The price of a name: Jo Malone’s quiet billion-dollar lesson

by

in

LONDON – When British fragrance entrepreneur Jo Malone sold her brand to The Estée Lauder Companies in 1999, the deal was described simply as being worth “undisclosed millions.”

At the time, it seemed a success story. A niche London perfume house had attracted one of the world’s largest beauty conglomerates.

Industry estimates suggest the sale likely fell somewhere between $30 million and $75 million, a respectable figure for a fast-growing but still relatively small business.

Be that as it may, the true value of the transaction would only become apparent years later.

As part of the deal, Malone did not just sell the company. She sold the rights to her name – at least within the world of fragrance. When she eventually stepped away and later sought to re-enter the industry, she could not use the very name that had built her reputation.

The brand she founded went on to become a global powerhouse under Estée Lauder, expanding across continents and evolving into a business now widely believed to be worth hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars.

Malone herself returned with a new venture, Jo Loves, but without the original name that had defined her.

The lesson is as sharp as it is enduring.

Entrepreneurs often focus on valuation at the point of sale. Far fewer consider the long-term cost of relinquishing identity, control and future participation in the very success they create.

In business, as in life, the price is rarely just the number on the contract.

Be that as it may, the true value of the transaction would only become apparent years later.

As part of the deal, Malone did not just sell the company. She sold the rights to her name – at least within the world of fragrance. When she eventually stepped away and later sought to re-enter the industry, she could not use the very name that had built her reputation.

The brand she founded went on to become a global powerhouse under Estée Lauder, expanding across continents and evolving into a business now widely believed to be worth hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars.

Malone herself returned with a new venture, Jo Loves, but without the original name that had defined her.

The lesson is as sharp as it is enduring.

Entrepreneurs often focus on valuation at the point of sale. Far fewer consider the long-term cost of relinquishing identity, control and future participation in the very success they create.

In business, as in life, the price is rarely just the number on the contract.


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