occurred Sunday about 2:42 p.m. when Eric Gillette, 17, of Johnsburg, drove his Trail Blazer into parking lot near the spa, according to police.

No injuries were reported and the estimate of damages is unknown, police said.

“Nothing operational has been damaged,” Calvin added. “This was just in our reception area.”

The spa contacted customers who had scheduled appointments this week and rescheduled.

“That was the main thing, that nobody was injured,” she said.

Chicago Illinois Day Spa, IL Day Spa, Spa Business, Spa Closing

Energy for Your Spas Success

December 28th, 2008

Feng Shui Creates Success Energy

Does your work space support you? You may have never asked yourself that question, but you should. It should support you energetically. Are the colors on the walls conducive to productivity? Is the entrance clutter-free and welcoming? Does it reflect a serene atmosphere? Whether you work in the corner treatment room of a large spa, or the corner of a rented space, your workspace should provide supportive energy for focus, productivity and income generation.

It used to be that a work space only needed a few simple basics. With all of the high-tech requirements, the more subtle, but equally supportive energy requirements are often overlooked. These provide a balanced atmosphere, allowing you to stay focused, productive and in control of your time. A success-oriented work space contains a balanced amount of both worlds. Integrating some basic feng shui principles and personal design preferences with your high-tech requirements will create a work space that is less stressful and more efficient, which yields more profitability and personal satisfaction.

Energize your space
Before you can invigorate your space for success, it is imperative that you first unclutter it. If you energize certain areas of your area and there is clutter in the way, you will energize the clutter first and create even more clutter. Organize it, file it or get rid of it. Then you are ready to move on.

Following are seven feng shui principles you can apply today to create a balanced work space.

Energize the entrance to your work space. Eliminate any clutter, have it well-lit, remove wastebaskets from the area and make sure the door can swing open. This is not only the entrance to your productivity, but also the entrance to new clients, new business and more profitability. The front entrance and its welcoming statement affect the success of your entire business.

Make sure the entrance is also welcoming. You can do this by making sure plants are pruned and there are colorful flowers to greet clients. Positive energy needs to enter in order to provide your work space with growth and prosperity.

Paint your walls colors that provide supportive energy for the work being done.

Treatment rooms or medical/dental offices. Walls should be light shades of blue or green; these are very calming colors. Because clients may be uncomfortable and nervous upon arrival, the best energy for them is calming energy. Sales, marketing and professional offices. Walls should be a soft terra-cotta or earth tones, which are conducive to building good relationships with clients. Avoid the hard, stress-oriented energy created by white walls; the stress created by the hard, white energy can easily pass on to clients, resulting in no sales or unsatisfied customers. High-tech, electronic, multi-tasking offices. These areas can be balanced with soft green on the walls and wood furniture. Avoid white here, as well.

Use art and wall décor to further enhance the purpose of the work space. Use motivational art and posters that energize—pieces that depict success, teamwork and winning attitudes are great. Frame them in silver or gold, and hang them on west and northwest walls. Family pictures in any space can be very distracting, so limit them to either a small grouping or a collage in one frame. Place them in the southwest area of your room to energize relationships, both work and personal.

Add plants. In the east and southeast areas of your office, energize both new business and wealth-generation by adding plants that reach upward, such as bamboo. If you do not have a green thumb, use great-looking silk plants or trees. You can also hang pictures of magnificent redwood trees or sequoias to give additional energy to income-generation.

Add artwork featuring water. Do this on the north wall to energize your career and provide a gentle flowing movement throughout. Be sure the water in the picture has movement to it, such as a flowing river instead of tumultuous waves crashing on the shore or stagnant water with no movement. A small tabletop water fountain with a gentle bubbling sound also works well. Make sure if you use the fountain to run it every day and keep it filled with fresh water.

Creating balance
By balancing your work space for supportive energy and aligning your personal design tastes with the type of work you do, you have the formula for improved focus, productivity and more success. Creating balance eliminates many of the energy-drainers in your workplace and reduces stress. Ideally, your work space should support you, your goals and objectives, as well as what you need to accomplish on any given day. A balanced and properly energized space leads to a calmer, in-control, more successful you.

