Business Forum Please click here

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

  • hot
  • hot 100
  • 50 to watch in mobile
  • Entrepreneurs Summit

How Mama Mio secured a superstar non-exec


Your email address:   
Friend's email address:   
   

by Matthew Rock - Monday, 10th March 2008

How Mama Mio secured a superstar non-exec

Remember 1995, when Oasis and Blur reigned, and Britannia was Cool? The mid-nineties were the years when pop stars and entrepreneurs mingled at 10 Downing Street parties, and Tony Blair was whiter than white.

Sian Sutherland was a bit of a player in that scene. Then in her mid-twenties, she launched her new restaurant in Soho and, full of the spirit that anything's possible, she bagged a Michelin star in year one.

Ten years on, and (she'll forgive me this) with the stretch marks to show for almost a decade of motherhood, Sutherland is now building a sassy, potential blockbuster brand in the skincare sector.

Created with friends Kathy Miller and Tanya McKay, Mama Mio provides "skincare for supermamas". While the brand is still quite small ($3m turnover and 12 employees), it's building a reputation in all the right places. Stocked in 600 upmarket retailers in the UK and, significantly, the US, Mama Mio will arrive in New York's iconic Macy's department store later this year.

The marketplace for beauty and skincare products is not only hyper-competitive, it also sees new entrants every week. So what makes Mama Mio stand out?

First, Sutherland reckons they've discovered a whole new segment. "Between the three of us founders, we had seven children in six years," she explains in a stylish, American-style cafe in deeply trendy Clerkenwell. "We realised that we were a segment that no-one was talking to." Most pregnancy products play on fears of stretch marks and stress the negatives; Mama Mio would be a postive, life-affirming brand that focused on mothers and motherhood. More than one customer has said to Sutherland: "when I discovered Mama Mio, it was like finding a sister."

The other, big differentiator for this wannabe mega-brand is its serious board structure and backers. Sutherland's varied entrepreneurial career (she also ran an ad agency with Kathy Miller) means that she's no lightweight dabbler in the beauty sector, but an experienced brand-builder. Mama Mio was originally backed by Investec, and has focused on the huge US marketplace from day one.

She's also recognised the importance of getting the best possible advice and input into the business. So, on a trip to the US, she was introduced to Bob Nielsen, former group president of Estee Lauder and the man who built brands such as Aramis, Tommy Hilfiger, Prescriptives, La Mer, Donna Karan, Jo Malone and Kate Spade.

Bingo! Not only did Nielsen agree to invest his own money, he also became quasi-chairman of the business and is leading the professionalisation of Mama Mio - a  new CFO arrives imminently.

"We're moving from a niche to a mainstream brand; from the nursery department to the beauty floor," says Sutherland. You can't miss the garish pinks, blues and greens on Mama Mio's packaging. This is a small business with plenty to shout about.

Picture source

Tags: skincare, building a brand, non-executive, bob nielsen, beauty products, sian sutherland, mama mio, doing business in the us, entrepreneur,

Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

BUSINESS NEWS >>

New blood shakes up family business

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 04, 2008 12:39pm GMT

When Tim Perutz joined the family business, Nimlok was in poor shape. Within two years he’d taken the firm into profit, and cracked 55 countries worldwide.

"Fuel duty will cripple us"

By Kate Pritchard - July 04, 2008 12:28pm GMT

This week, hauliers descended upon the capital, sounding their horns in protest of the rate of fuel duty and waving banners reading “Truck off”. “If this situation continues, it will cripple us, if not ruin us,” says transport entrepreneur Bill Hockin.

Grass Roots entrepreneur receives an MBE for social responsibility

By Kate Pritchard - July 03, 2008 5:24pm GMT

David Evans set up Herfordshire-based performance improvement firm Grass Roots in the eighties. Today, he turns over a whopping £247m, employs over 1,000 people and has just become one of only three people in the country to receive an MBE for services to CSR.

Foresight invests in Silvigen

By Real Deals & Real Business - July 03, 2008 3:45pm GMT

Silvigen, a supplier of biomass fuels for use in the power industry, will use £1.75m from Foresight to finance the development of a processing plant in Goole, North Humberside.

Countdown to Human Capital Awards

By Catherine Woods - July 03, 2008 3:38pm GMT

At last year’s CBI/Real Business Human Capital Awards, prison administrator Vicky O’Dea was crowned the ‘people’s champion’.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Lee McQueen pulls a sickie

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 02, 2008 2:55pm GMT

First day on the job and Apprentice winner McQueen has been struck down by a flu-like virus.

Look out Boris! Sir Alan for Mayor?!

By Ally Papasodaro - June 27, 2008 4:10pm GMT

Sir Alan Sugar has been mooted as a possible labour candidate for Mayor of London, and the grizzly entrepreneur is up for the challenge.

The world's first Tibetan consumer brand?

By Matthew Rock - June 26, 2008 4:41pm GMT

Bizarre.

Elnaugh Vs. Paphitis. The Dragons are at war

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 26, 2008 2:45pm GMT

When Theo Paphitis suggested all women’s brains “turn to mush” when they get pregnant, fellow Dragon Rachel Elnaugh, entrepreneur and mother-of-five, breathed fire and brimstone.

I’m so excited. And I just can’t hide it.

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 25, 2008 11:09am GMT

Anyone else gearing up to go wild over the new domain name changes? No? Just think of the wit, variety and confusion it will bring to the world wide web.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover