Speaker:

It's so important when

you bring new people,

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they need to understand

the history of the brand.

Speaker:

They need to understand the DNA

and what's really the value.

Speaker:

I would say value of the company,

yes, but the value can evolve,

Speaker:

depend on the years, but

the value of the brand.

Speaker:

Well, hello and welcome to another edition

of the E-Commerce Evolution podcast.

Speaker:

I'm your host, Brett

Curry, CEO of OMG commerce.

Speaker:

And today we are exploring

the longevity, the growth,

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the innovation,

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the storytelling of Dr Brandt

skincare. I love this brand,

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I love this category.

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You are going to learn a lot as we

explore the story of how this brand has

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stayed relevant offline,

online for multiple decades.

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And so lots to unpack. We're going

to talk about product positioning.

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We're going to talk about r and d,

we're going to talk about storytelling.

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We're going to talk about all kinds of

ways to connect with consumers and how to

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increase loyalty and retention.

Speaker:

It's going to be a fun conversation and

so I'm delighted to welcome to the show,

Speaker:

the CEO Dr. Stephane Colleu.

Speaker:

And he's got an amazing story,

just a charming individual.

Speaker:

I can't wait to dive in.

And so with that, Stephane,

Speaker:

welcome to the show and how's it going?

Speaker:

Thank you Brett. Thank you for having me.

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I'm very delighted to be there and to

be able to speak about our story and our

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journey and especially mine with Dr

Brandt because I've been with the company

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for 23 years.

Speaker:

23 Years. It's amazing. And yeah,

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you guys have stayed relevant

for so long. I'm a huge fan.

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I've loved the skincare,

haircare, personal care.

Speaker:

I've loved those categories from a

marketing and business standpoint.

Speaker:

And so excited to unpack

your story. But tell us,

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for those that don't know who Dr.

Brandt is or what products you sell,

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give us a little bit of the

background. What do you guys sell?

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What makes you unique?

Speaker:

Absolutely. So first and foremost,

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we've been one of the pioneering doctors

skincare line in the beauty industry.

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It was early in 2000 that we can

see the first doctor skincare line.

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And we were one of them.

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And it was very innovative at this

time because for people who maybe don't

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remember, it was very basic.

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You used to be the mass and

the prestige and that's it.

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And then suddenly there was this doctor

skincare line that came out that provide

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very efficient with

instant efficient products.

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And also the price point was quite

a very good starting point for

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the consumer side. And this is where

we start having our own success.

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And lucky enough,

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we have been scouting at this time

early by Sephora that gave us a huge

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visibility and being

distributed with Seron.

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And that's where the story started

on the commercial side because

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initially the concept started

with Dr. Brandts himself,

Speaker:

with his own medical office, 1996,

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he starts selling his own products and

knowing that he didn't want to recommend

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certain product, that he don't

feel he was efficient enough.

Speaker:

And then when he saw the potential,

Speaker:

this is why he created a concept

which was very revolutionary.

Speaker:

Take the doctor on with you.

So very simple. What I do,

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I'm trying to mimic what I do the best

in dermatological procedures and take the

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doctor home with you, with Dr. Brian.

Speaker:

It was the beginning of the

advent for early in 2000.

Speaker:

I love that. Take the doctor home with

you. We'll unpack that a little bit,

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but do your products, you kind have

like a Botox alternative or compliment,

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microderm abrasion some of those things.

Speaker:

Can you describe the products just a

little bit and what makes them unique?

Speaker:

Yeah, really,

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and I think I should maybe

highlight this point.

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We're still a private company

today, which is pretty exceptional.

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Meaning that we, what we want,

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and I think in Amir for that

to protect that we try to sell

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products that we believe in that truly

deliver the promise inside of products.

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And Dr. Ba was so visionary,

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it became one of the most well-known

dermatologists in the world. Why?

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Because it was the first dermatologist

to use as anesthetic side,

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the Botox of the fillers.

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And he became the masters and started

being part of the board of the biggest

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pharmaceutical company and tried to

develop new ingredients and laser,

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new technique of injection. And

he became the king of Botox.

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Having big celebrities

now become Evangela.

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Everyone used to go in his medical office.

We used to have two medical office,

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one in Miami and one in New York.

But also we used to do r and d with the

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biggest pharmaceutical company,

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which was for me very interesting because

we were working on potentially new

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laser new ingredients, new delivery

system that will be approved by the FDA,

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which is the food drug administration.

And just because of that,

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we can see the future potentially

before even the big corporation.

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And it was very inspiring for me

and the team to dig in and to find

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news, idea new concepts, new innovation

in terms of products. And Dr. Brian,

Speaker:

like to get back to your question,

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was the first kit care line to

bring your Microderm vision.