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Spa Business

WorkShop for Medispa Operators

December 25th, 2008

(PressRelease)  As part of their very successful Symposium series, the IAPAM has created a one day program to help new entrants into the medispa industry navigate “the often confusing process of creating a successful business plan” for their new venture. “This workshop is expertly designed for physicians, business managers, and key staff empowered to launch aesthetic medicine offerings within medical practices, comments Jeff Russell, Executive Director of the IAPAM. By translating the workshop facilitator’s extensive knowledge into a suite of tools and techniques for success, registrants will learn how to avoid the most common pitfalls experienced by many new entrants in aesthetic medicine.

After completing this workshop, participants will leave with a comprehensive business plan for their aesthetic medicine practice. This program will cover all aspects of creating a business plan for a profitable medical spa, including:

• Financing options for physicians;
• Target demographics for tailored aesthetic procedures;
• Developing a menu of treatments and pricing strategies;
• Establishing aesthetic practice protocols and HR for aesthetic practitioners;
• Creating an effective marketing plan;
• Finding the right location;
• Staffing;
• Federal and state legal and regulatory issues; and
• Startup costs and reading financials.

Financing Options for Physicians: The workshop addresses the opportunities associated with leasing vs. owning equipment, as well as discussing Small Business Administration (SBA) loans vs. regular loan options.

Target Demographics for Aesthetic Procedures: Based on each attendee’s current or proposed patient base, instructors will create a targeted demographic profile for said business, including specific patient profiles: age, sex, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity.

Developing a Menu of Treatments and Pricing Strategies for Aesthetic Procedures: After creating personalized demographic patient profiles, experts will lead participants toward a menu of services consistent with identified patient needs, and assist physicians in determining the most successful pricing options for each discrete procedure.

Establishing Aesthetic Practice Protocols and Human Resource Management Procedures: As many insurance companies are now requiring written procedural protocols, registrants are provided with a CD including customizable aesthetic procedural protocols for use in each practice. Additionally, participants are provided with sample key job descriptions including: aesthetic practice nurse, medical aesthetician and others.

Creating an Effective Marketing Plan for an Aesthetic Medicine Practice:
The workshop focuses on the most effective internal and external marketing techniques. Moreover, attendees are given electronic examples of effective (and ineffective) print advertising, press releases and other marketing collateral as part of the course material. Finally, the instructors rely on “industry best practices” in answering questions regarding marketing a new medspa offering, such as:
• how to utilize the media for publicity,
• how to create an effective direct mail postcard;
• how to use the internet for a low-cost, but highly effective marketing campaign;
• how to leverage open houses and educational seminars; and
• how to utilize Google local ads and AdWords to get patients into your practice.

Finding the Right Location for an Aesthetic Practice: The workshop leader will expertly guide participants through the best practices for choosing a location for a stand-alone medical spa, and will answer questions, on a site by site basis, regarding whether to integrate a medspa within an existing practice or to open a separate aesthetic medicine business.

Staffing a Medical Spa: The facilitator will review the key positions in each participant’s medspa, and will assist in the development of customized job descriptions.

Federal and State Legal and Regulatory Issues: All members at the workshop will be expertly schooled on Federal and State regulations pursuant to the medical spa industry, with a particular emphasis on understanding the Stark Law and its implications for aesthetic medical businesses.

Startup Costs and Reading Financials: The instructor is well versed in the typical startup costs for adding aesthetics to a practice, and is equally dedicated to instructing registrants in understanding financial reporting specific to a medical spa business. Furthermore, in order to maintain profitability, participants are educated in the key indicators that medspa business owners need to watch on a regular basis.

Ultimately, this comprehensive workshop provides attendees with focused intelligence regarding all aspects of their proposed medspa business: the services, prospective customers, the competition, and everything else that is needed to launch a successful medical spa. “This workshop provides registrants with a ‘Road Map’ for launching their aesthetic practice, and the knowledge gleaned by attending is invaluable in ensuring the future profitability of any new aesthetic medicine offering,” assures Jeff Russell.

For additional information or to register for the next Aesthetic Practice Startup Workshop please contact Jeff Russell at 1-800-219-5108 x705, or visit: http://www.iapam.com/bootcamp.html

About the International Association for Physicians in Aesthetic Medicine (IAPAM)

The International Association for Physicians in Aesthetic Medicine is a voluntary association of physicians and supporters, which sets standards for the aesthetic medical profession. The goal of the association is to offer education, ethical standards, credentialing, and member benefits. IAPAM membership is open to all licensed medical doctors (MDs) and doctors of osteopathic medicine (DOs).

