The Bossticks - #151: Gal Meets Glam Founders Julia Engel & Thomas Berolzheimer - Blog to Brand to Product Line, How To Stay Focused, How to Execute a Long Term Vision & Working With Your Significant Other
Episode Date: November 20, 2018On this episode we sit down with the dynamic duo and married couple behind the mega blog and brand Gal Meets Glam. Founders Julia Engel and Thomas Berolzheimer sit down with us and talk shop about the...ir journey in the blogger/influencer world. As early adapters the couple discuss what their journey has been like from blog, to brand, to product line. We also dive into what it's like working with your significant other, how to stay focused on a longterm vision and how to execute on a long term strategy. To shop The Gal Meets Glam Dress Collection and receive 15% OFF your order go to https://shop.galmeetsglam.com/ and use promo code TSC15 To connect with Julia Engel click HERE to connect with Thomas Berolzheimer click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by THRIVE MARKET. We use Thrive for our online grocery delivery on a weekly basis and we also now get our wine at Thrive! They provide the highest quality products and ingredients delivered straight to our door with unbeatable prices. Be sure to grab our deal by going to to https://thrivemarket.com/skinnywine to receive 25% off your first order (Max $20) + free shipping and a 30 day trial. This episode is brought to you by RITUAL Forget everything you thought you knew about vitamins. Ritual is the brand that's reinventing the experience with 9 essential nutrients women lack the most. If you're ready to invest in your health, do what I did and go to www.ritual.com/skinny Your future self will thank you for taking Ritual: Consider it your 'Lifelong-Health-401k'. Why put anything but clean ingredients (backed by real science) in your body?
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She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you alone for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
It was the first dress.
I had thought of way back in, you know, 2014 when we wanted to start the collection.
And it was the first dress that I saw the seamstresses making a sample of, and I burst into tears the moment I saw it because I just couldn't, I couldn't believe that my vision had finally come to life in a product.
And it was beautiful.
And, you know, I wasn't crazy with my ideas.
That clip was from our guests of the show, Thomas Beryl Zimer and Julia Engel from the blog, Turned Brand.
Gowmeets Glam.
On this episode, we discuss what it takes to go from blogger to brand to product and succeed,
how to stay focused on long-term goals and the process of working with your significant other,
which Lauren and I know plenty about.
For those of you that are new to the show, my name is Michael Bostic.
I am a serial entrepreneur and brand builder, most recently the CEO of Dear Media.
And I am Lauren Everett's, Michael's wife.
I am all relaxed from Cabo, and I am the creator of the Skinny Confidential,
which is a blog, a brand, and obviously,
podcast. You know, I was when I got, when we got back from Mexico, I kept trying to get in it with
you. I kept trying to like, it was for those. Get in at what? What does that mean, Michael? I was trying to
get it in. Okay. You were trying to get it in the second I landed from New York. So for people that
aren't aware of what we're talking about, it was just our anniversary, you have to step away from
that phone. I think the whole time I'm down there, I'm trying to get it in and you're trying to get it out,
right? Trying to get that content out. I'm trying to get that content in. Michael, I had, I had to
do some content but I did make time for you so so don't act like you're like crying about how how am I
supposed to like turn it up you turn it up get that Barry manelow Marvin gay going when you have that
camera on every second you guys I was trying to videotape him I'm just kidding I turned off my phone
for half the trip I would say so we were well I was in New York for the Victoria's Secret
Fashion show and it was amazing I'm going to do a recap of all the tips and tricks in the meantime
you can go to a picture on my Instagram where my boobs are hanging out and I'm wearing a purple
bodysuit and swipe right and see some behind the scenes. Anyway, I was there for the show. It was
insane. I can't wait to share some BTS with you guys on the blog. And then from New York,
I went straight to Cabo, which was a little weird to not travel with Michael because I'm so
used to him micromanaging my every move when I travel, but I made it. I want to know, okay, so
you had to you had to take multiple connecting flights i want to know it was bleak you left the you left the hotel at like
three in the morning i left the hotel at five in the morning which for those of you travel to jfk in new york is a pain
that's a pain in the ass hotel airport to get to and you know it just got rated the worst airport in the
state in the united states okay well i got a spray tan in my room at one a m i had been drinking from the
victoria secret after party i stayed up all night i packed i got in the car at five flew to the airport or drove
drove to the airport and almost forgot my passport, Michael, you would have freaked out and got on a
plane to see you. Well, I wouldn't have freaked out, but I just, I wish I could have been like a
fly on the wall to watch you travel because, you know, for as tough as you act, I know. I'm not a good
travel. How you are? No, I just like when you do everything for me. But now, do you know what the
problem is now, since you, now that I've seen that you're capable to do it on your own, which you
should be because you're an adult woman, now I know you can do it. So now I know I know I don't have to
help you as much when we go to the airport. No, I'm always going to play that card.
Do you know all these people have been tagging me in that post from the fat Jewish of the guy running on the treadmill with the bags in the, the bags in the, for the running through the airport.
And they're like, literally I got tagged by eight people on that.
That actually is you, though.
Like, that's not funny.
