Sven Raphael Schneider: Welcome back to the  Gentleman's Gazette!
  Today we are here with the founder of Beardbrand,  Erick Bandholz.
  Eric Bandholz: Hey, what's going on, man?
  SRS: Welcome Eric!
  EB: How are you doing?
  SRS: Wonderful.
  EB: Good.
  SRS: We are here in LA at the Art of Charm  headquarters.
  Today we are going to discuss beards and hair.
  EB: Well, there you go.
  I got a little bit of the beard and mustache.
  SRS: Eric started originally on Wall Street  in an investment banking then he went away
  from that.
  He then decided to start his company that's  all about beard care, grooming, and hair.
  He always has these awesome hairs and his  kind of really hipster looks.
  EB: Yeah.
  SRS: So, tell us more about how you got into  beards?
  EB: Yeah like you said, I used to be a financial  advisor.
  I had a closet full of suits and ties.
  I had the all-American look, you know the  shaved face and all that and really, I felt
  like it was a disguise, it wasn't who I  really was.
  I wasn't content in that job, so I quit  that job to start my own thing and grew my
  beard out.
  It was during that time that I realized I  would get a lot of stereotype comments about
  my beard like, "Oh you're a lumberjack  or a homeless guy or a biker or Grizzly Adams."
  They are all cool dudes and what not but it's  not me.
  I am a business person, I'm a designer,  I'm an urban type of guy.
  It was after attending an event that I realized  there were other guys out there like me with
  beards who are just kind of like ordinary  dudes.
  That's when we came up with the term Urban  Beardsman to describe who I was and describe
  other guys like me and then try to give them  the tools they needed to feel confident about
  growing their beard out.
  Scenarios like on Wall Street, typically the  guys are not growing their beards out and
  give those types of guys who want to grow  their beard out the confidence they need to
  be able to rock it.
  SRS: How would you provide this confidence  specifically?
  EB: You know for me, I think a lot of confidence  is rooted in education.
  So giving them the tools they need to feel  like they are taking care of their beard the
  right way or their expectations are realistic  with how beards are going to come in, how
  it's going to grow, how fast it's going  to grow, how curly it's going to be.
  So, education is really like a root and no  one really talks about this because our Dads,
  I don't know about your Dad, but my Dad's  a baby boomer and they always shave, like
  that is what you did.
  It's like you didn't have an option if  you're a baby boomer, so he didn't teach
  me how to grow a beard.
  I had to learn on my own.
  SRS: He thought you how to shave right?
  EB: Yeah!
  SRS: You're talking about tools, what tools  were you thinking of specifically?
  EB: Yeah, I mean there's tons of tools out  there from anything to wash your beard, like
  a beard wash to condition your beard, a beard  softener…
  SRS: Why can't you use shampoo?
  EB: Shampoo if you think about it, your head  has a 100 thousand follicles on the head.
  Your beard has 30 thousand.
  Your scalp is the thickest skin of anywhere  in your body.
  Whereas your face can be in some cases very  thin, so you want a product that's been
  formulated to take care of your skin beneath  the beard as well as the type of hairs that
  come out of your beard, out of your face,  which is the the flatter, coarser, curlier
  hair.
  Although you have pretty coarse thick hair  as well, you might be able to get away with
  something that works on both.
  But for a lot of guys, like you have a finer,  rounder hair on your scalp and then the flatter,
  coarser hair on the face, so you're going  to take that into consideration.
  SRS: How often should you wash your beard?
  EB: Personally, if you're like me or an  office guy and you're in the office like
  every day and you're not working out, you  only need to do it once a week, once every
  couple times a week.
  But, if you're going to the gym everyday,  you're getting sweaty, you're working
  outdoors, then yeah, you wash it everyday.
  Now when I say wash it, I rinse it thoroughly  every single day.
  SRS: With water?
  EB: Yeah.
  So it's not like when I say you only was  it once a week, you don't touch your face
  with water but it's actually using the soap  that can strip your natural oils away from
  your skin that will cause your beard to get  dry and have breakage and stuff like that.
  SRS: I mean sometimes, you know I get dry  skin on my face in certain areas and I know
  other people do too.
  Now when you have a beard, it's a little  more difficult to kind of use a scrub or something
  like that because it all sticks in there.
