Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    How This Management Consultant Built a Practice by Putting People at the Center of Business Strategy

    February 12, 2026

    “I Was Born Into Cosmetics—Then Lost Everything at 18”: How Early Exposure Shaped the Founder of Ever Bilena

    February 12, 2026

    “I Spent Decades Cooking Around the World Before Starting a Business”: How Santi’s Founder Built His Skills Abroad

    February 12, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Financial AdviserFinancial Adviser
    • Home
    • Success
      • Leadership & Growth
      • Entrepreneurship
      • Business Strategy
      • Inspiring Stories
    • Money
      • Investing
      • Personal Finance
      • Wealth Building
      • Financial Planning
    • Work
      • Career Development
      • Workplace Culture
      • Productivity & Efficiency
      • Management & Performance
    • Life
      • Relationships & Family
      • Health & Wellness
      • Mindfulness & Balance
      • Personal Growth
    • Inspiration
      • Vision & Purpose
      • Overcoming Adversity
      • Motivational Stories
      • Mindset & Motivation
    • Opinion
    Financial AdviserFinancial Adviser
    Home»Success»Entrepreneurship»“I Was Born Into Cosmetics—Then Lost Everything at 18”: How Early Exposure Shaped the Founder of Ever Bilena
    Entrepreneurship

    “I Was Born Into Cosmetics—Then Lost Everything at 18”: How Early Exposure Shaped the Founder of Ever Bilena

    FinancialAdviser.phFebruary 12, 20264 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link

    Long before Dioceldo Sy built Ever Bilena into one of the Philippines’ most recognizable cosmetics brands, he had already been immersed in the business—without fully realizing how formative those early lessons would be.

    “I was born in the family of cosmetics, because my angkong is a pioneer,” Sy says. His grandfather entered the industry decades before beauty brands became household names. “When he came in 1938, before the war, he started a pomade business.”

    The business thrived in an era with little competition. Sy remembers the economics clearly, even as a child. “Sabi nya yung piso ko na puhunan nabebenta ko ng sampung piso kasi walang kalaban eh.” The margins were extraordinary—simple products, strong demand, and almost no rivals.

    Distribution, too, was straightforward and personal. “Sabi ko, ‘Angkong pano ka mag-deliver?’ Sabi nya, ‘I used a bicycle.’” His grandfather would load products and go directly to customers. “Nagde-deliver siya mga 12 dozen.” What stuck with Sy wasn’t the scale, but the efficiency. “Hindi ko na alam kung magkano yun, pero naalala ko yung margin niya, 10 times na mabilis.”

    Even at a young age, Sy was already absorbing the fundamentals of business—pricing power, logistics, and the advantage of being early in an industry.

    That foundation, however, would be shaken abruptly.

    In 1969, when Sy was just 11 years old, tragedy struck. “Nung 1969, namatay siya at 58 years old kasi nasunugan kami,” he recalls. The fire was devastating. “Mga 80 percent nasunog siya.” The loss wasn’t only personal—it crippled the business.

    After his grandfather’s death, Sy’s uncle stepped in. “Uncle ko yung pumasok, siya nag-handle ng business,” Sy says. But the transition came with limitations. “High school graduate lang siya, syempre walang training eh.”

    Despite that, the business continued to operate and even expanded. “Yung pumasok na yung uncle ko, kompleto na yung Angkong ko ng mga products,” he explains. The company was no longer just about pomade. “Hindi lang pomade. Meron na siyang lipstick, powder. Nag-expand na.” At its peak, the business dominated the market. “He was number one na may 70 to 80 percent ng market share.”

    Sy remembers how strong the company was during those years. His uncle continued innovating. “When my uncle passed away in 1969, I remember he was already (selling) sabon, yung bath soap,” Sy says. At the time, local manufacturing was rare. “Kasi at that time, lahat ng sabon natin importe.” His uncle saw opportunity where others didn’t. “Wala pa kasi gumagawa ng sabon and shampoo noon.”

