By The Numbers: Beauty Supply Industry

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Yes black women weren't complicit in that at all:heh: You bytches are so hateful.

Black men were LEADERS of the community then. You all bellyache about BW not allowing you to be leaders and at a time when you were you led us right into integration. Had BW not went along then ya'll would be screaming BW are not supportive.The Civil Rights Movement was led by BM and there is not getting around that.
 

Poitier

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Black women are starting hair care companies out of their homes which is something I've noticed within the past 10 years. They are mixing up their own concoctions and selling them on etsy and their own sites. I'm hoping that this is the turning point. But Black women have nobody but ourselves to blame for what's been going on in the beauty supply industry. I don't have to shop at korean owned stores so they shouldn't have to either. Once again this all started with integration when black male leaders threw their communities into the bushes just to have access to the white man's communities and his women.
As well as the gas stations and carryouts. Black men said sayonora to their own communities when the white man told them he could come to theirs. But Black women should not be shopping at these stores tho, but the push for integration by Black men set the stage for all of this.

I cannot take you feminist serious.
 

KinksandCoils

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Jesus Christ you nikkas man :snoop:. We have a thread about a black man who saw the disrespect and racist practices of Koreans when it came to black consumers and black business owners and decided to do something about it and teach black people how to own and control our own shyt and y'all still wanna take these bullshyt cheap ass shots at black women :dahell:

We all suffer from self hate breh. It wasn't too long in the distant past that black men were also straightening our hair to look white. Have any of you actually ever sat down with a black women and asked them WHY they perm their hair? Why they wear wigs? Why they spend so much on hair care products? Why they never went natural or what obstacles they faced (from both black men and women) when they considered wearing their hair in it's natural state?

Do y'all even care about black women's hair and how it affects the self esteem of our women or do y'all wanna take these little bullshyt jabs at OUR women? This is actually a serious economic and psychological issue for our community that we can fix, but trying to throw shade at our women is not the fukking answer brehs :smh:
I'm a black woman and when I got relaxers I used them for manageability. I don't know how to do hair styles all I know how to do is curls. I was scared to stop getting relaxers because people kept saying once u get them you have to keep getting them because your hair will be damaged if u stopped. I got my first one as a young child and kept getting them since. Relaxers are basically the norm for black women. I never got my relaxers on time. I would only get about 2 a yr sometimes even once. I transitioned my hair for 15 months, meaning I stopped getting relaxers and I let my natural hair grow out without cutting the relaxed ends. As of last month I cut my relaxed hair and I'm finally all natural. I find that my hair is just as easy to manage without the relaxer. I will never get another one.
And yes once I stopped getting the relaxers my hair got very damaged even though I babied it.
By the way I have never had weave or wigs in my hair ever. And when I would get braids as a child it was with my own hair.
 

↓R↑LYB

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:wow: It is a goddamn shame brehs and brehettes.

Here's an article from Madame Noire on the subject. Gives a great history of how this came to be: http://madamenoire.com/104753/why-do-koreans-own-the-black-beauty-supply-business/

That's a pretty decent summation of what's going on in the black hair care industry and we should learn from what they did and emulate it for our own benefit. We definitely need to become distributors of these products so we can control the supply chain and benefit economically from this. Our unemployment rate and mistreatment in this society is directly tied to our lack of business ownership. In one of the Devin Robinson interviews he said the condition of our communities is directly tied to the quality of our entrepreneurs. I realized this clearly after I started researching why black people have been systematically fukked over globally.

Entrepreneurship should be a cornerstone of black activism and community work.
 

JamilALAmin

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Anyone got any insight on becoming a beauty supply distributor? Coli ladies@Elle Driver @sanityovar8ted???

You can answer too @**** :lolbron:

From what I understand its pretty hard bruh. A lot of those Asians only will do business with other Asians, even if you go over there its hard to get plugged in to a good connect. If anything we should take a page out of their book when it comes to doing business together and locking other groups out.
 

JamilALAmin

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Probably shouldn't be saying this on here but fukk it....

You can order weave from Aliexpress.com. Its not as cheap as what the Asians can get for over there but you can still turn a profit off of it if you buy it from Ali and flip it over here. Only problem is finding a legit plug. But I think if you search enough you can find a decent one.
 