MedSpa, Medical Spa, Spa Business

Spa Opening Boonsboro Maryland

December 17th, 2008

Couple opening spa in Boonsboro

Some people go on a cruise with hopes of relaxing and reconnecting with a special person.

Lisa Adali-Piston did all that but also came back with a new career.

She and her husband, Tom Piston, are opening the South Mountain Day Spa Saturday, Dec. 13, at 210 N. Main St. in Boonsboro.

“Tom and I were on a cruise and I tried an ionithermie detox spa treatment,” she said. “I was astonished at the results.”

After Adali-Piston lost a lot of weight, she was left with some sagging skin and cellulite. She tried several things to correct those problems and said nothing worked like the ionithermie detox.

“We built this business around that treatment — it was the catalyst,” said Tom Piston.

The open house will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., during which a demonstration of ionithermie detox treatment will be available.

Invented more than 25 years ago, ionithermie detox treatment utilizes a handheld device that transmits two gentle forms of low-level stimuli through a body mask of conductive clay.

The process breaks down fatty deposits by electrophoresis. It tones muscles, removes toxins and cleanses skin at the cellular level, the couple explained.

Adali-Piston explained there is a sensation of pins and needles, and some feelings of contractions, but no pain.

Representatives of the product lines will also be part of the open house, as will sales of holiday decor, jewelry and other items. Refreshments will be available.

“At first, the business will be just me doing the ionithermie detox treatments and facials,” Adali-Piston said. Later she hopes to hire a massage therapist.

Tom Piston has been in the Boonsboro area since 1988. He has two sons, one at Boonsboro High School and the other at Salisbury University.

Employed by Futrex, Tom Piston’s company manufactures body composition analyzers.

A native of Wisconsin, Adali-Piston said she met her future husband online. They were married in 2006 and she moved to Boonsboro.

“We were looking at retail space but it was too expensive,” she said. They bought the house in May and have been remodeling extensively.

Regular hours, by appointment, will be Thursdays and Fridays from 4 to 7 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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Day Spa, Maryland Day Spas, Spa Business, Spa Opening

Affordable Spa Treatments Student Spa

December 16th, 2008

CFCC’s student spa offers low-price pampering

Want to go? Cape Fear Community College student spa
Where: Cosmetology Building, 901 N. Third St.
When: Open Dec. 1-4, closed for the Christmas holidays, then re-opening Jan. 12 through the end of April.
Hours: Monday and Wednesday, appointments available at 6, 7 and 8 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, appointments available at 5, 6 and 7 p.m.
More info: To schedule an appointment, call Susan Vinters at 471-8508.

The Wilmington resident has been a devoted client of the CFCC student spa for two years. The services are comparable and the prices much lower than they would be in a professional spa, Jones said, and she welcomes the chance to help students get ready for the real world.

“It’s nice to think that you’re helping someone prepare for a career,” Jones said. “That’s why I enjoy it so much - hopefully me providing myself to work on will help them in the long run.”

The student spa offers steeply discounted services, from basic facials and leg-waxing to microdermabrasion, that help train aesthetics students in the techniques they need to graduate. CFCC and Miller-Motte Technical College are two area schools that offer lower prices to those who help provide students with real life spa experience.

With 600 class hours required for licensure, students start off by working on themselves and each other, then graduate to outside clientele near October, according to instructor Susan Vinters.

“I’m in the spa as the students are with the clients, so they know that I’m there if they need me,” Vinters said.

To complete the program, students must perform 40 makeup applications, 50 hair removals and 60 facials, Vinters said. The two-semester program starts with more traditionally structured classes on things like skin structure and physiology. Students slowly start to apply what they learn in class on each other. Then they work at the spa after 60 hours of classtime.

Despite that 60-plus hours of training, student Sunni Feil said she got the jitters before working on her first outside client.

“At first it was nerve-racking, but every client’s a little different,” Feil said.

Feil now confidently administers facials and other services a few times each week. She sees the low prices as a chance for community members to pamper themselves despite a rough economy.

“I don’t think a lot of people know that we’re here, and when you compare the price at the school and then going to the spa, it’s tremendously different,” Feil said. “Especially with the economy how it is right now … I think people will be pleasantly surprised.”

Vinters said the student spa sees steady traffic throughout the semester.

As one of the spa’s steadiest clients, Jones said that she has seen a “huge” improvement in her skin since she began, and looks forward to her weekly appointments.