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And if you have told anyone early in 2000,

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you would do your own Microderm

vision in your own bathroom,

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people would tell you it's crazy. No.

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Way. Yeah.

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And Dr. Ben, I think what he was

very smart and wise what he did,

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he used the same pharmaceutical,

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great crystal using his own medical

office and these products became a

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masterpiece, became an iconic

bestsellers. And as of today,

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this product is still sold after

25 years without changing any

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ingredients.

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That's amazing because they work and

people is addicted because when a product

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course why you would change.

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And that was the beginning of

the venture having the micro,

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and of course Dr. Van was one of the

first in Caroline to invent Botox like

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products. Obviously it was the one we

inject the most Botox in the world,

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but we wanted to create something for

people first cannot afford an ejection,

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but we love to minimize expression lines.

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So also we try to be very

truthful with our promise.

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We're not saying that every

wrinkles will disappear,

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especially their wrinkle cannot disappear.

But expression lines,

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we have the technology in the delivery

system to minimize expression lines.

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And that's why we created the

release was our first Botox.

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And then a lot of Botox like products

has been duplicated in the market,

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but we were one of the first to provide

this new innovation and to be the trend,

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et cetera, in terms of

Botox like products.

Speaker:

And it came from Dr Brandt and

that was the proper of the Brandt.

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Take the doctor home with you so you

can have your own Botox like products

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that could be a continuity of what you

do in a medical office and use that to

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minimize expression lines during the day.

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And for people who doesn't like the

needles does the wrong process or cannot

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afford it,

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you can use a similar products that give

you also the kind of similar effects.

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And that's why we try to

provide to our customers,

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our patients and to the skincare market.

Speaker:

Yeah, it's so good man.

Speaker:

And one of the things that I'm a firm

believer in as a long time marketer,

Speaker:

a long time entrepreneur is that

product positioning and brand

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positioning means so much.

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And my favorite definition

of positioning is what

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a product does and who it's for.

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But really bringing that

to life in a visual way,

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a way you can really hold onto.

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And so this idea of bringing the doctor

home with you, it's awesome, right?

Speaker:

It communicates, hey, these

aren't just standard results.

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This is not just your over

the counter moisturizer,

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this is doctor grade stuff,

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the stuff you'd have to pay big

money for in a doctor's office,

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but you get to do it at home.

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And so how do you guys

think about positioning?

Speaker:

How do you think about that line and

how that influences other products?

Speaker:

How do you guys view product positioning?

Speaker:

It's a good point. So

when the story started,

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it was with a uniqueness to differentiate

ourself and obviously it was to create

Speaker:

this line, which is ours

called we used to do today.

Speaker:

It's called Needles No More, which is

truly instant gratification products.

Speaker:

Needles no more. I love that. Yeah.

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That's truly inspired directly

from the medical office.

Speaker:

That's why we have a Botox, we have a

micro patient, we have an oxygenation,

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we got also no more baggage,

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which is poof and minimize

inflammation around your high products

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instantly.

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And these products can be combined with

your current skincare regimen even if

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you don't use DR Brandt's products

for the rest of your portfolio.

Speaker:

But as we have been evolving as a skincare

line obviously was very important to

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start to create some collection that

respond to the needs of oily and

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combination skin.

Speaker:

That's why we got the al line that's

focusing on pores for all in combination

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skin. We got also another line called

Bright this way that is more focused on

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pigmentation and also brightness

and uneven skin textures.

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We got also another one, it's

called DTA dare two edge,

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which is more for mature.

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We give improved collagen

elasticity and firmness the skin.

Speaker:

So we got a variety of collection,

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but also we decided for a good

purpose not to have 6,100 skew.

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We barely have 29 skew.

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Based.

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On different collection.

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So it's still very concise and for

the purpose just to really focus on

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a very strong products

assortments that allow us to

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target the right message with the right

audience and not to overwhelm ourself

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and also the customer.

Speaker:

Totally makes sense. And it's all about

all of those products fit that line of

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bringing the doctor home with you and

so that they all fit. And one thing,

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I know you guys talk about

the tension between balancing

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clinical authority.

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So this is scientifically backed stuff,

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but also being accessible, right? Because

we kind of think clinical authority,

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very expensive, very high price

stuff, it's Beverly Hills, is Miami,

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something like that.

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So this clinical authority but

with an affordable price tag.

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So how do you keep that tension?

How do you view that tension?

Speaker:

It's a very good value point because

obviously when Dr. Boy was there,

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Dr. Boyn had the philosophy that I'm

trying to respect every day since we lost

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our bill, beloved Dr. Fred

brand since April, 2015.

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And his message was the following one,

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I think a product should not exceed

over than 1 50, 200. And why?

