Yahoo Finance Presents: Pattern Founder & CEO Tracee Ellis Ross

On this episode of Yahoo Finance Presents, Pattern Founder and CEO Tracee Ellis Ross sat down with Yahoo Finance's Melody Hahm to discuss her new beauty business venture, as well as to discuss her role on ABC's show Blackish, and her political activism.

Video Transcript

[MUSIC PLAYING]

MELODY HAHM: Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with Tracee Ellis Ross, the founder and CEO of hair care line Pattern, as well as a Golden Globe-winning actress and producer. Tracee, thanks so much for joining us today.

TRACEE ELLIS ROSS: I'm so happy to be with you.

MELODY HAHM: So I want to start with talking about your entrepreneurial venture. You launched Pattern last fall. As you kind of reflect on the year that it's been, of course, there were so many uncertainties thrown in the mix as a new business owner, tell me about how you feel having launched this really successful business for textured hair.

TRACEE ELLIS ROSS: I feel really good. I've learned a lot. And I also feel really grateful to the community that I am serving and in dialogue with through this company. It's been really special. It's a community that I am a part of, a very vast community of curly, coily, and tight-textured people.

And-- but to be in this new relationship with this community that is a different kind of dialogue has been really exciting for me, both in terms of the feedback and hearing how people are verbally telling me how the products are working for them and also how our sales are doing, particularly during this pandemic. You know, it was a little scary. We launched phase two, the styling products, during the pandemic. And I think so much of what's happened in this very unprecedented time has really reinvigorated my mission for the company, my intention and my promise of the brands.

So my mission being to create effective products for the curly, coily, and tight-textured community that are actually meant for us to support our hair, that it'd be a company that is centered around the celebration of Black beauty, and also that we continue to be an active space where we are sharing and seeing our beauty, our authentic beauty.

MELODY HAHM: Mm-hmm. Yeah, and when you think about even initiatives, like Aurora James' fight for 15, right, to make sure that there average is 15% of store shelves or online space dedicated to Black-owned businesses. Tell me about your conversations that you're having with retailers. I know you're in Ulta now. Do you feel as though, given the fact that you do have celebrity status, you have a little bit more kind of weight, negotiating power, energy that you can bring to the table to kind of champion for the cause at large?