Showing posts with label millionaire moms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label millionaire moms. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2009

Silver Solver Una Griffin - Single Mum Following Her Dream.


When Una Griffin was made redundant she used the opportunity to set up her own jewellery business - Lovu.

At Lovu Una Griffin sells beautiful, funky sterling silver jewellery she imports from Mexico – from her front room in Ranelagh, Dublin 4, Ireland. Prices are keen as she has no overheads, and the single mum is finally following her dream.

“It was being made redundant earlier this year that made me think, things are so bad, I may as well give this a shot. I have always loved jewellery, since I was given a jewellery-making set when I was about seven. I have been tinkering away since, but never tried to make a living from it.”

Una took €3,000 from her post-office savings account and took off to Mexico to buy silver, with little more information about how to do it than she had gleaned from some Google searching. A week away, a journey up dirt-tracks to mining villages three hours outside Mexico city, and a bit of luck later, she had what she wanted: samples of beautiful, funky, John Rochaesque silver jewellery and beads she knew she loved and hoped others would, too.

She set up a stall in her kitchen one evening and invited friends, and their friends, for an evening of wine and silver, and the pieces “flew out the door”.

Almost all of the pieces are sterling silver – and so last forever, in and out of the shower – and are akin to the kind of work you would expect to find in Designyard or Kilkenny Design.

The pieces include: rings with funky, bright blown glass “stones” in silver plate, the least expensive costing €12; silver beaded and agate bracelets costing between €30 and €35; and chunky but sophisticated silver rings at €45. She also has simple pendants and necklaces – some of which can be worn a number of lengths and ways depending on how they are fixed around the neck – for between €60 and €135.

She has converted her front room into a shop, with display cabinets, a sales desk and a business name – Lovu. “Well, it’s the return of the cottage industry isn’t it?,” she says with a laugh.

This original article is by Kitty Holland of the Irish Times

Lovu is at 19 Cherryfield Avenue, Ranelagh, Dublin 6 (Tuesday to Thursday, 9.30am-2pm and Tuesday, 6-8pm). www.lovu.ie

The FabJob Guide to to Become a Jewelry Designer
covers topics of vital importance if you want to become a jewelry designer and get hired as a jewelry designer or start your own jewelry design business.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Value Fabrics


Congratulations to Helen Turkington (pictured above) who has just opened a second shop in Ranelagh (Dublin, Ireland), this one devoted to a selection of 200 value fabrics selling for 40 per cent less than similar quality, designer branded products.

The range starts at €10 per metre, and the rolls of fabric are displayed beside paint samples to help you concoct a pleasing colour scheme. “A relatively small amount of money can revitalise any home,” she says, “by recovering old pieces of furniture or changing the curtains.” Upholstery and curtain-making services are available through her interior design consultancy, or you can simply buy the fabric and do-it-yourself. The selection includes linens, silks, brushed lambswool paisleys and floral damasks. You’ll find Helen Turkington Fabrics at Terminus Mills, Clonskeagh Road, Dublin 14. Open Monday-Saturday. See www.helenturkington.com

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Shirley Conran on Fame and Fortune for Women


Shirley Conran, superwoman author and women's rights campaigner argues for a simpler tax system and women handling their own finances

Shirley Conran is an internationally-renowned writer and campaigner for women’s rights. Her latest project is to help teenage girls better understand money. Her new book, Money Stuff for Girls, is due to be published this month.

She was married to design tycoon Sir Terence Conran. Their two sons, Sebastian and Jasper, are also designers. She lives on her own in Putney, south-west London.

Conran, 76, is famed for her books including Superwoman (1974), a guide to household management, as well as novels such as Lace, which was an international bestseller in 1983. She became the first women’s editor of The Observer colour magazine and then women’s editor of the Daily Mail.

For the full article click here.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Work From Home Mom Puts Baby In The Picture



EVEN THE most organised women find themselves under pressure following the birth of their first child. Jane O'Neill's first child, Molly, was born in 2003 and immediately presents started arriving from family and friends in her home country of England. She was also overwhelmed by the generosity of her husband Shane's family.

"Presents came in for months and months. Not only did I receive gifts from friends and family, but also people whom I didn't even know. One of my mum's tennis friends knitted a beautiful cardigan, it was just amazing the kindness and generosity of people."

O'Neill worked in events management for the International Rugby Board (IRB) prior to Molly's birth. By nature an organised person, her mind immediately switched to thanking friends and family for their gifts.

In between feeds and nappy changes and trying to find time to have a shower, Jane O'Neill set about looking for personalised baby cards on which she could express her gratitude for the presents she had received.

O'Neill, who lives in Firhouse, went online trying to find a personalised baby company that would incorporate her daughter's picture into the greeting, but she found very little of note on offer.
So she and her husband Shane bought a digital camera and made the cards themselves.

"We wanted to make this card very personal to show our gratitude, and thought it would be great if we had a picture of our new little girl on the card.

