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Studio location

Concept

Your studio location stores the address and directions clients rely on when attending their appointment.

Each location includes name, address, map coordinates, and optional directions. This information appears on your public page and in appointment confirmation emails.

For most studios, you will have one location. Guest artists or mobile artists may add multiple locations for different working spots.

Why it matters

Accurate location details reduce "where are you?" messages and late arrivals.

  • Clients can find your studio easily before their appointment.
  • Appointment confirmation emails include your address and map.
  • Your public page shows your location clearly.
  • Guest spots or pop-ups at different locations stay organised.

Poor location data usually shows up as late clients, missed appointments, and avoidable messages.

How to configure it

  1. Go to Dashboard -> Settings -> Location.
  2. Add your studio address using the location picker so coordinates and map context are captured.
  3. Add optional directions:
    • Directions by car or public transport
    • Parking information
    • Entry instructions (for example, buzzer number or floor)
  4. Save, then check your public page to confirm the details display correctly.

Use one location per real working spot. If you guest at multiple studios, add each as a separate location.

How to verify it worked

  • Your studio location appears correctly on your public page.
  • Appointment confirmation emails include the correct address.
  • Directions are clear enough for a first-time visitor to follow.
  • Map pin is accurate.

Before going live, check the location from a client's perspective on mobile to confirm it's easy to follow.

Common mistakes

  • Leaving the address incomplete or using a vague description.
  • Not including parking or entry instructions.
  • Forgetting to update location details after moving studio.
  • Not checking how the location appears on the public page.
  • Having outdated map coordinates that point to the wrong place.