That understanding shaped how she views entrepreneurship in Africa. Creating sustainable businesses, generating jobs, and giving women the tools to thrive isn’t just an economic mission—it’s a pathway to dignity, stability, and long-term opportunity. It’s how communities stay rooted and grow.
Today, as the Founder and CEO of Ginger, she’s applying that same global insight to a problem most people never see: the hidden cracks in Africa’s beauty supply chain. Cracks that cost entrepreneurs time, money, and momentum.
In this conversation, she opens up about why she walked away from corporate success to build Ginger, what it really takes to transform a broken supply chain, and why leading with technology and purpose, not one or the other, is the only way to build something that lasts.
You built an exciting career at companies like Sony and Vox, working with some of the world’s biggest brands. What made you walk away from all of that to build Ginger?
I loved my time at Sony and Vox, where I learned how global brands scale, build trust, and move culture. But what ultimately led me to build Ginger came long before corporate.
Not many people know this about me, but I’ve always had a skill for hair. In college, I did hair on the side because there were no salons near campus that catered to Black women. For me, it
became an opportunity — but it also revealed something deeper. People were struggling to access the basics they needed simply because the system wasn’t built with them in mind.
Years later, while working with the United Nations on campaigns highlighting the realities of African refugees, I saw that same pattern play out in a far more urgent context: when systems fail, opportunity disappears. People lose income, stability, and sometimes the ability to stay in the places they call home.
That understanding shaped everything for me. Because when you look at Africa’s beauty sector — one of the most dynamic, women-powered industries on the continent — you see incredible talent and demand, but a supply chain full of cracks. Entrepreneurs are working twice as hard because the infrastructure hasn’t caught up.
So leaving corporate wasn’t walking away. It was answering a call to build something that could actually support the people keeping this industry alive.
Ginger isn’t simply a marketplace; it’s infrastructure. A platform designed to ensure beauty entrepreneurs can access the products, technology, and resources they need to build and scale sustainable businesses. It’s a new kind of opportunity engine for a sector that employs and empowers millions across the continent.
You mentioned infrastructure. What does it look like to build infrastructure for an industry that’s been underserved for decades?
When I talk about infrastructure, I’m really talking about the basic things that make commerce work — direct connections between suppliers and buyers, transparent pricing, reliable logistics, and systems people can actually trust.
Before Ginger, if you owned a salon in Lagos and wanted to stock quality hair care products, you might go through three, four, sometimes five middlemen. Each one taking a cut. Each one adding time. And sometimes, your money would just disappear somewhere in that chain. That’s not a supply chain — that’s a game of telephone where everyone loses except the middlemen.
For decades, beauty entrepreneurs across Africa have had to build their own workarounds because none of these foundational systems existed for them. So they spend more time chasing products, verifying authenticity, negotiating prices, or trying to piece together demand than actually running or growing their businesses.
Building infrastructure means replacing that chaos with clarity.
It looks like creating one platform where a retailer can source authentic products, compare prices, place orders, and trust that what they need will arrive on time. It’s using technology and strong partnerships to make the beauty supply chain predictable instead of painful.
And that’s ultimately what Ginger is — not just a marketplace, but the backbone that allows an entire sector to finally function the way it should.
What are the biggest challenges you’ve faced while trying to build that infrastructure, and how are you overcoming them?
Building infrastructure in an industry that has operated without it for decades comes with real challenges. The first is fragmentation — there’s no centralized supply chain, no standard pricing, and no shared systems. So we’re essentially connecting pieces that were never designed to work together. That requires time, trust, and a lot of coordination across suppliers, distributors, and retailers.
The second challenge is predictability. When you’re trying to create a stable experience in an unstable market, you have to build technology, partnerships, and processes that can absorb volatility — without pushing that burden onto the entrepreneur. That means being very intentional about which suppliers we onboard, how we vet products, and how we integrate logistics partners.
The third challenge is behavior change. Many entrepreneurs have operated a certain way for years — calling multiple suppliers in each order cycle, negotiating every price, and improvising around daily uncertainty. Introducing a system that brings clarity and structure is powerful, but it requires education and ongoing trust-building.
We overcome all of this by staying incredibly disciplined: focusing on quality over quantity, building technology that simplifies rather than complicates, and listening closely to the entrepreneurs we serve. Every challenge is solved with the same goal in mind — to make the beauty supply chain reliable for the first time.
You’ve already connected hundreds of brands and suppliers through Ginger. What’s been the biggest surprise as the platform has scaled?
