Walk into any salon conversation today and you’ll hear the same words on loop — new techniques, trending colours, viral reels, faster growth.
What you rarely hear is a conversation about leadership.
And that silence, according to Faisal Deshmukh, is the real gap holding the Indian salon industry back.
“Trends are exciting,” he says quietly. “But trends don’t build businesses. People do.”
As the founder of Lemon Salon, Faisal has seen the industry evolve from skill-led salons to marketing-led ones. What concerns him isn’t innovation — it’s how rarely salon owners are prepared for the responsibility that comes with growth.
Beyond Trends: Thinking in Decades, Not Seasons
While much of the industry is busy reacting — to algorithms, influencer culture, and fleeting aesthetics — Faisal has taken a noticeably different route. His focus isn’t on what will trend next month, but on what will still matter ten years from now.
For him, longevity comes down to a few unglamorous but essential questions:
- Who is being groomed to lead when the founder steps back?
- Are teams dependent on individuals, or guided by systems?
- Is the salon culture strong enough to survive change?
“These questions don’t give instant results,” he admits. “But they decide whether a brand survives or slowly fades.”
Why Leadership, Not Skill, Is the Industry’s Bottleneck
The Indian salon industry has never lacked talent. What it lacks, Faisal believes, is consistent leadership thinking.
Stylists are trained extensively. Owners, often, are not.
Many salons grow on the strength of one personality — the founder, the creative head, the star stylist. When that person burns out or moves on, the business struggles. Faisal sees this as a leadership failure, not a creative one.
“Leadership isn’t about being the best in the room,” he says. “It’s about building rooms that function even when you’re not inside them.”
The Quiet Shift: From Attention to Authority
In an era dominated by visibility, Faisal’s approach stands out because it isn’t loud. He doesn’t chase relevance through constant online presence or dramatic positioning. Instead, he invests in structure, people, and clarity.
The result?
A brand that doesn’t need to explain itself every season.
Other founders have begun to notice — not because Lemon Salon is shouting, but because it’s lasting.
A Long Game the Industry Is Just Beginning to Understand
Faisal isn’t critical of trends. He simply refuses to be led by them.
“Trends come and go,” he says. “Leadership stays. And the industry is finally realising which one actually builds respect.”
In a space obsessed with what’s new, Faisal Deshmukh is quietly asking a more powerful question:
What will still stand when the noise dies down?
That question — and the way he’s answering it — is what’s slowly positioning him not just as a successful founder, but as a thought leader shaping the future of Indian salons.





