In 1995 , Bobbi Brown sold her cosmetics company to Estée Lauder for $74.5 million . By 2012 , it was a billion-dollar business . In 2016 , she walked away from her own name. The reason?
"Too many people in a room making decisions, and too many men." Now she's 67 , running Jones Road Beauty , proving something most corporate acquirers refuse to believe: founders understand their brands better than committees ever will. The Philosophy That Built a Billion-Dollar Brand "I wish women would use cosmetics to look as
good as they can, and then get over it." Not contouring. Not drama. Not transformation. Makeup that looked like skin. She expected to sell 100 lipsticks in her first month. She sold 100 in a day . The market was hungry for something different. Estée Lauder saw the numbers and bought the company.
Brown was 38 and signed a 25-year non-compete , thinking: "I'm not going to want to work when I'm in my sixties." When Corporate Strategy Clashes With Brand DNA When you acquire a founder-led brand, you get the intellectual property, formulas, customer list, and distribution channels.
What you don't get: the instinct that built it. In Brown's final years at Estée Lauder , the company released a contour palette —everything Brown had built her brand against. "Because I wouldn't do it," she said. Contouring was trending. The data probably supported it. And it completely missed the point.
The Meeting Room Problem Brown describes her frustration simply: "A lot of people in a room making decisions." I've seen this pattern repeat across industries: Acquire a beloved brand Keep the founder for credibility Slowly optimize the soul out of it You add layers of approval—market research, focus groups,…