Student Starter Pack for Beauty & Aesthetics Practitioners (UK)
If you’re newly qualified (or close to qualifying) and wondering what to do next, this student starter pack for beauty & aesthetics practitioners gives you a clear, professional starting point.
It’s designed to help you set up properly, look credible online, and start taking enquiries with confidence — without overcomplicating things or getting stuck in tech.
What’s included in this student starter pack for beauty & aesthetics practitioners
This free pack includes three practical resources you can use immediately:
- Clinic-grade website checklist (1 page)
A simple checklist to help you spot what your website needs (or what you should build first if you don’t have a website yet). - Treatment page template (copy/paste headings)
A ready structure for any treatment page — so your pages answer the questions clients actually ask before booking. - “First 10 admin docs you’ll need” list
A starter list so you know what paperwork to create next (and what students often forget until a client asks).
Download the free student starter pack (UK)
How to use this pack (3 simple steps)
Step 1: Run the website checklist (5 minutes)
Use the checklist to review your current website (or your plan). Your aim is not “perfect design” — it’s clarity and trust.
Focus on:
- a clear headline that says what you do
- a simple Treatments structure
- an obvious call-to-action (enquire / book consultation)
Step 2: Build one strong treatment page
Use the treatment page template headings to create one “proper” treatment page for your most popular service.
Clients usually want to know:
- what it is (in plain English)
- downtime and recovery
- who it’s suitable for (and who it isn’t)
- how many sessions they may need
- price (even “from £X” is fine)
- aftercare basics
- what to do next (how to enquire/book)
One strong treatment page is better than ten vague ones.
Step 3: Start your admin documents list
Use the “first 10 admin docs” list to plan your next actions. The goal is to be able to handle enquiries professionally and consistently.
You don’t need everything on day one — but you do want the basics in place before you’re fully booked.
The first 10 admin documents newly qualified practitioners usually need
This list is intentionally practical (and not over-complicated). Depending on what you offer, you may need some variations, but this is a strong starting point:
- Client consultation form
- Consent form (treatment-specific)
- Contraindications checklist (treatment-specific)
- Aftercare sheet (treatment-specific)
- Patch test record (if relevant)
- Treatment record / notes sheet
- Photo consent form (if you take before/after photos)
- Cancellation / booking policy (simple)
- Privacy notice (website or printed)
- Complaints / incident note template (simple)
If you’re not sure what applies to your treatment, treat this as a planning checklist — and confirm requirements with your insurer/training guidance where relevant.
For independent tutors & training centres
You are welcome to share this student starter pack for beauty & aesthetics practitioners with your students as an optional resource.
This is shared for information only and does not imply endorsement.
If you’d like your training centre listed in the SkinTherapy.io directory, email: hello@skintherapy.io with:
- training centre name
- website link
- location
- qualifications offered
- contact email
Want a complete clinic-grade website structure?
If you’d rather start from a complete structure (not a blank theme), you can view the full website system here:
https://skintherapy.io
Helpful external reference
If you want a quick public reference point while studying skin typing, you can also review the overview of the Fitzpatrick skin type classification here: DermNet NZ – Skin prototype (Fitzpatrick skin type)