Beatrice Dixon founded The Honey Pot Company in 2014 after a recurring bacterial infection led her to develop her own remedy -- a plant-based vaginal wash that she describes as arriving to her in a dream from her ancestors. The origin story is not a marketing device. It is what happened, and Dixon has never softened it for audiences that might find it inconvenient.
The Honey Pot was the first plant-based feminine care line to reach Target's shelves at scale. Dixon built the brand with a thesis that the feminine care industry had spent generations ignoring: that Black women's bodies had been systematically over-medicated and underserved, and that a plant-based alternative rooted in wellness rather than clinical detachment could find both community trust and commercial success. She was right on both counts.
The 2020 Super Bowl commercial changed the brand's trajectory in two directions simultaneously. The ad -- in which Dixon spoke directly and plainly about building a company that would support the next generation of girls and women of color -- prompted a coordinated backlash from white consumers who objected to its framing. Target responded by promoting the brand more prominently. Sales increased. The hostility became fuel.
“My ancestors showed me the formula in a dream. I wrote it down when I woke up.”
-- Beatrice Dixon, Founder, The Honey Pot Company
Dixon built the brand without venture capital at launch, growing it through community trust and retail expansion before bringing on external investment. By the time Compass Diversified acquired The Honey Pot in 2023 in a deal valued at $380 million, the brand had become one of the most significant exits in the natural and wellness consumer goods space -- a number that reflected what Dixon had always known the market was worth.
She has described the acquisition as a transition, not a conclusion. The Honey Pot continues as a brand. Dixon continues as a builder. The dream that started it has not run its course.


