New To Stripping NEED HELP
I just started stripping a week ago to take care of my college bills. I’m 19 and I wasn’t really much of a dancer before I started dancing. The club I work and auditioned at is very slow except on Fridays & even then there isn’t enough customers throwing money. I need to make at least 1,000$ by next Monday. I made 300$ so far combined. My first night I made 100$ in a very slow club. The second night was a Friday and I made near 150-200$ before tipout. I know there is ways to make more money because I see girls pulling in 1,200$ a night with no extras because we have no VIP room. I need some tips!
How should I approach customers?
how do I handle the aggressive customers that want or suggest extras?
What should I do if a customer is tipping too low?
Re: New To Stripping NEED HELP
With no VIP room, it sounds like the kind of club that’s more of a fast hustle. If very slow, stay with a customer five songs max before he needs to get a dance. If busy, 1-2 songs is good enough.
As for approaching customers, the most obvious ones are who is paying most attention to you when on stage and who is tipping you. If they approach you, feel free to strike up a casual conversation while dancing, and then asking them where he is sitting. And warmin him up to the fact you will be dancing for him later.
When walking around the room, prioritize those who are making eye contact with you, and yet aren’t *too* confident appearing (likely time wasters)
Since the club is a no-VIP one, it should be relatively easy on the extras suggestion. Just dodge the question and be all “hmm idk...lets make sure we vibe well”...and then sell a dance and be prepared to squirm around him and move hands if he gets grabby.
And of course, if you use the search bar on this site, there is a greater wealth of advice for you. Good luck
Re: New To Stripping NEED HELP
I would always leave the aggressive/grabby looking guys as a last resort, but if you have to, you can still dance for them, just ask for the money up front and then hold their hands so that they can't touch you. Always remember you are the one in control, never trust o the club staff to come and help you.
Re: New To Stripping NEED HELP
Quote:
Originally Posted by
brownforeign
I just started stripping a week ago to take care of my college bills. I’m 19 and I wasn’t really much of a dancer before I started dancing. The club I work and auditioned at is very slow except on Fridays & even then there isn’t enough customers throwing money. I need to make at least 1,000$ by next Monday. I made 300$ so far combined. My first night I made 100$ in a very slow club. The second night was a Friday and I made near 150-200$ before tipout. I know there is ways to make more money because I see girls pulling in 1,200$ a night with no extras because we have no VIP room. I need some tips!
How should I approach customers?
how do I handle the aggressive customers that want or suggest extras?
What should I do if a customer is tipping too low?
Hmmm....just because there isn’t a vip doesn’t mean that extras aren’t going on. I have worked in a clubs where girls are giving handjobs in the topless area. Maybe try finding a different club that has more options to up sell dances.
Re: New To Stripping NEED HELP
If a customer tips you badly after dances don't be scared to ask for more, always say something like "Oh, did you not have a good time? Most guys usually tip me $___ after dances" or something like that and they'll be like "oh no of course I had a good time" and pay up or if they resist or say something like "I don't have any more cash" remind them there's an ATM and that you'd really appreciate it if they tipped accordingly since you did such a great job. Remember that you're in control of every single situation and don't settle for less than what your time is worth. In a club without a VIP room, don't sell single dances unless you absolutely have to, try to sell packages of them or blocks of time (calculate the amount of songs makes up 15 mins, a half hour, an hour, etc in your head) because a cheap guy loves a good deal (or what sounds like one). Sometimes it's a big fish in a small pond kind of thing so don't lose hope when it's slow! Best of luck to you!