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Because if you can spend more,

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you can come to see me and I can give

you a laser or whatever and I can fix

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exactly what you do. Because being more

than 23 years on a dermatological field,

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I'm telling you I'm pretty amazed

what the technology and how we've been

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evolving. Meaning that today if of

course you see the right doctors,

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I can mostly solve any skin disorders

or what you're facing because we

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truly have anything that can improve your

skin type or the disorders that you're

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facing. So if you need to

find a complimentary products,

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because I think obviously

it's very important,

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you need to have your skincare regimen

and this is what Dr. We believe it's the

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same thing if you go to the dentist,

you want to whitening your teeth. Yeah,

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you can whiten my teeth

and I can pay for that,

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but if I don't clean

my teeth day and night,

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I'm not going to do something

very healthy for myself.

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It's the same thing for the

skin. And because of that,

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we establish a price point that us

today, if you look on our website,

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our price won't go from $35 until one 50.

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And sometimes our margin could be lower

because obviously the DNA of this brand

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is to provide a very good formula.

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And I think if we have something that we

truly achieve over this year is to have

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a very good reputation about our

quality of other the products.

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And sometimes we spending little bit

too much on a formulation that probably

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anyone would do it from the business side.

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But that's our way also to differentiate

and that's what we believe as long as

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we afford,

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we're still pushing into this direction

despite some time might not take a lot

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of sense if you want to

get the best of the margin,

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but that's not our philosophy and

we're trying to keep it like this.

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It always been since day one and I'm so

happy we can still doing that after 25

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years.

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I love that.

Speaker:

And the price point resonates obviously

with consumers and your focus on

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not profit maximization, although

nothing wrong with that obviously,

Speaker:

but you really want to deliver a

great product and delight customers.

Speaker:

And so let's talk about

the longevity for a minute.

Speaker:

So been around for 25 years,

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even longer if you consider Dr.

Brandt's clinic starting in 1996.

Speaker:

But it's just hard. It's

hard to stay relevant.

Speaker:

Bands usually only popular for a

few years. Products go out of style.

Speaker:

What has been the key to your longevity

and how do you stay relevant year after

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year, decade after decade?

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This is a very good question and I'm

going to try to answer from my own

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perspective and getting the chance being

involved with this brand for now 23

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years. I would say first people,

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I think if you're lucky enough to have

people who have the passion and make it

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pause here, passion could be good

and bad on a daily basis, trust me,

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managing people. But truly speaking,

based on all these years that I face,

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when you have people and

you're surrounding people

with passion when you need

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them the most, when there's

the most challenging time,

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you better to be surrounding with people

who are passionate and they really

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believe on everything they do every day.

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So I think one of the reasons that

we've been able to do it's to have this

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quality of people around this

brand. The second aspect,

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I think after it's how you entertain

and you remain truthful with the

Speaker:

brand DNA and the identity of the brand.

And for me it's so important

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when you bring new people, they need

to understand the history of the brand,

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they need to understand the DNA

and what's really the value,

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I would say value of the company, yes,

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but the value can evolve

depending on the years,

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but the value of the brand and this

needs to be very well explained and I

Speaker:

learned that. And believe it or not,

I was very amazed about Esella order,

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Esella order. Every time I heard

someone speaking about Esella order,

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they always try to remind themself what

Este Lauder should have done if she

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would sit on my chair. And since I

heard that it was 15 years ago, I said,

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wow, everyone should think like

that. What Dr. Ben would think,

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because Dr. Ben was innovative,

Dr. Ben was very bold.

Speaker:

Dr. Ben was very cosmetic in a very

unique way in so many way a sense of humor

Speaker:

who was very known for and all this

characteristic needs to be maintain.

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If you want to make sure the brand

can resist on any challenges,

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you need to remain truthful with ourself,

your identity and everything else.

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And then if I can say the

third one, we have been,

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I would say lucky to

be scouted by Sephora.

Speaker:

Sephora has been one of the major

retailers we're sitting in Alta, well.

Speaker:

Totally, those two are the

top retailers really, right?

Speaker:

But yes, they sell top on the

prestige markets here they are.

Speaker:

Otherwise you have Walmart and

CVS, which is more the mass,

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but it's not the case anymore

since the COVID happened.

Speaker:

But just to give you also some

insights working with Phora,

Speaker:

you have to do a market week every quarter

and every quarter you have to defend

Speaker:

yourself. Whatcha going to

launch in new innovation.

Speaker:

And we were a private owned company

and we were not the first year to be

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launched.

