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The Story of a Brand Show

Apothékary - She Left Wall Street to Redefine Wellness

The Story of a Brand Show

Ramon Vela

Business, Entrepreneurship

4.9147 Ratings

🗓️ 3 June 2026

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

She left Goldman Sachs, moved to Mozambique for a year, and came back to build one of the most distinct wellness brands in America. 


Rose Hamilton, CEO of Compass Rose Ventures and co-host of The Story of a Brand Show, sits down with Shizu Okusa, Founder & CEO of Apothékary, for a masterclass in what it really means to build a brand system not just a product line. From a New York City billboard to a Series A close, Apothékary is proof that deep roots and radical clarity can outpace any amount of paid media spend.


* Three iterations before liftoff. Apothékary started as a pop-up store rooted in Ayurveda, evolved into powders, and eventually landed on liquid supplements, a format Shizu now considers a near-monopoly position. The lesson: your first product is almost never your final one.


* Heritage as an operating system, not a mood board. Shizu's Japanese roots show up in how the company hires, iterates, and moves; guided by the principle of Kaizen, continuous improvement. It's not packaging. It's how the business runs.


* TikTok crossed a million dollars a month and here's why. Apothékary's TikTok success isn't about chasing the algorithm. It's built on 20,000+ affiliates creating education-first content around a visually distinctive blue liquid dropper that stops the scroll and earns the click.


* Retail forced brutal clarity. Entering Whole Foods, Sprouts, and The Vitamin Shoppe forced Apothékary to put ingredient benefits bigger than the brand name on packaging. The consumer doesn't have time for your founder story in the aisle and that discipline makes the brand stronger everywhere.


* Distribution is the moat. In a category where products get copied, Shizu's sharpest insight is that the real defensibility is distribution,  the ability to play in grocery, health care, and beauty simultaneously, backed by proprietary formulas and Shiseido as a strategic investor.


Join us in listening to this episode for one of the most intellectually rigorous and practically useful brand conversations we've had on the show. Rose and Shizu cover signal, thesis, behavior, and proof, the four pillars of a brand that becomes easier to understand and harder to copy over time. 


Whether you're a founder, an operator, or an investor, this one will sharpen how you think. 


For more on Apothékary visit: https://www.apothekary.com/


If you enjoyed this episode, please leave The Story of a Brand Show a rating and review. 


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Most people do not wake up wanting another wellness product.

0:04.6

They wake up tired, overstimulated, bloated, anxious, underslept, overcaffeinated, trying to get through the day and still feel like themselves.

0:13.5

And that is where so many wellness brands I think miss the mark.

0:17.2

They sell the ingredient, they sell the claim, they sell the promise. Better sleep, more energy, less stress, balanced hormones, a longer life. But the consumer is not really buying a tincture, a powder, a pill, or a gummy. She's trying to build a day that actually feels better. That is why this conversation matters. Because the best brands do not just sell products.

0:40.6

They actually help people create a repeatable behavior.

0:43.9

A product gets tired, a system gets repeated.

0:46.7

Today's guest on The Story of a Brand Show is Shizu Akusta, founder and CEO of Apothecary.

0:55.2

Welcome to the story of a brand.

0:58.1

Today is going to be a great, great listen.

1:00.8

And be sure as you listen to it,

1:03.7

think about your own story and your own brand you're working on

1:06.8

and how we might apply some of what we talked through today.

1:09.8

So for anyone who's wanting to understand what the topic of the brand is, it's apothecary.

1:16.5

Apothecary is a liquid supplement platform that bridges eastern medicine and Western science

1:21.6

and modern consumer needs.

1:23.5

But this is not just another founder story about leaving Wall Street after burnout.

1:28.5

It is a Japanese heritage, but not as a mood board. It's about liquid supplements, not just as a format.

1:35.8

It's about ritual, education, trust, retail clarity, TikTok, clinical credibility, AI tongue

1:42.7

reading. Yes, you heard me right, you've got to stay tuned

1:45.0

into the list of that part, and the future of wellness. And most importantly, it's about the

1:50.6

difference between launching a product and building a system because the customer does not live

1:54.5

in skews. She lives in days. She has a morning, a midday slum, a workout window, she has a commute,

...

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