Turning 40 did not feel like a midpoint for entrepreneur Sam Garcia — it felt like a beginning.
For the president and CEO of Kings Herbal Plus Empire, the milestone was less about age and more about arrival: a quiet realization that every hardship she had endured was shaping a larger purpose. From growing up with almost nothing to leading a multi-million-peso company, her story traces a path powered not merely by ambition, but by compassion.
Garcia was raised in Nueva Ecija in a modest household alongside four sisters. Her mother stayed at home, while her father worked in government service. Money was tight — sometimes painfully so — but one rule never changed: school came first.
The scarcity left a deep imprint. As a child, she refused to remain a passive observer of her parents’ sacrifices. She found ways to contribute using whatever she had.
Her talent in drawing became her first livelihood. Even in elementary school, classmates paid her small amounts to illustrate school projects. The earnings were minimal, but the lesson was profound: resourcefulness could open doors.
She dreamed of becoming an architect, yet reality intervened. Tuition costs made it impossible. Instead, she pursued her education through a scholarship and trained to become a teacher — not because it was easy, but because it was possible.
Her greatest test came in her third year of college, when her father lost his job. She was asked to stop studying.
Many would have paused. Garcia did not.
“I knew I was only one year away from graduating, and I told myself I couldn’t let all the sacrifices go to waste.”
She worked seven days a week as a teacher’s assistant, rarely going home, surviving on persistence and hope until relatives helped her finish her degree.
That period, she says, defined her relationship with adversity — not something to fear, but something to outwork.
After graduation, she went to Manila with no guarantees.
She accepted every job available: sales clerk, restaurant worker and office staff. When she became a licensed teacher, she taught by day and tutored at night, leaving home before sunrise and returning late in the evening. The pay was modest, but the discipline was priceless.
Her journey eventually led her to a small research company — and later to a young business with fewer than ten people: Kings Herbal Plus.
In the beginning, there were no grand offices or polished systems. The team sold products house-to-house, barangay-to-barangay, province-to-province. They introduced a concept that resonated with everyday Filipinos: “Galing muna bago bayad.”
Garcia did everything herself — designing brochures, distributing flyers in public markets and building processes from scratch. Through direct selling and a membership model, the company steadily grew.
Ask Garcia about strategy, and she answers with philosophy.
“I truly believe that the foundation of my success is kindness — kindness to people, to partners, to employees and to customers.”
“When you lead with empathy and integrity, people naturally want to grow with you.”
To her, business sustainability is emotional, not just financial.
“Kindness builds trust, and trust builds longevity.”
“When people feel valued and respected, they become more committed — not just to the brand, but to the purpose behind it.”
Today, the company employs more than a hundred people. Beyond salaries, she provides housing and food support to what she calls her “warrior” workforce. The product line has expanded to perfume, skincare and coffee — a far cry from its humble beginnings.
The inspiration for Kings Herbal Plus traces back to a man Garcia deeply respects.
“The product was inspired by Ka Rey Herrera, a respected herbologist who believed in the healing power of natural herbs, even while battling cancer himself.”
“His desire to help others, despite his own struggle, became the heart of Kings Herbal Plus.”
Now in his 80s, Herrera remains healthy — a living testament, Garcia says, to the principles that sparked the brand.
Despite running a growing enterprise, she guards something she once lacked: time.
“I’ve learned that success is meaningless if you are constantly burned out or disconnected from life.”
“I protect my time — with family, with myself and with things that restore my energy.”
Her ambitions have evolved as well.
“Growth for me now is not just about scale, but about purpose — continuously learning, evolving and staying true to the values that brought us here.”
Sam Garcia’s journey is not the typical rags-to-riches tale fueled by sheer grit alone. It is a story shaped equally by empathy — a belief that businesses grow when people feel seen.
Her life proves that success can be built on gentleness, that leadership can be humane and that prosperity can carry compassion at its core.
For Garcia, the real achievement isn’t the size of her company — it’s the community she created along the way.