6 Lessons From Madam C.J. Walker, America's First Black Self-Made Female MillionaireInvest in yourself and your community.

ByNina Zipkin

Michael Ochs Archives | Getty Images

It's not very often that an entrepreneur's influence can still be felt for more than a century, but that is the case for Madam C.J. Walker.

Walker, born Sarah Breedlove in 1867 in Louisiana, is remembered today as the first black self-made female millionaire in the United States, amassing her fortune thanks to her groundbreaking haircare products for women of color and finely honed marketing skills.

Related:They're Doing It: Awe-Inspiring African American Female Entrepreneurs

除了作为一个坚定的女商人,Walker was an activist and philanthropist, using her success as a platform to help her community. Today, her legacy lives on. In 2016, Sundial Brands launched theMadam C.J. Walker Beauty Culture product linewith Sephora.

Not only that, but the company had some particular personal insight into the woman who inspired the collection -- acclaimed writer and Walker's great, great granddaughter A'Lelia Bundles is on board as the product line's advisor and official historian.

Read on for six lessons from Madam C.J. Walker.

You have strength you don’t even realize.

One of Walker's best known quotes is"I got my start by giving myself a start."She was born the child of sharecroppers in Louisiana, and her parents died when she was just 7 years old. She worked as a farm laborer and married her first husband when she was just 14 to leave the dangerous home of her brother-in-law. A widow and single mother to a young daughter at 20, she decided to move to Missouri where she worked for less than $2 a day to afford to get her daughter an education.

Solving a problem for yourself can fix something for others.

In the 1890s, Walker was suffering from hair loss and wanted to find a solution. On the advice of her four brothers, who all worked as barbers, she tested out a number ofremediesto find the formula that worked best for her. She also tried out products made by Annie Malone, another black female entrepreneur in the beauty space. Realizing she had a passion for the industry, she got a job working for Malone as a sales representative.

You can reinvent yourself.

Seeing that there was a real need, she was inspired to launch her own business and she changed her name fromSarah Breedlove to Madam C.J. Walker, the first steps towards building her empire.

She traveled around the country for a year and a half, going door to door and doing demos at churches and community gathering places to sell Madam Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower. It was a hit, and it allowed her to open her first training center in Pittsburgh in 1908, and then her first factory two years later in Indianapolis.

Collaborate with people who believe in your vision.

Though Walker started out as a one-woman operation, it didn't last that way for very long. With the Lelia College of Beauty Culture, she was dedicated to training women who could be ambassadors for her brand. By 1919, she had25,000 Walker agentsacross the country who had gotten diplomas from the school.

Invest in yourself.

Though Walker had a difficult time getting backers for herfactoryin Indianapolis, she was undeterred. She decided to invest $10,000 out of her own pocket to open the Walker Manufacturing Company, making her the lone shareholder of the operation, which massively paid off. She used her fortune to also pay for some sizable pieces of real estate: a Harlem townhouse that was a frequent gathering place for luminaries of the Harlem Renaissance and a mansion in Irvington, N.Y., which still stands as a historical landmark.

Support your community.

Walker was a well-knownactivist and philanthropist. She donated money to support scholarships for women at the Tuskegee Institute and to preserve Frederick Douglass's house. She was also patron of a number of organizations including the African American Young Men's Christian Association and the NAACP.

Wavy Line
Nina Zipkin

Entrepreneur Staff

Staff Writer. Covers leadership, media, technology and culture.

Nina Zipkin is a staff writer at Entrepreneur.com. She frequently covers leadership, media, tech, startups, culture and workplace trends.

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