By Marneille Castro-Fabros, Founder of Myriad Skincare
Life rarely falls apart quietly.
Sometimes, it collapses all at once—your career, your income, your sense of security—leaving you staring at a blank future, asking one question on repeat: “Lord, ano na po?”
For Marneille Castro-Fabros, that question marked the beginning of Myriad.
At 37, Marneille had spent most of her adult life building businesses. A graduate of BS Nursing, she spent 15 years in sales for health and wellness and digital services, eventually stepping into the role of Chief Marketing Officer for a startup founded alongside colleagues she trusted—friends she had known for years.
In 2022, that trust was shattered.
What began as a promising startup turned into a painful lesson in betrayal. A secret board meeting, held behind closed doors, removed her husband from the Board of Directors—making him instantly ineligible as President. No dialogue. No compensation. No dignity.
A month later, Marneille—a co-founder herself—was terminated.
As of January 2026, they have not received a single peso from their company shares.
What followed was not just unemployment. It was uncertainty with three children to feed, bills piling up, and no safety net left.
What makes this story different is this:
Marneille never dreamed of skincare.
She wasn’t passionate about beauty. She didn’t fantasize about building a brand. Myriad was not born from ambition—it was born from necessity and desperation.
This wasn’t a glow-up story yet. It was survival.
At first, there was relief. The pressure of a broken company was gone.
Then came anger—when the realization hit that the betrayal came from friends.
With no pay, no job, and no clarity, Marneille and her husband did the only thing left to do: they looked upward.
They attended a Victory Mabalacat Sunday service in July, not because life was good—but because life was unbearable without hope.
That day marked a turning point.
One quiet moment changed everything.
Sitting at their empty dining table, Marneille and her husband prayed—not for comfort, but for direction.
They asked God specifically for an idea.
The answer came unexpectedly.
“SOAP.”
Not metaphorical. Not symbolic. Literal.
The idea was sudden—because there was no time to hesitate.
But it was also gradual—because formulation, testing, and learning required patience.
The Philippine soap market was already saturated. Doubts were plenty.
But faith was louder.
With only ₱10,000 and zero employees, Myriad began.
There was no factory. No fancy office. No marketing team.
Leveraging years of experience as skincare resellers and co-founders, Marneille tapped into relationships with manufacturers she had built quietly over time. She learned formulations through experience, conversations, and relentless trial and error.
The first month?
Zero sales.
The biggest mistake? Underestimating the power of branding and packaging.
But they kept going.
Every day was hard. Especially when unpaid shares lingered as a painful reminder of injustice.
For the first three months, Marneille’s husband considered working overseas—anything to keep the family afloat.
What stopped them?
“An unexplainable peace,” she says.
A peace they credit entirely to God.
The first customers were close to home—neighbors, relatives, parents of their children’s classmates.
Then something unexpected happened.
People believed in the vision.
An investor came. A small physical store opened. More products were added.
Word-of-mouth exploded.
Bulk orders came in. OFWs brought Myriad products abroad—not even to sell at first, but to share.
Six months in, international orders started arriving.
Japan was the first.
Then Israel. Singapore. Italy. Thailand. The United States.
From Mabalacat to the world.
Today, Myriad is 1 year and 3 months old, operating with:
A full skincare lineup
Around 100 active resellers
Customers across multiple countries
A mission anchored in faith
But for Marneille, success isn’t measured in milestones.
Myriad operates with a Christ-centered foundation—no shady marketing, no fraud, no shortcuts.
Only integrity.
In five years, Marneille envisions Myriad as:
A household name in skincare
A job creator
A brand that solves real skin problems with simple, effective routines
The story of Myriad is not finished.
It is still being written—by every reseller, every customer, every believer who chooses faith over fear.
As Colossians 3:23–24 reminds them:
“Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord.”
Marneille Castro-Fabros, founder of Myriad, leaves this message:
Myriad Blessings!

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