2 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Beauty Industry Safety Guidelines & Research or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PROFESSIONAL BEAUTY ASSOCIATION The Professional Beauty Association is a national organization that supports and advocates for the professional beauty industry. It offers scholarships for cos… | AZ | $4.4M | 8 |
| 2 | Lilys Pad Lily's Pad operates a hyperclean indoor playground in Tempe, Arizona, designed for immunocompromised children and their families. The facility provides a safe,… | AZ | $180K | 2 |
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Peer-Led Capacity Building 1 orgBy facilitating peer-to-peer knowledge exchange and professional learning, organizations build collective expertise and resilience, because shared experience among practitioners increases trust, relevance, and practical applicability of solutions. This strategy centers on leveraging the lived experience and expertise of professionals within the same field to drive learning, innovation, and systemic improvement. Unlike top-down training or external consulting models, it relies on horizontal collaboration—through mentorship, peer review, storytelling, or resource sharing—to strengthen both individual members and the industry as a whole. What distinguishes it is its emphasis on mutual contribution, credibility through shared context, and sustainable knowledge transfer rooted in real-world practice.PROFESSIONAL BEAUTY ASSOCIATION
- Safe Space by Design 1 orgBy designing physically and socially protective environments tailored to medically vulnerable populations, organizations enable safe participation in developmental and psychosocial activities, because structured safety reduces health risks and builds trust necessary for engagement. This strategy centers on intentional environmental design—both physical (e.g., air filtration, access controls) and programmatic (e.g., inclusive policies, peer support)—to create spaces where children with chronic or immunocompromising conditions can safely play, learn, and grow. Unlike general accessibility efforts, this approach treats safety as an active, clinical-grade precondition for participation, enabling experiences like camp, socialization, and advocacy that are otherwise denied to these populations. It unifies infrastructure, policy, and programming under a single theory: that risk-mitigated environments are foundational to health, development, and equity.Lilys Pad