Prøve GULL - Gratis

What's Next for the $400 Million For-Profit Built on Karmic Capital

Inc.

|

May 2016

When he founded Toms, Blake Mycoskie reinvented the idea of a company that does well while doing good. So what’s next for him? Doing that again.

- Leigh Buchanan

What's Next for the $400 Million For-Profit Built on Karmic Capital

BLAKE MYCOSKIE IS THE MOST relaxed intense person you will ever meet. Two days after this year’s Academy Awards, Mycoskie sits in his world-bazaar-flavored office, one leg hooked over the arm of a chair, sipping sparkling water and munching almonds from Whole Foods. He seems recovered from the Oscar parties (Vanity Fair, InStyle) and ill-timed caffeine cleanse that left him yawning in meetings the previous day. At the ceremonies, his company, the virtuous shoe business Toms, took home what amounts to the statue for Best Publicity. During the broadcast, AT&T debuted an ad extolling Toms’ growth and ethos of giving.

And Abraham Attah—the 15-year-old co-star of Beasts of No Nation—turned up for his presenter’s gig shod in a pair of the company’s signature alpargata slip-ons, made specially for him from embroidered black velvet.

As Attah explained to red-carpet interviewer Ryan Seacrest—another Toms admirer—the business won him over by promising to donate 10,000 pairs of shoes to his native Ghana. It was a one-off escalation of Toms’ famous one-for-one model: Every time a consumer buys one of its products, the company donates a related product or service to someone in need. (In Toms-talk, such donations are “gives.”) Toms sealed the deal with Attah four days before the Oscars in a last-minute scramble. At the time, Mycoskie was incommunicado at the Hoffman Institute, a personal-transformation retreat. Right before that, he’d been in Colombia, delivering shoes to poor children.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Inc.

Inc.

Inc.

How I Beat the Odds to Create a New Kind of Event Company

It’s never too late to win big. That’s the way Derek Gwaltney, 52, thinks about both life and his event company, Atlas Experiences.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

THE TRICKY BUSINESS OF BEING AN IMMIGRATION ATTORNEY IN 2025

As sweeping changes reshape the immigration system, a wave of demand is fueling legal tech startups, boutique law firms, and social media-savvy lawyers.

time to read

7 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

Marina Khidekel

As your company grows, you'll add new products. Here are common traps to avoid.

time to read

5 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

Karen Dillon

Being on a winning streak is fun. But be careful you don't get addicted to chasing success.

time to read

5 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

STRESS TEST

With lucrative deals from Nvidia and OpenAI and a market value that has crossed $75 billion—as well as over $8 billion in debt—CoreWeave is a driving force in the AI boom.Amid growing competition, does the company have what it takes to sustain its meteoric rise?

time to read

12 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

How We Built an Allergy Business on Reddit and YouTube

Like millions of Americans, Aakash Shah, 31, has struggled with allergies, leading to itchy eyes and congestion for the software engineer.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

FOR GROWTH COMPANIES, A MESSY TRADE WAR THREATENS PROFITS

There’s a new normal in what it takes to lead and grow a business. And Inc. 5000 CEOs have been learning to adapt on the fly.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

A First-Class Idea

How Shenique Sparks turned her luxury travel side hustle into a big business.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

The Mother of Reinvention

Everything is perfectly in place for Joy Mangano's second act with CleanBoss, including her partnership with co-founder Pitbull.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2025

Inc.

Inc.

VIVA RAW

Jennifer Wu and Zach Ao Hillsborough, North Carolina Three-year growth rate: 5,670%

time to read

3 mins

Fall 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size