    Looking back, Sy believes the business could have grown even larger. “So sabi ko, pag ginawa nya yun, pag hindi sya namatay, baka mas malakas pa siya,” he reflects. The foundation was there—product range, distribution, and market dominance—but continuity was fragile.

    By 1976, Sy entered the business himself. “In 1976, when I was 18 years old, pumasok ako, doon ako nag-work.” His first role was far from glamorous. “I started as a bank messenger.” There were no structured roles back then. “Kasi dati naman walang job description.”

    Instead, he learned by doing everything. “Basta kahit ano ang utusin sa’yo, ginagawa ko lahat.” That lack of structure became his education. Over time, he touched every part of the operation. “From messenger, nag-purchasing ako, nag-ahente ako.” He describes himself plainly. “Nag-jack-of-all-trades ako.”

    Those years gave him something formal schooling could not. “Kaya I knew how the business was running.” He understood cash flow, sourcing, sales, and operations—not from theory, but from necessity.

    Yet despite that knowledge, the business did not survive. “Pero within four years, nung 1980, nagsara yung business kasi ang daming utang.” For Sy, the closure was painful but clarifying. “But I knew the ins and outs na of the business.”

    By the time the family business collapsed, Sy had already learned what many entrepreneurs only discover later: knowing an industry early does not guarantee survival, but it builds instinct. The exposure—good and bad—shaped how he would think about risk, margins, and control in the years ahead.

    Dioceldo Sy’s entrepreneurial story did not begin with Ever Bilena. It began with watching a bicycle-delivered pomade business earn tenfold margins, witnessing expansion without formal systems, and experiencing how quickly dominance can disappear without continuity. Losing the family business at a young age did not discourage him—it educated him. Long before he became a founder, he learned that opportunity favors those who understand the business deeply, but survival belongs to those who can rebuild when everything is lost.

    This article includes quotes from an interview originally published by Esquire Philippines, authored by Henry Ong

    Loading

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link
    Previous Article“I Spent Decades Cooking Around the World Before Starting a Business”: How Santi’s Founder Built His Skills Abroad
    Next Article How This Management Consultant Built a Practice by Putting People at the Center of Business Strategy

    Related Posts

    Entrepreneurship

    “I Spent Decades Cooking Around the World Before Starting a Business”: How Santi’s Founder Built His Skills Abroad

    February 12, 2026
    Entrepreneurship

    How the Founders of Baliwag Lechon Manok Turned a Food Fad Into a Business

    February 12, 2026
    Entrepreneurship

    “I Was Comfortable—but Bored”: Why the Founder of Goto King Walked Away From the Family Business

    January 30, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    ATRAM AI Banner Ad
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn

    Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest updates from Financial Adviser about financial literacy and business acumen. Subscribe to our mailing list!

      By checking this, you agree to our Data Privacy Consent/Agreement and accept our use of such cookies.
      I agree to the Terms and Conditions

      Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS

      Home

      Sucess

      • Leadership & Growth
      • Entrepreneurship
      • Business Strategy
      • Inspiring Stories

      Money

      • Investing
      • Personal Finance
      • Wealth Building
      • Financial Planning

      Work

      • Career Development
      • Workplace Culture
      • Productivity & Efficiency
      • Leadership & Management

      Life

      • Relationships & Family
      • Health & Wellness
      • Mindfullness & Balance
      • Personal Growth

      Inspiration

      • Vision & Purpose
      • Overcoming Adversity
      • Motivational Stories
      • Mindset & Motivation

      Contact Us

      Subscribe to Updates

        Get the latest updates from Financial Adviser about financial literacy and business acumen. Subscribe to our mailing list!

        By checking this, you agree to our Data Privacy Consent/Agreement and accept our use of such cookies.
        I agree to the Terms and Conditions

        Copyright © 2025 Financial Adviser. All rights reserved.

        • Privacy Policy

        Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

        FINANCIALADVISER.PH USES COOKIES TO ENSURE YOU GET THE BEST EXPERIENCE WHILE BROWSING THE SITE.

        By continued use, you agree to our Data Privacy Consent/Agreement and accept our use of such cookies. For further information, click the link Data Privacy Consent/Agreement.