The academy is a business. Most salons run it like a notebook.
Plenty of salons run training alongside the floor — it brings in fees, it builds the brand, and it produces the staff you will hire next year. Yet the academy is almost always managed in a register: names in a book, fees in a drawer, and a vague sense at the end of term that some people never quite paid.
The TressyPOS Academy module puts trainees and course fees inside the same system as the rest of your business — with the same books behind them.
Trainees, courses and fees
- Trainee records — who is enrolled, in what, since when
- Course fees — what is charged, what has been paid, what is outstanding
- Course-fee running balance — the live figure of what is still owed, per trainee
- Daily visibility — outstanding fees appear on the General Report every morning
Why the running balance is the whole point
Unpaid course fees are collectable in week three and almost uncollectable in month four. The trainee is still in front of you in week three. By the time the term ends and you finally add up the register, the relationship — and the leverage — is gone.
A running balance on your daily report changes the timing of the conversation, which is the only thing that actually determines whether the money arrives. This is not a reporting feature. It is a cash-collection feature wearing a reporting costume.
Academy income in your real books
Course fees post through the same double-entry accounting engine as salon revenue:
| Question | Where it is answered |
|---|---|
| Is the academy actually profitable? | Profit & Loss, with academy revenue and cost in their own accounts |
| Who still owes fees, and for how long? | AR Aging, bucketed by age |
| What is outstanding right now? | Course-fee running balance on the General Report |
| What did this trainee pay, and when? | Their bank-statement style ledger, line by line |
Because you control your own Chart of Accounts, you can give the academy its own revenue and expense accounts — and finally answer whether it makes money on its own, or is being quietly subsidised by the salon floor.
One system, one team, one set of books
Trainees become staff. Staff go onto the roster and payroll. Fees become revenue. Outstanding fees become receivables. Running the academy in a separate notebook breaks every one of those links — and each break is somewhere money leaks out.