The Aesthetic Contrarian Weekly Recap - Top Ups and Inner Circle

Newsletter Issue: “Top-Up Nonsense, Circle Jerks & What To Do Instead”

The aesthetics industry doesn’t need another protocol. It needs a f**king
intervention.
This week, we’re going deep on three things that have been quietly bleeding
your time, money and credibility while the “Inner Circle” sips champagne in Dubai and tells you it’s all normal. Let’s blow the doors off it:

Section 1 – The Evidence Check

“Two-Week Botox Reviews: Clinical Logic or Just Old Habits Dying Hard?”

You’ve been told it’s the gold standard. It’s not. It’s lazy, fear-based and borderline gaslighting. I’ll break down why automatic two-week top-ups are killing your margins, training your patients to expect freebies and weakening your results over time. Spoiler: NO MOVEMENT = NO MORE PRODUCT.

Section 2 – Harry’s Honest Hour

“The Inner Circle in Aesthetics: Support or Strategic Circle Jerk?”
I’m done pretending the same 5 people reposting each other’s selfies is mentorship. It’s politics. It’s posturing. And it’s damaging the real injectors out there doing damn good work without clout or camera crews. I’ll tell you what happened when I realised I wasn’t being recognised—I was being recruited.

Section 3 – Action points

“How to Detox from Botox Top-Ups & Inner Circle Syndrome – Starting This Week”

Five brutal, practical changes you can make THIS WEEK to reclaim your
time, protect your clinical integrity and stop training patients to expect
charity syringes. Plus: how to clean your social feed, your scripts and your own brain from the industry’s worst habits.

The Evidence Check (PART 1)

“Two-Week Botox Reviews: Clinical Logic or Just Old Habits Dying Hard?”

MYTH Spotlight

Here’s the nonsense KOLs keep pushing:
“You need to see patients at 2 weeks for a top-up—it’s part of the gold standard protocol.”

Said every Botox trainer since 2000 while handing you a mirror and a false
sense of evidence-based practice.

Reality Check

Let’s kill this sacred cow with something radical: FACTS.
Yes, Botox reaches its peak around 14 days post-injection. That’s pharmacokinetics, not divine intervention. So sure, the two-week mark makes sense for a REVIEW. But where did we start confusing assessment with a pre-approved second injection party?
Here’s what the data actually says:
And yet… we’ve got newbies and even “vets” treating the review like a scheduled booster jab. Why?
Lazy habits. Lazy language. And yes—fear. Of complaints. Of refunds. Of Karen’s eye twitch going viral on Insta.

Truth Bomb

Here’s your new rule of thumb:
NO MUSCLE CONTRACTION = NO MORE PRODUCT.
Review the face. Reassure the patient. Record the results. That’s it. If you’re topping up just because “that’s what we do,” you’re not practising medicine. You’re doing Botox by vibes.

Better Terminology, Better Expectations

Stop saying “top-up.” Seriously. You might as well tattoo “Free Extra Units If You Moan Loud Enough” on your forehead.

Use “review” or “assessment.” Teach your patients that Botox isn’t an unlimited pour-your-own-syringe buffet.

When IS a top-up actually needed?

Anything else is charity work with neurotoxin.

Long Term Reality

Regular Botox users often need less frequent intervention, not more. Muscles adapt. They “learn” relaxation like a Labrador learns where the snacks are kept.

We’ve also got studies showing increased longevity of results over time with consistent use—so top-ups? They should be tapering off, not ramping up.

And don’t forget: over-injecting = faster resistance, weird facial creep or looking like a melted Ken doll. It’s not a flex.

Bottom line: Your new clinical script

Otherwise? Smile, document the great result and tell ‘em you’ll see them in 3-4 months. Because top-ups shouldn’t be the default. Only if they deserve it.

Provocation to end on:

If you stopped offering “top-ups,” how much time and product would you save—and what could that do to your margins and your boundaries?

References

Harry’s Honest Hour

“The Inner Circle in Aesthetics: Support or Strategic Circle Jerk?”

Confession Corner

Alright, deep breath—I’m going there.
There was a time I thought I was climbing the ladder. Building respect. Getting “seen.” Being reshared by a few big names felt like the industry finally saying, “You belong.”
But I was wrong.
I wasn’t being recognised—I was being recruited.

And not into some meritocratic utopia. Nope. Into a tightly zipped echo chamber where quality takes a backseat to connection, where backs get scratched, not because you’re good but because you’re convenient.

Let’s talk about The Inner Circle.
You know who I mean. The same five faces at every conference, on every judging panel, always posting selfies in Dubai villas with hashtags like #workhardplayhard #tribe #family. Vomit.
They’re not inherently evil. Some are even decent clinicians. But the system they perpetuate? That’s the problem.

Lesson in Wisdom

Here’s the bitter truth I had to swallow: being part of that circle doesn’t make you better. It just makes you visible.

