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	<title>Debbie Nazelrod &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Debbie Nazelrod &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Debbie Nazelrod Builds a Spa Empire</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/debbie-nazelrod-builds-a-spa-empire/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jan 2014 14:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amanda Jeffries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[beauty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Debbie Nazelrod]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[people]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salons & Spas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spa in the Valley]]></category>
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			<p>When Debbie Nazelrod opened Spa in the Valley in 2005, she thought it<br />
 was perfect—but there was one minor flaw. “I remember a client saying,<br />
‘You built such a beautiful space, but I’m very disappointed with your<br />
bathroom,’” Nazelrod recalls. “And I’m thinking, ‘I just built a salon<br />
so nice that this could be my home,’ but I also knew she was right.”<br />
This feedback led Nazelrod to go all out in the bathrooms at her latest<br />
venture, Spa on the Boulevard. “I take everything a client has to say<br />
seriously,” she says. “Whether it’s positive or negative.”</p>
<p>Nazelrod<br />
 has always exhibited this perfectionism in customer service from as far<br />
 back as 24 years ago when she opened her modest first salon on South<br />
Charles Street to this past year when she started her new venture, Spa<br />
on the Boulevard. Opened a year ago this month and located in Abingdon’s<br />
 bustling Boulevard at Box Hill shopping center, the French-chateau<br />
inspired space is the most recent addition to an ever-expanding<br />
salon-spa beauty empire that includes the Moroccan-themed Spa on the<br />
Avenue in White Marsh and Hunt Valley’s Spa in the Valley with its<br />
Tuscan touches.</p>
<p>“We started with 800 square feet,”<br />
says Nazelrod, 56, who owned and operated several salons prior to her<br />
line Salon By Debbie, “and worked our way up to 11,500 square feet at<br />
this location. I’ve never really been afraid of opening new locations.<br />
All told, we’ve built 27,873  square feet through the years. But we have<br />
 always built from something small and then gone to the next location<br />
and the next.”</p>
<p>Salons and spas come and go—and many last as long as a manicure, with cutthroat competition and more firings than an episode of <em>The Apprentice</em>.<br />
 But with a staff of 275—including Nazelrod’s devoted daughter who<br />
suffers from a hair-loss disease and has a unique understanding of<br />
guests’ needs—the salons are not only surviving, but thriving. Last<br />
year’s revenues alone (not including the Boulevard, which had yet to<br />
open) were close to $7 million.</p>
<p>“I’ve seen the dream<br />
evolve,” says one of Nazelrod’s longest-running customers, Susan Wiley<br />
who has been with her since the start. “When she was working downtown,<br />
I’d drive all the way from where I live in Baldwin. I’d tell her, ‘Get<br />
out of the city and come to the county.’ I’d say, ‘Trust me. You’ll have<br />
 customers. If you build it, we will come.’”</p>
<p>And they<br />
 have. With all locations open seven days a week—many salons<br />
traditionally take Monday off—Nazelrod’s client base includes some<br />
170,000 customers who flock for soothing stone massages, oatmeal and<br />
licorice body treatments, balayage hair highlights, Brazilian bikini<br />
waxings, lash extensions, and Ayurvedic facials. The spaces themselves<br />
are immaculate and inspired (by trips to spas in Sonoma County, CA;<br />
South Beach, FL; Florence, Italy; and other destinations), and services<br />
such as a signature nearly two-hour Ultimate Facial (entailing<br />
everything from extraction to a total body massage) are unique and keep<br />
the appointment books brimming.  </p>
<p>“I started coming<br />
for facials and waxing,” says Wiley. “Now, they take care of this whole<br />
61-year-old deal. I would never think of going anywhere else. A lot of<br />
people put lip service to customer service and innovation, but Debbie<br />
actually makes it happen. Debbie is a perfectionist who anticipates what<br />
 you need before you know you need it, and she has always been very good<br />
 at figuring out what is trending.” </p>
<p>The accolades<br />
keep coming. Nazelrod has practically papered her walls with awards,<br />
including America’s “200 Fastest-Growing Salons” by <em>Salon Today</em>, one of Baltimore’s Largest Women-Owned Businesses by the <em>Baltimore Business Journal, </em>and Top Female CEO by <em>SmartCEO </em>(not to mention numerous “Top Salons” nods from this magazine).</p>
<p>How<br />
 Debbie has done it boils down to a combination of pluck, passion, and<br />
purpose. Sitting in the garden room—a relaxation area at the Spa on the<br />
Boulevard with peach-colored walls, palm plants, and soft music—Nazelrod<br />
 seems to marvel at how she built a business from a single salon to<br />
become a major player on the salon-spa scene. </p>
<p>“[My<br />
husband] Rick and I both grew up in tiny row homes in Loch Raven<br />
Village,” explains Nazelrod. “I come from a family of four children, and<br />
 Rick came from a family of five. My father was a firefighter and worked<br />
 his way up to lieutenant with Baltimore City. My mother was a<br />
seamstress in a sweatshop.” </p>
<p>For Rick’s part, his<br />
father worked for a Baltimore printing company as a bookbinder and his<br />
mother worked part-time at Read’s drug store in Towson. Both grew up<br />
understanding the value of hard work, though entrepreneurship was not on<br />
 the radar. </p>
<p>“We were both from blue-collar families,” says<br />
