Hi,
I have only posted once before, to introduce myself, but I often read the boards- what a mine of information.....
I am studying ITEC holistic massage, then hoping to do indian head, aromatherapy and nutrition- I love it!
I was reading a post a few weeks ago about licenses and someone reckoned you only needed one in London. However, I had a visit from Enviromental health (I have a catering business) and I was asking them about the regulations for massage. I rang up and I do need a license as I live in Nottingham city boundary. The cost is ยฃ438 per year. This seems excessive and it also seems I will be paying to have vice squad, health and safety and enviromental health check me out to prove I am not running a brothel! I was wondering if there was a way round it, as apparently you don't need a license to practice aromatherapy, reflexolgy etc. Any thoughts much appreciated.
Also, I have been thinking about colour schemes- are greens and blues the best colours for walls and floors in a massage room? The furniture etc is mostly old pine/ wicker and towels etc. cream. We probably cover this stuff later on in the course, but I'm so excited I can't help planning. I am converting one of our garages into a therapy room and there is a lot to think about- not least applying for planning permission and making it quiet and warm and cosy enough.
As I said, I already have a catering business and I would like to eventually split my week so that I do a few days catering and a few days massage etc. This means I won't be using the room all the time and I was thinking of finding another therapist to share it with me that offered different treatments. I have no idea whether I should be charging them rent or asking for a cut of their fee, is there a formula for working this out? I don't want to make pots of money out of someone else- just cover my overheads while the room is unused.
Thanks for reading and any advice would be much appreciated!
Phae
I have only posted once before, to introduce myself, but I often read the boards- what a mine of information.....
I am studying ITEC holistic massage, then hoping to do indian head, aromatherapy and nutrition- I love it!
I was reading a post a few weeks ago about licenses and someone reckoned you only needed one in London. However, I had a visit from Enviromental health (I have a catering business) and I was asking them about the regulations for massage. I rang up and I do need a license as I live in Nottingham city boundary. The cost is ยฃ438 per year. This seems excessive and it also seems I will be paying to have vice squad, health and safety and enviromental health check me out to prove I am not running a brothel! I was wondering if there was a way round it, as apparently you don't need a license to practice aromatherapy, reflexolgy etc. Any thoughts much appreciated.
Also, I have been thinking about colour schemes- are greens and blues the best colours for walls and floors in a massage room? The furniture etc is mostly old pine/ wicker and towels etc. cream. We probably cover this stuff later on in the course, but I'm so excited I can't help planning. I am converting one of our garages into a therapy room and there is a lot to think about- not least applying for planning permission and making it quiet and warm and cosy enough.
As I said, I already have a catering business and I would like to eventually split my week so that I do a few days catering and a few days massage etc. This means I won't be using the room all the time and I was thinking of finding another therapist to share it with me that offered different treatments. I have no idea whether I should be charging them rent or asking for a cut of their fee, is there a formula for working this out? I don't want to make pots of money out of someone else- just cover my overheads while the room is unused.
Thanks for reading and any advice would be much appreciated!
Phae