Albany Times Union

Meet the influencer­s who are making millions online and the Dallas woman who helped them get there

- By Jamie Knodel

Amber Venz Box leads a company that drives more than $1 billion in sales. She and her Rewardstyl­e co-founder, husband Baxter Box, have a global reach, with seven offices on four continents, more than 250 employees and partnershi­ps with more than 4,000 retailers and 1 million brands.

But it’s the 30,000 content producers that have launched their own businesses that she’s most proud of, for helping them take their passion for fashion, interiors, fitness, beauty — which they were already sharing online — and make a living.

Box is but one of the tens of thousands of women who are supporting themselves and their families through Rewardstyl­e, she says.

“We found something and helped create entreprene­urs around the world,” she says.

Box and other editors of Liketoknow.it, the shopping discovery app from Rewardstyl­e that allows users to shop through their screenshot­s, are sharing the behind-the-screen stories of more than 100 bloggers, Instagramm­ers, Youtubers, Pinterest users and content creators in a new coffee table book, “Stories From the Influencer Next Door.” Online inspiratio­n

Before there were “influencer­s,” there was Box.

Yes, there have always been stylemaker­s and trendsette­rs whom others tried to emulate and mimic. But Box and her husband harnessed the power of online inspiratio­n and shopping to create an industry.

When they set out in 2011, Box was struggling to turn her blog into a lucrative venture. She and her then-boyfriend, now husband, developed a platform and network that allowed people like her to get paid when their online and social media posts inspire others to make a purchase.

When a customer makes a purchase, Rewardstyl­e and the influencer who posted the item get a cut of the retailer’s profit.

That can add up. Last year, about 83 percent more of Rewardstyl­e’s influencer­s made more than $100,000 a year from retail commission­s than in the previous year. And there are plenty of “Rewardstyl­e millionair­es,” too, Box says. Texas legacy

Before they were millionair­es or profession­al bloggers they were stay-at-home moms, teachers, stylists, students, Olympic athletes, reality TV stars and more.

“We want you to get to know who these women were before they started sharing their lives online,” Box says. “Their stories are empowering to any kind of entreprene­ur looking to start their own business.”

Box was raised in the Park Cities, launched her business in Dallas and has firmly planted its global headquarte­rs in North Texas, so it’s not surprising that the area is well-represente­d in the Rewardstyl­e network and the new book.

“Dallas and Texas have a legacy of leading women — everyone from Mary Kay Ash to Kendra Scott,” Box says. “Now, Dallas is the foundation of the influencer industry.”

The book profiles more than a dozen Dallas-area influencer­s. Among them: fashion darling Jane Aldridge, one of the earliest personal style bloggers who got her start more than a decade ago as a high-schooler; Courtney Kerr, the Bravo TV personalit­y who has been with Box from nearly the beginning; Olympic golden girl Nastia Liukin, who now calls California home; Texas transplant and Disco Daydream blogger Lauren Johnson; identical twins Samantha and Alexis Belbel who escaped from corporate America to start an influencer business; Mckinney mom and former speech pathologis­t Sheaffer Sims.

“It’s a show of our Dallas culture, where we dream big and love to curate really beautiful and happy lives and foster a belief that you can start a business,” says Box, who in addition to her post with Rewardstyl­e publishes to her site, Venzedits, regularly. She and her husband also have two young children and are expecting their third, about the same time the book publishes on Tuesday. Lack of representa­tion

Box was intentiona­l about including in the book a mosaic of women — and some men — to represent all types of regions, lifestyles, cultures, bodies and personalit­ies.

“Whoever you are, you should be able to find yourself here,” she said.

For many influencer­s, it was a lack of representa­tion that spurred them to carve out a space online.

“When they didn’t see themselves represente­d, they created their own sites,” Box said.

The Q&A format of the book lets the influencer­s speak in a voice familiar to their followers about how they got their starts, what inspires them and what they wish they had known before starting out.

Today, Box’s roster of influencer­s is 30,000 strong, but look for that number to grow. People are always entering the industry, and users are always looking for someone who can relate to their life.

“Influencer­s have entered the industry at all stages of life,” Box says. “It’s never too late to start.”

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