Beautycounter: Gregg Renfrew. She Built Beautycounter to $1B… Then Got Fired From Her Own Company

Beautycounter: Gregg Renfrew. She Built Beautycounter to $1B… Then Got Fired From Her Own Company

Gregg Renfrew started a movement by making better-for-you cosmetics, then enlisted an army of women to build the business through direct sales. But after selling Beautycounter, she was pushed out of the company she created.

Then she got to do something almost no founder gets to do:

She bought her company back. Then lost it again. Then took the risky step of rebuilding it into a new brand, now called Counter.

This is a story about ambition, humility, and second chances.

Gregg learned her first lessons by launching an early online wedding registry and selling it to Martha Stewart. She briefly led a clothing company and was summarily fired—by messenger.

In this candid conversation, Gregg talks about the bold innovation she brought to the beauty industry, and the lessons she learned from working with difficult people—including, at times, herself.


What You’ll Learn:

How to build a movement—not just a product

The hidden risks of “growth at all costs”

Why direct sales (done right) can outperform traditional DTC

The emotional toll of being fired from your own company

How to rebuild your identity after losing your business

What it takes to come back—and do it differently the second time


Timestamps:

(00:06:15) – Selling Xerox machines and getting doors slammed in her face

(00:08:09) – The early inspiration for an online wedding registry.

(00:16:44) – The brutal lesson of the dot-com crash: “growth at all costs”

(00:21:58) – Standing up to Martha Stewart: “I was cocky.”

(00:23:51) – Getting fired as CEO… by messenger… in front of her team

(00:32:47) – The moment she realized the beauty industry had a massive gap

(00:35:25) – “Clean beauty didn’t exist”—and why that made it so hard

(00:47:04) – Building a 60,000-person sales force, scaling to hundreds of millions in sales

(00:46:40) – Selling Beautycounter for $1B… and losing control months later

(01:00:13) – The emotional aftermath of being pushed out—and what came next


This episode was produced by John Isabella with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant with research help from Noor Gill. Our engineers were Patrick Murray and Jimmy Keeley.


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