The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Allison Statter On Building A Powerhouse Brand, Advice For Success In The Creative Industry, & How To Stand Out In Any Field
Episode Date: March 27, 2025#822: Join us as we sit down with Allison Statter – prominent businesswoman & entrepreneur, best known as the founder & CEO of Blended Strategy Group. As a leading marketing and branding agency spec...ializing in celebrity partnerships, influencer marketing, & strategic brand growth – Allison has leveraged her expertise among the most well-known brands & celebrities. In this episode, Allison gets real about blending storytelling with strategic insights, her unique approach & qualities which attract the biggest names in the entertainment industry, knowing when to pivot a strategy, personal lessons from entrepreneurship, the importance of building a personal brand, & career milestones – including the launch of XOa.  To Watch the Show click HERE  For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM  To connect with Allison Statter click HERE  To connect with Blended Strategy Group click HERE  To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE  To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE  Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE  Get your burning questions featured on the show! Leave the Him & Her Show a voicemail at +1 (512) 537-7194.  This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential  Head to the HIM & HER Show ShopMy page HERE and LTK page HERE to find all of Michael and Lauryn’s favorite products mentioned on their latest episodes.  Visit blendedstrategy.com to learn more about Blended Strategy Group.  Visit houseofxoa.com to purchase Allison’s perfume XOa and use code skinny10 for 10% off.  This episode is sponsored by The Skinny Confidential  Optimize your daily beauty routine. Shop The Skinny Confidential Mouth Tape at shoptheskinnyconfidential.com.  This episode is sponsored by Smart Mouth  Find SmartMouth at Walgreens, Walmart, Amazon or visit smartmouth.com/skinny to snag a special discount on your next SmartMouth purchase.  This episode is sponsored by Momentous  Go to livemomentous.com/skinny and try it today at 20% off with code SKINNY, and start living on purpose.  This episode is sponsored by Good Ranchers  Visit GoodRanchers.com today, and don’t forget to use code SKINNY to claim your free meat for a year and $40 off.  This episode is sponsored by Purely Elizabeth  Visit purelyelizabeth.com and use code SKINNY at checkout for 20% off Purely Elizabeth.  This episode is sponsored by Nutrafol  For a limited time, Nutrafol is offering our listeners $10 off your first month’s subscription and free shipping when you go to Nutrafol.com and enter the promo code SKINNYHAIR.  Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to The Skinny Confidential, Him and Her.
Hello everybody. Welcome back to The Skinny Confidential confidential him and her show. Today we have our good friend and an absolute force joining us.
She's a branding genius, powerhouse entrepreneur and the go to woman for some of the biggest
names in the business.
She's built an empire by understanding the intersection of culture, marketing and relationships.
Something we all know is more important than ever now in today's world. From working with some of the most recognizable names in entertainment to launching
her own company, Alison Azovstadter is the founder and CEO of Blended Strategy Group where she helps
brands and talent connect in meaningful ways. But beyond that, she's not only an entrepreneur,
she's a friend, she's a mom, and most importantly, someone who gets what it means to build a business
with integrity and authenticity. There's a lot to learn from this woman. I know I have with that, Alison, let's get into it.
Welcome to the skinny confidential him and her show. This is the skinny confidential him and her.
Well, I'm excited that you're here doing the show under these circumstances,
because I feel like half the time I call you, it's for you to help me solve a problem.
I love solving problems. You're one of the best.
I love it.
How do you describe yourself and what you even do at this point of your career?
Because I was trying to even think about how to introduce you and I was like, I'm just
going to let you do it because you've done so many different things.
And even recently with the fire aid, the blended with products representation, how do you describe
your profession?
Yeah, it's interesting to hear you talk about it like that
because I, when I first, like it was very clear when I worked,
I went to college, I dropped out, hated school,
wanted to be a makeup artist, started working for my dad.
And then when I, which we'll get into,
which I did for 17 years, but when I left,
one of the things that I wanted so badly was was to be like I don't want to do a
hundred things I want people to know exactly what I do because there's a lot
of really incredible people out there that do do a lot and people are trying
to figure out well what do they do and I think that to sum it up I think that I'm a entrepreneur, entrepreneur. I am a pro, very pro female activist.
Like I want to support women in my work.
I want to support women across the board.
And I am a strategic marketing,
you know, I have this big strategic marketing agency
and I, to your point, I'm a problem solver, right?
Like I'm very goal oriented.
So whether it's representing talent and figuring out
if talent wants to create their own brand, right?
Like I am very focused on how do we do that
and what's the best path to doing that.
Or if I have a client that comes in and says,
I need a go-to- market strategy on launching these vitamins.
How do we do that?
You know, so I do wear a lot of hats, but at the end of the day, I think that I sit
in this really unique position of being
a female entrepreneur that supports other women in business that is just trying to
like pave her own path, you know, and for me, the output of my work is
the most important thing.
You're really a chameleon.
I think I might be.
But like, I also would describe you as, you said marketing strategist. I feel like you are a
strategist.
Yeah. Like, a strategic problem solver.
Like, okay, if somebody with the clients you work with, they obviously have the pick of the
litter to be able to work with is anyone right?
Yeah, why do why do they gravitate towards you?
Like what are you specifically like if you could pinpoint one or two qualities that you're helping them with like what?
What do you think it is two qualities?
I think there's two qualities that differentiate me and
The first one is that I have a small enough agency Right right, in the sense that we can still be very white glove, right?
So we can pivot quickly. We can, you know, really get our hands dirty and what the needs are and really get in there and work very, very collaboratively and closely with our clients as if we're on their team,
as if we're part of that team.
And I think that in today's era is very unique because you do have a lot more of these traditional
agencies who are bigger and who have tons and tons of clients and they're just servicing
them, right?
We're different.
We're very white glove.
We're very strategic them, right? We're different. We're very white glove. We're very strategic.
We build strategies.
We then are able to execute them if you want us to.
The second piece, which I think is incredibly unique, is my network.
There isn't anyone I cannot get to.
And I say that humbly.
I don't say it in a like, oh, I'm friends with this person and I know this person.
It's not that.
It's more my approach and it is yes
I do have a lot of incredible direct relationships that I've built over my lifetime. This isn't just over my career
It's my lifetime. I'm born and raised in LA the hub of entertainment, right? So I've had a lot of these relationships my entire life
And then on top of that, I've built them through every facet and every
area of my career and then on top of that, I've built them through every facet and every area of my career. And then on top of that, I'm not shy to go find the person I need to get to.
And I'm not shy or apprehensive about reaching out to anyone.
I think I'm most quite, I mean, even the other day I was sitting with someone in my office and she was like,
okay, we've reached out to this person
for this collaboration and this person,
I'm like, oh, I know someone here,
let me email this person directly,
let me text this person directly.
And within 15 minutes, I was able to put them in touch
with a handful of potential opportunities
for what they were trying to do.
How did you get so good at that?
Cause that is a finesse and skill
that you might think a lot of people have and they don't.
There are people that have grown up in LA that have grown up with a shit ton of money,
famous parents, etc., etc., and don't know how to network like that.
And the way that you network to me doesn't feel like try hard, desperado.
It's not.
Yeah, so like, how did you learn that?
My parents.
What did they teach you? Give us all the tips.
I mean, honestly, just the exposure.
Truly, it's like just being around it
and growing up in it is very different
than when you come to it and you come to LA
and you're trying to hustle for it.
And by the way, I have mad respect for people
that are not from LA that had to come here
and had a dream of being in the entertainment business and just are like I'll do anything you know
and had to work at these relationships and had to figure out who the people
were to get connected and you know that is so difficult as well and for me I
think that because I was raised here and I was raised in the business, it was just, I watched how my parents moved
and I replicated it.
When you say watched how they move,
your dad is obviously very prominent
in the entertainment space, but both your parents,
what are some of the things that they,
like if you were to dumb it down,
like what did they teach you?