But what about the new injector quietly doing phenomenal work with zero type? What about the practitioner in Stevenage changing lives with a perfect injection technique but only 300 followers?

They don’t get the reposts. They don’t get invited to speak. Why? Because they didn’t kiss the right ring. Or like enough stories. Or buy the course/advertising space that came with a free invite to the clique.

And worse? This circle rewards safety—not skill.

Stick to the same predictable topics. Post enough “inspo.” Never challenge the dominant narrative. You’ll be loved. You’ll be protected.

You’ll be boring as hell, but hey—you’ll be booked. Meanwhile, actual innovation gets ghosted.

We wonder why aesthetics, conferences, and magazines look so similar.
Why do everyone’s lips, cheeks, and jaws blur into one? It’s not the patient’s fault. It’s us. It’s the circle. It’s the industry rewarding comfort over challenge.

Quick win for you

Here’s what I started doing, and what I urge you to try if you’ve been side- eyeing the Insta-elite:
Follow injectors who are contrarian, fight the status quo and are a are not PC or arse lickers.
Mute 3 “popular” accounts this week and replace them with 3 emerging voices. You’ll notice your standards shift almost instantly.
Find a post by someone not in your network. Leave a meaningful comment. Support without expecting reciprocity. That’s real integrity.

Bromelain in pineapple can reduce inflammation (and tastes better than
sugar pellets in a blue tube). Tell them to hydrate well—blood vessels
don’t like dry tissue.

“If I disappeared tomorrow, would the people I constantly boost even notice?”
If the answer makes you wince, you’ve got work to do.

Reflect:

We don’t need more “tribes.” We need more truth.
The next time you feel left out of the party, remember—maybe the party’s shit. Maybe you’re better off building your own damn table, with seats reserved for skill, honesty, and courage.
Are you being recognised for your craft—or your conformity?
Citations (to prove I’m not just salty):

Section 3: Action Points

How to Detox from Botox Top-Ups & Inner Circle Syndrome – Starting This Week

  • Action Step: Update all patient comms—emails, texts, receptionist scripts—
    to replace “top-up” with “review.”
  • Why: “Top-up” trains patients to expect free toxin. “Review” puts you back in
    the driver’s seat.

Action Step: Before injecting, ask:

  • Is there residual movement?
  • Is there a new asymmetry?
  • Was under-dosing the plan?

 

If “no” to all—don’t inject.

  • Action Step: Unfollow 5 status-quo accounts. Follow 5 fresh voices doing
    actual clinical work.
  • Why: Your feed influences your thinking. Clean it up.
  • Action Step: Create a “Patient Response Tracker.” Log dose, result, review
    findings, and if a top-up was needed.
  • Why: Patterns don’t lie. You’ll become sharper, faster, and more consistent.
  • Action Step: Call BS on something this week—be it Botox top-ups, filler
    trends, or the “certification addiction.”
  • Why: People crave truth. Be the one who says it.

Quick-win exercise: The mirror moment

Stand in front of a mirror and ask:
“Am I doing this because it’s right—or because it’s expected?” If the answer stings, good. Now do something different.

Closing Thought

Real growth doesn’t come from another bloody “masterclass.” It comes from making decisions differently—when nobody’s watching. So go be dangerous. Be disruptive. Be excellent on your terms.

References:

Social Belonging Theory: Baumeister & Leary (1995)
Coming in the next brutal dose of truth…

VAT, Vanity & Very Expensive Mistakes

If you’re in aesthetics and still think VAT is just a thing for spas and shops-you’re probably halfway to a six-figure HMRC slap. This newsletter is your complete no-BS guide to understanding, surviving, and finally mastering the UK’s VAT rules on Botox and filler treatments.
No fluff. No KOL daydreams. Just hard-earned reality.
We break it down in 3 parts:

Part 1: The Evidence Check

We shared the myth that just because you’re medically qualified, your aesthetic treatments are automatically VAT-free. Spoiler: they’re not. Using real tribunal cases and HMRC guidance, we expose exactly what counts as medical care (and what doesn’t).

Part 2: Harry's honest hour

My confessional. How I screwed up my VAT, believed deluded influencers, and nearly paid the price. Raw, unfiltered, and deeply uncomfortable—but essential reading if you want to avoid the same fate.

Part 3: The Action Plan

You’ve seen the problem. You’ve read the horror story. Now here’s the fix: 10 practical steps to get your records, processes and pricing sorted—before HMRC does it for you.
If you’ve ever thought “VAT doesn’t apply to me”… grab a coffee, cancel your next lip filler top-up, and read this instead.
P.S. Got a colleague who thinks they know what they’re doing but still handing out Arnica like it’s gospel? Forward them this newsletter—IF they can handle the truth (cue Jack Nicholson’s voice: “YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!”).

If they survive it and still want more, they can subscribe over at:

Warning: no fluff, no filters, no sponsored BS. Just evidence, honesty, and the occasional ego bruising.
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