Why this matters for a salon
The best simulation is the one that helps the conversation: it shows a direction, makes alternatives concrete and lets the client compare options before committing. In a market where many clients arrive with saved images, social videos and very specific expectations, the salon can't just say yes or no. It must build a frame: what is realistic, what enhances the face, what requires maintenance and what journey makes the choice sustainable.
This is also where economic value gets decided. Before the wash, before the technique and before the checkout, the client is forming a judgement: am I being listened to? Do they have a method? Is the proposal designed for me, or is it a standard answer? When the consultation answers those questions well, the price is interpreted within a logic of expertise.
What improves when the process is guided
The chart doesn't represent real performance data: it's a visual model to read the levers a salon should monitor when introducing a more structured consultation.
Practical comparison
The best choice is born from the right comparison. Placing different tools on the same level often leads to confused decisions: an admin feature can be excellent, but it doesn't improve by an inch the way the salon explains a look change. The table below separates the goals.
| Criterion | Consumer app | Simulation in Saloria |
|---|---|---|
| Context | Individual and playful use | Professional use with stylist |
| Promise | Instant look try-on | Guidance preview |
| Output | Isolated image | Visual idea plus protocol |
| Risk | Rigid expectation | Guided expectation |
A simple sequence to apply
Start from the desired result
Ask the client not only what she wants to do, but what image she wants to obtain and how much she is willing to maintain that result over time.
Reduce the alternatives
Select a few compatible directions. Too many options create confusion and shift the conversation from method to personal taste.
Visualise with care
Use images, previews and references as decision supports. Always present them as an aesthetic direction, not as an exact guarantee.
Close with a plan
Summarise choice, motivation, maintenance and technical steps. The plan must be clear for the client and useful for the team.
What to keep in mind before adopting a solution
- Always call simulation a preview.
- Explain what depends on the real hair base.
- Use the image to decide a direction, not to guarantee a perfect identity match.
The point isn't to add technology to look modern. The point is to make the work the salon already does more readable: diagnosis, taste, technical experience, sensitivity in communication. A digital solution works when it removes ambiguity and leaves more space for the relationship, not when it creates another screen to manage.
That's why every piece of content, every table and every chart has to end up inside a real conversation. If the team doesn't know how to use the output at the station, the software stays decorative. If instead the output becomes a sentence, a choice and a protocol, the consultation becomes a commercial asset.
From discourse to guided consultation
Saloria integrates simulation inside a wider flow: it doesn't just show an image, it connects preview, face analysis and technical protocol. It doesn't replace management software, doesn't promise realtime AR and doesn't turn simulation into certainty. It brings method to the moment when client and professional decide the look together.
Frequently asked questions
Is the simulation accurate?
It's a useful visual idea, not a photographic guarantee of the final result.
When is it most useful?
When the client is undecided between two directions of cut or colour.