It's just never about them.
It's about the clients.
And it's about being the best for your clients and providing the
best service for your clients.
It's not about them.
It's not about the manager.
It's just about being a good person and knowing how to help.
I mean, that's truly what we do, right?
We help people.
We're providing value.
Were there any of their clients when you were a kid growing up
that like shocked you or blew your mind?
Or was it just kind of like normal?
Because you're talking about some of the biggest entertainers
in the world.
Like, was there anyone, or did it just be like,
oh, there's, you know,
There's Bono.
There's Stevie Nicks in my back house.
I know.
I don't, I just don't think I've ever been,
it just doesn't- It's just normal to you.
It's just normal.
I think that that too-
But there was no one that was like,
oh, that one is actually like that's-
Prince.
Prince, yeah, see?
Prince, I will tell you, there was one where
Rich and I were living at my parents' house
for like a year when we were redoing our house,
which was such a fun experience.
And Prince came over to meet with my dad.
And I was like, holy moly.
Can I, I was like, can I bring Sydney down?
He was a baby at the time.
I'm like, for a picture, they were like, no.
I'm like, okay.
That was the one.
That's it.
That's it.
So it just does, it seems like fame doesn't phase you.
No.
But what's so interesting about you is that you did grow up within this world of fame,
but you seem very comfortable and confident behind the scenes.
Yeah, I'm most comfortable and confident behind the scenes.
But yeah, I almost, if I were as an outsider, you seem to really just prefer it and you
like being the wizard of Oz.
Kind of.
I think I really just cherish privacy.
I think that there's something about privacy that
is important for your sanity.
And the other thing too is, look,
I also am getting somewhat to your point about this podcast.
I am getting a little bit more comfortable in front
because I've found that in order to be relevant
and in order to kind of have to,
you have to play the game a little bit in order to get,
especially now with social media and podcasting
and everything, like you almost, if you don't do it, it's, it's like you're going to miss out on opportunity.
I also think though you're thoughtful about, like before you came on this podcast,
I don't think you're trying to go on every podcast.
I think you were, like we talked about it.
Like it's like a thought out thing, which I appreciate.
I think that's cool.
It's a, it's a strategist.
Yeah. Again, did you always want to be behind the scenes because you were exposed to so many people who
were so famous with so much overexposure that you were just more drawn to being behind the scenes?
Yeah, I think that is part of it. I also think that, you know, it was just kind of
part of it, I also think that, you know, it was just kind of always just reiterated to us like we're BTS for a reason. And I actually appreciate, it's almost like a form of protection
I think from my parents, you know, and even my dad still is uncomfortable with having
to do press or like, you know, being on the cover of Billboard magazine or whatever, you know, it's so foreign
for him. And in a way, I think it's also because he doesn't ever want to upstage his clients
because to him, that's why he is who he is, is because his clients are his so important
to him.
I mean, it's very powerful, too. Yeah, there's something very powerful about privacy and my prediction is in the next ten years privacy
Will will start to become your greatest asset, you know, like we do the social media
We've done this show for a long time and obviously like that, you know, we're not Prince but it's it's you know
You start to get your Prince sometimes
Rendition of print in full costume by the way, you know what if I would sometimes. I would love to see a rendition of Prince in full costume, by the way.
You know what? If I would have known, I would have dressed up for you.
He does wear heels.
But I or he did.
I talked to Lauren about heels in your boots.
But no, you're something I talk to Lauren about this all the time.
I'm like, at some point,
you know, like there's you could do something for a long enough time
and then it starts to like kind of exponentially grow and I
get super
Cautious about like okay. How far do you push that thing because I value privacy, too
Yeah, and I'm actually used to I mean, you know
I'm used to being more behind the scenes than in front like we do the show but your meat is what I do
Yeah today and you've done an amazing job. Thank you. But it's, I always, she came out tap dancing, so she's super comfortable like being in front.
But I tell them like, okay, at some point if you push it too far, then it's hard to turn off.
You know, like some of the clients they were talking about with you, they can't, they can never get privacy back.
Well, and you also open yourself up for criticism and you have to have a really thick skin for that.
Oh, I'm good at that. I'm good with the criticism.
You have to be comfortable knowing that people are going to have negative, there's mean people
out there who are going to say mean things and you just have to let it roll off of your
back.
And that's where I think that's what is also really scary,
especially now, you know, even with the fire aid work
that we just completed and we're still doing it,
the blended team did such an amazing job.
We had to drop everything and we ran,
we did all the branding for fire aid.
We did all the marketing assets for fire aid.
We did all of the social media.
We created a handle within 30 seconds
and just started to be very like strategic
and methodical about how we were going to communicate all of this information
out because we knew that our Instagram was going to be our main source of
information as it related to fire aid.
Wait, so go back.
Okay.
So the fires happened here in LA quickly.
You guys jump, jump on it and you three minutes in three minutes.
Great.
Fire aid. My mom and my dad
we're sitting home and and everyone was like scrambling because our house was sort of in the line of the fire and
We didn't know if we were gonna be evacuated. It was very it was all very chaotic
It was one of the it was one of those experiences where you're like wait is this is this real life?
Is this really happening here that day for one day,
and then it's like-
I remember you guys were in town,
and it was so chaotic.
It was so scary.
The sun would go down every night,
because these fires went on uncontrollably
for night after night after night.
And we would be afraid to fall asleep.
The kids were stressed out.
It was a whole thing.
It was very stressful.
And my parents were home
and half of our family had to go to my parents' house.
Like my brother's power went out.
He had to go there.
You know, one of my dad's clients lost power.
He had to go there.
Like they were like running a hotel at this point.
And then we were like, well, where are we gonna go
if we have to leave?
Cause those rooms, like we don't know, you know?
But I think in the midst of the chaos, my mom looked at my dad and was like, we have to do something. rooms like we don't know you know but I think in the midst of the chaos my mom looked at my dad and was like we have to do
something what can we do and the only thing that there that came to them not
the only thing but the easiest thing to them was music music brings everyone
together we have the capability and the ability to put together a show and let's
just you know do it let's put this live show and raise money
and bring the community together,
back together through music.
And that just snowballed.
They called their friend at the Clippers Organization,
Gillian Zucker, who works for Steve Ballmer and said,
can we use the building at the Intuit Dome?
Oh wait, now we need two buildings.
So it just kind of snowballed.
So it was really a collaboration of efforts
and they looked at all of their different,
that the people around them that they could tap into, right?
So they tapped into Live Nation
because they knew Live Nation would be able to support them
from the live perspective.
They knew the Clippers organization
was gonna be able to support them,
with the venues amongst many, other things the bomber family has
Matched one for one dollar for dollar. Well since the show went on Thursday last Thursday, and we just got
The OD rights for the next 12 months that and the bombers are going to be matching dollar for dollar for the next 12 months
so anyone who donates to fire aid for the next 12 months is Steve and who donates to FireAid for the next 12 months is Steve and Connie Bomber are matching, which is insane.
And in it, they were like, you know,
okay, Allison has this marketing agency.
We'll leverage her for all of that.
And that's really how it all evolved.
And we all came together and my team went into action.
And to get back to what we were talking about and how it came up was the first minute we announced it,
immediately people were saying mean things.
Oh!
What do you mean?
Like, how could they say mean things
that you're trying to help?
I mean, if you look at some of the comments,
especially about our ticket prices and, you know,
I mean, people would say some of the meanest things
on these comments.
And the girls on my team
We're like are we allowed to reply? I'm like, no, you can't just let it go. There's gonna be haters
So again, it goes back to that thick skin, right?
Like is that the typical answer don't reply don't answer it. Is that like it depends?
It really depends we're gonna get into that. It really depends. I think you have to be super careful. Yeah, because I think the more you engage
You know I think you have to be super careful. Because I think the more you engage, you know, that can cause a lot more damage sometimes than good.
So what happened?
