Success·BillionairesSpanx founder Sara Blakely’s $1 billion idea started with just $5,000 in savings and wanting to solve her own blemBy Sydney LakeBy Sydney LakeAssociate EditorSydney LakeAssociate EditorSydney Lake is an associate editor at Fortune, where she writes and edits news for the publication's global news desk.SEE FULL BIO Founder of Spanx Sara Blakely speaks onstage at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit on October 16, 2013 in Washington, DC.Paul Morigi/Getty Images for FORTUNENew ideas can come from almost anywhere.
Sara Blakely’s bright idea was behind her the whole time—literally.
In 1998, the founder and former CEO of the women’s shapewear brand was working as a fax machine salesperson when she got the inspiration for Spanx.
Her white pants had hung in her closet for eight months without wear because she couldn’t get the “smooth look” she wanted.
Blakely, then in her mid-20s, wanted to wear something that wouldn’t show panty lines and came without the bulk of the classic girdle—so she cut the feet off control-top pantyhose.
With that, Blakely had come up with the idea that would eventually make her a billionaire.
“I wanted my clothes to fit better, and so my own butt was the inspiration,” Blakely said during Fortune’s 2013 Most Powerful Women Summit.
“I might be the only woman in the world grateful to my cellulite.” Blakely had never taken a class in her life, nor had she worked in fashion or retail—and she had only $5,000 to her name to invest in the .
A string of hosiery manufacturers turned Blakely’s initial pitch down. “They would always ask me the same three questions. They would say and you are? Sara Blakely. And you’re with? Sara Blakely.
And you’re financially backed by? Sara Blakely,” she said. “They’d show me the door and say no, thank you.” What made Blakely’s duct take off? Self-assurance.
“I’ve always trusted my gut through the journey,” Blakely said.
“I think it’s very important to be authentic.” Blakely’s big break at Neiman Marcus While Blakely got a lot of initial nos on her idea that would ultimately transform women’s hosiery as we once knew it, it didn’t stop her from pitching one of the biggest names in fashion: Neiman Marcus.
Blakely called her local Neiman Marcus store in Atlanta, where she was living at the time, and they redirected her to the company’s buying office in Dallas.
“I’m Sara Blakely and into the duct that’s going to change the way your customers wear clothes,” she told them on the phone.
Neiman Marcus’ buying office said they’d give Blakely 10 minutes in person to pitch her idea if she’d fly herself there.
Blakely was five minutes into her pitch when she realized her idea wasn’t totally resonating with the buying representative, so she made a snap decision to model the duct.
She guided the buying rep to the bathroom, modeled her white pants with and without Spanx on—and in that moment, her concept was received. “She immediately [said], ‘Oh I get it.
It’s brilliant—and I’m gonna put it in seven stores,” Blakley said during the Fortune interview.
“It was unbelievable.” The manufacturer who had finally agreed to make Spanx didn’t believe Blakely when she called him the news.
In fact, he told Blakely he thought she was just going to “give these as Christmas gifts for the next five years,” she said.
Growing the $1 billion Spanx empire Ahead of Spanx’s 2000 launch at Neiman Marcus, Blakely called her friends who d near the seven stores to get them to buy the duct.
She even offered to pay them back for purchasing the duct. “Right when I was running out of friends and money, Oprah called,” Blakely said.
“She chose it as her favorite duct of the year.” In 2000, Oprah Winfrey added Spanx to her annual duct roundup—and became a long-time fan of the brand.
In the subsequent two decades, Oprah continued to champion the brand. “Spanx really changed the way I wore clothes,” Oprah said on her show in 2006.
“When Sara first came on The Oprah Show to tell us her idea for Spanx, I knew it was brilliant. We’d all been cutting off our pantyhose for years!
So from the moment I wore my first pair, they became a staple in my wardrobe.” As Spanx continued to introduce new ducts including its comfort bra, “Bra-lleluja,” and slenderizing activewear, more celebrities including Gwyneth Paltrow, Katy Perry, Mindy Kaling, and Chrissy Teigen jumped on the bandwagon.
What Blakely had been told was a “crazy idea” had blown up—and she made a co-branding deal with Target to develop a more affordable line of shapewear for the major retailer.
In 2006, Assets by Sara Blakely launched at Target, and in the same year Oprah relinquished all wear of other panties, saying, “I only wear Spanx.” Stick it to the man When Blakely originally came up with the idea for Spanx, she realized that hosiery ducts were so uncomfortable because men were the ones who were making them.
“It had never dawned on me as a consumer, but everybody making our shapewear and hosiery were men,” Blakely said in the Fortune interview.
“The people making it were not wearing it—and if they were they were not admitting it.” Men who ran manufacturing facilities were also the ones to first turn down Blakey’s , which was valued at $1.2 billion as of late 2021.
But Blakely didn’t outright disown men—instead, she launched ducts for them in 2010.
She even brought a compression undershirt to the 2013 MPW Summit for Warren Buffett—the only man in the crowd—to try. “So far, I haven’t tried it on,” Buffett said.
“I’m afraid I might be too dangerous with this group.” A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on February 27, 2024.Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh.
CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of . Apply for an invitation.