Gobi Goo

Gobi Goo

Dalanzadgad, Ömnögovi 🇲🇳 Founder-Led Manufacturer

When COVID shut Mongolia's borders in 2020, over 95 percent of the country's cosmetics still came from abroad. From a workshop in Dalanzadgad — a Gobi Desert town 540 kilometers from the capital — one beautician built a brand on camel milk, sheep tail oil, and desert botanicals sourced directly from nomadic herders. The ingredients cannot be found anywhere else.

Founded 2020, during COVID lockdowns in Dalanzadgad, Ömnögovi Province
Revenue <₮100M MNT (<$30K USD)
Scale Artisanal workshop producing soaps, creams, shampoos, and lip balms — estimated 15-20 SKUs
Unique Edge Only natural beauty brand based in Mongolia's South Gobi Desert with direct herder-to-shelf supply chain

Transformation Arc

2017-03-01 EU TRAM project launches
€4.5 million EU-funded initiative to diversify Mongolia's mining-dependent exports targets organic cosmetics as key sector
Setup
2019-01-01 Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster established
Fifteen companies form cluster NGO with EU support, signing MoC with Ministry and introducing ISO 16128 standards
Setup
2020-01-01 Mongolia closes borders
One of the world's earliest COVID border closures disrupts imports that supply over 95 percent of Mongolia's cosmetics market
Catalyst
2020-06-01 Gobi Goo founded in Dalanzadgad
Tuuvee Dash launches artisanal cosmetics production using five indigenous desert ingredients from South Gobi herder communities
Catalyst
2020-06-01 Direct herder supply chain established
Partnership with herder Munkhzul Chuluun in Noyon soum creates traceable sourcing across 216 km of Gobi Desert
Struggle
2020-09-01 Mongolia GDP contracts 4.6-5.3 percent
Sixty-five percent of businesses report significant revenue declines; Gobi Goo launches counter-cyclically into devastated economy
Crisis
2021-01-01 Joins Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster
Gains access to EU certification support, export knowledge, and collective branding under 'Out of the Green'
Breakthrough
2021-07-01 TRAM project formally concludes
EU funding initiative ends after four years; successor workshop programs continue through 2022
Struggle
2021-12-01 EU-Mongolia trade surges
Bilateral trade increases 35 percent to $766.5 million post-pandemic, validating the export infrastructure Gobi Goo joined
Breakthrough
2022-01-01 Manufacturing authorization expands
Approximately 40 Mongolian companies authorized to manufacture beauty products, up from near zero a decade earlier
Breakthrough
2023-03-01 International media coverage
Global Press Journal publishes feature on Gobi Goo and Mongolian women in the beauty industry, bringing international attention
Triumph
2023-06-01 Cluster exports reach Europe
Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster exports over 20 products to European markets under the 'Out of the Green' collective brand
Triumph

Two hundred and sixteen kilometers of Gobi Desert separate Tuuvee Dash’s workshop in Dalanzadgad (Даланзадгад) from herder Munkhzul Chuluun’s camel herd in Noyon soum. That distance — crossed without paved roads, across terrain where winters reach minus forty degrees — is Gobi Goo’s (Говь Гоо) supply chain, and the reason no competitor can replicate what this brand sources.

Five ingredients from the edge of nowhere

Gobi Goo’s formulations draw on five indigenous ingredients sourced from Mongolia’s South Gobi ecosystem: Bactrian camel milk, sheep tail oil, wild thyme, nettle, and tsulkhir — a desert plant with edible seeds that grows in sandy soil and exists nowhere else on commercial radar. Each ingredient carries centuries of herder use. Bactrian camel milk, rich in anti-inflammatory and protective compounds, has been applied to skin by nomadic communities long before it entered the global cosmetics vocabulary. Sheep tail oil — rendered fat from Mongolia’s distinctive fat-tailed breed — is traditionally heated and used to heal cracked skin in a climate that swings between minus forty and plus forty-five degrees Celsius.

The product range includes hand and body soaps, moisturizing creams, shampoos, and lip balms — an estimated fifteen to twenty SKUs visible in retail displays at Tuuvee’s Dalanzadgad outlet. No industrial production facility exists. Gobi Goo operates as an artisanal workshop where a beautician-turned-formulator produces small batches using ingredients that arrive from herder partners rather than wholesale distributors.

The 540-kilometer moat

Dalanzadgad sits 540 kilometers south of Ulaanbaatar at 1,470 meters elevation, a provincial capital of roughly 29,000 people whose economy revolves around the nearby Oyu Tolgoi copper-gold mine. It is not where investors expect a beauty brand to emerge. But her location gave her something no capital-city competitor could match: proximity to raw materials sourced directly from the herders who produce them.

The brand’s defining partnership is with Munkhzul Chuluun (Мунхзул Чулуун), a herder in Noyon soum — a settlement of 1,300 people on the Chinese border, 216 kilometers from Dalanzadgad and 800 kilometers from Ulaanbaatar. Munkhzul’s family has roasted camel milk into powder and applied it as facial moisturizer for generations. The partnership provides Gobi Goo with camel milk, animal fat, and dairy products through a direct-to-herder supply chain that offers ingredient transparency no middleman-dependent brand can match.

“It’s something to be proud of that local companies make beauty products out of camel milk and sell them to the world,” Munkhzul told Global Press Journal. For a herder whose traditional livelihood faces pressure from mining expansion and climate shifts, the partnership represents potential economic restructuring — a path toward camel-focused herding sustained by cosmetics demand.

From cluster member to collective export

Gobi Goo’s route to international markets runs through the Mongolia Cosmetics Cluster, a business association of fifteen companies established in 2019 with support from the EU-funded Trade Related Assistance for Mongolia project — a four-year, €4.5 million initiative aimed at diversifying Mongolia’s mining-dependent exports. The cluster exports collectively under the brand name “Out of the Green,” targeting European specialty retailers through the EU’s Generalized Scheme of Preferences, which allows tax-free export of over 6,200 Mongolian product types.

This export pathway matters because Mongolia’s domestic cosmetics market is structurally inhospitable to local producers. Over 95 percent of cosmetics sold in the country are imported. Roughly forty companies hold manufacturing authorization, competing for less than five percent of domestic market share. The regulatory environment offers little protection: no national law governs the safety of beauty products, and 75 percent of existing cosmetics standards were approved before 2010.

For a micro-enterprise operating from the Gobi Desert, the cluster provides what no solo effort could: ISO 16128 certification support, EU market access knowledge, trade exhibition participation, and collective branding that positions Mongolian natural cosmetics as a category rather than isolated curiosities.

The terroir defense

Gobi Goo’s competitive position rests on a principle familiar to wine producers but rarely applied to cosmetics: terroir. The ingredients that define this brand — camel milk from Bactrian herds adapted to the Gobi’s extreme climate, tsulkhir from sandy desert soils, wild thyme from Gobi grasslands — cannot be sourced from coastal facilities or industrial suppliers. They exist because of the specific conditions of the South Gobi Desert.

This geographic specificity creates a natural moat. A competitor can match the formulation concept but cannot replicate the supply chain without building the same herder relationships, navigating the same 216-kilometer desert logistics, and operating in a town 540 kilometers from the nearest major city. Whether Gobi Goo can scale beyond artisanal production while maintaining the direct-to-herder model remains an open question. But the ingredients themselves — and the trust network that delivers them across some of the most remote terrain in Central Asia — constitute a defensible position no amount of capital can quickly reproduce.

Locations

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