Fortune | FORTUNE 09月20日
从销售传真机到创立价值12亿美元的Spanx:Sara Blakely的创业之路
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本文讲述了Sara Blakely如何白手起家,仅凭多年销售传真机积攒的五千美元启动资金,创立了价值12亿美元的塑身衣品牌Spanx。她凭借个人需求(希望穿白色裤子时有平滑的内搭效果)发明了剪掉脚的塑身裤,并克服重重困难,包括被拒绝的工厂和在Neiman Marcus的“非官方”营销策略,成功将Spanx打造成知名品牌。Blakely坚持不接受外部投资,保持了对公司的完全控制权。最终,她于2021年将Spanx的多数股权出售给黑石集团,实现了12亿美元的估值,并巩固了其亿万富翁的地位。文章还强调了她“先斩后奏”的创业哲学和保护早期想法的重要性。

💡 **白手起家的创业典范**: Sara Blakely的故事证明了仅凭个人积蓄和决心,也能建立起成功的企业。她用销售传真机攒下的五千美元作为Spanx的初始资金,并在没有外部投资者的情况下,独立运营了21年,最终将公司打造成价值12亿美元的品牌,体现了坚韧不拔的创业精神。

💡 **源于个人需求的创新**: Spanx的诞生源于Blakely在穿着白色裤子时,找不到合适的内衣来获得平滑效果的个人困扰。她剪掉塑身裤脚的设计,不仅解决了自身问题,也成为了Spanx产品的核心,展示了从痛点出发的创新力量及其市场潜力。

💡 **坚持自主控制与“先斩后奏”的策略**: Blakely坚决不接受外部投资,确保了对Spanx的完全控制权和利润。同时,她大胆的“非官方”营销策略,如在Neiman Marcus自行摆放产品,虽然冒险,却带来了显著的销售增长,印证了她“先问原谅,而非先问许可”的实用主义创业哲学。

💡 **保护早期想法的重要性**: Blakely分享了她在创业初期一年内不向任何人透露自己想法的经验。她认为,在想法萌芽阶段,外部的质疑和负面意见(如“别人为什么没做?”或“大公司会很快模仿”)可能会扼杀其潜力。这种保护机制是她能够坚持下来的关键。

Imagine knocking on doors to sell fax machines—then, years later, becoming a billionaire. That’s exactly what Sara Blakely did. The 54-year-old founder of Spanx recently spoke with The School of Hard Knocks, a YouTube channel focused on financial literacy and entrepreneurial content, where she talked about how she built her own company—with money she saved up from years of selling fax machines, and with no outside investors.

“I started it with five grand from selling fax machines and self-funded the entire 21 years,” Blakely, currently worth an estimated $1.3 billion, said. “I sat down with myself and I was like, you wanna spend your five grand on a vacation? Or do you wanna try to bet on yourself?”

Blakely’s journey with Spanx began in 2000 when she was 29 years old, working as a national sales trainer for Danka, an office-supply company, after spending seven years selling fax machines door-to-door. Her breakthrough moment came from personal frustration: She wanted to wear white pants but couldn’t find the right undergarment to create smooth lines beneath them. Her solution—cutting the feet off control-top pantyhose—became the foundation for what would eventually become a $1.2 billion company.

Building an empire without investors

What sets Blakely apart from most entrepreneurs was her refusal to accept outside investment.

“I never had a single investor in Spanx other than me,” she said.

The Florida State University grad started Spanx while still working her day job at Danka, spending nights researching fabrics, patents, and trademark designs. She wrote her own patent application, secured the Spanx trademark for $150, and found a hosiery mill willing to produce her prototype after multiple rejections. But by disallowing outside investment, she maintained total control over her company, and its profits.

A breakthrough at Neiman Marcus

When asked about the craziest thing she did as a business owner when just starting out, Blakely said she had just secured placement for Spanx in Neiman Marcus, but after noticing she was put in a “pocket” in the store’s expansive hosiery department, she bought bins at Office Depot and placed them at every cash register throughout the store—”which is so, so not okay,” she admitted.

“Neiman Marcus has a very strict visual department, but everybody thought somebody else approved it,” she said. “So I was trying to get the product out of the sleepiest corner of the store and move it around to where the customers actually were … You do whatever it takes.”

Blakely said her unauthorized gamble paid off: Customers began buying the product “like crazy,” and by the time management discovered the placement, the CEO reportedly said, “whatever this girl is doing, let her keep doing it.”

“I always say, ask for forgiveness, not permission,” she added.

Thanks to Blakely’s efforts—and a timely inclusion on Oprah Winfrey’s “Favorite Things” list in November 2000—Spanx achieved $4 million in sales in its first year, and $10 million in its second year.

Strategic entrances and exits

In 2021, Blakely sold a majority stake in Spanx to private equity firm Blackstone at a $1.2 billion valuation, while retaining a significant equity position and becoming executive chairwoman. The deal marked the end of her 21-year run as sole owner, but bestowed her with billionaire status. (She had become a billionaire years earlier, but her net worth had dropped below $1 billion in 2020 during the pandemic).

When asked about her advice for young people aspiring to become billionaires, Blakely said it’s important to motivate yourself and not get discouraged by outside opinions and intrusive thoughts.

“In today’s world, ideas are the most vulnerable in the moment you have them,” she said. “I waited a year before I told any friends or family what I was working on, and that’s because I didn’t want ego to have to get involved too early. My family was like, ‘Sara, if it’s such a good idea, why hasn’t anybody already done it? Even if this is a good idea, the big guys will knock you off in six months, and you’ve spent your life savings on it.’ Had I heard those things the moment that I had the idea, I would probably still be selling fax machines.”

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