  How do you handle that?
  EB: There's a product called an Alpha Fit  which is made by Clarisonic.
  Its a tool you can use int eh shower and it  will help exfoliate and get down below the
  beard if you wanted a tool to do that.
  And then of course, Clarisonic uses the little  micro vibration.
  SRS: We'll put that in the website so people  can check it out.
  EB: Yeah.
  SRS: Cool.
  So, why would you then on top of the shampoo  add something like a beard oil?
  EB: Yeah.
  So what we talked about is like the washing  process removes those natural oils from your
  face.
  So, when you hop out of the shower you want  to replace those oils and bring your natural
  chemistry back in balance.
  That's essentially what beard oil is doing.
  It's getting you beard back to where it  would be originally if you are doing these
  unnatural things like washing.
  Because if you think about in nature, washing  is not a very natural thing, it is something
  that we've added.
  SRS: That's interesting.
  I noticed that there are lots of beard oils  out there.
  EB: Yeah.
  SRS: We got approached by lots of companies  and they are like you know, mom and pop shops
  to like larger companies, it's a huge range  out there.
  Some people out there just do it themselves  - DIY.
  Why would I pay more for a beard oil if I  can just get all of them or something from
  the store?
  EB: We recognize that too.
  You've got to do what's i your budget.
  You got to do what you think is right.
  For the DIY guys, you are not going to have  a consistent product, you may formulate it
  wrong.
  It'll probably end up costing you more money.
  Yeah, you're going to have a lot more of  it but then the product goes bad after a certain
  period of time.
  SRS: Oh, what's the average life span of  oils?
  EB: Yeah, so like a natural product without  any preservatives in them, it's probably
  going to be about like 9 months I would say,  9 months to a year.
  SRS: Okay.
  EB: A little one ounce bottle is going to  last you three months.
  SRS: 30ml, 15ml.
  EB: 30 ml.
  Yep!
  If you have like 250ml or 8 ounces, you're  not going to use that like maybe 5 years to
  go through that.
  So you've wasted all this money.
  And then the mom and pop shops, a lot of times  they don't know like the effects of essential
  oils and the harm that they can do to people's  skin.
  You know, a lot of them will use like citrus  essential oils which smells lovely.
  It smells great but citrus can cause sensitivity  with your skin in the sun.
  So it's the last ingredient you want to  out on your face in higher than recommended
  dosages.
  So.
  there's things like that where the mom and  pop shops don't know.
  And then the big players, like the mass produced  players, they tend to take shortcuts and it's
  all about the profitability and how do we  maximize every little penny out of it.
  So they will instead of using natural ingredients,  they start using silicones and other items
  that are more affordable that give you the  effects of a natural product without the real
  benefits of it, so it's kind of disguising  what is going on.
  SRS: Interesting.
  So what exactly changes in the oil when it  turns bad?
  EB: Well for one, the fragrance will just  generally lose its potency over time.
  Fragrance is very volatile.
  SRS: It's alcohol based usually, right?
  EB: You can do oil base, alcohol base.
  You could do a solid base as well.
  There's a lot of mediums to do it and they  have different advantages.
  But a fragrance is a, you know it's like  when you cut an orange right?
  Right when you cut it, it's open, it's  in the air and then that orange is going to
  smell great forever, those kind of dissipate  over time.
  So fragrance by default is like a volatile  ingredient so you kind of lose that.
  And then you do have the issues of like microbials  entering into the product and growing in there,
  that's where with oil based product versus  a water based product and that's really
  like the biggest risk would be.
  And then there's bacteria versus mold and  fungus and all that stuff.
  SRS: All that stuff.
  Alright.
  EB: The fun science stuff of cosmetics.
  SRS: Great!
  So for a quality beard oil, what would you  say are the key ingredients?
  EB: You know we've talked about this a lot  at our time here in the house.
  It's so much more than the product, right?
  It's the company behind it and the brand  behind it and how they stand behind it.
  You know what we recognize, that what you  put on your face right under your nose, you've
  got to have that connection to the fragrance.
  If you don't have that connection to the  fragrance, you're not going to like it.
  It doesn't matter if it's the "best  beard oil on the face of the planet" if
  you don't like the way it smells.