Speaker:

So every quarter to do that for more

than two decades has been exhausting but

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also very rewarding as well because one

of the reason to answer to your question

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actually believe getting every

quarter and to reinvent yourself,

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making sure you get the best of the

best as being able to keep us in our,

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despite challenging time and having

a high competition and such a

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congested market environment,

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it help us to maintain the level of

high expectation that we should be

Speaker:

able to deliver if we want to be lucky

to still sell through all these big

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retailers channels that we

have been selling our brand.

Speaker:

Now things change lately with the digital,

but getting back to your question,

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I think for 20 years,

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having every quarter to have a

market tweak when you need to defend,

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if you go into be able to have

co-eds or marketing or support from

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your own main chain of

distribution was a challenge.

Speaker:

And I think he helped us also to

give our best every day, every year,

Speaker:

every quarter.

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So good. Yeah, there's no free rides.

Speaker:

It's not one of those things

where once you're in, you're in,

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you've got a constantly

show that you can deliver,

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that the customer wants your product,

that it's innovative, that it's good,

Speaker:

all those things. And so again,

Speaker:

kudos to you guys for being

so relevant for so long.

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I know part of that goes

back to retention of

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individual customers.

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So that's something you guys have

excelled at getting a customer,

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retaining them,

Speaker:

you've got loyalty programs and I know

the Glow getters membership is super

Speaker:

interesting to me. So talk

a little bit about that.

Speaker:

How do you guys view customer

retention and loyalty

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programs and what have

you done to increase the

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LTV and to get customers

to stick for longer?

Speaker:

So it means first you need to

understand better how you talk

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to them. And obviously today

with digital, the beauty of it,

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you can segment and get a

better understanding which

one you would like to talk

Speaker:

with based on what you have to offer or

which kind of products you think you'll

Speaker:

like to address that fit exactly

with the kind of profile.

Speaker:

So the beauty of the digital today,

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you get the data and the data allow

you to be more specific and more driven

Speaker:

in a way you want to speak and whatever

you would like to speak about the

Speaker:

products or what will be the offers.

Speaker:

So that's not an easy exercise

that you need to master.

Speaker:

The more you master that, more you please

and more you entertain a relationship.

Speaker:

On our side, we're doing that today,

but still we have a lot of space for,

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because I want to customize,

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I want to personalize more and more and

this is what the doctor Skin Caroline

Speaker:

should do,

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being able to personalize everything we

could offer outside the product itself.

Speaker:

Because today you're

talking about resilience,

Speaker:

I don't want to jump to get back

to the first initial products,

Speaker:

but the market has been shifting

a lot and to answer to new

Speaker:

expectation from the customers

and from the retailers,

Speaker:

we decided to revamp the brand during

the COVID, which was a very bold move.

Speaker:

And we did that because we know that

was the only way to answer to the new

Speaker:

expectation from the

consumer and the retailers.

Speaker:

So getting back to your question,

being more digital driven,

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allow us to segments,

bringing some program,

Speaker:

getting the loyalty program

is one of them, the getters,

Speaker:

it's something we want to speak with

them because it's a kind of subscription

Speaker:

program.

Speaker:

And the subscription is very interesting

also because people is willing to pay

Speaker:

to get obviously a better

offer on the long term,

Speaker:

but give us the ability now to speak in

a very different way than I would say

Speaker:

the loyalty program or the

current Sierra meeting.

Speaker:

So all of that is a great way.

Speaker:

Now what you do have also it's

when you work with retailers,

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they do have this database,

but unfortunately they're

not access to the brand.

Speaker:

So it's a question of negotiation.

When you can get special VIB,

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which is the special people

who spend the most in Sephora,

Speaker:

you can also be part of this kind of

program that allows us to have a different

Speaker:

way to tackle the

communication with this kind

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of customers.

Speaker:

Yeah, man, that's so good.

Speaker:

Can you unpack the Glow

getters membership?

Speaker:

What does that cost roughly?

Speaker:

I know that's something that

could be changing over time,

Speaker:

but how does that work and then how do

you get more people to take advantage of

Speaker:

that?

Speaker:

So you pay $49 and you are

part of the program of glow

Speaker:

getters and it give you a very

good way to have a discount of

Speaker:

the products itself. So then

you can replenish yourself with,

Speaker:

I would say a better offer.

Speaker:

And at the same time you get direct

communication from the brand that allow

Speaker:

you to have access or different events

or different package of being aware

Speaker:

and having a products before anyone else.

Speaker:

All these kind of advantages that we try

to build that give you something very

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special and very unique that

no one else can have access.

Speaker:

That's the purpose of the locators.

Speaker:

It's amazing.

Speaker:

And then how are you promoting that and

then how are you increasing the take

Speaker:

rate of the membership?

Speaker:

So still how we do that,

Speaker:

obviously it's to use pay media,

Speaker:

pay media to target

audiences that we do it.

Speaker:

And that's what we do with our

agency to target the kind of profile.

