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As a stylist, you quickly learn that once you leave cosmetology school, the real experience begins. While you learn much of the function, and the foundation of your career here, what sets you apart is often learned with everyday experiences and the knotty gritty details of day to day life at the salon. While many stylists quickly transition from school to the floor, it has become commonplace to further your education and strengthen your skillset through an assistant or apprenticeship position. This not only gives you the chance to earn a consistent income while building your book, but it allows you to learn techniques and insider secrets from some of the very best. 

To say the least, completing an apprenticeship in hairdressing can change your life and open up a world of opportunities. To give you a bit of insight into what this involves and the best way to go about it, TONI&GUY Head of Education and International Artistic Director, Cos Sakkas is lending his top 6 tricks to the process. He believes, like any job that you get out what you put in and the more you throw yourself into it, the more content you will be. 

“No one says being an apprentice is easy, but follow some simple rules and you will gain so much more than someone who does the bare minimum. If you mope around, don’t practice and take off sick days you’ll fall behind and not enjoy it. Ask questions, practice as much as you can and immerse yourself in meetings and shoots and you will have a career that you will love every day. “These few informative years will lay the foundations to an amazing career. So don’t give up, don’t be despondent and remember, the long days won’t last forever!” 

Cos’s Rulebook for Apprentices


1. It’s not reality TV

Becoming a success takes hard work and dedication. We’re not living in a reality TV world where everything is done for you and fame is instant. You have to prove you are the best and spend time learning the craft.
 

2. Practice, practice, practice  

Nothing worth having comes easy and the same applies to your training. If you think you can do something, do it again and again. It takes years to hone your skills and repeating a technique over and over is the only way to do it well.
 

3. Speak up

If you have a question or want to do something, make sure you say. Your boss isn’t a mind reader and if there’s a skill you want to learn, or need help with something, make sure they know. If you are quiet and look disinterested you’ll be overlooked for members of the team that are more enthusiastic.
 

4. Stay out of the staffroom

Breaks and lunch aside, don’t go into the staffroom. Ever. If you’ve finished washing hair, or tidying up, stay on the salon floor and watch what the stylists are doing. How they talk to clients, how they section the hair or where they place the pins, you will learn a lot by watching hairdressers at work. And if you see someone is busy, offer to help.
 

5. Dress to impress

They say dress for the job you want, not the job you’re in, so make sure you always look good. That doesn’t mean spending all your money on designer clothes, but make sure you look clean and smart, clothes are ironed and shoes aren’t scuffed. Do your hair and make-up every day; wearing different hairstyles is a great talking point with clients and will show the rest of the team what you can do.
 

6. Find a mentor

Find someone you respect and will spend time with you as someone did for them. We have all had someone in our careers who advised and guided us, try and find someone to do that for you.