
Sarangua Narankhuu
Founder & CEO
A decade importing other people's products. A top rank in American direct sales. Then a grandmother's sheep tail fat remedy rewired everything. Sarangua Narankhuu built ENARU to twenty-six products — then stripped it to three to reach Europe, coaching fifteen rival brands along the way.
Transformation Arc
Before she made cosmetics from horse oil, Sarangua Narankhuu (Наранхүүгийн Сарангуа) spent a decade importing other people’s products into Mongolia. Before that, she sold American health supplements and reached one of the highest tiers. ENARU is her third act — and perhaps the first one built to outlast her.
I dreamed of creating a national brand that would introduce our nomadic culture to the world.
The importer who wanted to make #
For many years, Sarangua was troubled by a single fact: Mongolia had no well-known brand to show the world other than wool and cashmere. She had spent enough time in import trade to understand the economics of the arrangement — Mongolians paid premium prices for products made from ingredients that originated on their own steppes. Korean horse oil, in particular, stung. Foreign researchers had praised Mongolian horse oil as uniquely organic, incomparable to products from other countries, yet Mongolians bought the Korean version in packaging they trusted more.
The frustration was professional, but the catalyst was personal. After her first pregnancy, Sarangua experienced persistent back pain that resisted modern remedies. Her grandmother’s response was simple: sheep tail fat oil, warmed between her palms and massaged into the aching area. The pain subsided. In those quiet moments, Sarangua later wrote, she felt “the presence of my grandmother and the wisdom of our ancestors” and realized that the answers she searched for were already within her culture.
Ten square metres of conviction #
Sarangua registered Enaru Biomedical LLC in 2016. The “Biomedical” in the corporate name was deliberate — her family worked in healthcare, and she wanted the company to bridge folk remedies and clinical credibility. She started in a room barely larger than a parking space, experimenting with formulations that combined traditional Mongolian ingredients with modern cosmetic science. The first product was a thyme-infused Castile soap, Mongolia’s first of its kind.
The name ENARU came from the ancient Mongolian scripture Altan Deed Gerie, meaning “sun” or “core.” Her logo — an ouroboros, a snake consuming its own tail — symbolized the eternal cycle of health and renewal. These were not marketing decisions. They were declarations of intent from a woman who had already succeeded in two careers and chose to start over in a ten-square-metre room because success without meaning had become its own kind of failure.
The serial reinventor #
What makes Sarangua unusual among founders is the breadth of her prior lives. Her decade in import trade gave her fluency in international logistics and supply chains. Her career at 4Life Research, where she reached the Presidential Diamond rank — one of the top tiers in the American health supplements company’s direct-sales network — gave her skills in network building, product evangelism, and the particular resilience required to sell door-to-door in a market that does not expect to buy. Her parents, who worked in healthcare, taught her what she describes as “the importance of being righteous and ethical” — a moral framework that surfaces in ENARU’s insistence on traceability and its refusal to source horse oil from anything other than meat production byproducts.
These experiences surface in how she built ENARU. The brand’s early growth was explosive — twenty-six products by 2018, eleven staff, media coverage that drew 39,000 views on a single Mongolian-language interview. Korean tourists sought out her horse oil soap specifically. She had created exactly the kind of domestic success that most founders would protect.
Then she did something that domestic success alone would not explain. When the Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster formed in 2019, uniting fifteen rival companies under an EU-funded project to pursue European export certification, Sarangua did not merely join. She became a cluster coach, helping competitors navigate the same regulatory pathway she was pursuing for her own brand. The dual role — building ENARU while teaching others to build theirs — revealed a founder whose mission extended beyond her own company. The cluster’s members had previously quarrelled and hidden information from one another. Sarangua’s willingness to share what she had learned about regulatory compliance, ingredient sourcing, and international distribution helped transform fifteen rivals into a functioning collective.
The cost of pruning #
The years between 2019 and 2023 demanded the hardest decision of Sarangua’s career. COVID-19 locked Mongolia down in January 2020, destroying the tourist sales that had been a significant revenue stream for heritage cosmetics. The Berlin showroom that IHZ Mongolei had opened for Mongolian products was forced to close almost immediately. Seventy-seven percent of Mongolia’s micro and small enterprises experienced sharp revenue falls, according to the Asian Development Bank.
For Sarangua, the crisis coincided with a strategic reckoning. The TRAM project’s EU export pathway required product-by-product regulatory compliance — safety assessments, ingredient documentation, CPNP notification. Pursuing certification for twenty-six products was impossible at her scale. She chose depth over breadth, stripping the line to three hero products and accepting the loss of everything else she had built. Staff fell from eleven to seven. The shop near the circus vanished from company materials.
The grandmother’s legacy, formalized #
The CPNP registration that ENARU achieved in 2024 validated more than a product. It proved that a Mongolian woman working from a small workshop in Ulaanbaatar could meet the same safety and documentation standards demanded of L’Oréal and Unilever. The regulatory achievement required European-standard safety assessments, full ingredient traceability, and a responsible person within the EU — infrastructure that Sarangua assembled through the IHZ Mongolei partnership in Berlin.
Today Sarangua operates across three domains simultaneously. ENARU Wellness produces the core cosmetics line. ENARU Academy teaches AI tools to Mongolian businesses through an online platform. And ENARU Trade manages the EU export operation. The trifecta is characteristically hers — a woman who has never stayed in one lane, whose career trajectory from importer to direct-sales leader to cosmetics founder to AI educator looks scattered on paper but carries a single through-line: making Mongolia visible to the world.
Her grandmother warmed sheep tail fat between her palms to heal. Sarangua wrapped that wisdom in CPNP documentation and sent it to Berlin. The remedy is the same. The reach is what changed.
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