“They’re very relaxed, and so it gives you a very relaxed feeling,” Jones said. “I always tell people, when you go into a professional setting, you have fewer people around to help you with a problem, so you might spend lots of money at a professional place and still not get what you want.”

Services & Skin care

  • Microcurrent Facial: $50
  • Microdermabrasion: $50
  • Spa 108 Signature Relaxation Facial: $20
  • Paraffin Facial: $20
  • Back Facial: $20
  • Chemical Peels: $10
  • Hair removal
  • Brows: $6
  • Face: $6
  • Back: $20
  • Half legs: $10
  • Whole legs: $20
  • Cosmetics
  • Lash and brow tint: $8 each area
  • Makeup consultation and application: $6

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Affordable Spa, Spa Business

Obama’s Impact on Professional Beauty Industry

December 3rd, 2008

Obama and the New Congress: Potential Issues & Threats that May Impact the Professional Beauty Ind

Phoenix, AZ (November 25, 2008) As the “voice” of the professional beauty industry, the Professional Beauty Association (PBA) aims to keep its members abreast of legislation that has the potential to impact their businesses, as well as provide a collective viewpoint to Congress and other government officials on the ramifications legislation could have on the beauty industry. As Director of Government Affairs for PBA, Sam Leyvas keeps PBA’s membership informed of issues relevant to the beauty industry and informs members on how they can become involved in helping their government representatives understand how certain polices will affect their business and employees. With a new administration, control of Congress by the Democrats and significant changes to many state legislatures, Leyvas has outlined some of the key issues members should be aware of: Negative Impact

“Card Check” Law (Employee Free Choice Act): This law could have a significant impact on the beauty industry and many other Main Street businesses. While the bill was approved by the House in 2007, it died in the Senate this year - it will most likely resurface in early 2009. With Democrats traditionally supporting organized labor’s agenda and with unions aiming to fold more employees into union membership, this law would completely change the economics of union organizing. Card Check would make it cost effective for unions to go after Main Street businesses, such as beauty/nail salons, spas, restaurants and other retail establishments, which have never experienced unionization before. The law would do away with the secret ballot process currently used for unionization in the workplace and replace it with a Card Check system. Once a union persuades more than half of workers to sign membership cards, the union would automatically be certified. Without the secret ballot process, employees would be exposed to intimidation and bullying tactics from union organizers. From large-scale beauty manufacturers to salon and spa owners, this is a law that could have serious consequences for the beauty industry.

Positive Impact

FICA Tax Credit for Salons/Spas: While this proposed legislation has actively been supported by PBA for the last few years, the bill’s principal sponsor (Shelley Berkeley D-NV) retained her seat in the House and is poised to keep this issue a priority. Additionally, 2009-2010 are likely to be years in which we will see a flurry of tax legislation in Congress - giving our industry newfound opportunities to advocate for a FICA tax credit. The FICA Tax Credit would give salon/spa owners a dollar-for-dollar tax credit on the FICA taxes paid on employee’s tip-income (employer’s currently do not share that income but are taxed on it) - putting the professional beauty industry on equal footing with the restaurant industry. This legislation would significantly help small and large salons and spas to lower their tax liability and allow them to further invest in their businesses.

Negative Impact

Elimination of LIFO Accounting Method: Distributors and manufacturers take note as the permanent repeal of the use of “Last-In, First-Out” inventory accounting would translate into massive tax increases for hundreds of thousands of American businesses. Although the proposed repeal of LIFO was recently defeated in Congress, with a new Congress controlled by one party and the increased pressure to close the federal “tax gap” along with finding additional revenues to cover budget deficits, it is likely to resurface. The restricted use or outright repeal of LIFO would have far-reaching and potentially damaging effects on companies within the professional beauty industry that rely on effective inventory management to remain profitable - principally distributors and manufacturers.

Positive Impact

Credit Card “Interchange Fees”: For years, small businesses like salons and spas, restaurants and other merchants have been waging a quiet war with the credit card companies over “interchange fees” - the hidden costs of processing credit and debit card transactions that can gobble up a store’s profits while earning banks a pretty penny. With a new Democratic Congress set to take power in January, it’s likely to see the resurrection of the “Credit Card Fair Fee Act” - federal legislation that would require credit card companies with “substantial market power” to negotiate with merchants and retailers on terms for fees paid when processing card transactions. “Interchange” is a percentage of each transaction that credit card companies collect from merchants every time a credit/debit card is used to pay for a purchase. The fee varies with type of card, size of merchant and other factors, but as much as $2 of every $100 consumers spend goes to card issuers.

