BOSS UP
April Showers, founder and CEO of Afro Unicorn, created a brand that represents the culture and beautifully unique qualities of women and children of color. Launching Afro Unicorn products in Walmart in 2022, the brand also became the first woman-founded and Black-owned business to own a licensed character brand in major retail.
Inspired to start Afro Unicorn after a chat with a close friend who called her a “unicorn” in reference to her ability to thrive at balancing multiple passions, personal life as a mother, and business, April is a self-made entrepreneur who brought her business acumen working in real estate and insurance to build a multimillion-dollar brand and a well-supported online platform for empowerment. The brand has caught the eyes of celebrities and major brands alike, continuing to amplify inclusion, fun, creativity, and representation.
Afro Unicorn has expanded, offering apparel, accessories, toys, books, bedding, and more to empower women and children of color how "unique, divine, and magical" they truly are. And recently, Afro Unicorn’s Magical Tresses Swirls & Twirls Curl Cream was chosen by Good Housekeeping for a 2024 Parenting Award for its empowering messaging and product offerings.
xoNecole caught up with April to talk about building her brand, her passion for the business, and more:
xoNecole: What was the idea and motivation behind launching Afro Unicorn?
April Showers: I believe that no one should rely on one source to dictate their livelihood, so that is the first reason why I started Afro Unicorn.
I was a serial entrepreneur when I started Afro Unicorn. I own and operate an insurance agency—one of the largest in the nation—and I'm also a licensed real estate broker. So a friend kept referring to me as a unicorn because of the businesses. I'm also a single mom of two boys. He kept telling me, like, ‘April, you're unicorn.' He told me this for two years, and finally, one day, I just asked him, ‘Why do you keep calling me that?’ He said, ‘Well, because you're running the businesses. You're raising the boys. You're a unicorn.’
I'm a woman, that's what we do. And he said, ‘No, you are exactly a unicorn.’ The phrase ‘You should never rely on one source to dictate your livelihood,’--- the reason why I started Afro Unicorn as an e-commerce brand--- it was because the insurance company that I have, the model is not a legacy, meaning if I pass away, I'm not able to give it to anyone.
And that kind of bothered me. I'm putting all this blood, sweat, and tears into it, and I want to build something that I can actually be able to pass down. And I found an article where it talked about starting a T-shirt brand, and the quote was, ‘You should never rely on one source to dictate your livelihood.’ And it just resonated with me.
So, I had my friend calling me a unicorn, I was using the unicorn emoji, and one day, it didn't resonate with me anymore. So, when I went to go find a unicorn that looked like me. I couldn't. I decided to create it, and I wanted to create it in a way where I can also otherwise was where I could also inspire other women like me who might have been dealing with imposter syndrome and did not know that they were a unicorn, those that wanted to start their own businesses but were scared, those that were in it but didn't know how to keep going in it.
So that's why I started Afro Unicorn. It started as a social platform, [then evolved into an] e-commerce brand selling T-shirts. [We] highlighted other women to say what makes them unique, divine, and magical, and yeah, it caught a wave.
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xoN: What did it take to launch the brand in terms of the business expenses and effort?
AS: I knew that I had to build it to sell it.
So, the very first thing that I did was I got an accountant on board, and I also trademarked the logo. That was step one. So [for] startup costs roughly, $1,500 just to get the accountant on board and to get the trademark going.
To start a Shopify store and the print-on-demand shop—it costs less than $200 to get that going. And that's where I started. That’s what it took to actually get the setup of Afro Unicorn going.
But then it took a whole lot of work because a lot of people start, they're thinking that they can just build a brand, not understanding that you have to have a movement behind the brand. You have to have raving fans behind the brand.
Strategically, the platform was created to highlight other women—other entrepreneurs—and shout them out and tell people to patronize their businesses. So in return, people saw like, ‘Oh, if I go get the free unicorn shirt, then she's going to post me. She's going to talk about me.’ So then that built a movement.
We launched in May of 2019, and by July, we had Tiffany Haddish on board. We had Alicia Keys. By September, we had Sherri Shepherd. All organic. It's still that way, still very organic, because they saw that we were building something.
And so before I got into retail, there was a demand, and there was a movement behind Afro Unicorn, and the way we got in was through a video that went viral of a little girl wearing an Afro Unicorn shirt. Someone said, ‘I love your hair.’ And she said, ‘Thank you. It's an afro.”
That particular video was shared on so many blogs, it got all the way up to Oprah Daily, and that's when the Walmart buyer saw in the comments everyone stating,
That's Afro Unicorn’s baby. That's Afro Unicorn’s shirt. That's Afro Unicorn, which made the buyer then go over to our page, saw how there was an actual movement behind the brand, and then reached out to me to see if we could bring this into retail.
xoN: Yes, Tiffany Haddish’s book had a unicorn reference as well, which is where the connection was there, correct?
AS: Yes, called The Last Black Unicorn. And yes, that is why we reached out to her. Again, a lot of people think that you could just build, like, just say, 'I'm going to drop this idea, and then it's going to sell. If we build it. They come.' But that's not the case. We were very strategic on which celebrities we wanted to target.
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xoN: What is your advice for other entrepreneurs seeking to find success in what they're doing with their brands?
AS: My advice is that you have to be consistent. You have to show up every single day. You have to give it your all. You have to see the end and focus on what that end result looks like for you, and not worry about how it's going to happen, but just know it's going to happen. But if you can't visually see what the end looks like, and you can't really articulate what that end looks like—like I said, I knew in 2019, I'll be a household name and a worldwide brand.
So, if you can't say that definitely, that you know where your product or your service or whatever you have is going to go, you probably need to take a step back for a minute until you have a clear vision on exactly what it is that you want to do.
xoN: What’s next for Afro Unicorn?
AS: Right now we are in the middle of finalizing our live-action show, as well as the animated show, so we're working on all the content behind the scenes right now.
For more information on Afro Unicorn, visit the website or follow on Instagram @afrounicorn.
This interview was edited for brevity.
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