We just were, I just stayed, we stayed very specific and very, I was just like, you know,
when we, at one point I was like, okay, let's address some of these questions.
And so we put up a bunch of FAQs, you know, and address them.
You know, we're getting today, we're getting hit with a lot of,
how soon are you going to deploy the money?
Where's it going?
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
So we have to do an FAQ to answer all of those questions.
But people can just write mean comments.
Like we put the merch, for example, up and one comment was like,
are they going to be, is it going gonna be as expensive as your tickets and of course
the instinct in me wanted to be like no it's not but just for the record we're
raising money. Like we are raising money for one of the biggest natural
disasters in California's history and there are so many people who need help across so
many different ways, whether it's people who have lost homes, whether it's you have firefighters
who lost homes. We had two different families who the husband went to go fight the fires
and came back and his house was gone. Their houses were gone. You know, so you know, you have
animal shelters overflowing. You have people whose jobs were, you know, working at a lot
of these homes and now they're gone and they have no source of income. And it's just devastation
in so many ways that people don't even understand and then they can just fly off the handle
on Instagram and write mean comments
But it happens to everyone someone will post a picture of themselves and they'll be like, oh she looks fat and I'm like
Who who like who even writes that?
It's just like I can you imagine if you replied to someone on Instagram and was like you look fat in this picture
Who says that I don't I think that they want acknowledgement.
Right, or to make themselves feel better.
It's one or the other.
And I think that the best thing you can do is ignore it
or sometimes just diffuse it with a really neutral answer.
Or just let the haters hate.
It's gonna happen, it's part of it.
And it's sad for them.
I think the fact that you have access
to all these incredible people,
and I can only imagine Irving pulling out his phone book
when he's like, who should I call to call up for fire
and he pulls his phone book off?
I don't even wanna know what's up.
But a lot of people were calling him.
That was what was super interesting.
Well, he's a problem solver.
Yeah, people were calling him. And my mom was super interesting. Problem solver. Yeah. People were calling him and they, and, and my mom, and they were like, can we
perform we're in, tell us what to do.
Where do we show up?
There was no ego at the door.
How many artists ended up participating?
I think we had close to 40.
Wow.
Who were some of the top liners?
Green Day.
Is that what you call it?
Top liners?
I mean, the thing about it was, is that there wasn't really a headliner.
It was all, everyone was just so willing to, you know, sign up and say, just tell me where
to be and when, and I'll show up and do it.
And so, you know, I mean, we had everyone, Green Day opened the show, which was so amazing.
Red Hot Chili Peppers were there.
There was a Nirvana reunion.
You had Billie Eilish.
You had Stevie Nicks.
You had no doubt.
You know, you had Olivia Rodrigo.
I mean, there was just, and John Mayer.
I mean, it was endless.
It was every genre.
As they all do it for free.
Yeah.
So they all do it for free to give back.
And people are still complaining about the ticket price?
Correct. Which by the way, like I get, Yeah, so they all do it for free and people are still complaining about the ticket price, correct
Which by the way, like I get I
Understand if you can't if it's too expensive and you're bummed out I get that but it just again goes back to like keep in mind. This isn't just a
for-profit concert
This is a benefit that we're raising money for and we were trying to raise
The most amount of money to be the most effective and helpful to the community.
I feel like you guys should do another line of merch
that's like the same merch that you have,
but do like, how do you say it, Swarovski?
Swarovski?
Yeah, crystals on it.
I know.
And then that would piss people off even more.
And you could be like, no, we're donating it.
It's like diamond merch.
I know, we're auctioning it off. I know. Auction it off. Well, that's the thing about this raise is It's like diamond merch. I know we're auctioning it off.
I know.
Auction it off.
Well, that's the thing about this raise
is it's not going to end
because there's going to be people
year over year over year who need help and support.
And you guys are just going to continue
to do everything you can to do that.
Yes.
I want to switch gears for a second.
So a lot of people that listen to this show
are excited about the prospect of potentially building their own personal
brand. I mean everybody wants to do that these days. From what you've seen and the
people you've worked with, like what have you seen people do right and what do you
think people do wrong when it comes to building personal brand? Yeah, like let me
pull out my scroll. Yeah I'm like well I can tell you what I've done right and
what I've done wrong because we've we all have it I think that's one thing too. Is that you know from an exterior perspective, it's really easy
To look and judge, you know what and everyone has a different I
Think a different version of what success is, right? So some people will look and be like, oh my god that company that brand is so
Successful. I love it. Love it. Love it
But then if you go into it and you look under the hood,
you're like, oh God, this is a mess, you know?
And I think, I can tell you from my experience
and the 10 years that I have been my own boss
and left working the family business
to start Blended Strategy, I can tell tell you I have learned more in those 10 years
than I have in anything in my entire life.
School, working for the family, anything.
Like, I dove head first thinking I was like,
okay, I got this.
I have learned so much.
And I think the biggest thing that people
have to know when they start their own business is once you start, there isn't really any
stopping. Like you've got to, and if there is stopping, you've got to know when that
is, right? Because once you start, you're in it. You're in it. And not everything is going to work.
I remember one time I was having a hard time with something.
And I called my mom.
And I was just like, oh, I feel like such a loser.
And she said two things to me.
She said, the first thing she said
is, you're going to be what you think you are.
She's like, so stop thinking you're a loser,
because you're not. And the second thing she said was if you think that your father didn't hit
holes sometimes or have roadblocks or hit you know hurdles in his career,
you're so wrong. But from an outsider right and I'm not even from like to me, I'm like, oh my god, he's,
you know, so successful. And he's had all these things. But there are not everyone can do everything
perfectly. And there are going to be things that are going to come and you're going to have to just
take them with grace and do your best to get through them. And starting your own business is
a massive responsibility.
And I think that that's what people are losing in it.
And they're like, oh, well, if this person can just,
you know, launch a fragrance on Instagram, so can I.
And I can, you know, be the next this and da-da.
It just, it doesn't work like that.
It just doesn't work like that.
You guys know better than anyone.
It is a lot of hard work.
It all falls on you no matter what,
no matter how good your bench is,
no matter how many people you have working for you.
At the end of the day, you are in charge.
You have to make the hard-hitting decisions
and you have to keep the business moving.
It makes so much sense that you say
that you've learned so much in the 10 years at Blended
because I remember when I started my business 13 years ago, a lot of the people that I went to high school
went to business school.
And I instead went and started a business.
And I'm not saying that's bad,
I'm just saying there's something different
about throwing yourself in the deep end
and like dog paddling out of it and figuring it out without
Doing the school route. I mean, I'm a college dropout. So I was never a good student
I had a really hard time with school. I went to University of Arizona for two years. I
Called my parents after my sophomore year and I was like this is not for me. I hate it.
I hate school.
I hate being in these big classes.
I'm coming home.
And honestly, I'm just so grateful.
They were like, okay.
And that was it.
I was like, great.
And I came, I mean, they said, you have to get a job.
Like, you know, but I also got my first job
when I was like 13 years old, you know?
I didn't want to go to sleepaway camps,
and they made me get jobs in the summer. And- What was my first job when I was like 13 years old. You know, I didn't want to go to sleepaway camps, and they made me get jobs in the summer.
And...
What was your first job?
My first job, I worked for, um, to a father-son duo
who were in the music business named Michael and Mo Austin.
Unfortunately, Mo has passed.
Michael is still here, and I love him deeply.
We're all very close
family friends and they had they were big in the music industry and I had known
them from growing up through my parents and I went myself with one other of my
girlfriends and asked them for a summer job as the receptionist at their record
label. It was called DreamWorks Records. And I was the receptionist and in the mailroom
with my girlfriend for like, I think I did it for like two or three summers in a row
and I loved it.
I knew you would have a good first job. Yeah. I'm all mine was a lemonade and embroidery
stand. I was like, mine was a record label. I was. But you know what? I was a landscaper.
Oh, really?
