HQ-led decisions

Pressed Roots Franchise Co.Pressed Roots Franchise Co.Pressed Roots

Personal services

Software purchasing at Pressed Roots Franchise Co. is controlled at the headquarters level, where Founder and CEO Piersten Gaines leads a lean executive team. The brand currently mandates Zenoti by Zenoti, Inc. alongside its own proprietary software, creating a defined but narrow tech landscape. With only 4 total units—all company-owned—the addressable market is extremely small, but the $1.2 million average unit volume signals a premium operational environment for any vendor that secures a mandate.

Mandated & recommended tech

The systems vendors compete with

2 of these are mandated in the franchise agreement. Each is named in Item 11 of the filing — the incumbents a challenger must displace or integrate with.

Pressed Roots Proprietary Software
Mandatory
Proprietary systemItem 11

You must operate the Franchised Business in accordance with the Manuals and all applicable laws, rules and regulations.

ZenotiZenoti, Inc.
Mandatory
POSItem 11

the designated point of sale system that you must license and use is Zenoti

Who buys here

The buyer at this brand

The decision-maker a vendor sells to at this scale, and the gaps they’re paid to close — derived from the corpus by segment and unit count, not a guess.

Sales LeaderSingle 1 19

The franchisee/operator personally, or a small franchisor still owner-run. Wears every hat.

OwnerCEOPresidentPrincipal
  1. With 298 active personal services brands, I can't see which ones are growing or have the tech gaps my product fills, so I waste weeks chasing the wrong targets.A rep burning 10 hours/week on manual research at $50/hr loses $26,000/year. FranCloud's fit_scoring and corpus_search surface high-fit brands in seconds, reclaiming that time for selling.
  2. 68.6% of brands mandate no accounting system, meaning 93 brands are ripe for displacement, but I lack the unit-count and financial context to prioritize them.Focusing on the wrong 10 brands costs a rep 2+ deals per quarter. FranCloud's fit_scoring layers AUV and unit growth onto tech gaps, so reps chase only the 93 with real revenue potential.
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Live signals

Total units
4
0 franchised
Unit growth YoY
vs prior filing
AUV
$1.20M
Item 19, 2025
Royalty
5%
of gross sales
Ad fund
2%
national + local
Initial fee
$50K
per unit
Investment range
$486K–$810K
all-in, Item 7
Procurement
Approved supplier
from the filing

The vendor opportunity at Pressed Roots

Pressed Roots Franchise Co. is a personal services brand headquartered in Texas, operating 4 company-owned locations with no franchised units reported in the 2025 FDD. The total addressable unit count is 4, all concentrated in Texas. This is a micro-cap target for software vendors—there is no multi-unit operator base to leverage for bottom-up adoption, and the 6 mapped operators are all single-unit. The average unit volume sits at $1,203,921, which is healthy for a salon concept and suggests each location generates enough revenue to justify operational software investment. However, with no year-over-year unit growth disclosed and no franchised units yet sold, the immediate expansion-driven buying window is closed. Vendors should treat this as a relationship-building play: get in early with HQ, prove value across the 4 existing units, and position for a mandate if and when franchising accelerates.

Who controls software purchasing

The buying center is small and centralized. Piersten Gaines, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, is the top authority. Briana Gaines serves as Chief of Staff and Vice President of Franchise Operations, a dual role that likely puts her close to day-to-day technology decisions affecting unit operations. Andy Louis-Charles, Vice President of Franchise Development, rounds out the named executive team from Item 1. There is no CIO, CTO, or VP of Technology listed, which means operational leaders double as tech evaluators. For a vendor, the path in runs through Piersten or Briana Gaines. The absence of a dedicated IT function also means any pitch must speak to operational outcomes—labor efficiency, client experience, revenue per appointment—rather than technical architecture.

Mandated and current tech stack

The 2025 FDD mandates two systems: Pressed Roots Proprietary Software and Zenoti by Zenoti, Inc. Zenoti is a well-known salon and spa management platform covering POS, online booking, inventory, and CRM. The proprietary system likely handles brand-specific workflows or reporting that Zenoti does not cover out of the box. This dual mandate means the core operational stack is locked down. Adjacent opportunities may exist in areas Zenoti does not dominate—think specialized HR, advanced analytics, or marketing automation—but any vendor proposing a replacement for Zenoti faces a steep uphill battle against an entrenched, mandated incumbent. The FDD does not list any other named technology vendors, so the full extent of the stack beyond these two systems is unknown.

Procurement, renewals, and timing

Procurement signals are thin. Item 8 of the FDD contains no extract regarding designated suppliers, approved supplier lists, or purchasing cooperatives. This means Pressed Roots has not publicly codified a procurement model in its franchise disclosure, which is not unusual for a brand with only 4 company-owned units and no franchisees to govern. Vendors should expect an informal, relationship-driven buying process led by the CEO’s office. Renewal timing is equally opaque: the initial franchise term is not disclosed, and Item 17 contains no renewal conditions. Without a term length, there is no way to back into contract expiration cycles. The only near-term trigger for a software review would be an operational pain point at the existing units or a strategic decision to begin franchising in earnest, which would require scalable systems.

How to read the Pressed Roots FDD

The 2025 Franchise Disclosure Document is the definitive source for understanding this brand’s obligations, financials, and technology mandates. Start with Item 1 to verify the executive team and any parent-company relationships—Pressed Roots appears independently owned with no parent on file. Item 11 is where you will find the full list of mandated technology, including the Zenoti and proprietary software requirements cited here. Item 19 contains the $1,203,921 average unit volume figure, critical for building a return-on-investment case. Because the brand has no franchised units, Items 8 and 17 are sparse, but that absence is itself a signal: the franchisor has not yet built the supplier governance infrastructure that larger systems use. For vendors who want a ranked target list of franchise brands matched to their product category, FranCloud provides the underlying data and filtering tools to prioritize outreach.

Questions vendors ask

Pressed Roots Franchise Co.Pressed Roots Franchise Co.Pressed Roots, answered from the filing

Founder and CEO Piersten Gaines is the ultimate decision-maker, supported by Briana Gaines (VP of Franchise Operations) and Andy Louis-Charles (VP of Franchise Development). With no CIO or CTO listed, operational leaders likely evaluate and recommend technology.
The 2025 FDD mandates Pressed Roots Proprietary Software and Zenoti by Zenoti, Inc. Zenoti is a salon and spa management platform, suggesting the brand has already standardized its core operational stack.
There are 4 total units, all company-owned and located in Texas. No franchised units are reported, and the operator footprint shows 6 single-unit operators across approximately 6 located units.
The procurement model is not disclosed in the most recent FDD. Item 8 contains no extract regarding designated or approved suppliers, so vendors should inquire directly about any preferred vendor programs during discovery.
Contract renewal windows are unknown. The FDD does not disclose an initial franchise term or Item 17 renewal conditions, and no recent unit growth data is available to signal expansion-driven procurement opportunities.
The 2025 FDD is filed with state franchise regulators. You can review the full document using the embedded PDF viewer below to analyze Item 11 tech mandates, Item 19 financials, and the executive team listed in Item 1.
Source

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Operator footprint

Who runs the locations

6 operators run 6 mapped locations — 0 of them are multi-unit. Aggregate counts from the filing; no names.

Operators by units owned

Single-unit6

Top states by locations

TX6