Hartford Courant

WaySlay app delivers beauty products straight to your door

- By Sara Bauknecht Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PITTSBURGH — Have you ever run out of beauty products right in the middle of applying makeup or styling hair?

Now there’s an app for that.

Pittsburgh resident Michael James and Ian Grant II, of Miami, are the founders of WaySlay, which stands for “the way you slay.” The app — available on Apple and Android platforms — enables users to search and order products from nearby beauty supply stores and have them delivered in as little as 20 minutes.

WaySlay launched in 2020 in Miami. The app, which offers products in a range of skin tones and hair textures, has been especially popular so far with Black women in their 20s and 30s.

“The easy way to think of it is the Uber Eats for beauty supplies,” said James.

He came up with the idea several years ago while living in Miami.

His girlfriend was getting ready for an event and didn’t have what she needed.

“The problem was she wasn’t able to get the items in time,” he said. “I asked if there was an app to deliver them. It turned out it didn’t exist. Basically since then I set out to figure out a way to make this a possibilit­y.”

He shared the vision with Grant, whom he met in Miami while playing on a kickball team. He liked the idea and so did his wife.

“You always want to trust your wife’s gut,” said Grant, WaySlay’s CEO.

Each man had skills that complement­ed the developmen­t process. James, WaySlay’s chief technology officer, graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 2008 with a degree in computer science and has helped large corporatio­ns modernize their technology. Grant’s background is in the quick-serve restaurant industry, including mobile ordering, kiosks and digital menu boards at drive-thru windows.

Unlike the food industry, however, many beauty supply stores haven’t incorporat­ed high-tech features into their day-today operation.

“I saw this as an opportunit­y to really help tech-enable these beauty supply stores,” Grant said.

WaySlay doesn’t stock inventory or make deliveries. The company partners with local beauty supply stores, which add products they want to sell to the app. When an order is placed, the store is notified via the app and bags the products for pickup. A third-party service handles deliveries.

“We’ve had orders get picked up within three minutes of the order being placed and delivered in 10 minutes,” James said.

WaySlay’s founders said COVID-19 has made the demand for their app even stronger. It allows remote workers or students to get what they need without running to the store, and it has boosted sales at stores during mandated shutdowns.

Before WaySlay expanded to Pittsburgh, Yerimah’s Sisters Hair & Beauty Supply store in downtown Pittsburgh tried to make deliveries on its own.

“We were making deliveries for hours after the store closed,” said owner Yega Tita Cosia. “WaySlay has been a blessing. We can offer delivery to our customers, and we literally don’t have to do anything — just fill the bag.”

Since last summer, the app has been downloaded more than 1,200 times, and more than half of orders come from repeat app users, according to the company. WaySlay’s founders hope to keep those numbers growing as they add more stores and cities. Within the next year, they plan to expand to Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Chicago, followed later by Los Angeles and possibly Houston.

 ?? STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE ?? Michael James, CTO of the beauty supply delivery app WaySlay, helps Yega Tita Cosia, owner of Yerimah’s Sisters Beauty Supply in Pittsburgh, configure her products into the app.
STEVE MELLON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE Michael James, CTO of the beauty supply delivery app WaySlay, helps Yega Tita Cosia, owner of Yerimah’s Sisters Beauty Supply in Pittsburgh, configure her products into the app.

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