I sold my seven-figure salon after ten years of building it from the ground up. On paper, it was a success; strong revenue, loyal clientele, an established team, industry recognition, and a profitable exit. What I wasn’t prepared for was what the sale revealed about my leadership model.
In our industry, we talk constantly about scaling, growth, and profitability. What we don’t talk about enough is sustainability. Not just financial sustainability, but operational and personal sustainability. Looking back, my burnout didn’t begin when I decided to sell. It began years earlier, when I built a business that functioned profitably, but still depended heavily on me.
The Hidden Cost
There is a hidden cost to being indispensable. Similar to many salon owners, I wore every hat in my business. Even with a team in place, I remained the cultural anchor, the final decision-maker, the problem solver, and the emotional regulator for both clients and my team. I hired, trained, coached, marketed, merchandised, and played bookkeeper. I led meetings and mediated conflicts. I nurtured client relationships, built systems, and monitored performance metrics. The business was systemized, but it was not fully transferable.
There’s a difference.
A business can run day to day without you physically present and still be structurally dependent on your leadership identity. I learned that the hard way.
When my first buyer backed out during the COVID shutdown, I hired a manager and stepped back geographically. That’s when the cracks surfaced, the vision drifted, standards softened, and communication shifted. The systems existed, but the leadership bench was not as strong as I believed. That experience forced me to confront a difficult truth: I had built a profitable operation, yet I had not built true succession readiness.
Burnout Before the Exit
By the time I completed the sale two years later, I had already mentally and emotionally stepped away. Burnout had been building long before the transaction. From the outside, the business looked healthy. Revenue was solid, the team was stable, we had won awards and expanded our reputation. Internally, I was exhausted.
When leadership becomes synonymous with over-functioning, even profitable growth can become taxing on the owner. I was still carrying too much emotional labor and operational oversight. I had built the efficient systems, but had not fostered enough distributed ownership within the team. Selling felt like the logical solution. But, selling does not automatically resolve structural burnout. It simply transfers ownership.
Reality Check
Prior to the sale, I did not consider the financial reality of post-sale life. I underestimated the financial runway. Yes, I sold at a profit. But I did not fully model what my next chapter would cost, both emotionally or financially. I moved onto new ventures too quickly and made decisions from a place of urgency. I had been so productive for so many years, I could not imagine a life without ownership.
If I could advise any owner considering an exit, I would say this: Build a post-sale plan with the same rigor you built your growth plan. Understand your true monthly living expenses. Account for taxes and reinvestment losses. Create a timeline for how long your capital must sustain you.
Avoid making major business decisions while emotionally dysregulated from the sale. Exits are transitions, not vacations.
What I Would Build Differently
Hindsight is always 20/20. While I do not regret selling my salon, I often think about what I would do differently if I did it all over again. These are the practical insights I’d share with a leader considering a sale:
Develop at least one leader who can carry culture and decision-making authority without defaulting back to you.
Ensure your systems are documented, measurable, and built to outlast any one individual.
Know your cost per hour, productivity percentages, retention rates, and true profit margins. Keep strict financial reports. Buyers look for stability and profitability more than personality.
Lastly, and this may be the most overlooked piece; If your entire sense of worth is tied to being “the owner,” the psychological transition will be harder than the transaction itself.
Redefining Success
Post-sale, I was forced to redefine success. With a loss of identity, I had to explore what next steps felt grounded and impactful for me. Today, I work as a leadership consultant in the salon and spa industry, helping owners build system-supported businesses that do not require self-sacrifice to succeed. Now, I can confidently say selling my salon was not a mistake. It was a milestone. But it exposed the difference between profitability and sustainability. A salon can generate strong revenue and still deplete the spirit of its owner.
If we want more healthy exits in this industry and fewer exhausted founders, we need to normalize conversations around leadership structure, emotional labor, and succession planning long before a sale is on the table. We need to stop wearing stress and exhaustion like badges of honor.
Growth is impressive. Profitability is measurable. But, building a business that can operate, scale, thrive, and transfer without consuming its owner? That is true leadership.