How hungry the market was for something that simply…works.
We’re not reinventing physics here. At its core, Ginger is connecting people who have products with people who need products — and making that connection reliable. But because the alternative has been so chaotic for so long, the impact feels transformative.
We started seeing businesses grow faster than even we anticipated. A distributor in Abuja told us their sales jumped after listing on Ginger. A salon owner told us she cut her procurement time in half. These are everyday wins, but they add up to something big.
And that’s the part that surprised me. It’s not magic — it’s what happens when you remove years of friction from a system that’s been carrying it by hand. The demand was always there. The talent was always there. The industry just needed a structure that actually holds.
When you remove that friction, what does it unlock for beauty entrepreneurs on the continent?
When you remove friction, you give people their time and confidence back — and that changes everything.
Most beauty entrepreneurs in Africa aren’t struggling because they’re not talented or hardworking. They’re struggling because they’re fighting the system every day: chasing suppliers, guessing prices, dealing with stockouts, and trying to stay consistent in an inconsistent environment.
When you take that weight off their shoulders, you see who they really are.
A retailer who used to spend three hours a day sourcing can now spend that time serving customers or growing her business. A distributor who never had visibility into demand can finally plan, forecast, and scale. And a salon owner isn’t operating from a place of scarcity anymore — she’s operating from strategy.
What it unlocks is stability. And with stability comes growth.
The truth is, the beauty sector in Africa has always had the demand, the creativity, and the entrepreneur spirit. What it lacked was the infrastructure. So when you make the system finally work the way it should, entrepreneurs do the rest. They rise. They expand. They build.
Our job is just to give them the foundation to do that.
As Ginger grows, which parts of the supply chain do you see the biggest opportunity to strengthen through technology?
As we grow, the biggest opportunities are really about tightening the connections between the pieces that already exist in the supply chain. A lot of the challenges in this industry aren’t because the actors are ineffective — it’s because the systems connecting them are weak or nonexistent.
So for us, technology is a way to bring clarity, consistency, and visibility to everyone involved. Whether that means better product data, more transparent pricing, smoother communication
between suppliers and retailers, or simply helping people plan and forecast with confidence — those are areas where tech can make an immediate difference.
We’re not trying to reinvent every part of the supply chain. We’re focused on strengthening the points where friction shows up the most, and doing it in a way that feels natural, not overwhelming. As we scale, we’ll keep layering in the tools that make the experience more predictable for everyone.
The guiding principle is simple: if it removes friction and builds trust, it’s worth exploring. Everything else can wait.
You mentioned you’re not leading with tech alone. What does that actually mean in practice?
It means the technology serves the business model, not the other way around.
A lot of startups fall into this trap where they build cool tech and then try to find a problem for it. We did the opposite. We identified the problem, broken access in beauty wholesale, and then built the technology needed to solve it profitably.
The platform enables direct connections. The inventory management tools help businesses scale. The payment systems protect transactions. The logistics partnerships ensure delivery.
All of that is technology. But it’s technology with a clear purpose: make everyone in this ecosystem more profitable.
What’s next for Ginger? Where do you see this going?
We’re just getting started, honestly. Right now we’re focused on Nigeria because it’s Africa’s largest beauty market. But the same problem exists across the continent. Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, everywhere you look, beauty businesses are dealing with broken supply chains but sky-high demand.
So expansion is definitely on the horizon. More markets. More categories within beauty. More value-added services for businesses on the platform.
But the core mission stays the same: build infrastructure that makes African beauty commerce work the way it should. Connect the people who need to connect. Remove the friction that’s been costing everyone money.
Last question: what do you want people to understand about what you’re building?
This isn’t just a beauty play. It’s not about products or even marketplaces.
We’re building the foundation that lets entrepreneurs actually thrive — not hustle around broken systems or survive on workarounds. When people have predictable access, fair pricing, and a platform they can trust, they get back their time, their margins, and their confidence.
And yes, Ginger is a business — intentionally built to scale and be profitable. Real change doesn’t come from charity; it comes from solutions strong enough to stand on their own and create value for everyone they touch.
When people ask what Ginger does, I tell them we’re building the infrastructure African beauty businesses have always deserved. Infrastructure that removes friction, unlocks growth, and gives entrepreneurs room to dream bigger than their circumstances.
At its core, Ginger is about possibility. And we’re only scratching the surface of the impact we’re here to make.
To learn more about how Ginger is transforming beauty wholesale across Africa, visit gingerme.io