Pattern Beauty by Tracee Ellis Ross is Now Available in Salons

Pattern Beauty, the curly and textured hair-care brand launched by Tracee Ellis Ross four years ago, is venturing into the direct-to-stylist professional channel.

As Glossy reports, on August 2, the brand announced it is expanding its omnichannel distribution via professional salons, opening up the buzzy hair-care brand to a new revenue channel and bridging the gap between professional services and textured-hair customers. Pattern is also currently sold through retailers including Sephora and Ulta Beauty.

“We’ve always known that stylists and salons have been safe spaces for nurturing beauty. Stylists are who we confide in and who we trust to transform. Stylists see the vision even before it’s realized,” said Jackson. “We wanted to continue to provide a personalized relationship to our community by going direct to stylists.”

According to McKinsey, Black customers spent $6.6 billion on beauty in 2021. That’s 11.1% of the total U.S. beauty market and just behind the 12.4% Black representation in the total U.S. population. Furthermore, Black consumers are three times more likely to be dissatisfied with their hair-care, skin-care and makeup options, compared to non-Black consumers. In 2020, Tresemmé released a survey on hair bias, revealing a training gap for stylists regarding textured hair, which tends to create a salon atmosphere that makes Black women and customers with textured hair feel uncomfortable and underserved.

Tracee Ellis Ross, founder and CEO of Pattern Beauty, recalled that the beauty advertisements of her childhood offered help for curly hair but didn’t do what they promised for her type of curly hair. “The marketing for hair products didn’t reflect images that looked like me, nor did the products provide what my curly and coily hair needed,” she said, according to the McKinsey report.

Pattern is not the only brand to offer a direct-to-stylist approach, but it does appear to be an underdeveloped approach to the professional channel. Brands found in salons are typically sold to salon owners through third-party distributors.


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