Speaker:

And sometime what I like

the most me is to convert.

Speaker:

To convert people already there on data

and to convince them to the Gators.

Speaker:

That's quite not an easy task to do it,

Speaker:

but that's where we're trying to

do and to execute because for me

Speaker:

it's very valuable when you have a

gloated set and it can increase this.

Speaker:

Community. Yeah, totally makes sense.

Speaker:

And I know you made a comment

in the beginning that hey,

Speaker:

if I'm using a Microderm abrasion product

or I'm using this Botox like product

Speaker:

and it works, why would

I ever stop using it?

Speaker:

And you're not constantly

jacking up the price,

Speaker:

you're still saying within that range

Dr. Brant envisioned the products to be

Speaker:

in. And so I know that's a big part

of customer retention is it's a

Speaker:

product that works and it's priced well.

Speaker:

And so that makes a ton of sense.

Speaker:

How do you then view product r and d?

Speaker:

Because you've done a great job

of defining your product position,

Speaker:

staying true to that as

you've launched in new lines,

Speaker:

you got products that just absolutely

work. How do you view r and d?

Speaker:

So the r and d, for us,

Speaker:

it's definitely being innovative because

this is what we've been known for and

Speaker:

for that we need to master

this piece. So how we do that,

Speaker:

there's many way to do it

internally, we have a process,

Speaker:

obviously first 25 years of expertise

that give you a lot of insight that you

Speaker:

can use.

Speaker:

The second one is we're working directly

with the University of Miami since Dr.

Speaker:

Brandt is not involved in the

brand. And we also working with,

Speaker:

we call the Dr B experts.

Speaker:

This is a group of experts that we agreed

to work with and maybe I should do a

Speaker:

step back for the audience to make sure

they understand the full journey of the

Speaker:

DR Skincare. It could be.

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Great. We love that. We'd love that.

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Because we Dr. KinCare for the people

who joined the show for 25 years and

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we were one of the first

p Dr. Skin Caroline.

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And what happened is 2015

tragically we lost our bill,

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beloved Dr. Frederick

Brandts in April, 2015.

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And it was quite difficult.

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Imagine a brand that is private

owned that depending on his name,

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and that was obviously

the visionary, the leader,

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and it was quite a difficult way to

think how we pursue the best way.

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We'll have to probably to

replace him with another doctors.

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But as I explained earlier,

this guy was a genius,

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was very unique in so many way.

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And I don't think you can replace

easily a person like this.

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And at the same time, I know this

is what I learned with Dr Brandt,

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you need to challenge the status quo.

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And I saw already the holistic wellness

approach that was studied on the food

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industry and also on the

dermatological fields. And this

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is what I decided that to pursue.

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And he was part of the philosophy of Dr.

Biden already because he always explain

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your skin, you need to take care of

the inside and the how you look good,

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you feel good and you feel

good, you look good, very easy.

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But he works for everyone at the

end of the day. So when we did that,

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we decided to become more

than a dermatologist,

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Carolina and we call doctor brand.

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And today if you see our tagline is called

Integrative of dermatology and integr

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of dermatology. For people

who does know dermatology,

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it's a branch medicine that would

take care and target skin disorders.

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And integrative is the tendency to unify

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separate things. And what that means,

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it's we're going to combine

non-conventional therapy

and I think it brings all

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the different fields of medicine.

So today as we're getting back,

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to get back to your question on NPD,

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we're taking our inspiration for

dermatology but for nutrition,

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for biology, for psychology,

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dermatology,

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and also we have a nonprofit organization

focusing on mental health and self

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care. So we build a different can of

skills of expertise that we call the Dr.

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B experts. That was the nickname

of Dr Brandt called Dr B.

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So we kept it like this and we said the

doctor B experts and all these people

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allow us to find different

venue to come up with ideas and

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direction that will be great for the

consumer that allow us to evolve above and

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be beyond the dermatology brand.

So getting back to your point,

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25 years is good.

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We go also on mini show that shows

different kind of delivery system,

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raw materials, but we're working

with University of Miami as well.

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And last but not least, I think

today that's the beauty of it.

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I think we discussed that earlier is

the data, the data today, the data,

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it dictates a little bit what

the consumer is looking for.

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Obviously our data is not as big,

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so I won't say that the data

is dictating me what my NPD is,

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but I need to take into consideration

certain parameters and this is what we do.

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But the same day, in order

to create uniqueness,

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we need to come up with things that no

one heard about it. When we talk earlier,

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we said with Microderm vision no one

knows what it was and we're one of the

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first Botox likes we're one of the first.

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And right now I'm very excited with

bringing a new technology that will be

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launched in September.

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You will see it's something that

will mimic the micro needles.

