How a 34-year-old Stanford and Harvard grad built Stitch Fix into a billion-dollar company that just went public
• CEO Katrina Blake has run Stitch Fix since it was founded in 2011. The company held an IPO Friday.
• The 34-year-old Stanford and Harvard grad was "risk averse" as a child and initially considered becoming a doctor.
• Lake is the only woman to lead a tech IPO in 2017 so far.
Friday, Katrina Lake became the only woman to lead a tech IPO so far this year.
Lake is the CEO of Stitch Fix, a subscription-based fashion startup. It works by having customers fill out a detailed questionnaire on their personal style, pick a shipment date, and pay a $20 styling fee. Stitch Fix stylists then pick out outfits to match your style, and if you like your outfit enough to keep it, you pay for the clothes.
The San Francisco-based company has around 5,000 employees - 3,500 of whom are full and part-time stylists, according to the Los Angeles Times.
According to CNBC, investors and analysts were concerned about Stitch Fix's profitability in the wake of troubles at meal subscription company Blue Apron. Forbes reported the IPO raised $120 million.
Here's a look at how Lake went from a prospective pre-med major to an entrepreneur on a quest to blend fashion and tech:
- CEO says he tried to hire an AI researcher from Meta, and was told to 'come back to me when you have 10,000 H100 GPUs'
- We bought a house in Japan for $30,000. We'll have more land than we could afford in the US, and our kids will be more independent.
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