
ENARU
In 2018, ENARU sold twenty-six products from a shop near Ulaanbaatar's circus. Then its founder deliberately killed eighty-eight percent of the line. The three survivors include one of only two Mongolian cosmetics ever registered for EU sale — proving that sometimes survival means destroying what you built to save what matters.
Transformation Arc
In 2018, ENARU sold twenty-six products from a shop across from Ulaanbaatar’s circus. Today it sells three. That arithmetic looks like failure until you learn that the surviving trio includes one of only two Mongolian cosmetics ever registered for sale in the European Union — and that the founder deliberately killed her own product line to build something that could cross borders.
The irony of Mongolian horse oil
Mongolians buy Korean horse oil. The absurdity of that sentence captures the market reality that ENARU was born to challenge. Mongolia’s horses graze on steppes that foreign researchers have called the world’s purest source of the ingredient, yet ninety-five percent of cosmetics sold in the country are imports. The domestic industry, roughly forty authorized manufacturers, competes for scraps of a market dominated by Korean and European brands with glossy packaging and clinical certifications that Mongolian producers cannot match.
ENARU’s answer was not to fight for shelf space at home. It was to register directly with the market that its competitors used as a credibility badge. If Korean horse oil could command premium prices by citing vaguely “Mongolian-sourced” ingredients, then actual Mongolian horse oil — traceable, organic, byproduct of meat production rather than purpose-farmed — should be able to do the same from the other direction.
A room the size of ambition
The brand started in 2016 in a ten-square-metre room in Ulaanbaatar. Sarangua Narankhuu, who had spent a decade importing other people’s products into Mongolia, began experimenting with formulations derived from her grandmother’s remedies. The first product was a thyme-infused Castile soap — Mongolia’s first. Within two years, she had twenty-six products spanning cosmetics, skincare, haircare, and household cleaners, eleven staff, and a retail shop that drew Korean tourists who came specifically for horse oil soap.
The name itself carries weight. “ENARU” derives from the ancient Mongolian scripture Altan Deed Gerie, meaning “sun” or “core.” The ouroboros logo — a snake consuming its own tail — symbolizes the eternal cycle of health and renewal that Sarangua’s grandmother embodied when she warmed sheep tail fat between her palms to ease her granddaughter’s post-pregnancy pain.
When twenty-six became three
What happened between 2018’s peak and the brand’s current form is the story that matters. Between 2019 and 2023, ENARU’s product range contracted by eighty-eight percent. Staff fell from eleven to seven. The retail shop near the circus disappeared from company references. The timing overlaps with three concurrent forces: COVID-19, which locked Mongolia down from January 2020 and caused seventy-seven percent of small enterprises to experience sharp revenue falls; the formation of the Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster in 2019, which pushed member companies toward EU export standards; and the EU-funded TRAM project, which offered a pathway to European shelves but demanded regulatory compliance that most of ENARU’s twenty-six products could not achieve.
The contraction was brutal but deliberate. Sarangua stripped the line to three hero products — Horse Essence Skin Balm in two sizes and an obsidian Gua Sha tool — and pursued CPNP registration through the EU’s Cosmetic Products Notification Portal. The process required European-standard safety assessments, ingredient documentation, and a responsible person based within the EU. IHZ Mongolei GmbH, a Mongolian trade promotion centre established in Berlin in 2020, became the distribution partner that made the regulatory architecture possible.
From steppe to shelf
By 2024, ENARU’s Horse Essence Skin Balm had achieved CPNP notification — making it approximately the second Mongolian cosmetics product ever to reach that status, following Helen Made’s earlier registration. The balm now sells through two German retail locations in Berlin’s Nikolaiviertel and Freiburg im Breisgau, plus EU-wide e-commerce through the mongolian-green-labels.eu platform under the collective “Out of the Green” brand that the cosmetics cluster created.
The pricing tells its own story. Products that sold for three to nine dollars domestically now carry export price tags of twenty-eight to thirty-two dollars. The formulations — eight to ten INCI ingredients per product, oil-based rather than the water-based norm that constitutes ninety percent of global cosmetics — distinguish ENARU from both mass-market competitors and the artisanal brands that cluster around “clean beauty” without regulatory proof.
Three pillars from the pruning
ENARU now operates as three divisions: Wellness (the core cosmetics line), Academy (an AI education platform through which Sarangua teaches business tools to Mongolian entrepreneurs — a revenue hedge that no three-product cosmetics line can afford to lack), and Trade (the EU export operation). The diversification reflects a founder who has reinvented herself before and who understands that a micro-enterprise in Ulaanbaatar cannot survive on a single revenue stream through Mongolian winters.
The brand’s self-declared “Responsible Nomads Standard” — an internal traceability framework, not a third-party certification — traces horse oil exclusively from meat production byproducts. Sixty to seventy percent of raw materials are Mongolian-sourced, with the remainder imported from France, Spain, and Germany. It is a supply chain built on Mongolia’s actual advantages: distance from industrial contamination, free-range grazing on unpolluted steppes, and ingredients whose provenance can be traced to specific herder communities. Whether the market will pay a sustained premium for that story remains the open question.
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