With a hard-to-get beauty patent, alumna Gwen Jimmere is taking her line of natural hair products from the kitchen sink to the global market.
by Laura Billings Coleman
photos by Brian Rozman
Gwen Jimmere â03, MA â08, recently became the first African-American woman in history to patent a natural hair care productâand she owes some of the credit to Chris Rock.
Catching a rewind of the comedianâs 2009 documentary âGood Hair,â a reflection on the love-hate relationship behind the $9 billion Black hair care industry, Jimmere was shocked by a scene in which Rock and a chemist dunk an aluminum can into a vat of hair relaxing ingredients, only to see it disintegrate in a matter of minutes.
âIâd been relaxing my hair since the third grade, so that really freaked me out,â recalls Jimmere, who decided to swear off the harsh chemicals while she was pregnant with her son in 2011. âI grew up in a household where my mom could make nearly anything she wanted by mixing oils and other ingredients to do different jobs,â so Jimmere began experimenting in her own kitchen sink, looking for natural ingredients that could do the work of the dozen or more products she once relied on.
Curious about the conditioning effects of natural claysâa cosmetic ingredient used for centuriesâshe found a source for rhassoul clay, a mineral-rich clay found only in Moroccoâs Atlas Mountains. âThe formulation was trial and error, but when I started working with the rhassoul clay, I was able to cut the time I spent on my wash day down from three hours to seven minutes, and my hair felt great. It was like Iâd hit pay dirt.â
Similar rave reviews from friends and family inspired Jimmere, a global digital marketing director for Ford Motor Company and later their agency of record Uniworld Group, . Word of mouth spread so far that one day she got a call asking her permission to include her line of products in the gift bags to be handed out at President Obamaâs second inauguration in January 2013. âWhen you hear the White House is calling you think, âWhoâs playing with my phone?â I thought it had to be a joke.â
âWhen I started working with the rhassoul clay, I was able to cut the time I spent on my wash day, and my hair felt great. It was like Iâd hit pay dirt.â
But just a few months later, Jimmere got very serious about the side business in her kitchen sink when she got the news that her corporate gig had been eliminated in a restructuringâthe same month she was finalizing her divorce. âIf Iâd had more warning, I might have been looking for other jobs, but instead I went right into survival mode,â she says, e-mailing her way into a pitch meeting with the management team of Whole Foods, which was just preparing to open their first location in downtown Detroit.
Fifteen minutes after making her case (âI came up with a four-step system that does the work of 13 products, so as you can imagine it saves you 80 percent of the time and 60 percent of the money that you would normally spendâŠâ), she walked out with her first retail contract.
âWhen they said yes, in my mind I just collapsed on the floor,â Jimmere says. âWith everything that was going on at the time, I only had $32 in the bank and my mortgage was due in 15 days. So I pitched them like my life depended on it. I didnât have the luxury of doubting myself or being afraid to approach a huge retailer.â
As Jimmereâs business began to scale out of her kitchen, into her basement and on toward shipping fulfillment centers, she knew she didnât want to take on additional debtâa mistake many small businesses make. Instead, she took to the stage, , which was held in Columbus, Ohio. Itâs one of several âShark Tankââlike competitions sheâs used to build up her bottom line.
âIâve been thrilled to watch Gwen and her business grow and mature,â says author and entrepreneur Lauren Maillian, a venture capital investor and co-host on Oxygenâs new startup-focused TV show who met and coached Jimmere at that first pitch event. âSheâs doing everything on a bootstrap budget, but sheâs found some very inexpensive ways to get the things that are important to her done, and she gets them done well.â
That D.I.Y. approach drove Jimmere to secure a patent for one part of her haircare line, a business move prompted by frequent encouragement from her mother. âShe kept telling me, âYouâve invented something incredible, but someone is going to do what youâve done and make millions off your idea if you donât patent it. Youâll see other people on TV, making all this money, and the only thing youâll be able to do is be upset because you didnât protect your invention.â Finally I thought, âWow, sheâs right.ââ
Though Jimmere had secured several trademarks on her own, she knew hiring a patent attorney was out of her price range. Instead, she took advantage of Detroitâs new regional United States Patent and Trademark Office that opened in 2012, a first-of-its kind entrepreneurial incubator made possible by Obamaâs America Invents Act.