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I don't think it has been seen

on the retail. It's very unique.

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You go on the cream and inside the cream

you have the micro sponges that will

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heat your skin and hitch it but in a

very uncomfortable but comfortable way

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at the same time. But the beauty of that,

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it'll open your pores and you're

going to deliver very deeply collagen

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ingredients that will improve quite

drastically in 48 hours. The collagen,

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the elasticity and the film nests very

exciting about this new products coming

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up.

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Amazing, amazing. I love that. And man,

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it really shows also in some of the

awards you guys have won. I know in style,

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allure, travel and leisure,

did I see that Oprah,

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didn't Oprah recognize one of their.

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Products many,

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many times We've been very lucky and

fortunate that over these years a lot of

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people from the industry, despite,

I'm going to tell you officially,

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we cannot afford an advertisement.

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We never put ads on

magazine and anything else.

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And usually when you put ads it's easier

I should say, to get some reports.

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So we got so many awards over the

years just based on the products,

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on how the quality of the products.

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And so very happy that also

continuing because like I just said,

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we just launched Rev months ago,

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we already received four five awards,

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which I was very surprised

to get it so early.

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So it's very encouraging and also it's

the beginning of the journey of this new

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revamping with our customer.

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That's great. That's great.

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What have been your primary

vehicles for customer acquisition?

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So how have you gotten

the story of Dr Brandt and

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your amazing product line?

Have you gotten that out there?

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How are you attracting customers?

What's worked the best there?

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Few things. First, when you're

lucky to work with retailers,

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sometime you get access to things

that they can give it to you.

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So they get some data,

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they can give you end caps inside the

stores that showcase the products.

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And for that you need of

course to be recognized,

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you need to negotiate depending on the

terms of the people you're speaking with.

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On our side as a brand, there is two

different way. One is the pay ads.

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Of course that is very important because

you still need to chase new customers

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and the only way to do it is to have a

relevant storytelling with paid media

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that can resonate. But that's not an

easy exercise. It's very congested,

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it's very competitive. And the cac,

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which is the click power

spanning customer getting more

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expensive every day. So that's why

we're forced also to make sure the

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organic side is very

important. And for that today,

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I know I'm sure your auditors knows that,

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but the streamline it becoming more

powerful every day and TikTok is one of

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them. I know Amazon is already there,

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but I think it's going to

increase significantly how

we streamline our products

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and having our own shopping inside.

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So that's something we're trying to

get much better on a social and organic

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because we saw the power of

streamline and the YouTube.

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So we try to educate.

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Educate is very important because I think

it's a point of differentiation we can

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do better than the others.

Speaker:

And the second one is to show a bit that

system money or before and after that

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can showcase the quality of

the products are delivering.

Speaker:

So that's be our mantra that we're trying

to push much more than what we have

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been doing the past few years.

And now with this neuro revamping,

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this is something we're

going to accelerate in the

next months. That's so good.

Speaker:

That's so good.

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Yeah. And how do you guys view

any philosophies to approaches

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to how do you tell great stories?

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How do you bring the benefits

of the product to life?

Speaker:

I know you mentioned before and after

and I know you've got the doctor be

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experts and things like that.

Speaker:

But any other thoughts on how do you

tell the story in a powerful way?

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Mia?

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I think I love to show when you can

show a drastic result before and

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after.

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I think that's the best way because a

visual will tell more than anything that

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we try to tell then after

how you can tell the story,

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which is very interesting is today I

would tell you this is what is so unique

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and the time we're living,

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I think there are no really rules because

you can see a mic whole influencer

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that is going to resonate with not

really a big audiences and she's going to

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have a better a I than potentially

someone who get to million.

Speaker:

Why sometime I don't have the

explanation to be honest with you.

Speaker:

So I think today I think it's

to have a good understanding of

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who can talk about your products and

how you're going to select these people.

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It's not an easy exercise,

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it's a conversation I'm having every

day with the team and then can translate

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the story that could be customized in

the way that where we're going to see the

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channels because we all know that TikTok

request a different kind of content

Speaker:

that if you do.

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YouTube it does, YouTube does

totally, totally different.

Speaker:

So it's much more work

for the brand nowadays.

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You need to customize constantly and

adapt the content based on YouTube,

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based on TikTok, based on

Instagram, based on the pay ads.

Speaker:

And that's an exercise that you need to

do mostly every day and build all the

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content that you should be enough for

you to make sure you can capitalize and

Speaker:

get the Hawaii. So I think that's

the challenge of any brand lately,

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how you do that, how you push, how far,

Speaker:

how much money you spent to make sure

that is relevant. At the end of the day,

Speaker:

I don't think there's a kind of recipe

and I think the more difficulty is when

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you're not at $100 million company,

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how you navigate with all this cotton and

spinning and that's an difficult task.

