Fiji Sun

She’s 35 - and Runs a FJ$6.30 Billion Company

- maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Stitch Fix founder Katrina Lake is one of the wealthiest female entreprene­urs in the United States, but it wasn’t too long ago that she could have never imagined herself as a chief executive officer.

“There haven’t been a lot of founder CEOs that look like me,” Ms Lake tells CNN’s Poppy Harlow in an episode of Boss Files. “I showed up as a girl who spent a lot of her life in California who said ‘like’ a lot, and kind of looked like what you would expect for that.”

Ms Lake, who is now 35, says starting a company was never on her radar and her time studying at Stanford deterred her even further.

“I looked at people like [Google founders] Larry [Page] and Sergey [Brin], who were coders, who were sitting in a garage, and building a company, and I looked at that and didn’t see myself in that,” she says.

“I just think it took me a while to think that this was a path that was available to me.”

Public company

Yet, that didn’t stop her from becoming the youngest woman ever to take a company public.

Last year, Ms Lake was named by Forbes as one of the wealthiest self-made women in America. Ms Lake was enrolled in a premed programme when she was at Stanford.

She intended to follow in her father’s footsteps and become a doctor, but she was drawn more towards the world of economics than the lab.

She worked for a retail consultant group and at a venture capital firm before enrolling at Harvard Business School to pursue a master’s degree in entreprene­urship.

It was at Harvard that she came up with the idea for Stitch Fix.

As part of a class project, Lake sought to bring a better shopping experience into the homes of women who don’t have easy access to a wide range of fashion options or the time to shop around. What she came up with was a personalis­ed shopping service that uses algorithms and recommenda­tions from stylists to curate boxes of clothing and accessorie­s that match a customer’s style, size and fit preference­s.

Stitch Fix was launched in 2011. The company has seen significan­t growth since, with 2.7 million cus- tomers and more than US$1 billion (FJ$2.1bn) in revenue.

“All of our growth was organic,” Ms Lake says.

It was just people telling other people.”

But the road to success has not been easy.

Road to success

Ms Lake struggled to raise money in an industry dominated by male investors.

She says she had to convince the men in the room that Stitch Fix was a service women actually wanted.

“It was just a woman’s product. I definitely think that it didn’t help,” Ms Lake says.

“You can’t blame the kind of individual for having that preference, but then you step back and realize 94 per cent of venture investors are male and have similar preference­s.

“And so, I think that it unquestion­ably made it harder.” Taking the company public was another hurdle.

Just days before Stitch Fix’s debut on the stock exchange last November, the company was forced to reduce the size of its US$18 to US$20 (FJ$37.80-FJ$42) a share offering. The stock opened at US$16.90, (FJ$35.49) but fell to US$15.15 (FJ$31.82) by the end of its first trading day.

“There were some headwinds there, but I think we came out really motivated by the challenge of it,” she says.

“We’ve been underestim­ated before. We’re happy to be at a place where we’re going to prove ourselves.”

Something else happened during that IPO.

A photo of Lake holding her then 14-month-old son as her company went viral on social media and Lake became a role model for women -- and especially mothers -- trying to make it in the startup world. “The response was amazing. I never anticipate­d it,” she says. Stitch Fix has also impressed Wall Street since that Nasdaq debut.

The company’s stock has more than doubled to nearly US$30 (FJ$63) a share as it continues to grow its customer base, sales and profits. It’s current market cap is nearly US$3bn (FJ$6.30bn). The company has expanded its line to include men’s and plus-size clothing.

 ??  ?? Katrina Lake.
Katrina Lake.

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