How Vicky Tsai Turns a Geisha Secret Into a Huge Business Success

How Vicky Tsai Turns a Geisha Secret Into a Huge Business Success
Vicky Tsai (Getty Images)
Entrepreneur
7/4/2022
Updated:
7/5/2022
By Tracy Byrnes
The title on Vicky Tsai’s business card is Chief Treasure Hunter at Tatcha, the skin-care company based on ancient Japanese traditions. It could very well say founder, CEO and product developer.

But Tsai has been on a continual hunt to find that ideal combination of living simply and naturally and appreciating this life.

And her journey reminds us all that if you have a problem or an issue, odds are good someone else is suffering from it as well. So fix it and build your business around the solution.

Life Is a Gift

As a fixed-income analyst at Merrill Lynch, Tsai worked in the World Financial Center, which was across the street from the Twin Towers.

So she saw everything on 9/11.

And everyday thereafter. “Every time they recovered another body we knew because they would cover it with the American flag,” remembers Tsai.

And then her once-athletic husband got very sick for the next two years after the attacks.“ And they still don’t know what happened,” she says.

“Plus I just didn’t believe in what I was doing anymore,” says the Jersey Girl, whose parents came from Taiwan.

So she knew it was time—they had to get out of there.

Life is a gift, she says. Don’t waste it.

Fix Yourself First

She went back to business school and got a job launching consumer products in China. But she made the grave mistake of testing way too many of those products on her own face. She ended up with acute dermatitis—which is basically a bleeding, blistering red rash—and couldn’t find anything to cure it.

In the process of researching a treatment for herself, she learned that the FDA has no oversight over cosmetics here in the States. “Ingredients are innocent until proven guilty here,” she says. “There are no advance protections in place for consumers.”

And the chemicals in some of the products she tested were obviously the reason for her current condition.

We often forget that the skin is the body’s largest organ and 60 percent of what you put on your skin passes right through into your body. So Tsai got completely turned off by the cosmetics industry and went “the natural, granola route, but that didn’t work either,” she says.

When flying through Japan one day, she came across these blotting papers—thin papers you use to pat your skin and absorb the excess oil. They were made from the abaca leaf, which is more fibrous than a banana leaf, and hammered into a super-thin sheet.

Her skin started to dramatically improve with these papers and she learned that the Geisha used them.

Our Ancestors Just May Have Been Smarter Than Us

Geisha, which means arts person, is considered almost sacred in Japan. It represents the female version of Kabuki actors.

Tsai decided to go back to Kyoto, the center of Geisha tradition, because she needed to know more about the beauty secrets.

When Tsai met her first Geisha she was blown away by her beautiful skin—with that white makeup and without makeup. “It was magical to meet her,” she says.

She learned that what they put in their bodies they put on their skin. But they didn’t write anything down. For more than 300 years, these traditions were just passed on.

She eventually heard that there was one book with all the details, written 200 years ago. When she finally got her hands on it and had it translated, “I didn’t know whether to be delighted or disappointed,” she says.

It was super simple: In addition to the abaca leaf, they used green tea, seaweed, red algae, oatmeal, rice bran, and Japanese wild roses.

Your Problem Is Likely Someone Else’s, Too

In the Western world, we are taught to believe that future discoveries must be better than what happened in the past.

But certainly not in this case.

“Visiting Kyoto was like walking back in time. Craftsmanship and integrity are still part of everyday life,” says Tsai. It inspired her and made her believe in something again. And she wanted to keep that feeling with her at all times.

It was then she decided to create a company that embodied these simple, old principles.

She sold her engagement ring and car to finance it. She took on consulting jobs and was even the superintendent of a building to make ends meet.

She found two partners and began the process of creating products—those blotting papers—made from these few ingredients.

When the first 10,000 arrived in big wooden crates, she panicked. “I really hoped other people were as obsessed with this piece of paper as I was” even though it wasn’t new or technologically advanced, Tsai says.

They put up a little website, “and there were crickets,” she says. The only people who purchased were a few good friends, to whom she is forever grateful.

She tried to hire a PR agency but they all turned her down. So she sent samples to magazine beauty editors and makeup artists.

And then people took notice. She was soon in every magazine, including O, the Oprah Magazine, and on the Today Show. Calls from stores started coming and today her blotting papers now are in every Hollywood star’s handbag.
View of Tatcha product on display at the Majestic Downtown in Los Angeles, California, on Oct. 21, 2018. (Presley Ann/Getty Images)
View of Tatcha product on display at the Majestic Downtown in Los Angeles, California, on Oct. 21, 2018. (Presley Ann/Getty Images)
Her skincare, all made with the same ingredients that the Geisha used, has taken off as well.

Be Grateful and Give

In January 2014, Tsai started a partnership with Room to Read, an organization committed to improving our children’s education. So every full-sized Tatcha skincare purchase funds a little girl’s day of school. She has since funded more than 1,500 years of school for girls in 11 countries.

“That is how I measure my success,” she says.

That’s how we all should. Life is a gift. Live simply.

In 2015, Tatcha ranked No. 21 on the 5000-list of fastest-growing private U.S. companies. And in 2019, Unilever purchased the company for an estimated $500 million.
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