Oh, no, don't even start this story.
Rich would love that.
No, it was not fun.
Rich built his own garden.
Well, Michael hasn't done shit with that.
You do not have a green book.
I hate to break it to you.
I got traumatized ever since.
No, they haven't.
It wasn't like the nice garden.
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Why did you decide to start your own business?
What was like the before part where you had this epiphany to do this?
I think that, you know, one, I went to work for my dad
after I had been working at a salon in West Hollywood
called Artluna, and I was working for the makeup artist
at Artluna, her name is Chris Levine,
I still see her and talk to her, I'm obsessed,
she's the best, and she taught me how to do makeup,
I was making $600 a week, I was so happy,
and my dad called me one day and was like,
oh, I need you to come into the office
and I need you to work for two weeks.
One of my assistants quit and I have all this going on.
And I was like, I don't really wanna work for you.
And he was like, I know, but I really need you to.
And I'm like, all right, fine.
And I had flexibility with Chris.
Like she knew my family, so she was very flexible with us. And so had flexibility with Chris.
She knew my family, so she was very flexible with us.
Two weeks turned into 17 years. I had one stint where I left for six months and went to work for a PR company called Harrison and Schriftman.
And I went back working for my dad after that six month stint. Because I just wasn't like the way that the
organization that I worked at wasn't right for me.
And so I was like, you know what, I'm going to go back.
He had just signed Jewel. Remember Jewel, the artist?
And he was like, I need someone.
He was like, I need to I love her.
I want you to come on this show.
OK, we could probably make that happen.
I'll call you later about it.
Okay.
Great.
Um, so she, he was like, Oh, I just signed jewel.
Come back and you know, help me and you can do all the day to day.
I'm like, okay, great.
So I went back and, um, I was there again for a while and I had my third kid.
I was going through like all my pregnancies there and had all my babies
there when I was there.
I had my third kid and I just had this epiphany where I was like, I am never going to grow
more than I am here.
He doesn't see me that way. He sees me as his little girl
and he just wants it to be kosher.
And I just don't think he wanted,
I was super focused on the brand stuff.
I had started the brand division at the management company
and I was like this intersection between brand and talent
is gonna be massive and we have to have our finger
on the pulse with it.
And we have to be proactive for our clients.
And he was like, great, babe, do that, no problem.
And I was like, okay, great, can I hire people?
He's like, no, I'm like, okay.
So like, there wasn't a lot of investment in it
and I don't blame him for it.
I just, you know, I think that it was foreign to him
quite transparently, you know?
He was just like, I don't know,
live touring and publishing and record labels.
That's where he was focused for his clients
as well he should have been.
And so I just had a passion for it and I felt stunted.
And I was like, if I'm gonna leave my babies every day,
it's gotta be worth it.
I had big dreams.
I still do.
And I just took this leap of faith and I was like,
I'm gonna start my own company
and I'm gonna be focused on the brand
and influencer and talent.
He was super supportive, as was my mom.
And I think it's come quite transparently full circle.
I think Fireade was actually full circle
because they really saw the nuts and bolts of what we do
in the work we just did.
And so, yeah, it's been a wild ride since I left.
I'm not gonna lie.
So did you quit and launch it quickly or was it like slow?
How did that look?
So did you quit and launch it quickly or was it like slow? How did that look?
I Think it was like over probably a six month
period where I you know went to him and was like this is what I'm thinking and this is what I want to do and
Here's my business partner and here's our business plan and he was very supportive and then you know over time
it just kind of, I sort of like phased out of the day-to-day stuff
at the management company and became, you know,
really, really like all in on Blended.
Who was your first client?
Who was our first client?
I think Revlon was our first client.
Who was your first person client?
I want to say, well, what's interesting is we,
when I left working for him, he was like,
well, who's gonna do all the brand deals for my clients?
And I was like, well, I don't know.
He was like, no, I want you to still do that.
And I'm like, I can still do that for you.
You know?
That's what we go through.
Yeah, and we worked out an arrangement.
So I still had all those talent clients
that I was still working with.
And they became, you know, like through full stop or at the management company, they became
clients to blended. And then I think our first client that we signed that was non, non full
stop was Jen Atkin.
Oh, that's a great one. Yeah.
Fresh. Yeah.
Yeah. I feel like at the time that was avant-garde too,
because people had just started looking at individuals like her with the type of,
with how people look at all those creators now. It was like, that was,
that was still early before people were really paying that much attention to like
these kinds of creators. Oh yeah. And, and I, the first year,
two years even, have blended
the amount of work we had to do to educate our clients
on what an influencer was or what a blogger was.
You know, one of the things that I'm really, really proud of
that I did with my dad was we invested in DBA very early.
And if people don't know what DBA is, explain that.
DBA was the first management firm to come to market that represented
at the time bloggers. I think Lauren was one of the first seven or eight clients. Yeah, you were.
OG. Yeah, you are an OG blogger. Wait, so how long? That's when they called them bloggers. That's when
they called them bloggers. Yeah. You told your dad to invest in DBA. Yeah. Well, Raina and I are really close.
And her, you know, she had moved here from New Orleans and, you know, was like,
I don't know what I'm going to do.
And then she took the path of partnering and becoming one of the founding partners of DBA.
And she would tell me about it and like educate me on what a blogger was.
So, you know, I mean, that's all part of it, right?
That's why I saw part of the intersection of how big this was going to be.
And so I went to my dad and I was like, you've got to look at this business.
This is crazy.
And he was like, what is it?
And I was like, it's just another, it's a management company.
It's just a different level of talent.
It's not a traditional artist or actor or model
or photographer or whatever.
I was like, these are influential personalities.
And so we invested in it.
And I mean, Reina did such a phenomenal job
growing DBA and the whole thing.
How do you spot when someone has talent?
Because I feel like you've been around it so much you could spot it easy.
Well, I think it's all subjective.
Okay.
Right?
Because what I think might be talent and I'm drawn to might be different than what you're drawn to.
Okay.
I think there's talent is a also a broad word right you have people who are super
talented in their craft of music and they have incredible voices and then you
have people who are just entertainers and are you know walk in a room and
everyone is drawn to them you know and I think I'm a very instinctual person I
have really good instincts and I I don't know I just trust my instincts I'm very
I very much trust my instincts like I'll be like oh that person gets it and
understands and I'm not always right but I'm right a lot of the time what do you
think I tell Michael that about me too yeah I think we're always right, but I'm right a lot of the time. What do you think creates...
I tell Michael that about me too.
Yeah.
I think we're always right actually.
I know.
I'm not going to argue with that.
You shouldn't.
What do you think creates career longevity for the people that you've seen that really
like go decades and decades compared to the people that kind of flash in a pan?
One is talent, right?
Like one is actual talent.
Like the actors that keep getting hired
and are able to move the needle,
they're incredibly talented at their craft.
So I definitely, you know,
it's no different than a product, right?
Like I always say that we're only as good
as our work product,
whether that's the service that we're providing at Blended,
whether it's the physical product
that we're creating to bring to market, whether you're a musician and the music that
you're bringing in the live show you're bringing or an actor that you're you
know or a comedian, like our product is what keeps us and our businesses moving.
And so I definitely think that has a big piece of it. And then I also think, you know,
I think hard work is really important, you know,
really, really, really, really, really important
because it's not easy.
It is not easy.
You don't just wake up and find success, you know,
you have to work really hard for it,
whether it's in your personal life, right right in finding your significant other and building a family
Whether it's in your friendships, you have to work really I work so hard at all of the relationships in my life
Because they're so important to me and then in in
Business it's and talent. It's
It's really that it's your It's the output of what you provide
and then being a hard worker.
When you look at everyone that you guys
are managing at Blended, brands, everything,
what are the biggest fires generally
that you guys have to put out?
