Some people are born to succeed in business. When an opportunity presents itself, they jump at it and keep going. Blake Mycoskie is one example. The founder of Toms shoes, former Shark Tank guest, has amassed a net worth of more than $300 million during his entrepreneurial career.
If you like success stories, look no further than Mycoskie, and follow his journey to make millions while maintaining a social conscience.
Early Years
Born in 1976 in Arlington, Texas, the son of a writer and an orthopedic surgeon, McCosky attended Southern Methodist University on a partial tennis scholarship, but an Achilles tendon injury put an end to his athletic career.
Mycoskie double majored in philosophy and business at SMU, choosing to focus on business was a wise choice. His first venture was laundry, which he quickly demonstrated a talent for, generating $1 million in sales before selling it to his partner in 1999.
Planning a business path
After his success in the laundry business, McCosky moved to Nashville and began making outdoor billboards promoting country music. The business also became profitable, and McCosky once again sold it, this time to Clear Channel.
However, his next destination was not the business world. Mycoskie and his sister Paige applied to compete on the reality show The Amazing Race. In 2001, they competed in the second season and won $1 million.
Subsequent business ventures included co-founding the cable television network Reality Central. The network had some success until Rupert Murdoch started a competing channel and began outbidding potential advertisers. Undeterred, Mycoskie started a driver’s education company and formed a marketing firm to promote it.
Mycoskie finally found his reward on the entrepreneurial merry-go-round when, on vacation in Argentina, he met a woman from a volunteer organization whose mission was to provide shoes to children in need.
At that moment, McCosky had an epiphany, returned to work, and founded the business that would determine his success – Shoes for Tomorrow, later shortened to Toms.
Mycoskie’s entrepreneurial instincts were honed by his generosity, and he has donated approximately 10 million pairs of shoes to those in need. He expanded his business to eyewear and began bringing that product to those in need.
By 2011, Mycoskie had found his business model, and he has been a pioneer in the emerging field of social entrepreneurship ever since. His businesses also serve markets in countries where poverty or adverse conditions have created a need for the products.
Mycoskie’s model also included selling a company for a huge profit once it became successful, and he took the same approach with his shoe company, selling a 50% stake to Bain Capital while retaining his role as “chief shoe donor.”
His latest entrepreneurial venture is a health company called Madefor, which was founded in early 2020, obviously coinciding with the beginning of the pandemic.
The company sells kits designed to increase behavioral and mindset awareness, but it’s safe to say the pandemic has put a damper on its short-term growth.
personal life
Relatively speaking, Mycoskie’s personal life has not been as smooth as his business success. His first marriage ended in divorce after he and now ex-wife Heather Long had two children. He now lives in Wyoming and is involved with model and former fund manager Molly Holm, whose strong Christian beliefs seem to be a good fit for the entrepreneur.
Categories: Shark Tank
Source: svlsf.edu.vn