"Several hours and clicks later with our newly bought digital print camera we finally had our picture. Molly was five weeks old, and we had propped her up on the sofa surrounded by teddies and a blanket. It was a lovely picture and we felt very proud of our darling daughter, as most new parents do."

O'Neill sent the card to friends and family, and the response she received from them was extremely positive.

Recipients said the picture of Molly brought the card to life and it meant that more distant relatives who might not meet her for some time in person were able to see her little face peering out of the card.

Relatives made the effort to phone O'Neill to talk about the card, and she was so amazed at the feedback that she decided to set up her own service. A new business idea was conceived and http://www.babycards.ie/ was launched in 2004.

As a new mother, O'Neill was finding time very precious so she made sure the website was quick and easy to use.

Customers create their own cards online by selecting a design from the templates provided, upload their photo and select the image print area using a cropping tool. They can then view an instant online proof of the card. Cards are then produced in Dublin and posted out.

O'Neill went to work in the business part-time after her maternity leave, and spent much of this period researching new products and developing the website.

In June 2005 O'Neill's second child, Jack, was born and the website took a back seat for a while.
O'Neill enjoyed her work and was keen to return on a part-time basis after her maternity leave on her second child. However, she set up a separate office from her husband and became a work-at-home mother to avoid the six-mile commute from Firhouse to Harold's Cross.

The mother of two says she thoroughly enjoyed working in events management at the IRB. She had come to Ireland with a sports degree and had a great time working in a relatively new field here.

However, when she had her daughter she experienced a "dramatic change in life" and felt the need for a new career. Since then she has never had a moment's regret at giving up her office life.

"While it has been busy bringing up two young children [Molly now aged 4½ and Jack nearly 3] and starting a new business, it has been very rewarding. Getting rid of the commute made life much easier.

"If Jack is sick one day I can make it up another day. You don't have to feel guilty. I enjoyed my work in events management, but time is so precious when you have children. I am so glad to be able to do this."

O'Neill says she is especially proud of having a product of her own. She also enjoys making life a little easier for new parents who are struggling to keep up with their little one's routines.
"When a parent sends out the cards, they feel organised and on top of things. It has been brilliant to produce a product that other mums and dads can benefit from. Once you take the leap, you can't go back. I never imagined I would get involved in anything like this," she says.


Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Stay At Home Mom Marsha Serlin Makes Millions From Scrap


One of my favourite millionaire mom stories concerns stay at home mom Marsha Serlin, who found herself in a very bad situation, divorced with two children to support, she was $250,000 in debt, had her electricity turned off and her home was in foreclosure. When she realised she just couldn’t seem to make enough money to get by she took a brave decision, and out of sheer desperation and with a determination to succeed she started her scrap metal company in 1978.

While in the early stages she faced ridicule in this predominately male dominated business, but her attitude never swayed and she thought, 'if a man can do this, I can do this.' Today Marsha is the owner of United Scrap Metal. Her Illinois business makes a whopping $140 million dollars annually. It took Marsha 29 years of hard work and determination, but in the end she went from a work at home mom to multimillionaire mompreneur.
A great story!

For more information see http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa5345/is_/ai_n21375395
Marsha Serlin, current CEO of United Scrap Metal, was featured February 2, 2007, in a segment on the Oprah Winfrey Show called "Moms Who Made Millions."

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Million Dollar Work At Home Mom - The Woman Who Made A Fortune Off Crocs



Sheri Schmeltzer is the woman behind Jibbitz, a Crocs accessory that started as a way of amusing her children. The ultimate work at home mom. By Hilary Rose (photo Mark Harrison).

Last summer, when my seven-year-old niece explained, in the tone of voice she reserves for particularly stupid questions, that the flowery button thingies on her Crocs were called Jibbitz, I was confused. “Gibbets?” I said. “As in hangmen? Don’t be ridiculous. They’re pointless flowery button thingies for you to waste your pocket money on.” In our different ways, we were both right: Jibbitz is indeed what they are but, pointless or not, they are a global craze created accidentally by an American housewife in her basement, and are worth $20 million (£10m). That’s a lot of pocket money.

The American housewife in question lives in Boulder, Colorado, and is an attractive 43-year-old called Sheri Schmelzer. The idea originated three years ago. The scenario was a familiar one: rainy afternoon, bored children, mum scrabbling around for ways to amuse them. Schmelzer rooted through her sewing kit, found some silk appliqué flowers and beads, and started to tie, stick and glue them into the holes of her children’s Crocs (which, as everyone knows, are some of the ugliest, but most useful, shoes on the planet – a cross between clogs and jelly shoes, with no buckles or ties, holes punched in the top; perfect for holidays). Her children – Lexie, then seven, Julian, five, and Riley, three, had multiple pairs in every colour and even wore them to school. “I was just trying to keep everybody entertained,” she remembers, “and my girls flipped out when they saw these. They were like, ‘I want the pink one! I want the red one!’ When my husband Richard came home, I said, ‘Look, honey: we’re accessorising our Crocs.’ You could see this little light bulb go on in his head.”

