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What We Learned From A Visit to Scenthound
We visited a grooming chain so you don’t have to—here’s what to steal for your salon.

Happy Friday, Daily Groomers!
We’ve got a little tradition going here at The Daily Groomer—whenever one of us takes our dog in for a haircut, we can’t go to the same place twice.
Sounds chaotic, I know.
But with so many boutiques booked solid these days, it’s become the perfect excuse to explore what other grooming businesses are doing right (and wrong).
Sure, we should probably get on a recurring schedule with one groomer like normal people. But this little experiment has turned into a goldmine of inspiration—and a great way to see firsthand how different shops operate behind the scenes.
Most recently, my business partner Drake took his water-obsessed golden retriever in for a clean-up at a nearby Scenthound. So today, I’m breaking down what stood out from his visit—and more importantly, what you can take away and try in your own business.
So first off meet Daisy. She loves the water and playing with her friends at daycare. She wears here Daisy chain proudly so everyone knows she’s a gooood gurrrrl….

She took a trip this week Scenthound to get her “summer cut”. It’s part of the newer wave of grooming shops built around wellness, tech, and subscriptions. It’s a franchise so there are systems in place for everything.
Here are some of the takeaways we discussed:
First Impressions Are Half the Game
When you walk in, the place was spotless. No hair, no weird smells, no clutter.
The grooming area was hidden—just a sleek front lobby, friendly team at the desk, and a wall of curated products.
It felt more like checking into a spa than a salon.
Your move: Tighten up your lobby game. Add subtle branding, create a peaceful customer zone, and keep clutter behind closed doors. Appearances do matter.

They Don’t Sell Grooms—They Sell a System
Scenthound pushes the subscription/membership model heavily.
They try to get all of their clients on a monthly plan that includes wellness checks and hygiene services (bath, nails, ears, teeth) to drive reoccurring revenue.
Add-ons like haircuts or de-sheds? Those are extras. I think even post-cut baths are extra which was kind of shocking.
You walk in expecting $30, walk out having spent $75—but you feel good about it.
Your move: Think about offering tiered packages or even a recurring plan (bath club, hygiene-only, VIP). It builds loyalty, boosts predictable revenue, and aligns with how modern pet parents think: “Health first.”
They’re Not Just Groomers—They Sell Themselves As Wellness Experts
Every visit includes what they call a S.C.E.N.T. Check™—a quick look at skin, coat, ears, nails, teeth, and glands.
They even promote it heavily in the salon with a full wall dedicated to this “wellness” aspect to educate their customers on why grooming + wellness matters.

They send a post-groom report card with wellness findings (hot spots, buildup, irritation, etc.). That little email? It builds massive trust.
Your move: Add a 3- to 5-point wellness check to your services. Doesn’t need to be fancy—just consistent. Share what you notice. Pet parents will remember that more than the bow you tied.
Tech-Enabled + Upsell Engine
They live on their app—appointments, upgrades, reminders, everything.
And they’ve trained the team to ask about add-ons and rebookings at the right moments.
The last thing he heard at checkout?
“Want to go ahead and book next month while you’re here?”
Your move:
Use grooming software that lets you easily manage rebookings and service add-ons.
Train your front desk (or AI receptionist) to close the loop.
A quick rebooking prompt + gentle upsell = more recurring revenue.
Standardized, Scalable, and Smart
Even though they’re franchised, every experience feels intentional. From facility layout to grooming protocols, everything is repeatable.
Your move: You don’t need to be a franchise to benefit from this.
Create standard operating procedures for wellness checks, client comms, and upsells.
Train your team the same way every time.
Systematize what works—then scale it.
TL;DR: How to Bring Scenthound Tactics into Your Salon
Scenthound Strategy | What You Can Try |
---|---|
Spotless, branded front lobby | Declutter, organize, and design for calm |
Subscription plans | Offer tiered wellness or bath packages |
Monthly wellness checks | Add a basic health report post-groom |
Tech-driven upsells & rebooks | Use software and train staff to upsell at key moments |
Standardized systems | Build checklists, SOPs, and repeatable client flows |
Was Scenthound groom perfect? No.
Was it interesting? Absolutely.
Even if you don’t vibe with franchises, there’s something to be said for the way they systematize everything: the branding, the upsells, the wellness messaging, the front desk scripts. It’s all designed to build trust, increase frequency, and boost revenue.
And that’s something any grooming business can benefit from.
So whether it’s adding a mini wellness check, tightening up your front desk flow, or just asking that simple “Want to book next month now?”—steal what works.
Always be learnin!
Until next week,
Alex
That’s all folks! Keep calm and groom on 🐶🤘