The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Driven Atlanta entreprene­ur had strong social conscience

Yolanda Owens’ natural health, skin care line was inspired by her grandma.

- By Ben Smith

Yolanda Owens built her business from the ground up, pulling fruits and vegetables from the earth to create an array of health and skin care products inspired by the grandmothe­r she called the “Home Remedy Queen.”

Owens sought to inspire “little brown girls” in the same way as she encouraged them to believe in themselves and to bravely follow their dreams.

“I want the little girls to know that they can do it and they can be just like me,” Owens told Scott Shigeoka, who interviewe­d her in 2020 for “Made in America,” a Godaddy series about successful entreprene­urs that aired on Youtube.

Owens died of colon cancer Jan. 11. She was 57. She left behind loved ones and her family-run business, iwi fresh, which she built from a dream and a cashed-out 401(k) after leaving a comfortabl­e six-figure corporate job in 2003.

Friends, family members and business associates all described Owens as a driven entreprene­ur with a strong social conscience, a woman who dared to risk everything and never gave up. That’s even when faced with the prospect of losing her natural skin care and spa services business to a potentiall­y career-crushing pandemic and the possibilit­y of her own demise to cancer. Owens, who was diagnosed with the disease in 2019, battled both at the same time. Those close to Owens said that if she was afraid of financial ruin or her own death, she largely kept it to herself.

“She was fearless,” said Owens’ daughter, Maya Johnson. “She took things day by day, and we were with her on that journey.”

Owens’ journey started in Atlanta, where, excluding college and her early career, she spent her whole life. She grew up in the Adamsville neighborho­od in the city’s southwest, playing kickball in the street and pursuing a variety of creative interests, including dancing and drawing. But it was her summer visits to Shreveport, Louisiana, to see her grandmothe­r, Cosata Blackmon,

called “Mother” by everyone, that left the biggest impression on Owens. Those experience­s ultimately led Owens to an entreprene­urial career.

Owens felt drawn to her grandmothe­r’s wild and eclectic garden, where all the growing things weren’t arranged in neat rows. From that garden, Blackmon treated Owens’ childhood eczema by bathing her in a mixture of onions, garlic and collard greens. And when the Charles Lincoln Harper High graduate went to college — first Tuskegee University, then Albany State University — Blackmon would send her care packages containing natural skin treatments she’d prepared out of backyard fruits and vegetables.

But it took years for Owens to return to the roots planted by her grandmothe­r. Persuaded by her parents to pursue a sensible career path, Owens, who went to college on a mathematic­s scholarshi­p, pursued a degree in computer science engineerin­g and graduated from Albany State. She then followed a corporate career path, first with IBM in Dallas, and later at Home Depot and Suntrust Bank in Atlanta.

Over time, however, Owens felt pulled in a different direction. She left Suntrust to develop her fledgling new company. Owens branded it with the rough acronym “I-W-I,” which stands for a favorite slogan: “It is what it is.”

Her decision unnerved family members. Owens, after all, was the first among them to graduate from college. In the “Made in America” interview, Owens recalled telling them: “I really have to pursue

what I really am.”

Owens downsized, turned her home into a mini-manufactur­ing plant, and made a name for herself by setting up booths at public events and trade shows. She taught employees at area spas about the virtues of her natural, refrigerat­ion-required products and how to use them.

In 2010, Owens opened her Fresh Farm-to-skin Spa in Castleberr­y Hill in Atlanta. She invited other entreprene­urs, including musicians and craftspeop­le, into the space and offered entreprene­urial workshops. Celebritie­s started dropping into her spa, and in 2017 her products started showing up in a local Whole Foods store.

When the COVID-19 pandemic struck in March 2020, Owens pivoted by expanding her online business, offering curbside service and successful­ly persuading Whole Foods to sell iwi products in more stores. Owens applied for and obtained business grants and loans to help keep the company afloat and delayed opening a 12,000-square-foot “Resting Retreat Spot” on Jonesboro Road.

That facility is now open, and Owens’ business is rebounding even though she is gone.

Owens is survived by two sons, Jordan and Austin Johnson, along with daughter Maya Johnson, who is within days of giving birth; both parents, Ralph Hill and Murry Henderson; two brothers, Corey Henderson and Berald Hill; and one grandson, Jah Johnson.

The family will soon announce plans for a memorial celebratio­n.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Yolanda Owens died of colon cancer Jan. 11. She was 57. She left behind loved ones and her family-run business, iwi fresh, which she built from a dream and a cashed-out 401(k) after leaving a comfortabl­e six-figure corporate job in 2003.
COURTESY Yolanda Owens died of colon cancer Jan. 11. She was 57. She left behind loved ones and her family-run business, iwi fresh, which she built from a dream and a cashed-out 401(k) after leaving a comfortabl­e six-figure corporate job in 2003.

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