Alli Webb spent her twenties working in hair salons. When she moved to Los Angeles and have become a stay-at-home mother, she began a cellular blowout side hustle — so she would go to a shopper’s house, blow-dry their hair, and magnificence it for $40. No haircuts or hair coloration.
“I obtained tons of shoppers,” Webb told entrepreneur Jeff Berman on the Masters of Scale podcast earlier this month. Her first pitch was to different mothers on a Yahoo group. It read: “I am a stay-at-home mother and a longtime hairstylist. I will come over and blow out your hair for under $40 whereas your infants are sleeping.”
Webb’s pitch was profitable and he or she quickly could not sustain with demand. She began interested by opening a brick-and-mortar location so her shoppers may come to her, as a substitute of her going to them.
Her brother, former Yahoo advertising and marketing director Michael Landau, was keen to assist financially again the enterprise, although he did have some questions at first.
“He was somewhat perplexed, ‘Like, why cannot ladies blow out their very own hair?'” Webb mentioned. “And I used to be like, you probably did develop up with me.” In previous interviews, Webb shared that she had frizzy hair rising up and was “obsessed with her hair.”
Landau was lastly satisfied by the success that Webb noticed in her facet hustle. He invested $250,000 whereas Webb and her then-husband Cameron Webb put of their financial savings of about $50,000. In 2010, the founding group opened the primary Drybar salon in Brentwood, California. It famously affords no cuts and no coloration.
Alli Webb. Photograph Credit score: Brian Stukes/Getty Photos
Although Drybar’s salons supplied a restricted vary of hair providers — simply the wash, blowout, and magnificence — Webb says that she wasn’t involved in regards to the enterprise mannequin. What she needed was quantity: 30 to 40 blowouts per day to interrupt even.
Demand ended up doubling expectations — to 60 to 80 blowouts per day.
“We realized in a short time, like throughout the first few days, [that] we had captured lightning in a bottle,” Webb mentioned. “Ladies have been coming in and fairly actually droves. I imply, we have been turning folks away left and proper.”
Drybar grew to over 150 salons throughout the nation inside a decade. Webb ended up selling Drybar’s product line to main client merchandise firm Helen of Troy for $255 million in cash in 2020. WellBiz Manufacturers acquired the franchise rights to Drybar salons in 2021 for an undisclosed sum.
Webb could not have imagined what Drybar would change into. When she opened her first store, she simply needed it to be a spot the place she may do what she beloved.
“I used to be actually enthusiastic about it and never considering I used to be going to show it into this large multi-million-dollar blowout empire,” she mentioned.