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From maid to one of Brazil’s top businesswomen: formula for curly/kinky hair leads to fame and fortune



Zica Assis: From maid to one of Brazil’s top businesswomen

Note from BW of Brazil:Although the blog has already featured the “rags-to-riches” story of Heloisa Assis in a previous post, it’s important to note that Forbes Brasil magazine has recognized this former domestic as one of the ten most important businesswomen in Brazil. In the piece below, “Zica”, as she known to friends, family, customers and partners, discusses her phenomenal success and her goals for expansion into other states throughout Brazil as well possibly into other countries. Keep on movin’, Zica!

The former maid who became one of the most important businesswomen in Brazil

by Cintia Esteves

Zica Assis, founder of the Instituto Beleza Natural talks about her next steps in the world of entrepreneurship

They call her Zica but she doesn’t know very well how to explain why. Heloisa Assisi, founder of the Instituto Beleza Natural, is unaware of the origin of her childhood nickname, but she loves it. For, if in the popular jargon the word “zica” means unlucky, for her it means lucky. Considered the tenth most powerful businesswoman in Brazil, the former maid has enjoyed twenty years of fame (and money) that the chemical formula she invented to manage kinky/curly hair has earned her.


Plans are underway to expand Institute Beleza Natural salons to other parts of Brazil

To Zica, being on the Forbes list alongside names like Graça Foster of Petrobras, and Chieko Aoki of Blue Tree Hotels, is “a tribute”. The entrepreneur explains her influence, mainly among the women of Brazil’s class C economic class, her target audience. “Having hair that is well taken care of helps people to be more respected; it’s easier to get a job, for example,” she says.


Hair products from Institute Beleza Natural

The Super –Relaxante (Super-Relaxer) is the flagship of her 13-unit network of hair salons and revenues estimated by the market at R$166 million (about US$75.5 million) – a value that the company didn’t confirm. Zica’s business is far from a common network of salons. There, well-kept hair comes out of the same rhythm of a hot roll at the bakery. To account for the production line, each unit houses 150 employees in 1,500 square meters of floor area.



Zica want more. She is currently looking for an investing partner to help her meet her goal of reaching 140 units in seven years. “It can be an investment fund, for example,” she says. To accelerate growth, the entrepreneur decided to reduce the size of the units. Now, each salon will have an average of 500 square meters and a staff of 70 professionals.


Hairstyles created at Instituto Beleza Natural

This way, before an inauguration took six months to happen, now it’s half the time. And the investment will plummet. Zica will need R$254 million (about US$115.5 million) to meet her goal of expanding an average of R$2 million (US$909,000) per unit, almost 70% less than the structure that mega salons demand.


Before and After photos

With or without an investor, new openings this year are guaranteed. The Beleza Natural has units in Rio de Janeiro, Salvador (state of Bahia) and Vitória (state of Espírito Santo) and in November and will open its first salon in São Paulo, in the Largo 13 de Maio area. By December there will be two more institutes in São Paulo and another two in Rio de Janeiro. Next year, the company should reach Belo Horizonte and Recife (capital cities of Minas Gerais and Pernambuco, respectively), besides strengthening its presence in Salvador, which has only one unit. “The capital of Bahia (Salvador) has space for at least ten salons,” says Zica.

Export

Even without having mapped the whole of Brazil yet, Zica dreams of taking her business outside the country. “Why not New York?,” she sighs. For this, she says that she knows she needs to know to find her investor and strengthen her presence in the country. And this expansion plan doesn’t include franchises. “We analyzed franchising for four years, but came to the conclusion that we need another five years to be prepared. It is necessary to better develop our team,” she says.


Zica with one of her partners Leila Velez

The businesswoman doesn’t lack patience. It took ten years to develop the formula of Super-Relaxante, whose application costs R$150 (US$68) and lasts for one month. The motivation was her own hair. Working as a maid from age 9 to 33 in homes of wealthy families in Rio de Janeiro, Zica was concerned about maintaining a boa aparência (good appearance). But curly/kinky, extremely voluminous hair displeased her. The straightening methods of the time didn’t solve the problem and she says she was unhappy.



Still working as a maid, Zica took a hairdressing course in the hope of understanding her tresses. But a student’s dedication was not enough. She confirmed her theory that the products available in the market did not really do the job. Thus, she convinced the retailers of the manufacturers to sell her the raw materials.