Yeah, but the only thing that was off is they say that that guy showed up only 37 minutes before the flight and you know I'm there at least an hour.
No, Michael is so gnarly at the airport.
You guys, I've never seen anything like it.
He's acting as if the world is ending.
Like, you are chaotic at the airport.
it's ridiculous.
Yep.
So, I mean, there's a lot of people out there.
Listen, I like to leisurely go through.
We've talked about it in the show.
I don't know anybody that, I don't know why people want to show up late and sweat and
stress and run through like Home Alone 2 and 1 to get to the airport.
That's number two.
Yeah, number two.
But they always running through the airport.
That's Home Alone people.
So I got to Cabo and Michael texts me that there was a ginger margarita waiting
for me and chips and popsicles.
Michael was so relaxed, which is like a rare plot twist when I got there.
and we had so much fun on our anniversary.
We really kicked up the romance, had some time to connect.
Kicked it up between takes.
Didn't work too much.
And back in L.A.
And the second we landed, it was time to move.
Time to move.
We're up in L.A. now full time.
We're up in L.A. full time.
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Thomas and Julia on the show, you guys.
They're just so major in the blogging world, and both of them are such a cool couple.
I feel like Michael and I had so much to talk about with them because there's a lot of similarities
in a lot of ways.
They both work together like us.
They work in the same space, similar space.
Yeah.
Travel together.
Thomas and I did like a little bromance.
We've been DMing each other, and I don't DM a lot of people, right?
I'm not like on their DM in a lot.
And I don't know how it.
happened, but we randomly started talking. And I don't talk to a lot of like, I guess we call
him blogger husbands, right? Like, I guess that's what I am, you know, to a certain degree. And I don't
talk to a lot of blogger husbands or a lot of people on DM, but we started talking to anyone,
yeah, to be honest, I was trying to think about who I talk. I don't talk to anyone really. So anyways,
I was talking to Thomas. And I started watching his content, he's doing cool stuff, coffee. He's like
completely opposite to me in the photography department. He's a master at it. Michael can't even
take a fucking iPhone photo on me. We were sharing boo.
booktips and just kind of shooting the shit and give each other advice once in a while.
And we develop a little online friendship.
And so I was really happy to be able to sit down with both of them.
There are some of the nicest people I've ever met in the space.
They're a nice, cool couple.
Down to Earth, highly successful.
Humble.
Humble.
Built some mega stuff.
Julia has great skin too.
Beautiful skin.
And I think the key to their success, if I could dumb it down.
Well, there's a lot of reasons.
But one of the main thing is they have extremely long-term vision,
extreme long-term vision, and they really know what they want.
They're really specific about it.
They don't get swayed by distractions.
They're very focused.
Tunnel vision.
Tunnel vision.
They work their asses off.
Long-term players.
Yep, long-term players, and it's going to pay off.
We have massive respect for both of them.
We could not be more excited to have them on the show.
So with that, let's welcome Thomas and Julia from the mega blog and brand, Galmeet Slam,
to the Skinny Confidential, him and her show.
This is the Skinny Confidential.
and her.
We are in the studio with a mega couple behind the mega brand,
Gal meets glam, Thomas and Julia.
Welcome to the show.
Excited to get you both in the hot seat.
Here we go.
Thank you so much.
We're thrilled to be here.
Thank you so much.
Thomas and I developed a little romance relationship through DM.
We slid into each other's DM.
Yeah.
We talk about books mostly.
Books mostly.
Business.
His favorite subject.
He loves them.
Oh, I know.
I mean, I have 20 books.
I haven't touched a single one yet.
Of the ones I've recommended?
Yeah, sadly.
Heartbreaking.
Maybe cliff notes.
Any cliff notes.
Anything you want.
So thank you guys for doing this.
We're excited to get into with you.
I think there's a lot of, there's a lot of similarity between us and you.
There are.
We've had outside sources tell us that too.
Yeah?
Who are those outside sources?
Mainly Raina and Vanessa.
Okay, so.
Management.
Management.
management. What do they say those similarities are? I'm curious to hear and I want to see how
close we're on this. Well, I think it's just the dynamic between the couple and the drive,
the focus on business and just the way we think about our business. You know, we both come from
similar backgrounds of starting blogs and developing them into more than just content, more than
just blogs. So I think
there's a lot of people doing it different ways
and I think we think similarly
But you guys live in Charleston in the cute town and we're in L.A.
So we got to come visit you, I feel like.
Yes, you absolutely.
And you guys have been by Patricia South.
Since you started the blog?
It's been
2011.
April 2011, so.
And I've been here the whole time.
Yeah, he has.
He started as my boyfriend.
Yeah, he was my boyfriend.
And I basically
gave him my canon point and shoot that I took to parties in college, you know the one that you
kept in your purse, and said, can you take some pictures in my outfits? And he was like, why,
why do I have to do this? And the pictures were so bad. Were you always into photography?
No. Because you're an amazing photographer, and I have absolutely zero skill in that department.
I'll probably pick your brain at some point. But you're really good in it, you know,
Lorenzo's pointing saying, look at this, look at this. And I'm like, I can't even come close to that.
