Three-time CEO Amy Shecter raises $55 million for Ever/Body

Ever/Body CEO Amy Shecter.
Ever/Body CEO Amy Shecter.
Courtesy of Ever/Body

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Female S&P 500 executives control just 1% of all shares, Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In philosophy is a key motivator at one female-led venture firm, and a three-time CEO takes on her next challenge. Have a wonderful Wednesday.

– Third time’s the charm. Amy Shecter is no stranger to running a business. The three-time CEO led CorePower Yoga and the on-demand beauty services business GlamSquad—not to mention stints at the president and VP level at apparel brands Tory Burch and C. Wonder—before taking on the chief executive job at the cosmetic dermatology chain Ever/Body in 2020.

Almost two years later, she’s leading Ever/Body into its next chapter. The New York-based company has raised $55.5 million in Series C funding, Fortune is the first to report. The round was led by existing investor Addition, with participation from Tiger Global, ACME Capital, Declaration Capital, Fifth Wall Ventures, and Imaginary Ventures. While Shecter has raised capital before—GlamSquad was a venture-backed business—this particular milestone at this particular job is especially monumental for her.

“I feel like it is the crescendo of what I’ve been doing in my career,” Shecter says of leading Ever/Body. “I have led digitally native businesses and opened a lot of retail stores around the world. This business is an opportunity to flex both of those muscles.”

Ever/Body CEO Amy Shecter.
Courtesy of Ever/Body

Ever/Body has about 75 employees and operates three locations in New York. Shecter plans to use the capital infusion to open six more storefronts in New York and Washington, D.C. by the end of 2022. Investors are bullish on the cosmetic dermatology space, which includes services like Botox, fillers, and laser hair removal performed outside of a traditional doctor’s office setting. (The company says its aestheticians and injectors go through up to 500 hours of training.) Citing data from Grand View Research, Ever/Body estimates that the total market for the services it offers is $73 billion. The average customer is 37 years old and returns three times in six months; 60% of clients purchase a second unique service, the company says.

Shecter’s experience at Ever/Body also speaks to another trend: the founder-to-experienced CEO pivot. Much like Glossier’s transition from founder Emily Weiss to new CEO Kyle Leahy and a similar changeover for founder Julie Wainwright at resale platform The RealReal, which was announced just yesterday, Ever/Body mirrored a similar executive jump. Shecter took the reins from Ever/Body founder Kate Twist in 2020, about a year after the company’s launch (Twist until recently served as board chair).

“I have tremendous respect for founders,” says Shecter, who’s previously served in high-level roles at brands like Liz Clairborne and Cole Haan. “I come into this business with a proven track record of how to morph from a founder-led business to a founder [co-operated] business. I now have the opportunity to help operationalize different facets of our business.”

At just under three years old, Ever/Body is a younger business than some other leading consumer brands, yet it made its corner office transition at an earlier stage than most. Its Series C round brings the company’s total capital raised to more than $100 million, says Shecter. “There is more demand for us right now than we can capture.”

Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com
@_emmahinchliffe

P.S. Join the conversation as Fortune partners with Credit Karma for a special discussion, Bridging the Pay Equity Gap, on Thursday, June 9, 11 a.m. EST. The speakers, including Fortune senior writer Maria Aspan, Chipotle chief diversity, inclusion and people officer Marissa Andrada, Credit Karma chief people, places and publicity officer Colleen McCreary, and chief diversity and inclusion officer for L’Oréal North America Angela E. Guy, will explore the pressing issues connected to pay equity and how corporate leadership can bridge the opportunity gap to eliminate pay disparities and help employee retention. Register here.

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- The 1%. While women make up a quarter of the top executives at S&P 500 companies, they only control 1% of shares, according to research from Swedish gender data company ExecuShe. Male S&P 500 executives held about $770 billion of shares in 2020, whereas women only held $9 billion. The disparity still held even when outliers like Elon Musk were removed from the data. Bloomberg

- State surveillance. Women’s rights activists in Poland, which has a near-total abortion ban, fear that a new ordinance on medical data will track pregnancies. Health minister Adam Niedzielski signed the ordinance on Friday, expanding the amount of information saved in a central database, including patient information on allergies, blood type, and pregnancies. Niedzielski says only medical professionals can access the data, but opponents worry the information could be used by police and prosecutors against patients who end pregnancies. Yahoo News

- New rules. The International Skating Union overwhelmingly voted to gradually increase the minimum age for senior figure skating competitions to 17. The measure was prompted by concerns for the protection of minors after then 15-year-old Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva tested positive for banned substances before the Winter Olympics in February. NBC News

- Lean In’s legacy. Former Facebook employees Kelly Graziadei and Joanna Lee Shevelenko credit outgoing COO Sheryl Sandberg’s advocacy for female leaders as having a major influence on their early stage venture firm F7. The firm, founded by seven Facebook alumnae, focuses investments on early-stage founders, particularly women and other underrepresented individuals. Sandberg and her partner Tom Bernthal are some of the limited partners in the firm’s $50 million fund. TechCrunch

MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Amazon executive Liz Coddington was appointed chief financial officer at Peloton. Corporate finance platform Rho has hired former Airbnb senior attorney Alexa Summer as its chief legal officer. Nextdoor head of marketing Maryam Banikarim is joining nonprofit organization Partnership for New York City. National Gallery of Canada director Sasha Suda was named the next director and chief executive of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Compensation benchmarking tool OpenComp appointed Emily Sweet as vice president of social impact. New York Times columnist and podcaster Kara Swisher is returning to Vox Media to host a new interview show with their podcast network. Media platform Teads has appointed Neala Brown as vice president of insights, Karen Wang as managing director for Canada, Jennifer Werner as vice president of Northeast; the company also promoted Jennifer Lockhart to SVP sales WC, Fiona McIndoe to VP East, Maria McCarthy to VP Midwest, Josefina Schmella and Ann Damele to VP West, and Jessica Curry to VP of performance, U.S. and VP of agency development. 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

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- Not over yet. Jessica Cisneros, the primary challenger to Rep. Henry Cuellar in South Texas, is filing for a recount of their May 24 runoff election. Cuellar, the only anti-abortion Democrat in the U.S. House, leads by only 197 votes with 99% of all ballots counted. "I owe it to our community to see this through to the end," Cisneros said in a statement. CNN 

ON MY RADAR

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PARTING WORDS

“They tell girls that the best day of her life will be her wedding day, but I grew up to be an engineer and speaking at #WWDC22 was the best day of my life.”

-Apple software engineer Novall Swift, who led the session introducing the weather data developer toolkit WeatherKit at Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference on Monday.

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