Sunday, December 29, 2013

B.O.B.S.A Celebrates As We Enter 2014


As we enter the 2014 New Year, we want to extend our sincerest thanks to all B.O.B.S.A members. Thank you all for your continued support.  In 2013, we have made strides into gaining attention from mainstream media because of our growing strength in numbers.
In looking to the year ahead, please look for our ad in the USA Today’s Black History Month edition. Here is a preview of what is to come in February.
 
 
 

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Metro Salon Pro Magazine

Check out B.O.B.S.A in the new edition of Metro Salon Pro Online. Metro Salon Pro is a free publication that is distributed  in local salons, grocery stores, coffee houses, colleges and universities, and other businesses in your neighborhood.

 

Monday, December 16, 2013

B.O.B.S.A Shows Off Its Natural Style At The NZURI Natural Hair Show

 The Show
 
The Natural Hair Models
 
 Off Da Hook Booth
 
The Mascots
 
B.O.B.S.A  Booth

Sunday, December 15, 2013

HAS THE KOREAN BEAUTY SUPPLY INDUSTRY REACHED ITS SUMMIT?


By Dr. Edward Tony Lloneau       

 The Korean Beauty Supply Industry is very strong; in fact, the largest beauty supply network in this country is Korean.  Jenny’s Beauty Supply with 8 distribution warehoused in 8 major cities is a strong example.  Sally’s Beauty Supply is the largest beauty supply chain of stores in America, with over 2,300 stores in the U.S.  But collectively the Koreans have over three times that many.  Most are bigger and stock a larger variety of products, including local and regional products.  However, the Korean stores for the most part are located in mostly Afro American communities.  The reason for this is because the main focus of sales are for commercial hair, ie… wigs, hair for weaves, braids, extensions and all forms of hair augmentations.   Afro American woman are the major consumers of these items.  The Koreans control the major source of import of this hair through there home land of Korea.  Afro Americans are only 12% of the country’s population, but are consumers of over 33% of hair care products in America.  These facts make for good business sense for the Korean Beauty Supply Stores to be located in the Afro communities. Koreans control 60% of the beauty supply industry in America, but they are only 3% of the population.

With the preceding in mine, this leads us to the reason for this article.  When the Korean’s first came to this country in groups after the Korean War and the North Korean conflict in the late 1960s, they discovered the demographics of commercial hair and the correlation of hair and hair care products as it related to the Afro consumer, and they opened stores in the predominately Afro communities to service that demographic.  At first the community was apprehensive and untrusting of the Koreans whom they felt had infiltrated there turf.  Also most of the Koreans could not speak English, so communication was difficult.  But because the Korean stores had what the populist wanted and needed without having to go outside of the area and at competitive prices the blending of the two cultures over time became acceptable.

The first generations of Koreans over came the many barriers of doing business in a some what hostel environment dating back to the late 60’s and early 70’s.  The second generation for the most part assimilated into the family business and the language barrier became less of a concern in the late 80’s and mid 90’s.  But when the third generation came on the scene, many of them had other goals and ambitions that did not include the Beauty Supply Business.  This was the beginning of the slow down of the Korean dominated Beauty Supply Business.  Many of this generation went to Colleges and Universities and came out with skills and diplomas that related to high Tec Industries and professional careers.  In fact, Asians are the second largest minority enrolled in institutes of higher learning in America.

Another factor that leads to the slow down of the Korean Beauty Supply business is OVER SATURATION years ago the Koreans were careful not to compete against each other in the same vicinity, but now they are competing within a close proximity of each other.  The Korean Beauty Supply market is over saturated in the Afro community especially in large metropolitan areas.

Another factor that leads to the slow down of the business is that when the Koreans first set up shop in the Afro communities the community was over 90% black.  But now many areas are less than 50% black.  They have been replaces by the growing Hispanic population.  Hispanics have a different and much less need for the hair care products that translates to fewer sales coming from the community.  Hispanics are the largest minority in America. The disappearing Afro residence has assimilated into the mainstream population.

 

HOW TO ADDRESS THIS CONCERN; try to stock products that relate to the Hispanic market.  Hire sales people of that culture.  Place window displays that relate to the market.  This still will not replace the business from the lost Afro customer based on the information in the last paragraph, but it will stabilize sales and lead to other opportunities that you may not be aware of yet.

