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Ore Runsewe: The lady who built a homegrown beauty brand in her bedroom

Ore Runsewe, Founder of Arami Essentials

The word Arami directly translates to “my body” in Yoruba, and the idea of creating “Arami (my body) essentials” is aligned towards treating the body right. So says Ore Runsewe, the young lady who built Arami Essentials from a table in her bedroom.

Ore Runsewe was born and raised in the United Kingdom and naturally had her education there. 

The idea was to try out some DIY skincare

Relocating to Nigeria, Ore’s major issue was getting the beauty (hair and skin products) she had used all her life in the United Kingdom. Most of them were not readily available. And even when she would incidentally storm into them, they were ridiculously overpriced (probably due to the added cost of importing and shelving them).

Switching to entirely new product lines did not seem like the best idea, as she would later recount. According to her, she has really sensitive skin and was afraid of how it would turn out. But then again, leaving her skin uncared for was also not an option she would consider.

She started creating her alternatives rather than just resigning to any available option. This new adventure led to a lot of discovery into natural and locally available options that were both safe and healthy for the skin.

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Your body is a temple. Take care of it…

The choice of name “Arami” came from the Yoruba translation of “my body”. After all, that was what the beauty brand was going to be focusing on. On another end, Ore said she also found inspiration from a Bible verse.

Sure seems like an uncommon trend to have a business name inspired by a Bible verse, but Ore did it, and somehow still got the brand name sounding unique.

Starting from the bedroom

Arami essentials started in late 2016 from Ore’s bedroom, with very little capital which she only had to use to purchase ingredients and packaging material. For a long time, Ore Runsewe juggled the business with her 9 to 5 full-time job, content to reinvest everything from the business back in while living off her job. There was no need to bother about rent, utilities or logistics, as the business was sharing her living expenses.

This strategy worked well and kept the business through the early days, a period when many others fail due to funding problems. With no overhead costs in form of rent and utilities, the business stabilised and Ore moved from her bedroom to a smaller room in her house, and then to a space, she built at the back of her compound. Each step of this relocation became necessary as the orders and production volume increased.

In this way, Arami Essentials was able to keep low on expenses for a long time. Going full-time was a decision Ore Runsewe made much later when she discovered that a lot of people were starting to depend on her brand for their beauty needs, and she could no longer combine it with the demands of a full-time job.

In October 2021, the beauty brand launched its first factory at Nigeria Foundries in Lagos.

The unique route to growth

Part of the unique route Arami Essentials took was attaching promise cards to its packages for delivery. According to Runsewe, it is a way to show them that they are a part of the brand story.

Such promise cards could come with reassuring and soothing messages like Everything will be beautiful in its own timePeace that passes all understandingPatience and love is kind. These messages target not just the physical but also the mental and emotional well-being of the customers. All of these are part of what makes the brand a favourite among the audience.

Arami Essentials is no longer considered just another beauty brand. But one of Nigeria’s home-grown beauty brands. Along with other young Nigerians in different fields, Ore Runsewe was recognised at the 16th edition of The Future Awards Africa (TFAA) for the entrepreneurship category.

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