
Erb
While Thailand's top natural beauty brands sold to Japanese conglomerates, Erb chose a Thai media company. The gamble: that RS Group's distribution muscle could amplify Siamese court beauty secrets without diluting 25 years of artisanal heritage. COVID destroyed 40 percent of revenue first. Then came a THB 72 million bet.
Royal Court Recipes from Bangkok to Harrods
Transformation Arc
While Thailand’s leading natural beauty brands were being swallowed by foreign conglomerates β Panpuri by Japan’s Kose for $32 million, Harnn folded into SET-listed Tanachira β Erb took a different exit. In October 2023, founder Pattree Bhakdibutr sold 60 percent of her 23-year-old herbal beauty company not to a Japanese cosmetics giant but to RS Group, a Thai media-to-commerce conglomerate. The price: THB 72.2 million. The bet: that a company built on television ratings could distribute Siamese royal court beauty secrets without destroying them.
The recipe no one else owns
The core of Erb’s defensibility is not scale, distribution, or marketing spend. It is provenance. The brand takes its name from Chao Chom Erb (ΰΉΰΈΰΈ΄ΰΈ), a consort of King Rama V, and its flagship Seven Pollen Collection draws on a court tradition in which ladies consumed pollen from seven specific Thai flowers as a rejuvenation formula. That formulation β translated from oral tradition into a modern anti-aging serum priced at THB 3,350 β won Top 3 Best Face Serum from Natural Health Magazine UK, a validation that neither Thann’s rice-bran science nor Harnn’s 16-country retail footprint can replicate.
The heritage claim deepened in 2013 when HRH Princess Bajrakitiyabha personally selected a blend of 15 white flowers for the Princess Pa Earth Mineral Collection β a royal collaboration no competitor can manufacture or purchase. That same year, Harrods chose Erb as the sole beauty brand for its Thailand: A Celebration of Colour and Light festival. Window displays on Brompton Road, backed by the Royal Thai Embassy, introduced the court-recipe narrative to London’s luxury market.
From incense sticks to 151 SKUs
Erb’s origin was more chaotic than its heritage positioning suggests. At the 2000 Bangkok International Gift and Houseware Fair, Pattree’s debut generated orders for 5,000 hand-rolled incense packs from Habitat UK, 6,000 tea sets from a Taiwanese buyer, and 100,000 candles from Canada. She delivered 4,000 of the 5,000 Habitat packs. The rest went unfulfilled. The gap between creative ambition and manufacturing reality defined Erb’s first years.
The strategy that emerged from that early capacity crisis was export-first: build international credibility before targeting Thai domestic consumers. By 2001, shipments were reaching Canada, the UK, and Taiwan. As production stabilized, the product range expanded from body care into spa services. By 2017 Erb had opened its first combined spa-and-retail concept at Gaysorn Village, blending gold facial therapy and Seven Pollen treatments with product sales. A boutique spa at the Warehouse 30 creative hub on Charoen Krung Road followed in 2019, designed by DIN Studio around a Magical Rainforest concept.
Today the catalogue spans roughly 151 SKUs across seven brand lines β from the core Jasmine Mint and Tamarind body care to the Up In Arms underarm care range (which developed a cult following), the Erb Maison home fragrance sub-brand launched in 2022, and a Thai herbal inhaler series introduced in 2025. The brand operates through approximately ten retail points and three spas across Bangkok, supplemented by e-commerce through its own site, Amazon in the United States, and Qoo10 in Singapore.
The 40 percent that vanished
COVID-19 did not merely disrupt Erb’s business. It eliminated the revenue architecture Pattree had spent two decades building. Thailand’s tourist arrivals dropped from 39.9 million to near-zero. Spa operations shuttered. Hotel amenity contracts evaporated. Forty percent of revenue β the export and tourism segments β disappeared. By 2022, the company posted THB 71.1 million in revenue against a net loss of THB 5.3 million.
The response was structural, not incremental. Erb pivoted to digital-first sales through LINE Shopping, Lazada, and Shopee. Professional financial management replaced founder-centric control. A new marketing team was recruited. Warehousing was outsourced. The organizational overhaul stabilized the business β and made it legible to a corporate acquirer.
The RS group question
RS Group’s October 2023 acquisition gave Erb what it could not build alone: a nationwide commerce infrastructure, growth capital, and access to one of Thailand’s most aggressive direct-to-consumer distribution networks. The first visible result was the EmSphere flagship store in Bangkok’s EM District, opened shortly after the deal closed. By 2025, Erb had signed its first celebrity presenter β actor New Thitipoom β and launched the Aroma Inhaler Series, both moves bearing the imprint of RS Group’s marketing playbook.
The unresolved tension is whether that playbook can coexist with the brand’s artisanal identity. Erb’s competitive moat is cultural specificity β royal court recipes, princess collaborations, a grandmother character named after a real 19th-century consort. RS Group’s DNA is mass-market reach. Whether distribution muscle amplifies heritage authenticity or dilutes it will determine whether the THB 72.2 million was an investment in scale or the beginning of a different kind of brand.
In a sector where Thailand’s premium herbal beauty market is projected to reach $1.25 billion by 2034 and consolidation is accelerating, Erb’s position rests on a simple thesis: the recipe no one else owns is worth more than the shelf space anyone can buy.
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