The Silent Crisis in India’s Salon Industry: Qurat Syed Deshmukh on Burnout, Attrition & the Talent Drain Nobody Talks About

India’s salon industry looks glamorous from the outside — polished mirrors, trending reels, celebrity clients, and endless transformations. But behind the blow-dries and brand collaborations lies a crisis that most industry leaders avoid talking about.

According to Qurat Syed Deshmukh, Co-Founder of Lemon Salon, the biggest challenge facing salons today isn’t competition or marketing — it’s people.

“We are losing skilled professionals not because they lack passion, but because the system exhausts them,” she says.

The Burnout Nobody Wants to Admit

High stylist attrition has quietly become normalised across India’s premium salons. Long working hours, physically demanding schedules, emotional labour with clients, and constant performance pressure are often brushed aside in the name of hustle and growth.

“Stylists are expected to perform like artists, salespeople, therapists, and content creators — all at once,” Qurat explains. “But very few salons ask how sustainable that expectation really is.”

Burnout, she believes, doesn’t show up overnight. It starts with skipped breaks, ignored health concerns, and the unspoken rule that saying ‘I’m tired’ is seen as weakness.

Why Good Pay Isn’t Enough Anymore

One of the industry’s biggest misconceptions is that salary alone can solve retention. Qurat disagrees.

“We’ve seen talented professionals walk away even when compensation is competitive. That’s when you realise money can’t fix a broken work culture.”

According to her, many salons confuse motivation with pressure — setting aggressive targets without offering emotional support, growth clarity, or humane schedules. Over time, even passionate stylists begin to detach, leading to low loyalty and eventual exit from the industry altogether.

The Emotional Cost of Glamour

What rarely gets discussed is the emotional fatigue stylists carry. Managing demanding clients, meeting visual expectations, handling rejection, and staying upbeat every day takes a toll.

“Stylists absorb a lot of energy — stress, insecurity, urgency — but they’re rarely taught how to protect their own mental health,” Qurat notes. “When salons ignore this, burnout becomes inevitable.”

This silent emotional drain is one of the main reasons skilled professionals either shift careers or move abroad in search of healthier work environments.

Rethinking Work Culture from the Inside

At Lemon Salon, this reality prompted an internal reset. Instead of pushing for faster growth, the focus shifted to sustainable systems — clearer role definitions, structured breaks, better team communication, and leadership that listens.

“We started asking different questions,” Qurat says.

“How long can someone realistically perform at their best?

What does growth look like without exhaustion?

How do we build careers, not just jobs?”

The goal wasn’t perfection, but progress — creating an environment where stylists feel seen, valued, and supported beyond just their output.

The Future Belongs to People-First Salons

Qurat believes the next phase of India’s salon industry will separate brands that merely scale from those that last.

“Salons that ignore burnout will continue to struggle with attrition. The ones that prioritise people will build loyalty — from both teams and clients.”

The future, she says, isn’t about working harder, but working humaner. It’s about recognising that a healthy salon culture isn’t a luxury — it’s a business necessity.

As conversations around mental health and workplace sustainability grow louder across industries, the salon world can no longer afford to stay silent.

“The real transformation,” Qurat adds, “begins behind the scenes — not on Instagram.”

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