“Acne was debilitating for me, so I set up a £40m business to help others”

James Mishreki started out as a professional poker player before moving into health technology.

James Mishreki suffered from acne as a teenager growing up in Northumberland. A debilitating period that damaged his confidence, he was nicknamed ‘pizza face’ for a year while undergoing NHS treatments. Then it came back in my 20s and led to another round of medication.

When it came to the entrepreneur who co-founded dermatology service Skin + Me in 2018, Mishreki “knew how badly people wanted to get rid of acne.” In four years, the British firm, which offers prescription skin treatment, has amassed revenues of almost £40m since launching in 2020.

“I became fascinated with the skincare industry, this £140bn industry with 55% customer dissatisfaction,” he says. “I knew what it was like to go through the acne journey and it’s not like you can talk to the dermatologist on a regular basis.”

Read more: We made 25 jars at one time – now our business boasts the best marmalade in the world

First we talk about the beginning of Mishreki’s career, which included two years of playing professional poker after completing his marketing management studies at Northumbria University in 2008.

After struggling with a few web-based startups, the co-founder of intelligence group Competitive Monitor led him to quit full-time poker to join the booming e-commerce sector.

An idea has been floated about websites that could index and package to customers, including John Lewis, which would use its intelligence software to track rivals’ prices.

Skin + Me
The Skin + Me co-founder has a unique philosophy on “rejection training.”

For a long time, Mishreki paid himself £500 a month, but being an early mover, the company didn’t double down on being the first venture or raising private capital. “We ended up competing with bedroom operators in Russia and getting undercut,” he admits.

After successfully exiting in 2018, Mishreki worked with co-founder Philip Wilkinson to set up a personalized skincare recommendation service called Mr & Mrs Oliver, primarily to test what consumers valued and wanted.

Mishreki ventured to Space NK and Debenhams, where he chatted with skincare advisors and asked if they wanted to earn extra money working on his startup.

Consumers were sent a treatment box for their skin goals, and the founders learned that people placed a high value on having credible specialists review consultations and make recommendations.

Mishreki admits the business model was “flawed”. By delivering third-party skin care products, consumers would then find cheaper brands elsewhere. But the goal of the founders to build a personalized regime was born, which proved to be a complex operation to implement.

The company only uses real members of the Skin + Me community in its marketing.
The company only uses real members of the Skin + Me community in its marketing.

Skin + Me had to build a regulatory approved pharmacy, create the personalization technology for prescriptions and create a brand “people love and trust”. Meanwhile, the founders began looking for qualified consultants, sending over 200 handwritten letters to a third of UK dermatologists.

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