In the crowded world of celebrity beauty brands, few break through the noise. Rhode, the minimalist skincare label co-founded by Hailey Bieber, did more than just launch well. It moved quickly, scaled smart and has become a benchmark for modern brand-building. But behind the gloss and glazed doughnut skin is a blueprint that female founders should study closely. Because Rhode’s rise isn’t just about celebrity, it’s about structure. And much of that structure can be traced to Nick Vlahos, t
, the CEO quietly steering Rhode with the same operational brilliance he used to scale The Honest Company into a billion-dollar business.
If Bieber is the face of Rhode, Vlahos is the engine. And his playbook is pure gold for female founders who want to scale beyond hype.
1. Celebrity is not strategy – structure is
It’s easy to reduce Rhode’s success to Hailey Bieber’s influence. But if celebrity alone built billion-dollar businesses, every famous face with a serum would be leading a unicorn.
What makes Rhode different is that it was never built as a vanity project, it was designed from day one to operate like a global brand. Behind the minimal packaging and social buzz is a business grounded in operational excellence: rapid product development cycles, disciplined SKU selection, margin-smart pricing and a clear strategy for global retail expansion. Rhode wasn’t chasing virality – it was engineered for longevity.
Lesson: Founders don’t need fame, they need foundation. A well-built brand outlasts any algorithm.
2. Discipline wins over SKU creep
Rhode launched with just three products. In a market that rewards breadth, the company bet on depth and it worked.
Many female founders get pressured into expansion too early. Distribution partners and investors want more SKUs, customers ask for what’s next, and social media fuels the idea that bigger or more equals better. But Rhode’s tight edit created brand focus, operational clarity and a cult following that felt intentional, not chaotic.
Lesson: Ruthless discipline in product strategy builds trust. It says: “We know what we’re good at and we’re going to do it better than anyone.”
3. A CEO who understands female consumers = unfair advantage
Vlahos has built his career in female-first categories – from The Honest Company to Clorox to Burt’s Bees. His deep understanding of how women buy, behave and build brand loyalty gives Rhode a strategic edge. He doesn’t just sell to women, he builds infrastructure around how women actually live, shop and share.
This kind of cultural fluency is what women founders already intuitively have but may underestimate in value. Vlahos proves it’s not ‘soft insight’. It’s a scalable strategy.
Lesson: Female founders must stop underplaying their proximity to their customer. It’s a strategic moat and your unfair advantage.
4. Build the back-end like you expect to win
Rhode didn’t wait until Series B to get serious about ops. From fulfilment to manufacturing to marketing performance metrics, it built the back-end like a legacy brand. This is where many early-stage founders fall short: They build for virality, not viability.
Lesson: Infrastructure isn’t the unsexy part of business – it is the business. Build like you’re planning to last.
5. Timing, taste and tactical brilliance
Rhode understood the cultural moment. Skin barrier health, quiet luxury and pared-back beauty were already converging. The brand didn’t invent a trend, it capitalised on one. And then it executed with military precision.
That mix of taste and tactics is rare. And it’s what women founders do best when they are given capital, capability and breathing room.
Lesson: You don’t need to reinvent the world. You need to feel the pulse of culture and have the tools to move in rhythm with it.
6. Brand is the business: World-building is non-negotiable
Rhode isn’t just a skincare brand, it’s a feeling. From its minimalist visuals to its curated product textures and Bieber’s aspirational but attainable persona, every touchpoint reinforces a cohesive world where customers want to belong.
This emotional architecture is just as critical as financial and operational structure. Rhode makes people feel something and that translates into loyalty, virality and repeat sales.
Too often, founders are told to focus on margins over mood, ops over originality. But what Rhode proves is that emotional resonance is commercial power. World-building is not BS. When customers feel seen, heard and reflected, they don’t just buy in, they buy.
Lesson: Build a world, not just a product. Belonging is the ultimate business strategy.
The real takeaway: Build like a CEO
Rhode didn’t just get lucky – it was the result of world-class execution:
Build emotional equity with brand world-building
Operate with discipline
Trust your cultural instinct
Scale strategically
make your customer feel like they belong.
Founders who want to build lasting, culture-defining brands need more than great ideas and beautiful packaging. They need a backbone of smart systems, a clear point of view and a deep understanding of what makes customers keep coming back.
Rhode didn’t succeed just because it had a famous founder. It succeeded because it was built with clarity, discipline and intention. It didn’t chase trends or succumb to the pressure of faster drops, more SKUs, and endless pivots. It made deliberate moves, invested in operational excellence and cultivated a brand world that invited people in and made them feel something.