You know, look, being in the client service business
I've been in it my whole life and so I think that I'm I've and I've gotten better with it year over year on
not getting
Emotional about it and just really being I think you have to be very
Problem-solving you have to be very you know. You have to be very you know let's
not go back and play the blame game. Let's go forward and figure out how to solve it.
Very logical. Very logical. Yeah you have to be that. I think we put out a lot of fires.
I would say if we've gotten a talent for one of our brand clients and something controversial
happens with that talent having to quickly know how to manage that is a big fire sometimes.
What's, what do you do? What's the, is there a recipe?
No, I don't think that there's a recipe because I think that each,
I think each instance is really different, you know, but for example, like when the fires happen,
we're like, we should advise our clients.
They shouldn't be posting right now.
Let's halt all posts or anything that is promoting something.
Let's be very mindful whenever that is, whether that's a fire was like the hurricanes or
you know, whenever something happens, COVID, you know.
Well, you know, it's funny when you say that because if you do anything publicly on a public
platform, I feel like anytime anything happens anywhere, you get all these people like, what
do you have to say on this?
What's your statement?
It's like,
Totally.
Like maybe you shouldn't have a statement on everything that's going on in the world.
You definitely shouldn't.
Unless it impacts you or unless you're passionate about it, you know, you just kind of have
to let things play out and play its course.
I mean, we have budget issues sometimes
of fires that we'll have to put out
where they'll be like,
oh, we don't have enough money to cover this shoot
and we need this or da, da, da, da, da.
I think I'd like to say we don't have to put out
a lot of fires, but it's just client service.
Like clients- Is your phone ringing all day off the hook? All day. Text messages. have to put out a lot of fires but it's just client service like I'm
ringing all day off all day text messages how do you keep track all those
text messages I don't know I do though I actually that's a lie I have my text
messages on my computer that's so funny that you said that because the other day
I was like I don't know what I'm gonna do about text message I'm feeling overwhelmed with it and I went and bought a keyboard I'm
gonna send you the link off Amazon that you put your phone on and you can just
reply and so now I just take it to the footspah for two hours and respond to
text messages well I also think the amount of the different forms of
communication is overwhelming that's why I don't do WhatsApp.
Everyone gets mad at me.
Well, I have to do WhatsApp for my kids' soccer teams,
because that's what everyone's on.
I hope I don't have my kids in soccer.
I can't do it.
It's too much work.
And international.
I like WhatsApp better than text, actually,
because I feel like people don't.
It's the DMs.
People abuse the text.
What do you think they abuse the text?
I mean, WhatsApp is text. No, I know. But if there but for something like people abuse like I feel like they then they get on
What's up? It's like okay. There's got to be an intention behind the measures like sometimes people just abuse the text
I mean, there's what's up? There's text. There's email. There's slack. There's DMS. It's absurd LinkedIn
I won't go on linked. I don't I am NOT on LinkedIn
I'm not on slack because I would get crushed email says I'm in focus mode if anyone emails me by the way
I've noticed your emails are you're in focus mode and if you need something contact this person
I find it to be brilliant actually a boundary
I can I get it you can only do I like no it becomes a point of working in your business or on your
No, but then what she'll do this. I'm gonna call you out
I have a couple things a month and a half will go by everybody has solved the thing that needed to be solved a month What becomes the point of working in your business or on your business? No, but then what she'll do, I'm just going to call you out.
I have a couple things I know.
A month and a half will go by.
Everybody has solved the thing that needed to be solved.
A month and a half.
Good.
That's...
And then she responds a month and a half later and spams.
Everyone's like, following up on this.
This has been done for a month and a half.
But like, that's okay.
It's for her mental to know she replied.
Yeah, exactly.
It's my ADHD.
And all you have to do is reply and say, we got it.
Yeah, it's not hard.
I also will not go on camera for Zoom,
not because I'm being a diva,
but because I don't want to hurt my eyes all day.
Yeah, Zoom, the pandemic and Zoom
really changed our pace of work.
Do you like it?
Like faster or slower?
Faster. Faster.
Well, both.
Okay.
Both.
I think faster in the sense that you can connect with people quicker.
Okay.
You can have meetings with people that you would normally maybe have to go fly to New York to meet with, or, you know, wait for them to come here or whatever
it is, like you can connect that way slower in the sense that for little
things to wait, to schedule a 20 minute zoom to get an answer is just not efficient. or whatever it is, like you can connect that way. Slower in the sense that for little things,
to wait to schedule a 20 minute Zoom to get an answer
is just not efficient.
Just be in the office, walk in and say,
hey, can I show you this really quick?
I know you have five minutes and we're done.
Michael, and you could have this conversation all day.
Yeah, it drives me a little nuts.
This is Michael's favorite.
It takes up more time than it needs to.
Cause I'm like a popper inner. like I'll just like pop into people's offices
real quick, you know, like, or chat them up real fast. Yeah, same. So I like I like
to be able to get to people. Yeah, I make Taylor put on emergency bypass for my
number when I call because because he doesn't answer sometimes and so my
favorites when you call Taylor at 1 p.m. and he's still asleep and he acts like this. He goes, oh hell hello!
Bitch I can hear the fucking gruff in your voice. I'll be like Taylor are you just waking up?
I'll be like no no I hear him crashing around. It's amazing. No this is no way. I don't judge
Taylor. I'm not a morning person either. I don't judge. Oh Taylor's not the morning or afternoon person.
He's not a morning or mid- person. Taylor, I get it.
I get it.
It's all over 3 a.m. now and he'll be awake.
I, well, maybe you should go to bed a little earlier.
The funny thing is I've known Taylor
since he was 12 years old.
What?
And he's worked with me in everything we've ever done.
And he still to this, like tries to pretend
that I don't know exactly who he is.
That's amazing.
Like I can-
When he calls you, when you call him at 8 a.m.,
I sit there and I wait to hear him on speaker.
He goes,
Oh, hello.
Michael's like, are you awake?
It's weird.
We're the same age, but I feel like he's like my son in a way.
It's kind of strange.
I'm sure he loves that.
I'm sure he loves that.
Don't call me that.
That's so creepy.
I don't know if we need to go on the popper route.
Yeah, please don't know if we need to go on the popper route.
Yeah, please don't.
What is your plan for what you wanna do
with the expansion of Blendit?
Do you have a plan?
Yeah, we do have a plan.
Listen, I think that's also a good note
for people who wanna start their businesses.
Plans don't always work out how you map them out.
You're gonna have to be a little bit flexible.
Oh, my favorite word is pivot.
And then I always think of, you know, Ross and friends when he's like pivot,
pivot, trying to get the couch down the, down the chair at the stairs.
It's like my favorite thing.
Um, and you know, it's interesting.
I think that I have for a very, very long time worked really hard
for this moment and I haven't realized that the moment is here, right?
Like this is the time.
Like this is, we're now at a level of, okay, you went through the first, you know, iteration
of blended, you grew it. I stand behind my thesis of being a one-stop shop agency
and having to have multiple capabilities under one roof
to streamline work both for our clients
but also for our teams at the agency, right?
Like that I stand behind.
And we did that over the past 10 years is we've brought
capabilities in both through acquisition and through starting from
scratch, right? We started our influencer and celebrity marketing division from
scratch. We started our PR division from scratch. We started our social media
division through acquisition, right? We bought a little shop that we had already
been working with. And we started our paid division as an extension of our
social division and bringing an expert in who knows paid really really well and
UGC and all of that kind of stuff and I think that for me now growth is through
consolidation is incredibly important. I think that there's a lot of amazing talented people out there in the service business across both the
capabilities that we already have in-house at Blended, but also
capabilities that we don't have that I would like to have. So for me, growth
through bringing very talented people in from a staffing perspective is in the playbook, and then growth
through mergers and acquisitions is where I'm focused for the next couple of years.
I'm always focused on making sure that the foundation is there in order to do all of
these things.
I'm always focused on driving revenue, driving EBITDA, getting cool, great clients.