Speaker:

Yeah, well said. And then I think yes,

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sometimes it's finding

those micro influencers,

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sometimes it's finding lots of

different people to tell the story from

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their own perspective and that's going

to resonate with certain audiences and so

Speaker:

you guys are doing a great job of that

as well, which is really impressive.

Speaker:

So that's great. And then I

would love to hear the story,

Speaker:

so you've been with

the brand for 23 years,

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you're the CEO been the CEO

since 2015, is that right?

Speaker:

12,012. And so talk about that.

Speaker:

How did you rise from helping with the

European expansion and things like that

Speaker:

to now being the CEO and CEO

for a long time of the company?

Speaker:

So here's the true story, 24 years.

Speaker:

I joined the company in 2002

and I studied on the US markets,

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I became market manager and

I became pretty fast and

been very key to become the

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national sales director and then

a new management came on board.

Speaker:

It was a very kind of nice way to ask me,

Speaker:

but I took the challenge because

international expansion did not exist.

Speaker:

It is a true story. And I studied,

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I came with my small luggage in France

and I have no clue what I was doing.

Speaker:

And it was the beginning of SE to scouting

international brand to bring it back

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in Europe and I was one of them. I think

I was very, very lucky to be French.

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So I understand the French

style and the demands and I can

Speaker:

smooth the American branding with how

it will fit with the European market.

Speaker:

And it was at the time that Ceara was

willing to do anything to push all this

Speaker:

more brand. They were doing extremely

well in us and this is where jojo started.

Speaker:

And I've been very key to expand in

35 countries in three years from 2005,

Speaker:

2008, then after they

gave me the far east.

Speaker:

So I was still managing all this

international expansion from Paris until I

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became the new president and CEO in 2012.

Speaker:

So during this time it was not an

easy also for our brand for people to

Speaker:

understand who was aware

about the skin. Carolina.

Speaker:

I went through five different

C meaning every two years,

Speaker:

two years and a half. Management

and president was mostly dismiss.

Speaker:

And I survived because I was the cashflow

of the company to be honest with you.

Speaker:

So when I came it was a big challenge.

Speaker:

It was not an easy task and I was very

happy to find a way to bring a vision

Speaker:

and to explain to Dr. Boy and

you're acting in be like a startup,

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but you're already a brand

and you don't realize that.

Speaker:

And I realize how big it was

with the two medical office,

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the RD and the skincare line.

Speaker:

And I put all these entities as a

trilogy and I put a vision that the

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vision and from the consumer,

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the consumer and from the goods and

we can go that with the practice.

Speaker:

And it was a very virtual

positive circle that put us

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to explore ourselves and our

size three times until:

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and 15. This is where something very

unexpected. We lost our bill of founders,

Speaker:

Dr in 15.

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And just to get back and being

completely truthful with your audience,

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because I know this is a question that

has been asked for me for so long,

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I became by coincidence,

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the owners of the brand and it was

the only way to save the company

Speaker:

because at this time there was no one,

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the bank didn't want to backups. It was

a lot of people and a lot of praise.

Speaker:

And I think I wanted to

keep on what we were doing.

Speaker:

It means the legacy of the brand and no

one truly cared this time there was no

Speaker:

backup, nothing was anticipated.

Speaker:

So I decided to figure out how to convince

people from the estates and becoming

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the new owner of the brand. I was lucky

that everyone has been backed me up.

Speaker:

I mean my team in skincare

line, but also the bank.

Speaker:

And this is where I

became also the owners.

Speaker:

And then after a new

adventure study for me,

Speaker:

I needed to prove the rest of the world

that this brand can survive without Dr.

Speaker:

Brandts, which I know we do because

it's difficult. It's difficult.

Speaker:

Without the founder and with the

name, the namesake of the brand.

Speaker:

And this is where we bring this new

vision, the integrity of dermatology,

Speaker:

how we should evolve. And I think

we'll try to do as best as we can.

Speaker:

And then in 1920 the COVID happened,

Speaker:

but we're mainly driven by brick

and mortars, motor distribution,

Speaker:

which was so hard for us. So

I'm not going to lie to you.

Speaker:

For people who sometimes

saw our brand much less,

Speaker:

we suffer a lot because of the COVID,

Speaker:

because we shut down our brick and mortar

and we were not as strong as a digital

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as we should have been.

Speaker:

We knew that we were in a process of

building our digital and during this

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process and the COVID, this is

where the study to do the revamping,

Speaker:

which was crazy,

Speaker:

but I think there was the only way to

make sure we the ability to pursue the

Speaker:

next 10, 15 years. And I'm so

happy because I'm telling you,

Speaker:

the past two years we have been shifting.

