Ask any salon owner in Beirut, any dentist in Jounieh, or any padel court manager in Dbayeh what hurts most, and you will hear the same answer: people book, then they simply do not show up.
Across service businesses in Lebanon, no-show rates of 30 to 50 percent are common. Every empty chair is rent, electricity, and staff time you already paid for. The good news: no-shows are not a personality trait of your clients. They are a process problem, and process problems can be fixed.
Why clients actually miss appointments
Very few no-shows are malicious. Most happen for boring reasons: the client forgot, the appointment was never truly confirmed, plans changed and rescheduling felt awkward, or the booking lived in a WhatsApp thread that scrolled away three days ago.
That last one matters in Lebanon more than anywhere. When bookings are taken by DM, there is no calendar entry, no reminder, and no record. The client remembers a vague promise; you remember a confirmed slot. Both of you are wrong together.
Step 1: Confirm instantly, in writing
The single cheapest fix is an instant, written confirmation the moment the booking is made. Not a voice note, not a thumbs-up emoji: a message that states the service, the date, the time, and the location.
A confirmation does two jobs. It creates a shared record, and it signals that the slot is real and reserved. Clients treat appointments the way you present them: casual bookings get casual attendance.
Step 2: Remind twice, on WhatsApp
Email reminders get ignored in Lebanon; SMS is expensive and often skipped. WhatsApp is where your clients already live, with read rates that email can only dream about.
The timing that works best for service businesses is a two-touch sequence:
- 24 hours before: a friendly reminder with the service and time, plus an easy way to reschedule. This catches the plan-changers while you can still refill the slot.
- 2 hours before: a short nudge on the day. This catches the forgetters.
Step 3: Take a small deposit
Nothing changes behavior like a little skin in the game. A 5 to 10 dollar deposit on a 40 dollar service will not scare serious clients away, but it filters out the casual bookers who were never really coming.
The classic objection in Lebanon is that cards do not work and clients do not have bank accounts. True, and also not a blocker: deposits over Whish or OMT work exactly the way your clients already pay for everything else. Make the deposit deductible from the final price and say so clearly, so it reads as a reservation, not a fee.
Step 4: Make rescheduling easier than disappearing
Clients ghost when cancelling feels like a confrontation. If the reminder message includes a link to reschedule in two taps, a client whose plans changed becomes a moved booking instead of an empty chair.
Pair this with a simple, published policy: free rescheduling up to a few hours before, deposit kept after that. Firm, fair, and written down beats improvising in a DM argument every time.
What this looks like with Mawaeed
Mawaeed was built around exactly this playbook for Lebanese businesses. Clients book from a page with your real availability, get an instant confirmation, then automatic WhatsApp reminders at 24 hours and 2 hours, in Arabic, French, or English, and every reminder includes a self-service reschedule link.
Operators who follow this playbook consistently report no-show rates dropping from a third of bookings to single digits. The playbook is free to copy. If you want it running by tonight without building anything, that is what Mawaeed is for.
Put this into practice with Mawaeed
Free for 50 bookings a month. A trilingual booking page, automatic WhatsApp reminders, and a calendar that fills itself.