Coronation Street beauty says business career is her ‘big success’

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Former Coronation Street star Arianna Ajtar rose to fame after being cast as model Olivia Radfield in Weatherfield in 2018.

Although her cobbles stay was somewhat shortlived, she became recognisable to millions on ITV. Five years on, however, the 27-year old claims its her business career that is her “big success” – something she was working on during her time on the Street.




Arianna established Mars the Label in 2015 using £3,000 of savings and working from her dad’s living room in Bolton, Greater Manchester. Since then she has negotiated the highs and lows of becoming an enternepeur, and has gone on to steer her company into a multi-million pound empire.

Incredibly, the star is self-taught, having started out by designing clothes she wanted to wear on an online “kids doodle app”. She now employs 25 members of staff at a much more impressive office headquarters in the northern town, and said of her success: “We are now an eight figure annual turnover brand, which is honestly wild when you bring it all the way back to starting with less than £3,000 in my dad’s living room. We’ve come such a long way, and I’ve learnt so many lessons.

“I can’t even believe it myself to be honest. Sometimes I sit there and look at the sales on the website and can’t believe that genuinely it’s mine.” Arianna was studying for a degree in acting at Liverpool University and working two part-time jobs when she dreamt up the business idea.

Arianna during her Corrie days(ITV)

But she soon realised she couldn’t juggle all those commitments if she wanted her fashion dream to fulfill its huge potential. And against the advice of friends and family, Arianna quit her studies believing she had found a “gap in the market” for stylish fashions, clubwear and swimwear.

It was an instant hit – and by the time of the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 she had taken her business to the next level. Arianna explained to MEN: “I was 19 when I first founded Mars, I just thought I’m going to design some pieces on a kids doodle app, which I still use. I’m not a trained designer, with no background in business. I was the seller as well as the consumer at that stage.

“I didn’t realise at the time, but I filled a massive gap in the market. Eight years ago it was one size fits all online, but there were different things I wanted to wear, so I just created them. But I didn’t see it as a scale-able business at that time.”



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