News
» Go to news mainFrom employee to entrepreneur to innovator
I had no clue about skin care products, says Stephen Aikman (MBA11), which is surprising when you learn that in 2019 he sold the skin care business he started in his basement, All Natural Advice, for tens of millions of dollars.
By most peoples measure, Stephen was a success long before that. For 25 years hed worked at RBC in various senior leadership roles, including vice president and head of commercial strategy.
Getting the MBA was intense
Banking had not been his dream job, he admits. But after hed completed his Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA95) at Brock University, it was just about the only position he could apply for. The job market was horrible at the time, says Stephen. About 700 people applied for the two available positions and I got one of them.
For a time, banking looked like a secure future, leading Stephen to get his MBA in financial services from 窪蹋勛圖厙in 2011.
Getting the MBA was intense, remembers Stephen. At the time I lived in Hamilton and worked in Toronto. It was an hour train ride each way. Id study on the way in, and on the way home. Then at night, Id study some more.
Two years in, and his start-up was worth millions
While the program may have been focused on helping bankers become even better at their jobs, it managed to have a different effect on many in Stephens cohort. I stayed connected with just about everyone in my program, he says, and over half of us left our jobs to become entrepreneurs and do something else. And were all successful.
In Stephens case, that something else came in 2013 in the form of a skin care product a friend was selling to hotels and spas. Stephen had the insight to rebrand it and sell it exclusively onlinea place where the big brands werent playing yet. They didnt care about e-commerce; they cared about in-store experience. By 2019, that little start-up was worth millions and in 2020 he left RBC.
Professor Carolan McLarney had our best interests at heart
I saw a market need for organic natural products, steering away from corporate synthetic products, allowing consumers to make a choice that was healthier for the environment and themselves, says Stephen. We were also able to tap into economic innovation for global growth.
Stephen credits Dal 100 per cent for giving him the courage to take the plunge and change careers. The people at Dal were invested in me, he says. The staff were so engaging. The entire program was a community.
Stephen singles out Professor Carolan McLarney as especially inspiring. When I told her about this opportunity, she said Just do it. She was someone who looked after us as students and had our best interests at heart. Im an entrepreneur today because of her.
泭
Recent News
- Celebrating 20,000 Business Work Terms: Jamie McGuigans Journey from 窪蹋勛圖厙Student to Scotiabank Leadership
- Q and A with Alison Brown: The twists and turns which led her to Information Science
- The Bachelor of Management is 25!
- From MBA classroom to the frontline of healthcare
- Yirun Wang (BMgmt24) builds a community while earning his degree
- Building a path forward with work integrated learning
- Alum finds ways to have a big impact on health and students
- Two exciting milestones, one amazing Dal Business Networking Night