Next day, Richard filed for all the relevant patents, trademarks and copyrights. A successful entrepreneur, he knew the importance of patenting everything before anyone else saw it. So the children were sworn to secrecy and the Jibbitz stayed at home while they thought of a name. Richard’s nickname for her had always been “flibbertigibbet”, because, she says, she talks a lot. “I thought it was such a funny name,” she says. “So when I realised we had a business and needed to name it, I cut it in half, put a ‘z’ at the end, and we had Jibbitz!” After a discussion, the pair dipped into their savings to get the company started. Schmelzer thinks they had $300,000 (£150,000), but used less than $20,000 (£10,000), “because we became profitable almost immediately. Isn’t that crazy?”

When the children first wore them to school, they were inundated with requests from friends. Three months later, the couple launched a website, on their wedding anniversary, August 9, “because we thought it was sweet, and we were doing this together and taking a big chance, and who knew what was going to happen?” The local TV news station immediately ran a story on them, and 200 orders a day started pouring in off the fax machine in their basement. They put a cover over the pool table so Schmelzer had a surface on which to work on the designs, and her mother drove round Boulder emptying fabric stores for materials.

“I was up until 3am gluing things,” recalls Schmelzer. “Because I was at home, I had no separation between work and family. Every moment, I was in the basement gluing my fingers together. I would feed the kids, get them to bed, then go down to the basement again. After three or four months, I looked at Rich and said, ‘I can’t do this by myself.’” So through Richard’s business contacts they found a factory in China. One day, Schmelzer came home to find 25 boxes of Jibbitz on her step. She spent four months packing and shipping the orders herself, before the couple eventually rented office space and hired ten employees.

According to its website, Jibbitz “allow Crocs consumers to personalise their footwear to creatively express their individuality”, which is perhaps over-intellectualising it a bit. For those still blissfully ignorant, they are pieces of coloured rubber-like buttons, selling for around $3 (£1.50) a pop, in 1,100 different patterns. There are Harry Potter house crests and Disney characters. You can stick gingerbread houses or gemstones on your Crocs, national flags and animals (the UK’s bestsellers are the big flowers). There are Jibbitz for specific places – football ones for Europe, Hello Kitty for the Far East and American flags for, well, probably only Americans. They are sold in 86 countries (Japan is the biggest market) and Schmelzer has been on Oprah, in an edition called Million Dollar Moms.

By August 2006, the Schmelzers had sold eight million Jibbitz. A map on the website showing stockists started off with five red dots; three days later there were 20 and in less than a fortnight it was covered. Finally, in December 2006, they sold out to Crocs for $20 million. The two companies had been in touch from the very beginning, after one of the Crocs founders – who also, oddly, lived in Boulder, Colorado – saw Schmelzer’s daughter sporting her Jibbitz, gave her his business card and asked her to get her mummy to call him. Terrified at the thought of their first big business meeting, Schmelzer bought a briefcase. “I didn’t want to sell in the beginning because I wanted to prove to myself that I could do this,” she says. “I thought, ‘We’ve got something cool here; let’s try to make it really big.’ I wanted it to be just us, and we succeeded, way more than we thought we would. I had tears in my eyes when we sold it.”

Sales of Jibbitz recently passed the 100 million mark and Schmelzer thinks there is no limit. But although she admits to being surprised by the scale of the success, she denies that it’s just a craze, “because they [Crocs] are completely redefining themselves. I still design the Jibbitz, and now we’re moving into all these other products, which is what’s fun for me. People still contact me directly and say, ‘I can’t believe you don’t have a cocker spaniel.’” As for the money, Schmelzer says that although they weren’t exactly struggling before, it’s nice to have $20 million in the bank. “We know we can marry two girls, and the children can do anything they want at any school they want.” But they must have splurged on something, surely? She has a considerable stock of very white and sparkly diamonds round her neck and on her fingers but, sweetly, the main thing they bought were two huge tree houses for the children (this being America, they came with their own tree trunk).

Jibbitz is one of those things that mothers around the world kick themselves for not thinking of. The rest of us wonder how much more of the world’s pocket money can possibly be spent on pointless flowery button thingies to stick in children’s shoes. Scarily, the answer is probably a lot.


Original article http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/entrepreneur/article4331134.ece

http://www1.jibbitz.com/

Friday, October 10, 2008

Mompreneur Avril Webster of Off We Go Publishing


INTERVIEW: THEY SAY that necessity is the mother of invention, and this has certainly been the experience of Avril Webster, founder of Off We Go Publishing.

When a search for clear, simple books to help her 10-year-old son Stephen, who has a severe developmental brain disorder, cope with everyday activities proved fruitless, she decided to fill the gap herself.

With the support of Stephen's speech therapist Jeanne Dippenaar, she set about creating books at her kitchen table that would prepare him for new experiences - like a trip to the dentist or the swimming pool - which would normally cause him stress and anxiety.

She broke each event down into 12 steps with a sequence of uncluttered pictures and functional language and soon found that her little home-made books had a marked effect on Stephen's reaction to these events.

Full interview....