And to me, cool, great clients aren't necessarily like the shiny, cool brand.
Cool, great clients are collaborative clients who really lean into who we are and what we
bring to the table and vice versa, because that's when you're going to have the most
success.
I agree with you on all that.
Yeah. Very smart.
What's wrong with PR today?
Oh, God, that's a whole episode in its own.
And by the way, PR is so important, right?
And it always has been so important.
I think that there's a...
I don't want to say what's wrong with it.
I want to say how it's shifting. because I think that's what's really important is there's
a massive shift in two things one how you go about getting PR and two the
relationships have always been important but there's this interesting gray area of
editors and journalists and media properties being influencers in their own right.
And how you go about engaging with them to then generate the PR.
So I think that's shifting.
And I think too, you know, you have so many incredible PR
veterans that have been doing this for so long
and who have the most incredible relationships
and know all the pitching and know the angles
and know everything.
The problem with that is that that's just not
what actually garners the results that you're
looking for anymore.
And so I tell our PR clients a lot, the importance of them working with us across the board on
the influencer space and the celebrity space and the social space and the content, everything,
you have to be doing all of those things.
That's what's going to get you the PR.
Gone are the days of let's go sell this fragrance without that.
Right.
You have to have that because that's what people are drawn to.
And that's what people want to see.
And that's what people want to read about.
What are the best tips for someone who wants to open a PR agency today?
Like how would you counsel them to stand out and create noise in the space?
Yeah.
Well, first of all, there are a lot of PR firms that are opening.
And I think that they're being like, it's very rare that you see anyone that's just
a straight PR firm anymore.
Everyone is doing PR, even on the talent side, you're seeing that they're doing, they're
representing the talent for PR, then they're opening a brand division and representing the brands of those
talent clients.
Then they're also representing some other brands for PR.
Then they're also servicing brand deals for their clients.
Like, it is no longer just PR because it all, it's all, it's all one in, it's all part of the formula.
So what I would say is if you're gonna start a PR company,
one, you need to start a marketing company,
not a PR company.
And you need to start a company that's able to do
or is knowledgeable about all of the facets
that come with marketing
because that's what's generating the PR, right?
Like when you go and you see what people are talking about,
it's all about even what Vogue does, right?
Vogue is getting talent to come and create content
for them on their platform, you know?
And it's really smart.
And that is a big get for talent, to be able to go do that.
And they're still covering all the fashion,
and they're still doing all these incredible shoots,
and, you know, all that stuff still is there,
but it's never just that anymore.
You know, when Vogue puts out a cover,
they have all of these other assets to support it.
And so you have to be able to do that now.
And I would say, and this is something that I talk a lot
to our senior team about is, you know, who are your hires?
Who are we hiring?
I don't want to hire just someone in PR anymore.
I want to hire someone that is versatile,
that knows all of the things that are going to be relevant
to all of our campaigns and everything that we have to do.
And by the way, from a staffing perspective,
from a just P&L perspective,
like you have to be able to do that.
We need to get those types of people in our doors
and that's happening.
And I think it's happening everywhere.
I think people who had to learn it, like I said earlier,
we spent a lot of time educating our clients early on
on what an influencer was, how much money are you pulling,
where are you pulling it from?
They were pulling it from their PR budget, right?
They're like, well, I guess this is PR.
They didn't know.
They were traditional marketers.
And so they were taking money to pay influencers from their PR budget when technically it's
marketing, right?
It's actually a marketing spend.
It's not PR, it's marketing.
And it all comes under marketing, but so that's why the PR agencies had to quickly shift and
learn influencer.
And now they all do it.
All of my competitors do that.
They all buy talent now.
They all buy influencers.
They're all servicing deals.
They're all going out and pitching all of these things
that they're then, let's say they're Neutrogena
is their client and they're getting so and so for Neutrogena.
They're taking that story and going and pitching it to press
and that's what's getting them their heads. You're really good at the whole 360 approach.
Well, because I think that's quite transparently, I think that's the only way you're going to
achieve the goals that you're looking for. And I tell my clients all the time, I'm like, look,
whether you're hiring us for just PR, you're hiring us for just influence, or you're hiring
us for just social, that's fine.
But we're thinking about it regardless, right?
So we're all sharing information within the blended orbit
and that is helpful across every capability,
whether we're being scoped for it or not.
I'm thinking about it, my teams are thinking about it.
They're thinking about, you know, okay, if we're going to do an event, they're going to tap my influencer
team and say who are the relevant influencers, if they don't know themselves, by the way,
because a lot of the younger team members now know the cool people. But otherwise, they're
going to go tap my influencer team and say, who should we be including in this? And by the way, vice versa, when my influencer team, you know,
is executing a event to launch the new brand ambassador,
they're going to go to my PR team and say,
what media would you recommend we put up for this to attend?
Because again, it goes back to a lot of these editors are also influencers now.
You know so there's that gray area of it and then you know we're thinking about what moments are
at that event that you're going to be able to capture content that people are going to be
super psyched to be there and they're going to be like I have to take this picture and want to be
in that photo and have that photo on their you know social media. We're thinking about what's the takeaway from the event?
What are we sending them home with
so that they feel like they've really had an experience?
What's the content look like coming out of the event?
What's the recap look like?
What are the reels look like?
How many photographers and videographers
are we gonna have there?
We're thinking about all of those things
as we're putting these strategies together.
I am all about a rebrand when it comes to kids.
So I rebrand everything.
I have cookie water, which is electrolyte water.
I have candy water, which is mango amino water.
And I also have cookie granola.
And the cookie granola is all
thanks to purely Elizabeth. My kids love this. It's like delicious granola with
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and they are so tricked it's not even funny. They don't know that they're
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My hair has changed, let me tell you. It has gone through a transformation, okay? Stylus
who do my hair now are some of the same stylus I had when I was blonde, and they cannot believe
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One product that has transformed not only my sleep
but my jawline is mouth tape.
I mouth tape every single night.
There is not a night that goes by that I miss mouth taping.
And the first thing that I notice
is I wake up with way more energy.
When you're nose breathing all night, you get so much more oxygen. It's incredible. And also it
supports your tongue posture while you sleep, which sculpts your jawline and makes it stronger.
So what I've noticed is better tongue posture, better sleep, more energy in the morning.
I cannot live without it. The other night I actually fell asleep for like
two hours without my mouth tape and I woke up with a dry mouth. I felt like I was almost like hung
over. I can't explain it. I have to have this as my nightly routine. So what I do is after my skincare
I put the Skinny Confidential mouth tape on. It has a tiny little slit so you can use a straw if
you get thirsty in the middle of the night to drink and then I sleep with it all night
and then in the morning I mist my face, I remove it and it is the sleep pack of a
lifetime. I know anyone who is looking for a better sleep, more energy in the
morning and a more sculpted jawline will love it. You can shop it now at
shopskinnyconfidential.com. That's shopskinnyconfidential.com.
How do you think about working with your husband Rich? How are you guys synergistic together?
Is there a thing that you do at night to shut it off? What are your tips?
Well, we would love to know. Rich isn't on the mic, but he is sitting next to me, everybody.
So I have to be very careful of how I answer this question.
Yeah. What is he to your yin and yang?
Rich keeps me alive and keeps it all in perspective for me.
So he's the one who will be like, you got to turn it off for a minute and
you've got to take a deep breath and you have to be present. Or you know, if I am
having a hard time with a decision, I value his opinion probably more than
anyone's and he's typically always right when it comes to these. He's very like
chill and non-emotional about some of the decision-making.
Get your notepad out Lauren.
No, I'm more like rich.
Where I'm not, you know, and I've gotten better at it,
but he's my grounding force, like he is.
You are.
I'm not just, I would say that even if you weren't here.
Where did you guys meet?
We met at Yumi Sushi in Beverly Hills.
You told me that at dinner.
I just wanted to hear you say,
Yumi Sushi, that's so cute.
