10 questions to ask before you switch platforms.
We tried five platforms before we built our own, and every painful surprise traced back to a question we didn’t know to ask. Here’s the list, so you don’t learn them the expensive way.
Switching platforms is one of the highest-stakes decisions a shop makes, and most owners evaluate it on the demo — the pretty calendar, the smooth booking flow. The demo is never where the pain lives. The pain lives in the fine print and the day-to-day.
These are the ten questions we wish someone had handed us. Ask every one before you sign anything.
Money
- 1. When do I actually get paid? “Fast payouts” means nothing without a timeline. Ask for the real deposit schedule and what qualifies for same-day.
- 2. What’s the all-in processing rate — with every fee? Get card-present and card-not-present rates, plus PCI, setup, monthly, and per-seat fees. The headline rate is rarely the real one.
- 3. Are there per-message or per-feature charges? SMS confirmations, reminders, marketing texts — some platforms nickel-and-dime every one. Ask what’s included vs. metered.
Lock-in
- 4. Can I export my data — all of it — and in what format? Clients, history, notes, financials. If the answer is vague, assume you can’t, and that your business is now hostage.
- 5. Is there a contract, and what does leaving cost? Term length, early-termination fees, what happens to your data the day you cancel.
- 6. Who owns the client relationship? Some platforms insert themselves between you and your customer. Make sure your clients are yours.
If a vendor gets uncomfortable when you ask how to leave, you’ve learned the most important thing about staying.
The day-to-day
- 7. Does it handle my compensation model — exactly? Commission, booth rent, hourly, hybrid, tip pools. If it only does one cleanly, you’ll be back in a spreadsheet by month two.
- 8. What happens on my busiest day? Walk-ins, overflow, a live queue. A tool that only handles neat appointments falls apart exactly when it matters most.
- 9. Can I trust one number across the whole business? If booking, payments, payouts, and reporting live in separate systems, you’ll spend Sundays reconciling and still not trust Monday’s number.
The people
- 10. Who’s building this — and do they understand a shop? Software built by people who’ve never run a chair solves imaginary problems and misses real ones. Ask who’s behind it.
Run a prospective platform through all ten and the right choice gets obvious fast. The demo shows you the best day. These questions show you the worst one — and the worst day is what you’re actually buying insurance against.