Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Hi. My name is Grace. and I am the founder of Mink. Here we go. Mink is the desktop printer that prints makeup. It can take any image and instantly transform it into a wearable color cosmetic, turning any phone, laptop,or printer oh sorry, phone, laptop, or camera into an endless beauty aisle. So, I wanna first talk a little bit about myself so you guys can get to understand about how I came up with this idea. I'm a serial inventor. I've done everything from medic devices all the way to jewelry. Uhm, and not too long ago I was student at Harvard Business School. And I want to create a makeup product. Uhm, and what I found out was the makeup industry makes a whole lot of money on a whole lot of bullshit. And they do this by charging a huge premium on one thing that technology provides for free. And that one thing is color! So, the beauty industry is worth 55 billion dollars and in the US, 70% of all makeup is purchased in mass outlets like Walmart. Walmart can offer you all the colors that expensive prestige stores can, like Sephora. Why? Supply chain. And that's because volume discounts drive a mass price one So they can only… they can only select colors that are gonna sell out in mass volumes. So you might like the coolish colors, you have to go to expensive Sephora. But who likes paying for expensive Sephora prices? No one! That's true. So that's what Mink does. It gives you the selection of prestige that combines with the convenience and mass. As a matter of fact, I'm beating the selection of prestige because I'm giving you the selection of the internet. And I'm beating the convenience of the mass because I'm giving you the convenience of your own freaking house. So, this is the Mink. It's a proprietary piece of hardware. And it works just as like an inkjet printer. You do not need any new software. All you need is a color picker to copy the HEX code and any software to print. Also, just like an inkjet printer, you just need subscript and ink. Both of which are FDA compliant and came from the same exact sources as those of trusted brands. I'm gonna retail this for about $300 initially and the ink and the subscripts gonna be combined to a price so that they are very exhaustible. My initial target market – they're girls ages 13-21. They have not formed any habits yet. And they're still experimenting and we're gonna grow with them. And that's how we're gonna change the world by this makeup. Plus, this is how they ordinarily learn, know how to put on makeup. This is their natural habitats. So clicking to print is just the next natural step. So I'm gonna stop talkin' now and just put to the demo. So, imagine… oh demo please? Thank you! So, imagine… I'm 16 year Amanda, again you don't need any new software. I'm using colorzilla and photoshop because why? I just like it. So, imagine… I'm 16 year-old Amanda and I'm watching Michelle Phan putting on some eye shadow I see a color I like, I pause the video it's active and I pick a color to copy And I just paste the code. It's the HEX code every pixel has it And just like any other inkjet printer… we have all done it before. it's very boring! Someone should figures And then just press print. The Mink enables the web to be the biggest beauty store in the world. It not only unlocks images, it unlocks pixels. So, we're gonna live in a world where you can just take a picture of your friend's lipstick and just print it out. hinting developers Uhm… this, we're printing eye shadow right now but this is basically gonna be able to print lipsticks, powders, creams, foundations, etc. So all we have to do now is basically just lift the cover up, take it out, and it's simply ready to apply. Oh! Here it is! Just so you guys can see that it's makeup. I'm just gonna put it on my hand. See my hand. It's makeup. And the case, I know all of you guys think of the case. Just put it in the case, just close it and it's ready to go. So, can we switch to the presentation slides please? Thank you! This is all nice to know but I think the most important thing of all these is that this is gonna finally train our girls to understand that the definition of beauty is something that they should be able to control. Not our corporations, and I think to me, that's the most important thing. So finally, I'm excited to announce the launch of our software developer. Sign up on gracemink.com and hope that you all can join us. Thank you! Judges, do you want to jump in? That's a really, really impressive demo. Very cool! I've seen hardwares really difficult processes, a lot of businesses failed in trying manufacturing Talk about your kind of experiences and why you think you can help build many maufacturerers. Oh ‘cause I failed a lot times before, so this is ain't my first, this is neither my second nor my third, you know, I've done this before I know the, you know, pitfalls and stuff. And we're gonna fail, you just don't have… you just… have to make sure you don't fail when it counts, you know, so, uhm.. And I think the best way to attack this is uhm… you know this is based on mature technology, it's inkjet right? So I'm gonna go to this, I'm gonna go to EPSON and, I'm gonna go to Dell not…well Dell doesn't do printers anymore but I'm gonna go to these printer guys and just build a kind of deal; you're business is dying, this can help, you know. And from there, I mean, I think it should be pretty easy. I think from hereon it's just negotiating with partners… and I'm not greedy, I'm gonna be like, hey, let's kind of deal and get this on the road and like You don't wanna do manufacturing or manage manufacturing that rather license without to… No, no, no, no, I mean I'll … I'll deal with this but I think… I think… I think there is partnerships that can help with the manufacturing because they have the know-how that can speed up the process. Is the idea to keep the same margin structure as cosmetics but focus on the convenience factor which is you don't need to buy all the, go to Sephora, you don't have to buy it but essentially the pricing is still relatively the same? No, the pricing is gonna be per unit. The pricing is gonna be much lower. So, uhm… per unit's gonna be down to mass. So the idea is to disrupt both the distribution and pricing mechanism of cosmetics? Yes So, I thought it was awesome but I'm truly: congratulations hoping that demo to work, amazing! If I understood it correctly, it was a little hard to hear, you're selling the printer to 13-21 year olds to make their own makeup? One of the things that I think you may wanna look at is how do you sell it to kind of influencers who would then make makeup for their friends, either for free or business right? Like 300 bucks is a lot for a 13 years old but if you then can turn around for 10 bucks like custom makeup for your friends, it's like a social thing, you got parties around it and you potentially could have disrupt all retail through all these like Tupperware meets social meets 3-D printing world. And I wouldn't get too focused on what you're trying to do in the form factor in the business model, I would just try to put in the people's hands and let them run with it. I totally agree and I think another thing, another outlet that uh… I don't think this needs much formal marketing