Speaker:

We're mostly driven at digital at

65% now. It's amazing. It's amazing.

Speaker:

The Rev thing is it just ending this year?

Speaker:

So now we mostly revamped the whole brand

and a very happy that we multiply by

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twice for the past two years, our website,

Speaker:

which show me that the consumer

has been very well welcoming,

Speaker:

this new revamping on top of chasing

new customers. So this is where we are,

Speaker:

but there's been my

journey with the brand.

Speaker:

It's an amazing journey from kind of

getting pushed out to saying, Hey, okay,

Speaker:

I'll help you in France. And then you

became the cash cow of the business,

Speaker:

five CEOs come and go. Finally

you become CEO become owner.

Speaker:

And yeah, it's tough to lose

the face of the brand for sure.

Speaker:

You stepped in there and then COVID

for a retail focused brand. Come on.

Speaker:

I mean glad you had some

digital focus already,

Speaker:

but I know that accelerated

things and was not a welcome news.

Speaker:

And so kudos to you man.

Entrepreneurship is hard,

Speaker:

running a brand is hard and you guys just

seem to answer the challenge no matter

Speaker:

what the challenge is. So

kudos to you guys for that.

Speaker:

And then one thing I want to kind of

close with because I know this is near and

Speaker:

dear to your heart, and it's a

really cool thing you're doing.

Speaker:

You guys talk a lot about

mental health and mental health.

Speaker:

It's popular now or it's

acceptable to talk about now.

Speaker:

You guys really leaned into mental

health before it was popular.

Speaker:

So talk briefly about that.

Speaker:

Why did you decide to do that and why

did you decide to do that at a time when

Speaker:

it wasn't all that acceptable?

Speaker:

But thank you for letting me know to

speak about it because it's very close to

Speaker:

my hearts. When I lost Dr. Brown, as you

can imagine, I was very close with him.

Speaker:

He was like a motto, was a friend.

He was the godfather of my kids.

Speaker:

And I just tried to

educate myself and educate,

Speaker:

understanding what depression means,

and I have no clue. And when I dig in,

Speaker:

I realize what people start knowing today.

Speaker:

This is a dramatic statistic and I

saw how many people are depressed,

Speaker:

but no one used to talk about it.

Speaker:

And.

Speaker:

At this time I decided I

cannot hide how he passed away

Speaker:

because internet was already everywhere.

And it was at a time where

Speaker:

also company needs to chase. How are

you giving back to the community,

Speaker:

how you define yourself? And I told

everyone, no guys, it's very easy.

Speaker:

This is part of our story.

We should not be ashamed,

Speaker:

but I think we should find

a way to embrace it. Let's

correct the doctor Brandt,

Speaker:

foundation, and we're going

to focusing on multi life.

Speaker:

And at this time it was very bold

because a lot of people told me,

Speaker:

and I did my checking, if you

look on the beauty industry,

Speaker:

you got Mac who did an incredible

job about HEV eight on the

Speaker:

nonprofit organization is the one

who raised more money every year.

Speaker:

We got also a state order with the

breast cancer and we got over causes that

Speaker:

also is discussed. But at this time in 15,

Speaker:

no one talk about health and self-care.

So I decided to create the Dr. Brenton.

Speaker:

Our first action was to do what we

knew the best is mostly doing marketing

Speaker:

action to s the conversation

around health and self-care.

Speaker:

And this is what we have been doing.

Speaker:

And now we're going to celebrate out

10 years of the Dr. Brand Foundation.

Speaker:

This year of 2025, this is where we are.

Speaker:

So 10 years that this foundation has

been created. Great. So great man. And.

Speaker:

Yeah,

Speaker:

some people could have hid from the

story or run from the story or just hope

Speaker:

people would forget about it.

You guys leaned in and said, no,

Speaker:

let's honor the legacy. Let's

do something about this.

Speaker:

And so he started the foundation

and kudos to you guys. So with that,

Speaker:

we are out of time, Stephane, but really

thoroughly enjoyed this conversation.

Speaker:

Thank you for being transparent.

Speaker:

Thank you for talking about all the great

things you guys have done through the

Speaker:

ups downs, the twists and

turns of building a brand.

Speaker:

And so kudos to you guys

and keep up the good work.

Speaker:

Yeah, thank you. And thank you for

having me, Brett. Thank you so much.

Speaker:

Bye. Absolutely. And as always,

thank you for tuning in.

Speaker:

We'd love to hear more from you. If

you found this show helpful, powerful,

Speaker:

please share it with somebody else.

Speaker:

And if you'd like to

leave a review on iTunes,

Speaker:

that helps other people discover the

show. And with that, until next time,

Speaker:

thank you for listening.