Sophia Amoruso proudly owns the term Girlboss. So much so that the Nasty Gal founder and one of the world’s richest self-made women wrote a best-selling book about it in 2014 – encouraging other women to be the “mistress of your own universe”.
Given her business name – the one she started as an eBay store selling vintage clothing at just 22, before creating one of the world’s biggest online fashion retailers — she’s also rather fond of the term ‘nasty woman’, a gift Donald Trump offered during the third US presidential debate when he pinned the label on rival Hillary Clinton. Amoruso was in a room with 200 women at the time of hearing it and immediately started receiving memes on social media. “Donald was up there trying to equate the word “nasty” with a woman who is super qualified, intelligent and confident,” she says, “And the whole Internet was like, “Damn right we are!”
This year, Amoruso was named the second young woman to make the Forbes’ annual list of America’s Richest Self-Made women, with an estimated net worth of US$280 million. In 2015, Nasty Gal took first place in a list of 500 top e-commerce sites, ahead of Amazon and Apple. According to Internet Retailer, almost 20% of its traffic comes from social networks, which is around nine times higher than the 500 other online merchants studied.
Amoruso traces her desire to run her own business back to working in a high end shoe store with an unnecessarily ‘mean’ boss. She celebrates failure as much as she does success, and says the latter is merely a moving target: it’s curiosity that really fulfils her.
So when Business Chicks offered us the chance to get some questions to Amoruso in the lead up to her upcoming Australia tour and following the release of her second book Nasty Galaxy, we jumped at the opportunity to learn more about the businesswoman – and take in a few tips along the way. (Tickets are still available to see Amoruso next week in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne)
To those who haven’t read your first book or are still learning about who you are, can you briefly explain the idea of the ‘Girlboss’. What does it mean to be a Girlboss in 2016, or for those who’re planning to be one in the future?
A Girlboss is someone who is in charge of her own life. It’s about self-awareness and an insatiable curiosity and drive. It’s a philosophy rather than a literal term; you don’t need to be the managing someone to be a Girlboss–you’re just working every day to be the mistress of your own universe.
Ten years since launching Nasty Gal, what’s been the most painful lesson you’ve learned?
That it doesn’t get easier, you just get better at handling things. I think at one point I thought that five years into starting a business I’d be on an island somewhere sipping rum, but things only get more complex the more a company grows, and the demands only increase.