What do you do for a second act, when your first act literally changed an industry? That was the question facing makeup powerhouse Bobbi Brown, whose simple line of lipsticks blossomed into the billion-dollar company Bobbi Brown Cosmetics.
She left it in 2016 with no plans for what to do next; all she knew was that she was done with corporate life. (The company had been acquired decades earlier by Estée Lauder.) “It wasn’t freeing,” she says. “It was like, Oh, shit; now what?” But she’s since found an answer— expanding into new territories with a supplements line for Walmart (Evolution_18), an editorial site (justBOBBI), and a boutique hotel (The George), all of which launched in spring 2018. She also has a new podcast (Beyond the Beauty) and a film and photo studio (18Label). But the second act isn’t really so different from the first act, she says: At its heart, everything an entrepreneur does is just about doing.
You made your name in a time before the phrase personal brand existed. Did you ever think of yourself as a brand?
Not even a little bit. I didn’t know what a brand was back then. I was a makeup artist. I just wanted to make something that was better than what was on the market, and that I got really excited about.
I hear that a lot from famous people—that they weren’t strategic about building themselves up. It’s such a contrast to now, where people consciously treat themselves like brands.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Startups Spring 2020-Ausgabe von Entrepreneur.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Startups Spring 2020-Ausgabe von Entrepreneur.
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