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Olaplex’s new CEO turns to her past at Supergoop in a bid to regain the brand’s dominance in haircare

By
Emma Hinchliffe
Emma Hinchliffe
and
Nina Ajemian
Nina Ajemian
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By
Emma Hinchliffe
Emma Hinchliffe
and
Nina Ajemian
Nina Ajemian
Down Arrow Button Icon
August 14, 2024, 8:45 AM ET
Amanda Baldwin, CEO of Olaplex.
Amanda Baldwin, CEO of Olaplex. Courtesy of Olaplex

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Fertility clinics in Alabama are shipping embryos out of state, Dolly Parton is launching a beauty line, and Olaplex’s new CEO aims for a comeback. Have a great Wednesday.

– Hair repair. Amanda Baldwin joined the sunscreen brand Supergoop in 2016 as the category was exploding. What had been a sleepy corner of the personal care sector in the U.S. became a hot beauty product, with consumers suddenly viewing SPF as a key part of their beauty routines.

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It’s an experience that prepared her for her new job as CEO of Olaplex, which she began in December. The haircare brand, known for a science- and repair-driven approach to hair, helped kick off a boom in the category when it launched a decade ago. Baldwin, an alum of LVMH earlier in her career, credits the brand with creating the category of “bond-building” haircare, or how Olaplex refers to strengthening and repairing hair.

But the brand is at a different stage of its lifecycle now. It’s a more mature business with $458.3 million in sales in 2023—down a dramatic 34.9% from the year prior. (Olaplex went public in 2021 and was backed by private equity firm Advent International.) Olaplex is recovering from a lawsuit that alleged its products caused people to lose hair—the opposite of what the brand wants to be known for. The episode also lost Olaplex some of the stylists who are so important in the hair industry; the ones who recommend and sell products to their clients. (Baldwin says there has been “misinformation” and the brand is focused on the future.) And as more competitors enter the hair-repair category, Baldwin is seeking to help Olaplex become known for more than its initial products.

Amanda Baldwin, CEO of Olaplex.
Courtesy of Olaplex

Still, Baldwin plans to rely on her category-building background to write Olaplex’s next chapter. “If you create a category, you have to continue to lead it, you have to continue to innovate, you have to continue to break the next boundary,” she says. Even when new players enter the space, “you’re the original, you’re the one that started the conversation,” she adds.

Last month, the brand introduced a new product for curly hair that was called its “biggest innovation in 10 years.” Her goal is to make clearer to Olaplex customers “what’s distinctive about our product” through both product innovation and marketing, finding the white space that Olaplex can own in the years ahead.

Moving from SPF to hair, Baldwin has enjoyed the emotional resonance of that work with customers. “Everybody relates to the idea of what a good hair day is. It’s an incredibly impactful, emotional category,” she says.

Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com

The Broadsheet is Fortune’s newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.

ALSO IN THE HEADLINES

- IVF across borders. At least four out of seven fertility clinics in Alabama are working to ship embryos out of state after the state’s ruling that embryos were “unborn children.” Others are working to discard embryos out of state, worried about legal repercussions in Alabama. New York Times

- Court to court. WNBA player Dearica Hamby filed a lawsuit against the WNBA and her former team the Las Vegas Aces alleging unfair treatment when she was pregnant. The WNBA is aware of the suit and reviewing; the Aces did not respond to a request for comment. CNN

- Shifting strategy. General Motors, with chief executive officer Mary Barra, has been laying off its staff in China as part of a strategy shift and upcoming operations overhaul. The employees laid off were in market-related roles. In the coming weeks, GM and local partner SAIC Motor will be talking about potential capacity cuts. Bloomberg

- Hello, Dolly. Dolly Parton has announced the launch of her new makeup line Dolly Beauty; four lipsticks, with names referencing her song titles, will be available online starting Aug. 22 for $20 each. “Lord knows, nobody wears more makeup than me, so I know all the little things I want,” the country superstar says. WWD

MOVERS AND SHAKERS

As part of Starbucks’ CEO transition from Laxman Narasimhan to Chipotle boss Brian Niccol, Starbucks CFO Rachel Ruggeri will serve as interim CEO. Board chair Mellody Hobson will become lead independent director. 

Chubb Limited, an insurance provider, named Annmarie Hagan as vice president, Chubb Group and chief financial officer of operations & technology and transformation. The company also appointed Mong-Diep “Dee” Le as chief auditor. Most recently, Hagan was vice president, Chubb Group and chief accounting officer. Le was executive vice president, global controller.

Razorfish, a marketing service, appointed Emily Schwinge to executive vice president, CRM practice lead. Most recently, she was senior vice president CRM practice lead at VML.

Prove, a digital identity company, appointed Linda Mantia to its board of directors. Most recently, she was chief operating officer at Manulife Financial Corporation.

ON MY RADAR

Kristen Faulkner, the former VC who just won two Olympic gold medals, talks leaving Silicon Valley behind to follow her cycling dreams Fortune

It’s my party, and I’ll take it seriously if I want to: How Partiful revived the evite USA Today

How do you market a domestic-violence movie? Not like It Ends With Us Rolling Stone

PARTING WORDS

“I knew that ‘we told you so’ moment was coming. I knew it would come eventually.”

— Esther Wallace, founder of streetwear brand Playa Society, on her company taking off amid a boom in women’s sports

This is the web version of MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Authors
Emma Hinchliffe
By Emma HinchliffeMost Powerful Women Editor
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Emma Hinchliffe is Fortune’s Most Powerful Women editor, overseeing editorial for the longstanding franchise. As a senior writer at Fortune, Emma has covered women in business and gender-lens news across business, politics, and culture. She is the lead author of the Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter (formerly the Broadsheet), Fortune’s daily missive for and about the women leading the business world.

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By Nina AjemianNewsletter Curation Fellow

Nina Ajemian is the newsletter curation fellow at Fortune and works on the Term Sheet and MPW Daily newsletters.

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