Guest Blog: Tattoo Coupons – No Big Deal

Posted by Guest Blogger on January 26th, 2012

Editor’s Note: Earlier we posted a guest blog from Joe Capobianco (Tattoo Coupons: Bad for Business). I encourage you to read both posts before firing off on anyone. I encourage you to read both posts before firing off  in the comments.

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The current Republican primary has unraveled into hyperbolic absurdity, and as an outsider (a non-Republican), it is an amusing disaster to watch. Each statement a candidate makes is taken by his rivals and twisted so far out of context that its original meaning is completely lost before being used against him in stump speeches and misquoted in ads on TV. Although unfair and dishonest, it is a brutal election process with very high stakes. It’s not hard to see how respectable politicians can become childish and petty so quickly.

When similar name-calling and shit-talking eats away at your own community, though, it is far from entertaining. Every time something new is unveiled in the tattoo industry, there’s a thousand over-the-top opinions and judgements unleashed immediately. While you can find honest debate over relevant industry issues (i.e. licensing, safety, and equipment), it tends to be drowned out by the alarmist babble concerning the more insignificant happenings that don’t have a real effect on anything–or anyone.

The newest non-issue incurring the wrath of those who need to be heard is the offering of coupons for tattoo work on group discount websites like Groupon. These sites are a little too “thrifty suburban housewife” for me, but I hardly believe that the partnering of these sites with tattoo shops is going to destroy the tattoo industry as we know it. In fact, other shops using coupons probably won’t have any impact on established custom tattoo shops with existing clientele.

Tattoo customers have various ways of finding the type of artist or shop that best suits their purposes. Some people want a tattoo of something simple ASAP, and a normal street shop works fine for them. On the other side of the spectrum, a serious tattoo collector will want a specific artist’s work, and are willing to wait a year or more to get an appointment.

Between these two sides fall the rest of the tattoo shops, which range widely in quality, price, cleanliness and experience. In order to differentiate themselves from each other, shops use whatever marketing techniques are available to them. For the shops that don’t offer especially unique skills or styles that are competing with many other shops for the mid-grade type of customer (who might not know much about the tattoo industry) but does want a clean, friendly environment, coupons seem like an effective strategy.

The clients that search out specific artists and styles are looking for a higher quality of tattooing. They aren’t shopping based on price, they are educated about the tattoo industry and know what they are looking for. They often get larger pieces, have to travel to their artist and sometimes wait months (or longer) for appointments. None of these clients would be swayed by the coupons offered by local, unremarkable shops.

Mitt Romney never slammed Jon Huntsman or Rick Perry (even when they were twisting his words about wanting choices in his health care plan by repeating his “I like to fire people…” quote)… because he didn’t have to. The Perry campaign spent their time turning that unfairly edited quote into a ringtone for download on his website (and they did), but it wasn’t going to change the minds of Romney’s supporters. They knew the truth, and they also knew that neither Perry or Huntsman were a threat. They’ve both since dropped out of the race, after all. Mitt Romney has focused on running the best campaign he can, with little thought to the desperate moves taken by harmless opponents.

Tattooing will never be an industry without gritty parts and undesirable qualities. It certainly wasn’t founded on high principles of artistic merit, but has come a long way in a short amount of time. The best approach to having a more educated public is to promote the highest caliber of artists and shops through avenues such as TattooSnob and Tattoo Now, and to encourage all the positive efforts being made in the industry. This will more effectively contribute to the betterment of the tattoo community than the very public and negative infighting, especially concerning issues that have no real bearing on established artists.

 

 

–Guest blog by Shawn Hebrank

**** We’re looking for quality guest blogs from tattooers & enthusiasts–shoot us an email.

Other posts on TattooSnob you may enjoy:

  1. Guest Blog: Tattoo Coupons – Bad For Business

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  • Mary

    At Off the Map Tattoo we don’t offer “coupons” per say but we do offer promotions as well as send clients gift certificates from time to time. One of our popular promos is having people proudly post an Off the Map bumper sticker on their car, and we thank them with a $25 gift certificate. It supports our business, keeps clients involved in the tattoo community, and helps them pay for their tattoos.

    We also send out $25 gift certificates to our clients on their birthday. Why? Because it makes them feel super special, it makes us stand out and lets them know we care about them and thank them for their support. 

    We get plenty of people that come in and say “Joe Schmoe says they’ll do it for $30,” and personally those are some of my favorite clients because it gives us a chance to educate them. My response is generally somewhere along the lines of “we won’t do it cheaper, but we’ll be able to do it better” and I explain to them WHY. If people still walk out because our shop minimum is $100 becayse they can get 2 for 1 somewhere else, well then I suppose “whatever” is the most eloquent response I can muster.

    While price shoppers can be frustrating, I also think tattoo studios and tattooers should, without criticism, be able to find creative ways to help clients with cost. For better or worse, now is a time where, more than ever, the price tag is a huge deciding factor in many large life decisions, including tattoos, and I think the industry addressing clients needs in a constructive way, is nothing but a good thing.

  • Uncle Jesse

    Well said!!!

  • Petelarkin Tattoos

    It almost seems as though we are at a point in tattooing that the vast majority of tattooers almost feel as though the industry would be better off without clients. Every where you turn you see artist putting eachother down for extending a hand to the most prized possession in our industry….the people that are willing to give us their hard earned money to put permanent art on them. The customer is not always right when it cokes to tattooing, but we need to help these people understand more about why they are not, and sometimes that may mean offering them a price break to get in the door to show them what good tattooing is.

  • Petelarkin Tattoos

    Sorry for the typos, on a cellphone

  • Mary

    I think you make a great point Peter. Its so sad to me that so many tattooers spent, or waste I should say, their time on complaining about discounts, copycats, uneducated clients, etc. I agree with you completely thats is sad that so many people knock down what keeps the whole industry going.