At home, she played the role of professor doing experiments on her own hair. Mixtures of powders and creams resulted in numerous disastrous results, with clumps of hair spread out around the floor and on her scalp. Until her husband, tired of seeing his wife suffer, prohibited her crazy experiences.

Zica didn’t quit. She got her younger brother, who at the time was 9 years old, and did her experiments in his hair for nearly a decade. Until that in 1993 she found her famous formula and patented it. To open her first salon, she sold her husband’s Volkswagon Bug and called her guinea-pig brother, who had some savings. With the help of another friend, the four transformed their lives and the heads of the women of economic class C.

Source: Forbes Brasil
 

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I'm a black woman and when I got relaxers I used them for manageability. I don't know how to do hair styles all I know how to do is curls. I was scared to stop getting relaxers because people kept saying once u get them you have to keep getting them because your hair will be damaged if u stopped. I got my first one as a young child and kept getting them since. Relaxers are basically the norm for black women. I never got my relaxers on time. I would only get about 2 a yr sometimes even once. I transitioned my hair for 15 months, meaning I stopped getting relaxers and I let my natural hair grow out without cutting the relaxed ends. As of last month I cut my relaxed hair and I'm finally all natural. I find that my hair is just as easy to manage without the relaxer. I will never get another one.
And yes once I stopped getting the relaxers my hair got very damaged even though I babied it.
By the way I have never had weave or wigs in my hair ever. And when I would get braids as a child it was with my own hair.

This is pretty much the exact same story I've heard from every black women who had their hair permed (they got their hair straightened as a child and they never learned how to properly care for their own hair). My GF has been natural for about 4 years now and she said that it wasn't until recently (mostly thanks to YouTube) that black women had an outlet to know about how to care for their own hair. She said before that trying to find a beauty salon that would even touch natural hair was pretty damn difficult. Of all the women I met who went natural, none of them did it for some afrocentric fukk white supremacy tip (which was shocking to me).

What percentage of the black women that you know have went natural?
 

Gravity

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Jesus Christ you nikkas man :snoop:. We have a thread about a black man who saw the disrespect and racist practices of Koreans when it came to black consumers and black business owners and decided to do something about it and teach black people how to own and control our own shyt and y'all still wanna take these bullshyt cheap ass shots at black women :dahell:

We all suffer from self hate breh. It wasn't too long in the distant past that black men were also straightening our hair to look white. Have any of you actually ever sat down with a black women and asked them WHY they perm their hair? Why they wear wigs? Why they spend so much on hair care products? Why they never went natural or what obstacles they faced (from both black men and women) when they considered wearing their hair in it's natural state?

Do y'all even care about black women's hair and how it affects the self esteem of our women or do y'all wanna take these little bullshyt jabs at OUR women? This is actually a serious economic and psychological issue for our community that we can fix, but trying to throw shade at our women is not the fukking answer brehs :smh:
Shut your fakkit ass up.
Black men were LEADERS of the community then. You all bellyache about BW not allowing you to be leaders and at a time when you were you led us right into integration. Had BW not went along then ya'll would be screaming BW are not supportive.The Civil Rights Movement was led by BM and there is not getting around that.
Learn what "complicit" means dumb fukk.
 

JamilALAmin

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Black people need to stop supporting everyone else's pockets like this. Because they damn sure don't solicit blacks for anything, they support themselves first. So why don't we? Why has no one started any business like this? What will it take for us to get it done?

They have classes over there in Asia just for folks who want to move here and start businesses. And in those classes they basically teach them the best way to make money and a lot of times it involves making money off of us. They come here with a vision and a plan and as soon as they hit the dirt they are off and running with it. We need to do what they do in terms of pushing entrepreneurship to the masses and come together as a people and figure out what we can bring to the table, what niche we can fill and then go from there.
 

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From what I understand its pretty hard bruh. A lot of those Asians only will do business with other Asians, even if you go over there its hard to get plugged in to a good connect. If anything we should take a page out of their book when it comes to doing business together and locking other groups out.

To my surprise there's a pretty large number of black owned beauty supply manufacturers still out there. For the black people that start their own stores, they should really focus on buying exclusively from black owned manufacturers if at all possible. It's not in our own self interest to buy shyt from other races when we can be self sufficient ourselves.
 
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