In 2015, Christian Patrick had a simple idea: bring the barbershop to the client, instead of the other way around. He loaded a pair of clippers into a Subaru and started knocking on doors across Fairfield County.
What he didn't expect was how much it would mean to the people who opened them.
The senior who hadn't left the house in months. The dad who couldn't find two hours on a Saturday. The kid with sensory sensitivities who'd never had a haircut that didn't end in tears. These were the people nobody was building for.
That first year, Christian drove more miles than he can remember. By year two, word had spread. By year five, Doorbell Barbers had become something nobody had a category for yet — a premium in-home grooming service that actually showed up, actually did the work, and actually left people feeling better than before.