In Silicon Valley lore, the garage is the go-to site of startup founding stories.
If you want a curveball to this cliched tale, check out OXB Studio, the maker of sweat-proof jewelry.
Co-founders Maggie Kyle (yoga teacher turned metalsmith) and Laura Treganowan (cycling instructor turned marketing guru) met in the latter’s 7am spin class.
But when the pandemic hit, the business lost 90% of its revenue.
OXB was selling its minimalist necklaces, bracelets, and anklets across a network of fitness studios in Denver (where OXB is based) and nationally, in partnerships with Pure Barre.
“Our ecommerce business was tiny when COVID-19 hit,” Kyle tells The Hustle.
OXB — an 18-month-old operation with 6 employees — turned around its fortunes with a multi-pronged attack:
The business hit $94k in October and hopes for 2021 are high.
“When I started making jewelry, I was targeting $50k a year,” says Kyle. “OXB can do 7 figures next year and we plan on scaling the business and hiring more people.”
That was one fortuitous spin class.