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MARKET SIZE

HAIR SALONS
Neue Antwort am 8. Nov. 2019
2 Antworten
1,5 T. Views
Liat fragte am 7. Nov. 2019

HOW CAN I FIGURE OUT THE MARKET SIZE OF HAIR SALONS IN NEW YORK, THEIR OPENING HOURS, AND AMOUNT OF TASK FORCE WORKING AT THESE LOCATIONS?

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Beste Antwort
Antonello
Experte
Content Creator
antwortete am 7. Nov. 2019
McKinsey | NASA | top 10 FT MBA professor for consulting interviews | 6+ years of coaching

Hi Liat,
I would approach with the following structure:

1. Market size. Estimate:

  • People in NY
  • Clusters of people based on frequency (think about gender, age, events during the year like holidays and weddings)
  • Frequency and mean treatment price per cluster

-> you can calculate the market size (if the interviewer means a distinction between hair saloon and little barbershop, take only a % of the total number).

2. Amount of hairdressers. Estimate:

  • No. of people per each salon (you can think about a mean value or identify clusters by dimensions)
  • Hour per shift, no. of shifts
  • Occupancy

-> Starting by the total no. of hours calculated in problem 1. you get the amount of hairstylist needed.

Does it make sense?

For a deep dive on market sizing resolutions feel free to write me.

Best,
Antonello

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Liat am 10. Nov. 2019

What do you feel about using the app 'yelp' as reference?

Antonello am 10. Nov. 2019

Hi Liat, do you mean in order to know the real numbers? You should try to estimate those numbers based on your experience and common sense and only at the end of the case check if your estimations make sense.

Kay
Experte
antwortete am 8. Nov. 2019
McKinsey Junior Associate

Hi Liat,

There are many ways to do this, but I would do it top-down.

Start with working out how many people get their hair cut in a specific amount of time, and make an assumption about % utility of hair stylists.

i.e. Number of people in New York * number of times they get their hair cut per year * duration of a haircut = number of hours hair stylists spend actively working, which you can multipy by average price for the market size.

To work out opening hours and number of task force working, you can make an assumption on utility - I'd say 80% based on personal experience. You can divide the product from above by 0.80 to get total hours stylists work, and make an assumption also on admin (e.g. one full time per 4 stylists, or something similar). Assuming all staff work full time at 35 hours weeks, you can work that out by dividing the total product by 35.

Finally, you already have the total number of hours worked by all staff so can work out opening hours from there.

You can make it more nuanced by making assumptions about how many people have their hair done at salons vs. at home/by a friend, and you can also segment by, say, males and females (as this would impact both price of haircuts and frequency).

Best,

Kay

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