  We've got 9 different fragrances to really  help people connect with that.
  As a company we do "Swaps are always free."
  There's no risk on the buyer to get into  the product.
  They don't have the hassle to do returns.
  If they don't like this fragrance, we give  them a new one, no big deal.
  If there are not happy with a product down  the road or they have allergies to certain
  ingredients, we take care of them.
  And I think, as much as people want to think  that the money they are paying for is just
  the liquid inside the bottle, it's more  than that.
  It's the education that the company provides.
  SRS: Which is huge and that's how you in  fact you started.
  You're on the Youtube channel first and  then you added a product.
  So it's very similar to us where we had  education first, articles because we loved
  it and wanted to do it.
  Then people asked, "Hey, where can I find  this?"
  And then you're like, "Hey, I can't  find it, so let's make it!"
  That's the same concept and I think it's  just a different mindset if you start it that
  way than if you have a product then just try  "How can I market it better?"
  EB: Education takes resources from the company.
  It takes a lot of time, energy to produce  these videos, to produce the blog articles.
  A cheaper company, they are riding off on  someone else's education.
  They are not the ones who are educating the  customers.
  They're like, "Oh, you already know about  beard oil because of Beardbrand.
  Hey, just come over here, and I didn't have  to spend any of that money on here."
  SRS: Buy it on Amazon.
  EB: Right.
  So a little of bit of that is the education,  the return policy, the packaging too to give
  a nice experience and just the feel of the  brand and that connection to the brand.
  It's kind of like the entrepreneur on me.
  It's more than just the juice.
  The juice is great, don't get me wrong,  but there's so much more than that when
  you decide to work with a company.
  SRS: What are the challenges with using quality  ingredients in beard oils, would you say?
  EB: There's always going to be like sourcing  issues and seasonal issues.
  It's like fragrance is really a lot like  wine.
  You do have, depending on the weather, right?
  SRS: Conditions.
  If there is a good turnout on the fields,  you get really good scents.
  Then maybe the next year it's really bad  because there was a flood and all is gone.
  EB: And you'll have the ebbs and flows of  the pricing because of that.
  It's really interesting you know, we try  to maintain a consistent product of course,
  but if we have to supply like a different  clove from a different area, it's going
  to affect the product.
  We do have a little bit of seasonality with  out products which is kind of cool when some
  customers notice that, they're like, "Hey,  this smells slightly different from the last
  time I had it."
  SRS: It's a quality of a handmade product  in a way.
  We know that whenever you have hand work involved  there's slight variations.
  EB: Right.
  SRS: With some peccary glove and it's just  a wild animal.
  So every hide is going to be different and  they have slight imperfections, but it's
  part of the beauty and that's what you have  to accept.
  Like a handmade suit is not a factory made  suit and it's the same thing if you have
  an artificial ingredient versus a natural  ingredient.
  EB: Right.
  SRS: There will be some fluctuations.
  EB: It's like we could process the bejesus  out of certain ingredients until it's all
  exactly the same.
  SRS: Like a Big Mac.
  EB: And then you get a Big Mac quality.
  It is those imperfections that really make  it beautiful and lovely, and in my opinion,
  a higher quality but everyone has their own  preferences for what they want.
  SRS: What are the tools would you say should  a man have?
  EB: Yes, like a beard oil, a utility balm  is a great product as well if you're balding
  up top.
  You can use it to condition your dome.
  You can use it to condition your tattoos or  your skin, if you do that, of course your
  beard and your mustache.
  It's a real versatile product but we've  grown beyond the beard with items like combs
  and brushes which can also be used in the  head hair.
  Beardbrands have really grown a lot over the  years and we recognize like kind of my journey
  into finding my style has been through my  beard.
  I think a lot of our audience members, they're  like, "Oh, if I can take care of my beard
  then I can take care of my style, I can take  care of my wardrobe, I can take care of my
  hair."
  And the beard is like the starting point for  that.
  SRS: Sometimes I have seen these men with  really impressive beards but then they go
  bald on top.
  Is there a connection between?
  EB: Oh yeah.
  In a sick twisted fate, the thing that causes  guys to grow great beards is also the thing
  that may cause them to lose their hair.