 Rick, who has known Nazelrod since she was nine and the best friend of<br />
his younger sister. (They didn’t date until many years later, after they<br />
 both found themselves divorced.) “You work until a certain hour, and<br />
you come home to eat dinner with your family—that kind of thing. If we<br />
had tried to plan all of this as our life’s dream, it never would have<br />
worked.” </p>
<p>While still in high school, Nazelrod, who always<br />
loved playing with makeup, went to work for About Faces. “I worked<br />
part-time as a receptionist for [then owner] Gloria Brennan,” explains<br />
Nazelrod. “I felt at home there right away.” But when it came time to<br />
pick a profession, Nazelrod felt limited in her options. “Since I had<br />
come from a blue-collar family I thought that all I could do was be a<br />
secretary, a nurse, or a teacher.” </p>
<p>But it was Gloria’s<br />
then-husband Patrick Brennan who helped expand her horizons, encouraging<br />
 Nazelrod to learn the beauty trade and then work for him on the floor.<br />
By 1980, she became an aesthetician and continued to work at About Faces<br />
 in Pikesville for 13 years, where she built a client base thanks to her<br />
 sunny personality and commitment to hard work.</p>
<p>Patrick says<br />
 he’s not surprised by his former employee’s success. “She was always<br />
committed and competent,” he recalls. “She had good customer-service<br />
skills as well as being client oriented and good technically—Debbie is <em>very</em> good at what she does.” (Though there are no hard feelings, About Faces is now a direct competitor.)</p>
<p>A<br />
 large part of Nazelrod’s success is also due to the fact that she has<br />
surrounded herself with members of her own, extremely close-knit<br />
family—all of whom are involved in aspects of the business. Her<br />
27-year-old daughter Amanda Jeffries is the general manager at the<br />
Boulevard and Nazelrod is currently grooming her, so to speak, to take<br />
over the business in the years to come. Amanda has also been<br />
instrumental in helping to forge ahead with plans for a dedicated<br />
hair-loss area installed at Spa on the Boulevard for those who suffer<br />
from thinning hair, hair loss due to chemotherapy, and other conditions.</p>
<p>Ironically, Jeffries herself suffers from alopecia (a<br />
condition in which hair is lost from some or all areas of the body,<br />
usually from the scalp), which necessitates wearing a hairpiece, as well<br />
 as having her eyebrows tattooed on. “I would love to be able to help<br />
others going through similar issues,” says Jeffries. “It definitely has<br />
been a journey; a lot of tears and heartache.” But Jeffries’s struggles<br />
have also proven of value on the job. “I am able to understand our<br />
guests’ needs and appreciate that hair can change one’s image,” she<br />
says. “While I face challenges every day—bad hair days, eyelash<br />
problems, and hating summer weather—I love my job and surrounding myself<br />
 with watching our guests transform.”</p>
<p>While Amanda is<br />
stationed on the Boulevard, Nazelrod’s son, Joe, does the bookkeeping<br />
for all three locations (“I can honestly say there’s nothing bad about<br />
working with my family,” he says); Nazelrod’s stepson, Tim, does the<br />
electrical work; and Rick, who in the early days did the major<br />
construction work on her smaller spaces, is in charge of facilities<br />
management. </p>
<p>“There was a time when I did the drawings, I framed<br />
everything out, and did the spackling and painting,” he says. In those<br />
early days, Debbie’s salons were very much a grassroots, DIY affair. “We<br />
 had so much help from friends and family,” says Nazelrod. “I have a<br />
picture [hanging in my foyer] that I purchased in Amish country of a<br />
barn raising. It reminded me so much of what our friends and family have<br />
 done.”  </p>
<p>And anyone who isn’t family still gets treated as<br />
such. When a hairstylist needed a kidney transplant, Nazelrod and her<br />
staff raised more than $30,000 at a benefit at Martin’s East, including<br />
proceeds from a staff-written cookbook. “She makes each and every one of<br />
 us part of her family,” says longtime employee Megan Dulsky, the<br />
general manager at Spa on the Avenue. Adds Avenue spa manager Elaine<br />
Girardi, “She’s a good person and that helps her attract good people.” </p>
<p>The<br />
 love is clearly mutual. With her perfectly applied makeup and eyes that<br />
 sparkle when she speaks, Nazelrod gets emotional when she talks about<br />
her staff. “I just came back from a family trip to Jamaica,” she says.<br />
“I had a massage there, and their touch is incredible—you can’t teach<br />
that. You can teach everything else, but they’ve got to have it in<br />
here,” she says pressing on her heart. “Those are the people who I want<br />
here and 98 percent of the people we hire have [that quality].”</p>
<p>When<br />
 Nazelrod isn’t spending two days a week at each spa-salon, she and Rick<br />
 enjoy season tickets to the Ravens’ games or cooking dinner for family<br />
in their Perry Hall home. Another favorite pastime is hitting the road<br />
in their 40-foot motor coach—“it looks like an apartment,” says<br />
Nazelrod, laughing—for road trips to Key West, Ocean City, and<br />
Gettysburg.  “We don’t give gifts for the holiday,” says Nazelrod. “We<br />
give memories.” </p>
<p>Despite the long hours and<br />
occasional headaches that come with running a large group of businesses,<br />
 Nazelrod says she couldn’t be more pleased.</p>
<p>“I would<br />
 do it again and again,” she says, her voice catching with emotion. “I<br />
love this business. I love being able to take care of my clients to the<br />
point where I watch them walk out that door almost stumbling because,<br />
after coming here, they feel like they are in La La Land.”</p>

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