Luxy Hair reduced founder involvement in day-to-day operations by delegating customer support, administrative work, and back-office responsibilities to Filipino virtual assistants. The shift created more operational capacity, improved scalability, and allowed leadership to focus on growth rather than routine execution.
Company
Luxy Hair
Services Provided
Customer support
Administrative support
Back-office operations
Industry
E-Commerce
Locations
Canada
Philippines
Operating Model
Founder-led direct-to-consumer ecommerce brand supported by a remote team of Filipino virtual assistants.
Delivery Structure
Luxy Hair integrated Philippine-based virtual assistants into its daily operations to support customer service, administrative workflows, and recurring back-office responsibilities. The remote team became part of the company’s operating model as the business continued to grow.
Why This Approach
Growth creates new challenges for founder-led businesses.
As ecommerce brands scale, customer inquiries increase, administrative responsibilities expand, and operational complexity grows. Tasks that once took a few hours each week can quickly become full-time responsibilities.
The problem is that many founders continue handling these activities themselves long after the business has outgrown that approach.
Luxy Hair faced a similar challenge. Leadership needed additional execution capacity without becoming more involved in daily operational work. The company turned to Filipino virtual assistants to support recurring functions and create more room for strategic growth activities.
Success Snapshot
Performance Drivers
- Delegation of recurring operational responsibilities
- Dedicated customer support resources
- Remote administrative support
- Reduced dependence on founder involvement
- Scalable virtual assistant model
Outcomes
- Reduced founder workload
- Greater operational efficiency
- Improved support responsiveness
- Increased organizational scalability
- More leadership focus on growth initiatives
Company Background
Luxy Hair is a Canadian direct-to-consumer beauty brand specializing in premium hair extensions and related beauty products. Founded by sisters Mimi and Leyla Bouchard, the company built its reputation through ecommerce, educational content, digital marketing, and strong customer engagement.
As the brand grew internationally, so did the operational requirements needed to support customers and maintain business performance. Customer service, administration, and back-office responsibilities became increasingly important as order volumes and customer interactions expanded.
Like many successful ecommerce businesses, Luxy Hair eventually faced the challenge of scaling operations without making founders responsible for every process inside the company.
Industry and Operating Context
Many ecommerce businesses encounter the same problem during growth.
Revenue increases, but operational demands often grow even faster.
More customers generate more support inquiries. More orders create additional administrative work. More products, vendors, and workflows introduce greater operational complexity.
In the early stages of a business, founders can usually manage these responsibilities themselves. Over time, however, operational execution begins competing with strategy, marketing, product development, and growth initiatives.
That is when founder bandwidth becomes a business constraint.
The challenge is not whether the founder can do the work. The challenge is whether they should continue doing it.
Core Problem
Luxy Hair’s primary constraint was founder capacity.
As the company expanded, customer support requests, administrative responsibilities, and back-office workloads increased alongside business growth. Much of this work remained tied to leadership involvement.
This created a familiar scaling challenge.
Founders were spending time on recurring operational activities that, while important, did not require founder-level decision-making.
The business needed support across several areas:
- Customer service
- Administrative operations
- Back-office workflows
- Day-to-day execution tasks
Without delegation, operational responsibilities risked consuming more leadership attention as the company continued to grow.
The challenge was not a lack of demand.
The challenge was creating enough execution capacity without increasing founder dependency.
Insight: Many founder-led ecommerce businesses do not struggle because of weak strategy. They struggle because too much execution remains concentrated around the founders.
Offshore Solution
Luxy Hair integrated Filipino virtual assistants into its operating model to support recurring business functions.
The virtual assistants handled:
- Customer support activities
- Administrative responsibilities
- Back-office support functions
- Operational execution tasks
Specific team size, hiring timelines, and role structures were not publicly disclosed. However, founder discussions consistently reference Filipino virtual assistants as an important part of the company’s operational support system.
The approach allowed Luxy Hair to separate strategic leadership from operational execution.
Leadership remained responsible for:
- Brand direction
- Marketing strategy
- Business growth initiatives
- Executive decision-making
Meanwhile, recurring operational work was delegated to remote support professionals.
Rather than adding complexity to the organization, the virtual assistant model created additional capacity while allowing founders to focus on higher-value activities.
The outsourced team became an extension of daily operations and helped reduce the amount of routine work flowing through leadership.
Results
Measurable Outcomes
No revenue, ROI, cost savings, customer satisfaction, productivity, or response-time metrics were publicly disclosed.
However, founder discussions and available evidence point to several documented operational improvements.
Most notably, leadership reduced direct involvement in recurring operational work by delegating responsibilities to Filipino virtual assistants.
Operational Outcomes
Customer support, administrative functions, and back-office activities were shifted away from founders and assigned to dedicated support resources.
This created a more manageable operating structure and reduced the amount of day-to-day execution work handled by leadership.
The company also improved its ability to support growing customer and operational demands without increasing founder involvement at the same pace.
Business Impact
The most significant outcome was founder leverage.
Instead of serving as the primary execution layer for operational tasks, leadership gained additional capacity to focus on growth, marketing, brand development, and strategic decision-making.
The business became more scalable because operational knowledge and execution were no longer concentrated around a small number of people.
The case demonstrates that outsourcing can create value by expanding leadership capacity, not just by reducing labor costs.
Why This Worked
- The focus was on founder bandwidth
The initiative addressed leadership capacity rather than simply reducing operational expenses.
- Recurring work was delegated
Customer support and administrative responsibilities were assigned to dedicated resources instead of remaining with founders.
- Strategic ownership stayed internal
Leadership retained responsibility for growth, brand development, and business direction.
- Capacity expanded without increasing founder dependency
The virtual assistant model created operational support that could grow alongside the business.
Conclusion
Luxy Hair’s experience highlights one of the most common challenges facing founder-led ecommerce brands. As businesses grow, operational work often expands faster than leadership capacity.
By leveraging Filipino virtual assistants, Luxy Hair created additional execution capacity without increasing founder involvement in day-to-day operations. The result was a more scalable business model that allowed leadership to spend more time on growth and less time on routine execution. For many ecommerce companies, that shift may be one of the most valuable outcomes outsourcing can deliver.




