What I Wish I Knew Starting Out in Personal Care

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What I Wish I Knew Starting Out in Personal Care

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What I Wish I Knew Starting Out in The Personal Care Industry

Authored by: Guery Cordovadisla

When I first got into personal care, I thought the hardest part would be making a great product. I was wrong. The hardest part is making a stranger trust you. In 2026, shoppers have a million tabs open and very little patience.

The first thing I wish I knew is this: “good” is not a plan. A clean formula and nice packaging are just the entry fee. The real job is clarity. In five seconds, a customer should know what problem you solve, who you solve it for, and what to do next. If they have to think, they leave. Personal care is emotional. People buy with hope and worry at the same time. They want the choice to feel safe.

The second thing is that your first real product is not the product. It is the routine. Brands love to talk about ingredients like a science class. That can help later, but it is not what makes someone buy today. People want a simple plan that fits real life. Morning, night, after a shower, after a shave. Two minutes. Done. When you sell a routine, you are really selling a habit. Habits create repeat customers.

The third thing is that positioning beats features. Everyone says “premium.” Everyone says “clean.” Everyone says “high quality.” That is background noise now. What cuts through is being specific. Specific person. Specific problem. Specific result. When you pick a lane, you stop competing with everybody, and you start becoming the obvious choice for somebody.

Here is one real example from my own business. I’m a co-owner of Domepeace, a DTC personal care brand built for bald men. At first, we tried to sound like a normal skincare brand. We talked about “healthy skin” and “hydration.” It was true, but it was vague. Then we listened to our customers. Bald men did not say, “I want better skin.” They said, “My head looks shiny in photos.” They said, “My scalp feels tight after I shave.” They said, “I want a clean matte look, not a greasy look.”

So we changed our messaging to match their words. We centered the offer on shine control and post-shave comfort. We made the routine painfully clear: what to use, when to use it, and what to expect in the first week. The result was not just better click-through rates. It also improved reviews and lowered returns, because the right people were buying for the right reason. It even made bundles easier to sell, because a bundle feels like a complete answer when the problem is clear.

The fourth thing I wish I knew is that operations are part of the product. Fast shipping, clear tracking, quick support replies, and a package that arrives in one piece are not “extra.” They are trust signals. In personal care, trust is the whole business. A bad delivery can ruin a great formula.

The last thing is to treat claims like a loaded weapon. New founders get excited and promise everything. Don’t. Say what it does, say who it is for, and let customer experience do the rest. Believable beats flashy.

If I could go back, I would do three things every week: make the routine simpler, make the offer clearer, and make the purchase feel safer. That is how you build a brand that lasts.

Byline: Guery Cordovadisla is a co-owner at Domepeace, a DTC mens personal care brand


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