BusinessHealthy glow for Scots tanning salon chain after record results

Healthy glow for Scots tanning salon chain after record results

TANNING salon chain Indigo Sun has reported its best ever results, recording a turnover of more than £26m and almost £5.6m profit in its latest financial year.

The family-owned Scottish business has seen both turnover and profits double on the previous financial period, when performance was hampered by months of Covid lockdowns.

However, owners of the firm, which is headquartered in Stirling, say the impressive figures far outstrip performance even in pre-Covid years, giving the business a platform for an ambitious period of expansion.

Frank Taylor, Founder and CEO of Indigo Sun.
Frank Taylor, 72, is the founder and CEO of Indigo Sun.

Frank Taylor, 72, the founder and CEO of Indigo Sun, said: “In 2022 we saw full freedom from Covid closures.

“As the economy reopened, our customers were determined to get back to normal and to go on holiday with great enthusiasm.

“That was a clear signal for our customers to return to our salons. They did so in such numbers that during peak periods in 2022 we were serving 140,000 people a week.

“While those lockdown months were extremely tough, we used that time to look ahead. We set out plans to expand by 10 salons a year once business resumed.”

As well as opening new salons, the group has also embarked on a refitting and refurbishment programme.

Between February 2020 and September 2022, Indigo Sun opened 14 new salons and refurbished another 10, with each refit costing an average £350,000.

It means the firm now operates almost 100 tanning venues across the UK, employing 817 people.

Frank, who runs the business with wife Sadie and their son Ewan, says a critical element of the ongoing success is the ability to identify the best locations.

Now established as the biggest tanning chain in the UK, Indigo Sun has also positioned itself as a sought-after tenant for commercial landlords and property managers operating retail outlets on major arterial routes inside towns and cities.

Typically, those are anchored by smaller supermarkets operated by the likes of Aldi, Tesco, Asda or M&S, with other outlets on the site including popular coffee shops such as Costa, pharmacies like Boots and popular fast-food outlets, such as KFC or Greggs.

With its younger customer base and large footfall the chain is now a target for such developments, which are within town or city limits, but sit outside of traditional town centres.

He added: “We have found the perfect niche for our salons. These locations are very much about convenience.

“Customers drive in and can see the full retail offering in front of them, be it a supermarket, a coffee shop or a pharmacy.

“They may spend as little as 30 minutes in these retail centres – including a sunbed session – and then head on their way. That is perfect for what they need and want.”

Currently stretching from Inverness to London, the group’s continued expansion will see it focus on towns or population centres with around 100,000 people.

In bigger cities, it will look to create clusters of salons, for more streamlined management.

Serial entrepreneur Frank set up the business after running a successful chain of video rental stores.

Early on he spotted the threat posed by DVDs and online streaming, so exited the business and transformed his shops into tanning salons instead, the first being launched in Stirling in 1993.

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