  It's called DiHydrogen Testosterone (DHT).
  It's not technically like certain DHT levels  will cause effects, but it's your genetic
  response to those DHT levels.
  So let's say your head hair will stay in  place yup to like 10,000 DHT and mine will
  stay in place up yo 8,000 so if I go to 9,000  you're still going to have your hair but
  I'm going to go bald.
  It's all those levels and how we respond  to it so there's no absolutes out there
  like if I just lower my DHT or raise my DHT  then I can prevent it.
  But here are tools out there to help you either  boost your natural testosterone to grow a
  better beard or black those DHTs to kind of  keep your hair.
  SRS: In terms of beard styling, you used to  have this gigantic beard basically and now
  you switched it up.
  Looking back to the 1890s or so men had much  more unusual appearance than they do today.
  What do you think are good beards for certain  people and how do you find a style that works
  for you?
  EB: For me, I like to have a beard style that's  not very common.
  So right now that's why I have the big mustache  because a lot people aren't rocking it.
  When I grew my beard out, I grew it pretty  long and at that time no one had big long
  beards.
  And then there was phase when everyone had  big beards and then I kind of went shorter
  with it.
  SRS: You want to be ahead of the curve.
  EB: I like being ahead of the curve.
  I kind of like being different and being the  drummer to my own beat or whatever that is.
  SRS: Or just create your unique style.
  I mean for you obviously, your beard is a  hallmark.
  EB: Yeah.
  SRS: And yesterday, you showed me on your  phone on your Instagram account there are
  a lot of people actually because of that create  artwork.
  EB: I got some fans.
  SRS: So I'm sure, you also look taller,  you're like like what 6'4"?
  EB: Yeah.
  SRS: So when you walk around with a beard,  I mean you stand out.
  EB: Yeah I don't blend in and I prefer it  that way.
  But the thing is there's so many details  with the beard like do you do a hard line
  here?
  Do you do a hard line on your neck?
  Do you have a natural line?
  Do you blend the mustache into the beard or  do you have the mustache separate from the
  beard?
  Do you shave off like the sides and go with  a goatee?
  Do you have a big goatee and go with shorter  sides?
  There's just like so many style options  where like 5 years ago to 10 years ago it's
  like I grow a beard.
  It's a full beard, it's like the one option  but now it's like with your head hairstyle,
  do you want to do a fade?
  do you want to do an undercut?
  Do you want to disconnect?
  How do you want to style?
  There's so many options with beard styles  that a lot of guys don't even know are options.
  And really, you want to play into your strengths.
  I've got a great mustache.
  My sides are a little bit thinner than my  mustache area, so that's why I highlight
  my mustache.
  SRS: So some people you know, they go to beard  growing competitions where you use like beard
  wax and stuff, what's your take on that?
  EB: Yeah that's a cool little community.
  I've judged plenty of beard competitions.
  Yeah, it's an interesting community and it's  really how guys do beauty pageants.
  They have a lot of fun, they drink beer and  they're a little rowdy.
  They do these, absolutely crazy like it sounds.
  What they're using is actually a high hold  hairspray so like a no.
  5 hairspray to get all those in place.
  A beard wax just isn't' strong enough for  that.
  SRS: Do you ever use it for your beard?
  EB: Yeah, I mean we sell a mustache wax where  you could use to get it all in place.
  I avoid the hairsprays.
  I go for a more natural look.
  Yeah it's kinda my...
  SRS: It's more your style.
  EB: It's more of my.. my hair and my stuff.
  I don't like the handle bars.
  For my own personal style.
  I think some other guys pull it off great  but it just doesn't work for me.
  SRS: Yeah, interesting.
  Cause I find that there are lots of companies  that play on insecurities.
  And they often times look quite shady.
  You know, It's not something where I'm like  "wow, this looks like a trustworthy product."
  Is there anything where you say, Hey there,  there have been medical studies and tests
  that actually work and it's not just bogus  where you spent a lot of money, not actually
  seeing something.
  You know all these, before/after pictures  and you're like, yeah right.
  EB: Yeah we share the same look on things.
  We're not like a natural only company because  natural is better and..
  We think that natural is like a better experience  but we're also kind of scientifically jurymen.