Did he like come up to you?
No.
Oh.
He's super shy.
Oh, did you go up to him?
I don't know.
We just kind of gravitated naturally
towards each other, wouldn't you say?
Well, it seems like it's worked out.
It has.
We're, how many years?
19 years strong.
And do you guys work together on a daily basis?
Um, no, but we have a lot of crossover, right?
Like in his world of podcasting, he's in podcasting, he's been in media for his whole career.
So we have a lot of things in common so we can share that. And I think that's helpful,
right? Is you guys work together. I actually have asked Rich to come multiple times work with me and
he said no, just for the record. I'm like, can't you come just-
Well, because so Lauren and I do this show together, but I think people like, and then
I do Dear Media and she does this game, but we like, I think it's because we have separate things. It works. We just did
the same thing. Like if she worked for me or I worked for her, there's no way. There's
no way. Yeah, no, I don't think it's a work for each other. I think it's just more of
like, how do we build a family business together and make it the greatest for our family. It
feels like you separate divisions that are synergistic.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
You guys are doing a good job.
One day it's working.
It does.
It works, but he's also like very calm and he can handle like anything pretty
much, even when the fires broke out, he was in charge and I just did whatever he
said, he was like, here's what we're going to do. We're going to. anything pretty much even when the fires broke out. He was in charge and I just did whatever he said.
He was like, here's what we're gonna do.
I'm getting the roofing people here
and they have to come and put tape on all the vents
so that no embers fly in and we have to clean the gutters
and we have to put all the outdoor furniture inside
and blah, blah, blah, blah.
I'm like, okay, whatever you say.
He's like, you need to come home and start packing.
And I'm like, okay.
I was at the office until like eight o'clock at night the night the day the fire started. And he finally called and was like, you need to come home and start packing. And I'm like, okay. I was at the office until like eight o'clock at night,
the night, the day the fire started.
And he finally called and was like,
you need to come home now.
I'm like, got it.
And I've never packed so fast in my life.
Like putting every photo album,
every keepsake in our cars, like ready to go.
And that's from his direction.
This is like, that doesn't sound so great,
but I find it interesting to think about
what people go for in those moments.
So for you it's photo albums.
Yeah.
The irreplaceable stuff.
It's all the irreplaceable stuff.
Couple pieces of jewelry.
All my jewelry.
Yeah.
Some bags.
I'm just gonna say some bags.
But then it's like letters.
Yeah.
All that like falls under the irreplaceable.
Our passports, our birth certificates.
Michael would grab his hair gel.
I get it.
I did grab a lot of face stuff.
I'm not gonna lie.
I had a, you know, now they're called go bags, by the way.
There's a thing now that people are supposed
to have go bags packed.
Well, if you move to Texas,
you get a very specific kind of go bag. Simon has that company. Yes, ready set Judy
Is it Judy now? Just Judy? Oh
I don't know. Everyone should go buy that after what just happened
Like that is so important. It's like a fire
It's an everything. I'm like borderline prepper status in my house now.
I'm a go with the flow.
Like Lauren doesn't even know what's buried in the, in the house.
There's, we had that crazy freeze in Austin.
And ever since that happened, there's like random generators. I got,
I got emergency water supplies. I got all sorts of shit.
I'm also very OCD about like organization and
neatness and Rich has learned my OCD,
so he's pretty good about it,
but there's still times where I'm like,
no, no, we cannot put that there.
He wanted to order a water,
because the water now is contaminated.
You don't know what the hell the water is.
So he wants to order one of those water things
where you have it delivered, and you can just put your thing
in and whatever, whatever.
And he's like, it could just go right there.
The big silver one?
Yeah.
And I'm like, no, no.
Good idea.
It cannot go right there in the middle of the kitchen.
I don't know.
But it's a big silver one, right?
It's a Sora.
Like no one wants to look at that.
Yeah, but it is a good water filter though.
Yeah, but it doesn't, That's not where it goes.
It needs to be in a closet.
It's not aesthetically pleasing.
It has to spark joy.
It just needs to be.
It needs to have a home.
We would rather drink sludge water than have this.
I mean, that's kind of where I'm at.
I'm kind of like a mama three.
I'm becoming a mama three.
How do you manage all these balls?
Because it's because it's like you have three kids,
but you also have Rich and a husband.
And then you have all these clients.
And my family and my friends.
Yeah, it's a lot.
It's a lot.
How, what's the secret?
One, I think that I do better with high volume.
Like I am just a very efficient, like,
when I am not busy, I freak out.
Like I literally freak out.
I'll call my assistant, Emily, she's more than my assistant.
She was like director of my entire office.
She's amazing.
She's been with me for, I think eight years now
or something crazy.
And on a day where like my schedule isn't like
packed to the minute and I'm like, what's wrong?
She's like, what do you mean?
I'm like, is everything okay?
Like, why am I not busy?
And she's like, girl, it's okay.
And I'm like, okay.
Like I just operate better that way.
And so I think that that's how I manage it quite honestly.
It's like, it's just easier for me when I'm in it,
I'm good at it.
When it's like not, then I start to get in my head
and I'm like, oh, what's happening?
But you know, I do my best.
And I think that I have been giving myself a lot of grace
in certain areas.
I've been doing a lot of work.
I know you're super spiritual as well.
I'm not like, I'm spiritual. I believe
in God. I think that is super important. You know, I grew up Jewish. That's been a whole
horrible experience over the past year and change. But I also really believe in like energy work and light work and crystals and you know all
of that woo woo stuff is really I think it's helped me tremendously a lot.
I went to a workshop called WellSoul Workshop that is run by two women named Casey and Jackie
and it truly changed everything for me.
It changed how I spoke to myself in my head.
It changed how I treated other people.
It just really has helped me a lot in grounding,
and really grounding myself
and grounding the people around me.
And I also think a lot of it comes with age.
I turned 45 on January 11th.
I did not know you were 45.
Yeah, I turned 45.
I thought you were in your 30s.
Thanks, babe.
45.
45.
You look damn good.
Thank you.
Thank you, yeah.
I turned 45 on January 11th.
And I think that age, it's, like you gain perspective as you get older
and your kids get older, you know, I have teenagers,
I have all boys by the way.
My 10 year old said to me last night,
I was putting him to sleep, he's like,
Mom, I'm not a baby anymore and I'm like,
no, no, you're my baby forever.
He's like, what does that mean?
And it's like, it means that I'm going to treat you
like my baby for the rest of your life.
I sing a song in my son's ear.
I say he's living with his mom for the rest of his life.
He knows the song.
We like dance to it and rap.
But at some point we're going to stop at that.
We got to raise a strong young man.
I am totally down to like live with them forever.
My mom said the other day we were talking about something.
She's like, yeah, you know, daddy and I are the tree trunk and you guys are our branches
and those branches continue to grow and blah, blah, blah.
And I looked at her, I'm like,
I really want to get back in the trunk.
I was like, it's really scary out here on the branches.
I was like, let me back in, you know?
She's like, yes, I know that you would live with us forever.
I was like, I would.
I loved when Rich and I lived with my parents.
It was so fun.
My kids got, you know, like to see them
and it was just, it's great.
And it is special.
And I do believe everything starts in the home, you know?
So if we set this example for our kids,
then I think hopefully my hope is that this foundation
that we're setting for them will translate
as they grow old and branch out and build their own families and have their own careers.
I really hope that we stay a unit because it's so important.
When we went out to dinner, you told me that you were launching Perfume.
And I found the reason that you were launching it to be really cool.
It's a cool story.
Thank you.
And then you showed it to me today and it smells so good.
So tell us the story and why you decided to do this.
Yeah. Well, first off, thank you for being so supportive because I'm so grateful to both of you for the support.
You guys have been in the product business for a long time, especially in beauty.
So you get it and you know what it entails and all of the things.
Not easy.
It is not easy.
No. and all of the things. Not easy. It is not easy.
