The scale story doesn't start at zero. It starts at 120 five-star reviews, 1,000+ bookings, and seven live courses generating $220–$400 per seat. That equity is the foundation the boutique is built on.
Selected work — from your StyleSeat portfolio
A full-service beauty boutique in Long Island where 10–15 independent artists rent their own booth, and where your MUA Academy lives in the same building — training the next generation who then fill your open booths.
Multi-service floor: hair, nails, skin, brows & lashes, and your makeup station as the anchor. Each service has its own dedicated professional renting their booth from you.
Your seven existing courses — beginner through advanced pro-MUA — taught in a dedicated training bay inside the same building. Every graduating student is a candidate for a future booth.
Sola Salons and Phenix rent cubicles. Nobody in that model recruits their own tenants from a paid academy running inside the same walls. That's the difference.
Every dollar the building earns comes from one of three streams. They stack.
Your existing client list transfers on day one. Your top services stay the same — Natural Glam, Full Face, Drama Queen, Photo Shoots & Events.
10–15 booth renters at $850–$1,100/month each. Residual income that runs whether you're behind your chair or not.
Course cohorts sold in advance. Beginners at $220–$300. Advanced Pro at $360. Sip & Paint groups at $400 per event.
Nobody buys a piece of your business. You don't sign for a loan. Every dollar coming in is money that a customer or an artist already owed you — you're just collecting it a little earlier than usual.
Ten artists pay you first month's rent and a security deposit up front. This is the exact same money each of them would owe you the day the doors open. You're just taking it in before you sign the lease instead of after. That puts $17,000 to $44,000 in your bank account before you commit to anything. It's your money and it stays your money as long as those artists show up and use their booths.
Twenty students pay a deposit for the first two academy classes. Around $300 each, that's another ~$6,000 in the bank. And it proves your classes will fill.
A waitlist of clients ready to book on day one. No money changes hands here — just names, emails, and phone numbers of people around Long Island who want an appointment the moment you're open. This is what you hand the landlord to prove the demand is real.
Building out a 3,000 sq ft salon — shampoo sinks, nail stations, walls, floors, lighting — usually costs somewhere between $60,000 and $180,000. Most people think they have to pay for that themselves. They don't.
When you sign a multi-year commercial lease, the landlord gives you a construction budget. It's just how commercial real estate works. The landlord wants a tenant who will stay for years, so he fronts the money for the buildout and gets it back gradually through your rent. On Long Island, that budget usually runs $20 to $60 per square foot — on 3,000 sq ft, that's the full $60K–$180K of construction the landlord funds.
The reason a landlord agrees to front that money for you is that you're walking in the door with ten signed booth-rental agreements already in hand. That makes you a proven, low-risk tenant. Landlords love that.
Nobody owns a piece of Pure Glamour but you.
No investors. No bank loans. Every dollar coming in is either rent from an artist, tuition from a student, or a paying client of your own. That's it.
The offer we make to the first ten artists. Structured so the deposit is a real reservation, not a leap of faith.
A one-time offer. When these ten booths are taken, the deal closes and the next ten pay standard rate.
The landing page isn't marketing. It's a collateral document. It runs before any lease is signed. Traffic count, deposits, and waitlist size are what we hand the landlord and the bank.
Nothing here is complicated. It's just the boxes New York State wants checked before you open the doors. Handle these before you sign a lease and you never have a problem.
This is a working draft. Nothing on this page is committed. Read it, mark it up, tell Dad what to change. When you're happy with the plan, we build the real one.