35 years ago the Afro community had only a few Beauty Supply Stores scattered through out the area.  Today there are locations in most every shopping area large and small within that community.  However, other mainstream communities in the cities have changed very little in this regard.  Maybe that is where the new opportunities are.  This will mean stocking high end items that relate to the professional market only, (as a segregated section) as well as general retail products.  The draw back is that rent and property costs are higher, but this can be over come due to the higher income bracket of people in these communities.

You may not agree with the suggestions here, but now you know how and why the market is in transition.

 


Mane Vendor Hair Extension Vending Machine

Congratulations to INSO Hair School - Atlanta Georgia
I am so excited to welcome one of our new hosts to the family. INSO Hair School in Atlanta Georgia received the Mane Vendor Hair Extension Vending Machine on December 5, 2013. The owner, students, and clients were amazed! The machine is simply beautiful, state of the art and blended right in to the elegant design of INSO Hair School. We couldn't get the machine ready fast enough, as we were programming the machine, the customers were standing there ready to purchase hair.
If you are a salon owner and would like to become a host  we will stock your salon with top of the line 5A Brazilian Human Hair and pay you on sales, please email     tressa@themanevendor.com
Or contact Tressa Eleby 1(855) 626-3836 ext 3

Take a look at the demo video....
 
Own Your Own Machine!!
For more information click the link
 
 

Welcome Primp Beauty Bar




We are pleased to announce the opening of Primp Beauty Bar. Mrs. Ayanna Dennis is the new proud store owner of this black owned beauty supply store.We welcome her to the B.O.B.S.A family and wish her much success.


PRIMP BEAUTY BAR

Ayanna Dennis

1515 U STREET NW

WASHINTON, DC 20009


202-387-1000

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

As The World Remembers Nelson Mandela, We Remember That Beauty Isn’t Skin Deep.


This week Nelson Mandela passed on at the age of 95. He was a beautiful inspiration to all of us as we remember him and the grace that he embodied in the face of adversity. We sang “Free Nelson Mandela” in our 20’s and in the Boomer years, we love him for all that he has accomplished.

(CNN) -- Freedom fighter, prisoner, moral compass and South Africa's symbol of the struggle against racial oppression.

That was Nelson Mandela, who emerged from prison after 27 years to lead his country out of decades of apartheid.


 His message of reconciliation, not vengeance, inspired the world after he negotiated a peaceful end to segregation and urged forgiveness for the white government that imprisoned him.

"As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn't leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I'd still be in prison," Mandela said after he was freed in 1990.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Student Suspended For Wearing Natural Hair Style


 Photo Courtesy of Click Orlando
A 12-year-old girl will be expelled from a Florida school unless she gets her hair under control, school officials have told her. Vanessa VanDyke, an honors student and violinist at the Faith Christian Academy in Orlando, tells WKMG that administrators have given her one week to decide whether to cut and shape her hair or leave the school, which she has attended since the third grade.
 More on Yahoo Shine: In Defense of Gabby Douglas' Hair
 Faith Christian Academy did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Yahoo Shine. And VanDyke’s mother, Sabrina Kent, could not be reached for comment.
But WKMG reports that the school’s handbook includes a section on hair that says it “must be a natural color and must not be a distraction,” stating examples that include mohawks, shaved designs and rat tails. However, notes Kent, “A distraction to one person is not a distraction to another. You can have a kid come in with pimples on his face. Are you going to call that a distraction?"
 
 

Black Hair Care Products Successfully Featured In Big Box Stores


The majority of Black haircare products are purchased at major mass retailers and at beauty supply stores, not from beauty salons. This is why when you pop into a Target, Walmart, Walgreens, and even a Duane Reed or CVS you’ll see an expanded assortment of products for Black or “multi-ethnic” hair including natural, coily, curly, or even nappy hair. Yes, these large marketers have got the hots for the business of Black hair.


How did it happen? You may remember when Chris Rock released the film Good Hair in 2009 and showed the “creamy crack” market. Black women were revealed spending thousands of dollars on weaves, scorching their scalps with chemical relaxers, and  many causing damage to their hair and their psyche.

 
The film led to serious discussions by Black women of alternatives and helped usher in the movement to natural hair. Since the release of Good Hair sales of chemical relaxers have fallen more than 30-percent according to market research firm Mintel. Weave sales have also declined adds BOBSA (The Black Owned Beauty Supply Association).

 Click To Read The Full Article