  We're not doing natural for the sake of natural..  does that make sense?
  SRS: Yeah, it has to be better.
  It's the quality thing.
  If you want the best quality, if you need  a certain consistency or a certain output,
  then maybe the artificially derived thing  maybe actually be superior for the job.
  EB: Yeah, so I think what happens is.. it's  funny because in the beard, there's like beard
  growth pills, beard growth oils, which are  like pseudoscience and it's all anecdotal
  evidence.
  It's essentially like penis pills, or a lot  of like, in my opinion, a lot of like natural
  hair growth things.
  There are scientifically proven options out  there right now and it's really like..
  SRS: What are those?
  EB: It's like a Triple Play.
  It's a drug called Minoxidil, a drug called  Finasteride and a shampoo called Nioxin.
  Something like that.
  I'm bad with words but..
  SRS: So we'll have a link on the website.
  EB: So Minoxidil, you'll probably know by  the trade name, Rogaine.
  It's the big player out there and that's going  to be like a..
  I think it's a fast code dilator.
  I'm not a doctor but it affects the bloodflow  and increases blood flow to your scalp which
  allows the hairs to be healthier.
  But it's not like a DHT blocker.
  That's what the Finasteride is.
  Finasteride, by the trade name is Propecia.
  What that does is, it's an oral medication  that will affect your hormones to kind of
  lower and block the DHT and then the shampoo  is more of for like a, the way I interpret
  it is like a dandruff type of thing.
  You're gonna get a dry scalp when you use  Rogaine and it's gonna help with that.
  Kinda keep the hair healthy in a sense.
  When you use all three of those in combination,  that's gonna be your best strategy to minimize
  hair loss.
  or kinda stop it, or to slightly regrow but  it's not really gonna bring it all back.
  It's more of like slowing and stopping the  progression of your hair loss.
  SRS: Sounds like the key is as soon as you  notice some recession in your hair line or
  in your crown, you should start right away.
  It's much easier to maintain than to grow  it back.
  EB: Absolutely.
  And then if you ever grow it back, then that's  when you're gonna be looking into hair transplants
  where you kinda relocate the hairs from this  part, which you don't really lose, to your
  crown, to your temples and stuff.
  SRS: Interesting.
  EB: Yeah there's a whole industry and you  know, I've been a big fan of..
  These are tools that are available to you,  and we've talked about this earlier and there's
  no shame in using the tools.
  Just like you use a styling product to get  your hair to look a certain way.
  Your hair doesn't look like this when you  wake up.
  You use a styling tool to get to where you  wanna go.
  There's no shame in using that styling product.
  There's no shame in using Rogaine or Finasteride  to get you to maintain your hair at the level
  that you want it.
  Don't mask it.
  Don't disguise it, just be like "yeah of course  I do it because that's what I wanna do".
  But I think a lot of guys have insecurities  with losing the hair and they wanna hide,
  and they'd be like "No, I don't use Rogaine.
  No, I don't do beard or hair transplants because  this is what I have naturally".
  No dude, it's cool.
  You know it's cool to use this tool.
  Heck yeah I'm doing it.
  Heck yeah I'm fighting for it like I wanna  keep my hair.
  You know and own it.
  SRS: Exactly.
  So I mean, you know a lot about beards and  hair and obviously, you know what's going
  on your head.
  So what do you think is the next step for  beard brand, should you have more grooming
  products or hair products.
  Where are you heading?
  EB: Yeah, like I said, my story started with  a beard and kinda went out from there so our
  product offering is gonna start that way.
  You know we have great beard care products.
  We're growing into hair care products and  we have a styling balm, we have a sea salt
  spray which is great for giving you a variety  of hair styling options.
  SRS: It's very popular the women market.
  My wife, she looks at things and what is this  and it's like beach hair, oh beach hair.
  EB: But it's great for guys because with guys  and especially if you're thinning, it'll give
  you that volume and that texture that you're  not gonna get from like maybe a pomade or
  it's really gonna way your hair down.
  How do you see your scalp or sea salt spray  is gonna give you that volume in that natural
  look.
  SRS: I mean sea salts are like popular, right?
  Sea salts, caramels, what not..
  To me, first glance sounds more like marketing  scheme.