âIt was like going back to Kent State,â she says. âI spent nine months making friends with librarians and learning everything I could about how to properly draw the design and research prior art, which is anything that resembles or has the same utility as what youâre trying to patent. In 2015, itâs extremely hard to invent something unlike anything thatâs ever been invented before. But I did invent something brand new and was able to prove it, which resulted in the patent being issued to me.â
Now with a five-year-old son and a haircare line finding its way into global markets from South Africa to the Bahamas, Jimmere has launched another sideline, Pitch Proof, a consulting firm aimed at teaching other aspiring entrepreneurs some of her secrets.
âSo many people talk themselves out of their dreams by thinking, âWhat if people donât like me, or my product, or my idea?,ââ says Jimmere. âItâs fear of rejection that makes people only imagine the negative, but we hardly ever ask ourselves, âWhat if everybody loves it?â I figure, if I try and fail, the worse that will happen is Iâm in the same spot that I was before I tried. So why not try?ââŒ
Laura Billings Coleman is a writer and editor based in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Gwen Jimmere once made all of her Naturalicious line by hand, with packaging she designed herself. But her business was able to take off when she hired more help. âThe best advice I ever got from one of my mentors was, âGet out of the basement.ââ
Gwen Jimmereâs Top Tips for Inventors and Entrepreneurs
Start before youâre ready
âWhatever the reason you havenât started your business yetâyou need to save up more money, you need to get the kids out of the houseâthereâs never going to be a perfect time,â says Jimmere. âInstead, start where you are, work with what youâve got and just get it goingâmaybe testing the market with two products instead of 50. I call it âinvesting in your greatness,â and if youâre scared to invest in your plan, you canât complain when youâre still in the same place next year. Waiting is not a wealth strategy.â
âWaiting is not a wealth strategy.â
Hire the help you need
Though Jimmere once made all of her Naturalicious line by hand, with packaging she designed herself, âAt one point I realized I was spending six hours a day filling orders and keeping up,â she says. âThe best advice I ever got from one of my mentors was, âGet out of the basement.â My business couldnât grow if I had my hands in everything.â
Though she still manages her business day-to-day, Jimmere also depends on a fulfillment center to ship orders and a call center to answer customer questions. âIâm still bootstrapping, but getting extra help allows your business to scale.â
Know your numbers
Reality TV shows may spotlight the inventors with compelling personal stories, but in real-life pitch competitions, investors are more interested in the bottom line. âJudges want to know how theyâre going to make ten to twenty times their money back, so my strategy is to answer all of those questions before they even have a chance to ask,â Jimmere says. By the time youâve led the judges through their return on investment, youâll be able to hit a softball question like âHowâd you come up with this idea?â right out of the park.
Donât take on too much debt
âStudies have shown that women and minority-owned businesses take on personal debt to grow their business far more than other businesses,â Jimmere says. âWeâre taking out loans, home equity lines of credit, credit card debt, because weâre in the daily grind and not thinking about other ways to get it done.â
Instead of hiring expensive PR firms to get the word out about her product, Jimmere has relied on social media and her own storytelling savvy to get publicity in several online publications, including Fast Company, Entrepreneur and the Huffington Post. âExhaust all the alternatives before you spend money you donât have.â
âExhaust all the alternatives before you spend money you donât have.â
Own your ideas
Securing a patent is a high hurdle for any inventor, but Jimmere believes itâs important to protect your intellectual property. âItâs easy to be on the hamster wheel of running your business day to day, without thinking about the future,â she says.
Securing a patent gives her the leverage to sell her business someday, but hang on to her invention. âOwning a patent or a strong brand trademark can set you and your family up for wealth for generations to come,â she says. âJust think how much Nike could make with the swoosh alone? Itâs crazy.â
Listen to your customers
Businesses that ignore customer complaints do so at their peril. âYou need to respond not just to the person, but to everyone else who is looking to see how youâre going to handle it,â says Jimmere, whoâs had two complaints since Naturalicious hit the shelves at Whole Foods in June 2013.
âI turned the complaints around so well that one of those customers invited me to her wedding in July, and the other is now a huge fan of the company. A basic human need is to feel appreciatedâshow your customers that their business matters to you.â
âLaura Billings Coleman