Try GOLD - Free
Spanx's Sara Blakely Has Wisdom For All
Entrepreneur
|December 2018
Spanx founder Sara Blakely had a huge, multibillion-dollar idea. But she’s still producing new ones—and eager to share her inspiration.
Ladies’ underwear has long been revolutionary territory—bras burned, girdles sacked. But when Sara Blakely, a 27-year-old fax machine saleswoman, discovered she was making less than her male colleague at the same job, she was inspired to take scissors to tights to invent what would give power to the pantie (and anyone who wore it), and launch her own business. Twelve years later, she landed in Forbes as the youngest self-made female billionaire in the world. You know the story: Blakely’s company, Spanx, started with $5,000, is now to shape wear what Kleenex is to tissue, baptized by Oprah as a “favorite thing” and worn unapologetically by the famous, from JLo to Reese Wither spoon. It’s even made its way into MoMA. Blakely, who was inducted into Babson College’s Academy of Distinguished Entrepreneurs last month, is still on a roll—and finding new ways to share her wisdom.
What’s new at Spanx? Blacktie Spanx? Spanx for dogs? Anything in the pipeline?
There are three things in the works that are specifically inventions I can’t talk about. But I’m really excited about our new leggings. And the denim we just launched.
You’ve done this for 18 years. Do you have another venture up your sleeve?
I’ll never say never. I keep an idea book. Right now it’s 99 pages, single-spaced, and a lot of the ideas have nothing to do with Spanx. But what I am working on that’s new is a digital platform of my insights, because I’m asked multiple times a day for 15 minutes of my time. And the question is always the same: How did you start Spanx? The real answer is it started way before I cut the feet out of my pantyhose, with the work I began doing at the age of 16 on myself. So the digital platform is in beta now.
Can you share some of your insights as you’ve grown the company to nearly 200 employees?
This story is from the December 2018 edition of Entrepreneur.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur US
Why Junk Removal Is Booming
As e-commerce grows, so do our garbage piles.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
10 Hottest Trends in Franchising Today
Good news: You can buy a brand in the hottest categories! We list 600 of them.
1 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
How to Hire the Perfect Employee in 6 Steps
Founders are often terrible at hiring. We have 40 years' worth of data on how to do it right.
7 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
HOW TO RAISE MONEY IN AN AI-OBSESSED WORLD
If you're building an AI company, the fundraising rules have shifted. Here's what it takes to succeed.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
Reinventing the Flower Shop
French Florist was once a struggling florist shop in Los Angeles. Here's how it transformed into an innovative franchise that's taking on the industry.
3 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
Why Personal Care Is Booming
It's on people's minds, and good for the bottom line.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
Why Pet Franchises Are Booming
Our relationships with our pets are changing.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
THINK OUTSIDE THE BUBBLE
As an investor in emerging markets, George Rzepecki looks for opportunities—and founders—that don't fit the Silicon Valley mold.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
The Top Franchises for Veterans
If you've served in the military, these 150 franchise brands really want you!
1 mins
November - December 2025
Entrepreneur US
Why I Keep Hiring the Same People
I'm a serial entrepreneur, and I owe my success to keeping my team consistent-from company to company.
2 mins
November - December 2025
Translate
Change font size