“In order for the entire professional beauty industry to move forward, we must have a unified voice and actively engage government officials on the issues that have an impact on our livelihoods, our employee’s livelihoods and the future prosperity of the industry as a whole. I urge everyone to become active with PBA’s government affairs efforts and do your part for the betterment of our industry,” states Lee Rizzuto Jr, Chair of PBA’s Board of Directors and Senior Vice President of Conair.

From events such as Welcome to Our World, where members of the industry converge on Capitol Hill to lobby their representatives on issues that affect their business and provide an evening of beauty treatments to officials and their staff, to simply signing the License Mobility petition allowing for professionals to transfer their licenses across states without further examination - your voice is needed! Interested parties can also Sign up to receive The Washington Update - an e-newsletter designed to keep you informed on the latest legislative and regulatory news affecting the professional beauty industry. The Washington Update is published 8 times a year and delivered directly to your inbox.

For additional issues that have the potential to impact the industry and/or ways in which to get involved, please contact Sam Leyvas at 800.468.2274 x3437, sam@probeauty.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or visit probeauty.org.

The Professional Beauty Association is made up of salons and spas, distributors and manufacturers dedicated to improving their individual businesses and the industry as a whole. Led by industry volunteers, the association offers: business tools · education · government advocacy · networking · and more. Visit www.probeauty.org or call 800.468.2274 to learn more.

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Spa Business, Spa Professionals

Fighting Stress while Saving Money

December 2nd, 2008

Gyms, spas stress value of fighting stress in hard times

As cash-strapped customers cut spending, spas and gyms are doing all they can to keep a place in people’s budgets.

Beyond deep discounts, some are adopting a recession spin: touting services as stress reducers, not indulgences, and highlighting the economic benefits of “wellness.”

A Gold’s Gym program — deemed “Fat-O-Nomics” — centers on money people can save by shedding excess weight. One stat: Being 50 pounds overweight burns nine extra gallons of gasoline per year.

“The cost of a lot of goods has gone up,” spokesman Dave Reiseman says. “We’re aware that there are stories out there asking, ‘Is the gym membership worth it?’ ”

The Westin New York in Times Square has turned layoffs into sales opportunity. A “pink slip pick-me-up” spa promotion gives 20% off a facial from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily.

“If you’re unemployed, you need a pick-me-up — and you need to look good on your interviews,” spa director Nicole Morris says.

As spa owners “feel the pinch” of consumer cutbacks, they’re also all aggressively touting good, old-fashioned discounts via e-mail blasts and website updates, says Larry Oskin, spokesman for the Day Spa Association.

Businesses listed on websites are slashing prices. The number of discount deals offered is up 25% to 30% vs. a year ago.

Spa and health club sales for 2008 aren’t in yet. But on the gym front, signs of trouble started last year. Membership dropped in 2007 for the first time in more than a decade to 41.5 million from 42.7 million in 2006, says the International Health Racquet & Sportsclub Association.

Debbie Goldman of Manhasset Hills, N.Y., is keeping up her gym routine, but saving. She was an off-and-on-again member of upscale gym chain Equinox for more than 10 years, but when she got her $1,500 yearly renewal bill in September, she decided it was “too extravagant in these times.” She opted for an LA Fitness chain offer of two years for $1,200.

To cater to current clients — and lure new ones — Equinox is one of the gyms playing up “mind-body balance” in stressful times.

Equinox has run full-page newspaper ads and updated its website to promote “mind over madness.” Say the promotions: “In these changing times, make a renewed commitment to yourself to lead a healthy life.” Each has a list of healthy endeavors — such as meditating and eating well. Of course, exercise tops the list.

Recent ads from rival gym chain Town Sports International proclaim “Protect your most important asset. Your health.” They also touted an initiation fee cut to $59 from $149.

Says Town Sports marketing chief Sean O’Hearen: “We’re trying to encourage our current and potential customers to focus on things they can control. Your health is one of them.”

Botox providers are also doing all they can to keep their bottom lines looking good.

To lure cash-strapped clients, plastic surgeons and dermatologists have rolled out promotions for the wrinkle-reducer, including a recent “Boootox” special for Halloween.

Botox injections typically cost about $500 per site — such as between the eyebrows — according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. It says demand is firm but vulnerable. Botox-maker Allergan reported third-quarter sales up 7% to $318 million, but short of analysts’ expectations.

