For Barbershops & Grooming
Fill your chairs
via WhatsApp
Barbers and grooming studios — stop losing clients to shops that are easier to reach. Give every customer a professional link showing your cuts menu, your styles, and a one-tap WhatsApp booking button.
Set up in under 10 minutes
What you get
Everything your barbershop needs online
Cuts & services menu
List every service — fades, taper cuts, shape-ups, beard trims — with prices. No more repeating yourself over WhatsApp.
Style gallery
Showcase your best fades, braids, and designs. Let your work do the selling and convert browsers into bookings.
WhatsApp booking button
One tap from any phone and the client is in a WhatsApp chat with you. No app downloads, no logins.
Business hours & location
Display your trading hours and address so clients know when you're open and where to find you.
Client reviews
Collect and display 5-star reviews directly on your page to build trust and win new clients from Instagram and Google.
"My clients kept asking for my price list over WhatsApp. Now I just send my LinkDeck link — they see everything, choose their cut, and book. My chair is full every day."
Thabo M.
Barber & Grooming Studio Owner, Johannesburg
How it works
From signup to first chair booking in under 10 minutes
Choose your barber template
Pick a barbershop or grooming layout — your menu, gallery, and booking button come pre-built.
Add your cuts & photos
Upload your best work, set your prices, and add your location and hours.
Share your link everywhere
Put it in your Instagram bio, WhatsApp status, and on a QR sticker in your window. Clients tap and book.
Ready to fill every chair?
Join South African barbers and grooming studios using LinkDeck to look more professional and book more clients via WhatsApp.
Ready to grow your business?
Your WhatsApp-ready business page — live in minutes
Give customers one link they can tap from WhatsApp, Instagram, or a flyer — and land on a professional page built for your business.
Free plan available • No credit card required • Cancel anytime • Built in South Africa