And I think this is a really awesome case study where I've taken all of my learnings
from so many other things that I've worked on in my career and applied it to this.
And this wasn't like a, I want to start a fragrance company.
That did not happen. It was more of a,
I have worn the exact same fragrance since I was like 12, 13 years old.
I found it in a local beauty supply in Beverly Hills
when I was growing up and I never wavered from it.
I wear it to this day.
It was like my signature scent, the whole thing.
And I couldn't tell you the name of the brand.
It's like a random French brand.
They stopped, the beauty supply shut down.
I couldn't find it anywhere and I started to panic.
And then I finally found it on Amazon.
And so I just would buy bottles and bottles of it on Amazon.
And then I just get compliments.
I would be everywhere and people would be like, you smell so good, random, strangers. I'd be would be everywhere and people would be like,
you smell so good, random, strangers.
I'd be in an elevator and someone would be like,
wow, you smell like a cupcake or you smell so good.
What is that?
And I'd have to pull up Amazon
and they'd take a screenshot on my phone.
I'd be like, I can't tell you the name of the brand.
I just buy it on Amazon, here's what it is.
And so finally, I was like,
I'm kind of sick of driving people to Amazon to buy this brand
that I can't pronounce.
So I just want to do it myself.
And I had the relationships with True Beauty that I was telling you about.
I've worked with them on a couple different projects over the years, and they're incredible
partners.
And I called them and I was like, would you wanna do this with me?
And they jumped at the opportunity.
They have been so incredibly collaborative
and accommodating and just incredible to work with.
And I said, this is a fragrance that I've worn forever
and I wanna put my own spin on it.
Like I wanna recreate it,
but I want it to have a little bit more vanilla in it. And I want it to have a little bit more vanilla in it.
And I want it to have a little bit more, like, of the peach apricot to it.
And I want it to last longer than what my other fragrance was.
And so we worked on the juice for a while, actually.
We did a couple iterations of the juice before we got it right.
And then it just kind of started to take shape. And it
was, you know, I was like, I just want to be able when someone compliments me, just
when they say, what are you wearing? I can say, oh, it's my own fragrance. It's called
XOA. And here's the website. You can go and buy it. Like I'm not, I don't have like a
retail strategy. I don't have like, you know, a big, I have, I have big dreams for me and my life and my family in general.
This is part of that dream.
But this isn't a traditional like I'm launching a brand, everyone take notice and wait for the next thing.
Like this is, okay, let's see if this hits and how I do. I'm
doing a really small run out of the gate and then if it converts and people like
it then I can do another run and I can double the amount of units I buy and so
on and so forth. So it's really one of those approaches where I'm gonna let the
market dictate how I go about growing it. I'm going to predict you're going to sell out.
Oh, thanks, babe.
And when you walked in and gave me the gift, it smelled so good.
I was like, oh, my God, the gift smells so good.
You're like, no, that's me. I'm wearing it. Yeah.
So I did what all the strangers on the elevator do.
Yes. And said that.
And here's something interesting.
I have a sensitive nose. Ask my husband. Yes. And said that. And here's something interesting. I have a sensitive nose.
Ask my husband. Interesting.
If something does not smell good to me, I will go on and on.
I just got hairspray sprayed on me, Arielle.
Aquanet, someone sprayed it on me.
I was having a fucking meltdown.
Was it that guy that was here?
I was having a fucking meltdown in there.
I'm like, he sprayed Aquanet on me.
This I have no aversion to.
Oh, that makes me happy.
Says the pregnant woman with the big, I don't want to say big nose.
Yeah, like I have a cute nose.
Sensitive nose.
Sensitive nose.
It smells really fucking good.
Thank you.
That's a huge compliment.
And I am just excited for everyone to be able to try it.
And it's simple.
Like I didn't, you know, I didn't do custom tooling on the bottle because I, again, I
learned from everything that I've learned through all of my experiences.
Like I was like, let's keep this as low lift and easy because really for me, the goal is
to get the juice in people's hands and let them
try it and love it and you know, that's what's most important to me.
And it is a really, I think people are always like, you smell like a cupcake, and I'm like, oh, thank you.
You know, it's it definitely veers very vanilla, very peachy, apricotty,
and it's a good blend of both of them. There's some white florals in it as well,
just to give it that tiny bit of flower,
but I'm really excited about it.
I was supposed to launch on my birthday,
but then the fires happened, so we're kind of in like a,
let's retry this again.
We're redoing.
It's good.
We do do great.
Yeah, thank you.
Where can everyone shop XOA?
You can get it on our website, which is House of XOA.com.
Yeah.
And it's a simple like the cool thing about this is we did this all in House of Blended.
Every single thing was done in Blended.
So Blended is very synergistic.
It is.
That name to XOA.
It is. And the reason I called it XOA when we were like, they're like, what do you want to call it? I'm like, I don't know, like just call it XOA. That is and and I've the reason I
Every single one and has been for my whole career. I don't know how that happened, but it has and
I have thousands of emails to prove it.
It'd be weird if I was signing off as like XOM.
Yes, it would.
Somehow I've gotten away with it.
And I don't know how.
You can get away with it.
That's what I'm saying.
If I sent that, people would be like,
what is this creep doing?
Yeah.
And so that was just, it was like a natural, like,
well, let's just call it XOA
because that's how I sign everything.
And it's kind of one of those things where it's like from me to you type of thing.
I love it. Congratulations.
Thank you.
Where can everyone find you reach out to you stalk you.
Well since I don't like checking Slack or LinkedIn please don't try me there. But my Instagram is Allison Statter with two L's and an I.
And I've been, again, another blended case study.
The team, my social team at Blended really helps build
and program my social channel.
So they've done a phenomenal job there.
And that's really kind of like my main place,
my main destination.
Allison, launch main destination.
Allison, launch a podcast.
Branding tips.
Branding tips.
I think you should.
Launch a podcast.
You just know a lot of different areas.
Marketing strategy, strategist.
Yeah.
Behind the scenes.
The one thing, but to go back to the very beginning
of the podcast is, you, I never want to lose sight of my goal
you know of like building this great business and
You know being successful in that
And I don't want to do too many things that distract me from that. I get it
You know and your eyes on the ball
Yeah, my eyes on the ball for now and And then we can see where it goes from there.
But for now, I'm super psyched about, you know, the future of Blended.
We did our rebrand, so check out our website, blendedstrategy.com.
It looks super chic and elevated, and I love it.
You can also follow us at Blended Strategy on Instagram.
If you have brands or personalities that want to work with you,
what's the typical process?
info at blendedstrategy.com is the best place.
Come back on the podcast anytime.
I would love to.
Yeah, we could, I mean, I could have talked to you
about so many different things.
I know, and I'm so excited for you guys
that you're having your third baby.
Number three.
Rich always said, I think I told you this
when we had dinner that two's for quitters.
Two is for quitters.
I'm not a quitter.
Am I a quitter?
No, you're crushing it.
You're gonna, you're gonna, it's great.
The three feels like, like a, like complete, you know?
Yeah, I do know, because it did complete our family.
He did, even though I was like, oh my gosh, it's another boy.
What am I going to do?
Yeah, when you said a lot of balls in there earlier, that's what I thought you were referencing. I literally do. I have so many balls in the inner of my house.
There's balls everywhere.
I know. I have told them, every single one, including my husband, that there is one toilet
in the master bathroom that is specifically for me and none of them are allowed to use
because-
Is there spray everywhere?
Everywhere.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, what, you know, we had modern family, the mom.
Julie Bowen.
She's amazing.
Julie Bowen.
And I love her JB scrub is so good.
Yeah, she's saying she made it for-
She launched it cause her boys smelled.
Yes, it's really good.
My kids use it.
I know her partner really well.
And I love that product.
We like her a lot.
Allison, come back anytime.
I will, thanks for having me guys.
That was great.
Thank you, Allison.
Love you.