logo
episode-header-image
Jun 2025
34 m

Tracee Ellis Ross: Understanding the Div...

THE BUSINESS OF FASHION
About this episode

When Tracee Ellis Ross launched Pattern Beauty in 2019, she set out to challenge the beauty industry's lack of products for curly, coily and tight-textured hair. Despite numerous obstacles, including scepticism about market viability and systemic biases in the product testing process, Ross has built Pattern into a leading haircare brand addressing an underserved market.


“Black beauty and textured hair was not being mirrored back as a celebration but instead it was a problem,” Ross shared. “[Pattern] is to allow people to have the access to their most beautiful hair and self in their own bathroom as opposed to having to always trust a professional.”


During her conversation with BoF founder Imran Amed at The Business of Beauty Global Forum 2025 in Napa Valley, California, Ross shared her journey from Hollywood actress to entrepreneur, detailed the systemic changes she's driving in the haircare industry and emphasised the importance of humanity in business building. 


Key Insights: 


  •  Ross described her early struggle with understanding and accepting her natural hair as a deeply personal and emotional journey. "Making sense of how my hair grew out of my head was difficult," she said. "I had to master and understand and gain a sense of love and celebration in my hair." This experience became the foundation for her brand Pattern, which aims to shift the narrative around textured hair from one of difficulty to one of pride and empowerment.


  • Ross articulated how the standard beauty narrative has often required Black women to erase parts of themselves to be seen. “There’s a part of beauty and beauty culture that has been about erasing who we are in order to fit in,” she said. Through Pattern, she seeks to change that narrative by celebrating individuality and authenticity: “I want people to have their hair. They just need the right products to support their hair. That’s what doesn’t exist.”


  • Pattern was not an overnight success born of celebrity privilege — it took a decade of perseverance, rejection and self-education, Ross said. “There’s this myth that I was this famous actress who had lots of money to start a company — garbage,” she said. “I’m a Black actress in Hollywood. Let’s be clear about my finances.”


  • While products are at the heart of Pattern, Ross stressed that her brand is rooted in community, identity and purpose. “Pattern is about allowing people access to their most beautiful hair, their most beautiful self, in their own bathroom,” she said. “You have an opportunity to take all that wasted space not serving this customer and turn it into money, purpose, and value.”


Additional Resources:



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Up next
Nov 21
Prada Group CEO Andrea Guerra on Fixing the Luxury Business Model
<p>Over the last two years, demand for luxury fashion has softened as aspirational shoppers have pulled back and consumer fatigue has crept in. Yet, Prada Group has continued to grow, by prioritising brand DNA, employing disciplined curation and creating strong connections to&nbs ... Show More
25m 44s
Nov 19
Can Fashion Still Meet Its Climate Promises?
<p>As COP30 gets underway in Belém, a port city on the edge of the Brazilian rainforest, the mood is sober. A decade after the Paris Agreement was adopted internationally to limit global warming, many of the world’s largest fashion companies have fallen short on emissions cuts — ... Show More
30m 26s
Nov 14
Amber Valletta: ‘Do What You Love. Serve a Higher Purpose.’
<p>Amber Valletta grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spending time on her grandparents’ farm. Her childhood was defined by open fields, a freshwater creek and a simple rule from her mother: go outside and use your imagination.</p><br><p>At 15, a local modelling class set her on an unexp ... Show More
42m 22s
Recommended Episodes
Nov 2024
Tracee Ellis Ross talks Pattern Beauty, advocacy, and joy with Samira Nasr
<p>Award-winning actress and founder of Pattern Beauty Tracee Ellis Ross didn’t see Black beauty being represented well in the market – so she built a company from scratch to fix that. In this episode, she shares entrepreneurial lessons with her longtime friend Samira Nasr, who i ... Show More
24m 24s
Sep 29
Julie Wainwright: Getting Real Real About Building a Billion-Dollar Business
Julie Wainwright is the visionary founder and past CEO of The RealReal, the luxury resale giant that disrupted the fashion industry and redefined what it means to build a billion-dollar brand. In her new book, Time to Get Real: How I Built a Billion Dollar Business that Rocked th ... Show More
1h 16m
Nov 2024
Brittany Lo
<p>Brittany Lo is the innovative entrepreneur behind <a href="https://beiabeauty.com" style="color:rgb(17,85,204);background-color:transparent;">Beia Beauty</a> and <a href="https://www.beautinibyblo.com/" style="color:rgb(17,85,204);background-color:transparent;">Beautini</a>. H ... Show More
27m 55s
Oct 13
Setting The New Standard in Skincare With Alisa Metzger, Co-Founder iNNBEAUTY Project
Before launching iNNBEAUTY Project, Alisa Metzger spent over a decade inside some of the world’s biggest beauty companies—L’Oréal, Procter & Gamble, and Coty—learning exactly how the industry worked from the inside out. But after years of seeing the same patterns repeat—sky-high ... Show More
51m 40s
Oct 2024
Ep492 - Elizabeth Block | Beyond Vanity: The History and Power of Hairdressing
<p>Elizabeth L. Block visits Google to discuss her book "Beyond Vanity: The History and Power of Hairdressing" where she explores the diverse history of women's hair.</p> <p>In the nineteenth century, the complex cultural meaning of hair was not only significant, but it could als ... Show More
34m 16s
Sep 2024
Ep.105 What It Takes To Be The Best In Your Industry with Jen Atkin
Dream guest klaxon!! This week on Working Hard, Hardly Working, I’m speaking to the incredible Jen Atkin, the founder of OUAI and one of the world’s most influential hairstylists. She started out as a young stylist who moved to LA with $300 dollars in her pocket, and has since tr ... Show More
1 h