I really struggled for a long time figuring out what I wanted to do with my life and I also grew up in a generation where my parents were like, we hope you marry well, kind of mentality. And I did want to have kids really badly and I was excited to be a mom and I loved the opportunity of being able to stay home with my boys but ultimately found that I wanted to do something for myself. Hi, my name is Ali Webb and I am the founder of the Dry Bar and author of the Messy Truth. I was born in New York, in Long Island, New York and I grew up in South Florida. My parents were entrepreneurs, not a big surprise there and I think that's really where I got that kind of entrepreneurial spirit and I grew up watching my parents operate a business. It was an upbringing that would turn out to really serve me as I got older and started Dry Bar but one that I didn't even really pay attention to as a kid.
I did not go to college. This wasn't for me. At a high school, I was pretty confused about what I wanted to do with my life and I was really perplexed by how all my friends knew what they wanted to do and people were going to college with a pretty strong idea of what they were going to do with their life which was like crazy to me to have an idea of what you want to do when you're 18, 19 years old and it just wasn't the path for me. So I moved to New York City and I lived in New York basically all of my 20s and worked a lot of different jobs. I really loved it. I jumped from fashion to PR to hair, all the different things, learning how to kind of take care of myself which I guess is a similar experience that you have in college. I am a long time hair stylist. I've been doing hair for gosh a million years now.
I started when I was 20. Went to beauty school in Bookerton, Florida where I grew up and then I moved to New York and did hair in New York, the Johns of Hogg and then I moved to LA and that's when I had my boys. So I was a stay at home mom for about five years and then I started a mobile blowout business called Straight at Home and I was only charging 40 bucks to go to women's house and blow dry their hair which is pretty inexpensive for any city especially LA. But it was during that time that I realized there was this pretty big hole in the marketplace. There was nowhere for women to go for an affordable blowout in a really nice place and have a great experience.
我在20岁时开始这行。在我成长的佛罗里达州布克尔顿上的美容学校,然后搬到纽约,在纽约的约翰·霍格(Johns of Hogg)理发。之后我搬到洛杉矶,那时我有了我的孩子,所以我当了大约五年的家庭主妇。然后我开始了一家名为 "Straight at Home" 的移动吹发业务,我只收取40美元上门为女性吹干头发,这对任何城市,尤其是洛杉矶来说,都算是非常便宜的。但就是在那段时间,我发现了市场中的一个相当大的空白。没有一个地方能让女性以实惠的价格在一个非常好的环境中享受吹发和美发的体验。
You know there were the discount chains where you didn't really know what you were getting or there was the high end salons where it was like very expensive and the stylists wanted to use that time to do cotton color. So you know I saw this like small opportunity and that very much came from my mobile blowout business and the price point seemed right that if we could charge little enough that women would do this often and that was kind of the whole idea for the business model. And you know it was definitely a risk because nothing like this had ever been done and you know to do blowouts at $35 you would have to do a lot of blowouts you know in a day and so that was the big question mark if this business would work and ultimately women went really bonkers for this idea.
I'm not joking the first day when it was so busy and we had seen what the rest of the week looked like in terms of appointments. We were like we were definitely onto something here and it was a very like emotional day because we realized this thing could be really huge and there's a real big opportunity here to grow this thing into a big business. We didn't really make any money in the beginning and you know I was taking such a small salary and I'll never forget once we made one of our biggest hires we hired a president of retail and her salary requirement was so bananas to me and especially because I wasn't making any money and but that would lead to us raising our first big tranche of money which was about $26 million from private equity and when we did that my brother and I both took money off the table and that was when we made our first millions was when we took a sliver of that $26 million towards the company for ourselves and that was really you know Castanaya who's now Stride that was you know that was something they wanted us to do to get to have some of the fruits of our labor and at that point we had I don't know 10, 11 stores and so we were on this ride and we were this rocket ship to success.