Welcome Back!

You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Sharing her secrets to success for a good cause

She spoke no English when she migrated at age 15 from Syria to Australia with her family in 1974. Yet through strong self-belief, tenacity and pure grit, Nad’s creator and ChildFund ambassador Sue Ismiel has transformed herself into a multimillionaire entrepreneur and avid philanthropist.

“From a very young age, back in Syria, I always wanted to become someone. There was this drive in me that I can`t explain,” shares the Sue Ismiel & Daughters company founder, who is one of 10 Australian business leaders auctioning off their time and expertise in ChildFund Australia`s inaugural MentorMe Auction.

Unable to find a suitable product which was gentle, natural and effective for her daughter`s sensitive skin, the mother-of-three created her own hair removal product from ingredients found in her kitchen. From there Nad`s was born in 1992, with Nad`s Natural Hair Removal Gel becoming the most successful product launch of its kind when it entered the United States market in 1998.

With no formal business training, Sue looked inwards for inspiration and adopted a trial-and-error approach to establishing her business empire. It was through her savvy decision to harness the power of direct TV sales that she went from selling Nad`s at a market stall in Sydney`s west, to seeing the hair removal gel €“ and a second product, NitWits head lice treatment €“ stocked in major retail chains across Australia, the USA, the UK and New Zealand.

“Everything I`ve done to build a business from the ground up was not by learning from a textbook,” says Sue, who overcame schoolyard bullying and the challenges of building a new life, in a new country, to become a role model for others. “I throw myself in the deep end and find out what is the best way to solve a core problem.”

The dedicated entrepreneur admits the mistakes she made along the way often became her biggest lessons. “I`ve had to learn the hard way and I think it`s the best way to learn,” she says, noting persistence pays off: “It`s those mistakes that helped me become stronger and better in everything that I have been able to do.”

As she prepares to impart her business wisdom to the winning bidder of her MentorMe Auction, Sue emphasises the importance of having “the courage to get started”, and credits her strong self-determination to her own mentor, her late grandmother, whom she never met.

“She was a Middle Eastern woman, we`re talking about 70 or 80 years ago, who had a disabled husband and had to provide for her family,” reveals Sue. “Her story was empowering, the struggles she had to overcome were always ringing in the back of my mind. I always thought, if she could do it back then, in that day, in that age, then why can`t I?”

Her top tip for those wanting to carve their own path? “Find out what moves you, what drives you, what interests you in life. Then go with it,” says the avid philanthropist, whose life motto is to give back. “You have to have the right attitude; you have to believe in yourself.”

Related Stories

How Vikki and Chris' commitment to each other led to a legacy of helping children

Read Story

Suzanne leaves a gift in Will to give children healthy futures

Read Story

Supporter Spotlight: Russell Spencer and Ursula Groves– champions for children’s education in Vietnam

Read Story

There’s always so much more to a story!

Get all the latest stories from ChildFund Australia

The story doesn’t end here.

Stay up to date with all the latest news from ChildFund Australia