Daniel and Kat explore the origin story behind Ritual, starting with Kat being four months pregnant and unable to find a prenatal vitamin she trusted. Kat explains how women’s health has been underfunded, understudied, and underestimated, and how that gap became the foundation for a brand built on transparency, science, and trust. The conversation covers venture funding, building while raising three children, the power of starting narrow, the problem with copycat supplements, and why Ritual has invested millions into human clinical studies instead of relying on marketing claims.
Key Discussion Points
Kat shares that Ritual began when she was pregnant and saw a major gap in women’s health, especially around prenatal nutrition, postpartum, perimenopause, and menopause.
She recalls an investor telling her she could either start a family or start a business, but not both, and explains how that moment became fuel to build Ritual into a nine-figure company.
Kat explains why she rejects the idea that women’s health categories are “niche,” arguing that these experiences make up the collective women’s health journey.
She breaks down Ritual’s strategy of starting with one product, one price point, and one clear promise, instead of launching everything at once and standing for nothing.
Kat shares how customer demand led to major product expansion, including a gut health product that did $30 million in first-year sales.
She also explains when Ritual does not simply follow customer requests, using choline as an example of a science-led product customers did not yet know they needed.
The conversation goes deep into women’s health research, including postnatal nutrition, breast milk quality, methylated folate, and the problem of studies being run on men or animals while marketed to women.
Kat explains why Ritual raised venture capital from the beginning: to build from the ground up, invest in scientists, clinical validation, sourcing, delivery technology, and patented formulations.
She opens up about sacrifice, saying she tries to throw guilt out the window and focus on three priorities: health, business, and family.
Kat reflects on success, saying she often struggles to feel like she has “arrived” because every milestone leads to the next one.
Takeaways
Women’s health is not niche, it has simply been underfunded, understudied, and underestimated for too long.
Starting narrow can build more trust than launching wide, because focus helps a brand stand for something clearly.
In supplements, marketing is not enough; clinical studies, sourcing, safety, and delivery technology are what separate real innovation from private-label copycats.
Motherhood and entrepreneurship are not separate lanes for Kat, they are intertwined, and being the customer helped her build for the customer.
For founders, guilt can become a trap, so Kat’s framework is choosing the few things that matter most in a given season and accepting the tradeoffs.
Closing Thoughts
Kat Schneider’s story is about more than building Ritual. It is about proving that overlooked markets are often massive opportunities hiding in plain sight. This episode shows how trust becomes a moat when a founder is willing to build slower, go deeper into science, and solve a problem she understands personally. For anyone building in health, CPG, or women’s wellness, Kat’s message is clear: don’t copy what already exists, build what people actually need.
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