The economy was a hot topic this month at the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery convention in Orlando, says Jeanine Downie, director of Image Dermatology in Montclair, N.J.

What some docs are doing:

•Image Dermatology hosted a successful “Boootox” Halloween special with discounted injections. Now Downie is looking at a Thanksgiving event. “I’m going to say something like, ‘Don’t let wrinkles gobble up your face.’ ”

•On Nov. 1, Scottsdale, Ariz., dermatologist Susan Van Dyke hosted a Botox for Beginners event with free consultations, samples of skin care products and deep Botox discounts. “The economy is hitting everybody,” she says.

•Beverly Hills facial plastic surgeon Behrooz Torkian now hosts a Beauty Day on Fridays that includes discounts on Botox and other services, says his office director Marcy Parco.

Beauty Day clients get extra pampering such as hand massages, makeup tips and free skin care samples. Many people now can’t afford long family vacations or a “girls’ weekend” at a spa, so these Beauty Days — where customers can spend $500 to $800 for a bundle of treatments — are a way to “feel good” in the downturn, she says.

It’s also good for business: “It was a creative way to get the ladies in here,” she says.

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Spa, Spa Business, Spa Deals, Spa Trends

Umstead Hotel and Spa Management Change

November 28th, 2008

 

Umstead Hotel & Spa to replace GM, sales managerTriangle Business Journal 

CARY – The Goodnight family, owners of the luxury Umstead Hotel & Spa in Cary, have dismissed three members of the hotel’s management staff based on what was considered “underperformance on the owner’s vision.”

Leah Goodnight, daughter of SAS co-founder Jim Goodnight and his wife, Ann Goodnight, has been named acting general manager. She has taken over the role from former Managing Director Bob Schofield, who had been with the hotel’s management team since before construction began in 2006. The hotel and spa opened in January 2007.

“Operationally, the hotel is running fine and profitable,” Leah Goodnight wrote in a statement to Triangle Business Journal. “The upper management change was based solely on the vision and expectation ownership had set forth for internal procedures, and our concern about employee turnover.”

Other management members who were dismissed around Oct. 24 include Richard Brooks, director of sales and marketing, and Bridget Nelson, director of human resources. The hotel also has an ongoing search for a new food and beverage director following Nick Pijerov’s departure in September.

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Resort Spa, Spa Business, Spa Resort

Integrated Wellness Pavilion Spa Business Opportunities

November 22nd, 2008

New Integrated Wellness Pavilion at SPA LA Offers New Business Opportunities for SPA Owners and One-Stop Service for Consumers

With multidisciplinary collaboration at an all-time high and a clear trend toward integrating services as a means to maximize patient care, providers and consumers increasingly demand information on and access to a wide array of complementary health care options. At the upcoming Spa & Resort Expo/Medical Aesthetics Conference & Expo in Los Angeles (Feb. 21-22, 2009, LA Convention Center), producers Reed Exhibitions and MPA Media will present an Integrated Wellness Pavilion.

The Integrated Wellness Pavilion puts four distinct health professions in one area of the show floor: Chiropractic; Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine; Massage Therapy and Naturopathic Medicine. Combined with the larger SPA & Resort Expo and Medical Aesthetics Expo, SPA professionals can preview and have access to true wellness integration all in one location bringing patient care to an all-time high.
“Everyone knows patients want their health care providers to work together for their benefit,” said Donald Petersen Jr., publisher/president of MPA Media. “This event is designed to bring health care professions together to focus on wellness and how they can better serve their patients with an integrated approach.”
“We are pleased to be working with MPA on this new initiative for SPA & Resort Expo LA,” said Nancy Largay, Vice President, SPA & Resort Expo portfolio, Reed Exhibitions. “Spa, medical and alternative healthcare professionals attending the event will have greater access to the products, services and information that will have an impact on their businesses now and for the future.”
While not open to the public, the Integrated Wellness Pavilion will educate spa professionals on the latest techniques while offering a more integrated approach to for their patients.
MPA Media is the leading integrated publishing company serving alternative health and wellness professions. Titles include Dynamic Chiropractic, Acupuncture Today, Massage Today, Nutritional Wellness, Naturopathy Digest and To Your Health. MPA reaches over 200,000 practitioners and 60,000 waiting rooms with its print publications and approximately 1,000,000 unique visitors online every month. 

Spa, Spa Business, Spa Professionals