  Is it actually sea salt.. from the sea or  is just made up?
  EB: I mean, with a sea salt, it's just kind  of saltwater right?
  It is..
  SRS: Maybe with some kind of algae and some  other things.
  EB: So our sea salt spray, almost everyone  has figured out how to bottle the "sea water"
  right?
  They got salt water formulation down but what  they forgot in where our products are different
  than everyone else is we bottled the beach.
  So when you go to the ocean, and you're surfing,  and you're boogey boarding and you're clashing
  into the waves, sands get tossled up and that's  what also get in your hair.
  So we put some clay in our sea salt spray  all set on the bottom.
  You give it a shake and it makes waves in  the bottle and then you spray it in.
  You wanna get a lot more authentic type of  beach hair.
  It's the look you're going for versus some  of the alternatives on the marketplace.
  SRS: Great, I'll have my wife check it out.
  EB: Yeah yeah, get you some bottles.
  SRS: Awesome.
  Yeah, I think my hair's a little bit too thick.
  I have very thick hair
  EB: You can get a very nice fro going on,  man.
  SRS: Exactly, exactly.
  Yeah I don't know.
  Maybe.
  It seems like on your Instagram, you have  a lots of different guides to post.
  It's a good kind of inspiration for people.
  EB: Yeah we try to show that it's not.. not  everyone has the same beard style, not everyone
  has the same hair look, the same wardrobe  style.
  What are those options and how can you tie  your beard in?
  With a style like yours, I think there's a  lot of guys now who are off of wallstreet
  who are finally getting a confidence to rock  a beard too.
  It's like how can you pull that off in a very  classic, dignified, quality way?
  SRS: With a three piece suit.
  EB: Yeah, and I think a lot of guys are figuring  out ways to do it and we post a lot of those
  photographs.
  SRS: That's cool, to have just the bandwidth  of things rather than just have one kind of
  beards man.
  EB: Yeah.
  People look at me, and they're like, "Ah,  you're right he's a hipster, everything's
  hipster." and I'm like, I did kind of planned  that hipster look, but reality is I'm a businessperson,
  I'm an entrepreneur, I'm a finance guy.
  SRS: You're a libertarian like you're not  a hipster to me at all once I get to know
  you, but you're right...
  EB: Yeah, but if you look at me at the surface,  I get that I look like it, but I would say
  that, I'm not living at my mom's basement,  I don't think I'm pretentious when it comes
  to coffee, I mean slightly but...
  SRS: We all have our own things, and it's  all about quality, right?
  I mean, it's okay to have a quality coffee,  or a quality hair product, or a quality pocket
  square or tie.
  It's all about what goes into it, and once  you touch it and feel it and use it, you're
  like yeah, this is both lane leather but this  one is so superior to this one, and it feels
  heavenly and it's same with most things in  life.
  EB: It's like you and your belts, man.
  You love just like fine leathers, I don't  know anything about belts.
  SRS: We're making them right now, they're  like, "Hey, what's out there in belts and
  what do people use?" and oftentimes they use,  they all call it the top grain but in fact
  it's not.
  It's coated, and then there's a middle layer  usually to get the belt a little more volume,
  and nice edges or angles, and that's usually  not leather, and the inside leather is the
  cheapest leather you could get, and they have  the thread and stuff and the buckles, it's
  not solid brass or sterling silver, it's a  lower grade material, it just doesn't age
  as well, the plating is not so thick and it  comes off, and all those things.
  A belt seems so simple but there's many ways  to screw them differently.
  Alright, if people want to learn more things  about beards, where should they go?
  EB: Beardbrand, is the ultimate source, we've  got a youtube channel, beardbrand.
  SRS: Since when?
  EB: Since 2012, is when we launched the community.
  I think we are the company that created the  industry of beard care, like before us it
  just didn't exist, and again man it's beardbrand  youtube, instagram, twitter, our website of
  course, beardbrand, we got a blog there, all  that, and of course me, I'm Eric Bandholz.
  SRS: Alright, that was good.
  We also did a guide about how to grow a beard,  it's a pdf, you can download it, and of course
  check out more on beardbrand.com.
  EB: Yeah, thanks for having me.
  SRS: Thanks, Eric.
     
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