By Helen Owens – Owner & Founder of Current AHIA QLD State Salon Business of the Year – Tigerlamb Salon
At Tigerlamb we say if there were Olympic medals for pushing through exhaustion, hairdressers would sweep the podium. Gold. Silver. Bronze. ‘Kyeah’! We got the grit!
We love the pace. The creativity. The buzz. But lately the industry feels… unsettled?
Stylists are still moving fast. Owners are questioning more. Clients are more fluid. Loyalty looks different. Everyone seems to be peering over the fence, wondering if somewhere else might feel lighter, freer, easier.
So let’s ask it properly.
Is the grass actually greener – or has someone just whacked a filter on it?
Because from where I sit, what we’re calling “burnout” often looks a lot like instability.
Hairdressing is emotional labour. We’re not just cutting hair. We’re absorbing breakups, career meltdowns, family dramas and the occasional MAFS-level existential crisis – usually before lunch. Add physical strain, full columns and Instagram-impossible expectations, and of course we’re tired.
But tired isn’t broken baby.
What I see more of right now isn’t collapse it’s restlessness.
Stylists open suite and garage businesses, then quietly return to teams. Others sprint toward independence chasing “freedom,” only to discover that freedom comes with bookkeeping, boundaries and business realities they didn’t factor in. Owners exit, then miss the connection and identity they didn’t realise were woven into who they are.
The grass always looks lush from a distance. No weeds. No dry patches. Just glossy highlight reels and perfectly angled reels.
But every patch of grass needs mowing.
Client behaviour has shifted too. The guests who once “couldn’t live without you” are now comfortable seeing anyone available. Movement is normal. Careers aren’t linear. Loyalty is earned daily, not assumed.
This isn’t necessarily bad.
It just means we need stronger roots.
From decades watching my teams over the span of 6 salons -and others in action- people don’t burn out from working hard.
They burn out from instability.
From unclear expectations.
From chaotic leadership.
From environments that feel emotionally noisy instead of commercially steady.
From constantly questioning whether they’re in the right place.
Chaos dressed up as freedom is still chaos.
And this is where the conversation around “wellbeing” needs to grow up.
Wellbeing isn’t a reward of an overseas trip for unproductive stylists .
It’s not forced bonding in the tree tops or Saturday nights on the bag and benders disguised as culture.
It’s not “bestie club” management.
Real wellbeing is structural.
It lives in the boring, repeatable things that don’t make for sexy social posts:
– Predictable rosters and proper breaks.
– Leaders who are calm instead of reactive.
– Clear targets. Clear pay structures. Clear consequences.
– A culture where someone can say “I’m not coping” – and be taught tools, not just handed sympathy.
– Mutual responsibility: leadership that listens and teaches, and team members who show up and do the job beautifully.
None of that is fluffy. All of it is commercial.
Because sustainable salons are built on emotional steadiness as much as technical skill.
At Tigerlamb, we don’t offer a lot of sparkly fluff. We offer process. We offer pathways. We offer growth that’s mapped, not mystical. Yes, there’s fun – but it sits on top of structure, not in place of it.
And here’s another take on restlessness and fed up ‘tiredness’
sometimes what looks like burnout is actually avoidance.
Avoidance of hard conversations.
Avoidance of financial discipline.
Avoidance of personal accountability.
It’s easier to chase a new postcode, a new salon, a new “vibe” than it is to stabilise where you are.
But movement without maturity just recreates the same problems with different décor. My pretty laser cut plywood branches and the sweeping display of awards aren’t going to solve anyone’s problems if avoiding structure is your go-to…
Yes, this industry is in motion. It always has been. Creative people test edges. They wonder what’s next. That’s healthy.
Permanent agitation isn’t.
So here’s the less glamorous, more powerful play:
Get personally strong.
Save money.
Set goals.
Choose environments that feel calm, not chaotic.
Stop blaming.
Stay in your lane – and support the people running alongside you.
..and stop waiting for-or giving-undeserving handouts.
We can care deeply about our clients and still have boundaries.
We can build happy profitable salons without grinding ourselves into dust.
We can evolve without constantly running.
But it takes clarity.
It takes systems.
It takes leadership that is kind and clear.
You are not a confetti cannon.
So before you sprint toward brighter grass, pause.
Check whether it’s genuinely greener…
or whether someone’s just turned up the saturation.