He takes two iPhone photos of me and says, did we get it?
Only two?
He used to do that.
Was it five or ten?
Five picture maximum.
He'd say if you don't get it in five pictures, it wasn't meant to be.
That's a good.
That's not the case anymore.
No.
He's like, I'll take 150.
Hopefully we got something.
When we started the blog, I was not interested in photography at all.
I was kind of forced.
I mean, the same thing.
Like, we would sit in our room and Julie would be going through all these other
blogs and she's like, why can't you take pictures like this? And it was hard because I was trying
to learn how to do it. I wasn't that interested in doing it, but I wanted to help Julia. So it's
like not until about two years that I really kind of mastered it that I actually started enjoying
photography. And then when it wasn't like, oh, I was fussing around with all the camera, trying to
figure out composition stuff, is that's when I was finally, it became like a passion in mine.
And now I'm so obsessed with it. Yeah, and you're really into the tech side of it too.
I've read some of your stuff
That's why I think he likes it so much
Is because anything that he can
Fully understand and become an expert at
He will become obsessed with it
Like he did home brewing in college
And it was more about the technical beer
Yeah
It was more about the technical side of like the science
Behind creating the beer
Than I think you wouldn't even
Drink the beer at the end
I mean you would kind of
But he would basically set up a keg
And just say okay everybody like
try the beer, but it was more just learning like the craft of it and becoming obsessed with that.
Until I met Julia, that was my career path. I was going to own my own brewery. So I want to back up.
Where did both of you guys grow up? Before you guys met, what was your life like? Yeah. So I grew up
kind of in a few different places I was born in just outside of Seattle and Washington. Then my family
moved to Lodi in California. And I lived there until,
about seventh grade, and then I lived in Atwater, California, until just for high school. And then I
moved back to Stockton, which is next to Lodi. Thomas grew up in Stockton. And then we both went to
University of the Pacific, which is a small private school in Stockton, California. And that's where we met.
But I actually- So how long have you guys known each other now, then?
We met in 2010, but our families had been trying to set us up since we were in middle school.
So I knew his whole family. He knew my family. He'd been on our both of our,
our grandpa's flyfish and they'd been on tons of fly fishing trips together. Our grandmas are in
like the same cribbage group and like go see plays together and stuff. So I heard all about him and
funny enough his grandma had been trying to tell him about me but he had a girlfriend at the time.
And she loves to always remind him like listen to your grandma because remember when I tried to
tell you about Julia? And she actually just said it in an email last week. She was trying to set us up
with another Charleston couple.
Yeah, and she was like, remember last time I tried to set you up and I was right?
So listen to your grandma.
So who ended up pursuing him?
So our best friends were dating and introduced us.
It wasn't really, it wasn't a setup either.
It was just like we sort of randomly met finally.
And we sort of...
We both had this moment where we just met and we were like, wait, I know you.
I was supposed to meet you.
Like we already knew so much about each other.
and then, I mean, it was pretty much instant.
I would say you pursued me,
and he was the first guy I ever met that did such romantic things.
He made me dinner.
Thomas told me that you just wouldn't stop calling him and bothering him.
He said, you were just beating down his door.
I said, listen, I can relate.
Trust me, this one, he's following me everywhere.
Oh, my God.
Probably the other way around.
I'd never had a guy make me dinner before,
or just do these really thoughtful, romantic gestures.
he would always open the door for me, always bring me my favorite coffee drink.
He just did all these.
I'd never had anybody that was just kind and nice before.
Thomas, did you know you were going to marry her right away?
Yeah.
You did?
Instantly.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah?
You didn't tell that?
No.
She's lying.
So I want to talk.
So you guys are obviously now very public couple as we are.
And there's challenges that come with that, especially when you're working together.
Yeah.
So for people that are looking.
looking from the outside and they see this picture perfect couple and this great brand and
everything you guys are doing. What are the challenges of working together and being a public
couple? Yeah. I think, well, there's a lot of challenges. The challenge of being public and then
also the challenge of working together. I would say working together was a learning process
in the first couple years. And now we're in a really good place where we both know what.
our strong suits are and we both trust each other and allow each other to do those things.
Whereas in the beginning it was trying to just figure out those, what those were in the
very beginning because I had done everything sort of on my own on the content and blogging
side that just wasn't photography because he had a full-time job when we graduated from
college and moved to San Francisco. He worked in tech and he still did the photography, but
that was really it and he would help me with some website design stuff. So when he left his job
to join me full time, it was really figuring out, okay, what are his responsibilities going to be
and how can he take ownership over them? How can I let him take ownership over them and help him
grow into what his role is and allow him to develop new ideas for GalMeets glam instead of me
just dictating everything? What of the things that I respect so much about you guys?
is I've watched your evolution and I can tell from as a blogger and from an outside perspective
that it's so strategic how you guys have built your business. Like it's not, things aren't just
happening, right? I can see that you guys have a very clear brand. You have a clear message.
You know your why. Yeah. How did you guys sort of set that up at the beginning when you both
didn't know each other's strengths yet? Yeah. So it wasn't set up at the beginning. The beginning was
really random. We didn't know why we were starting. I just found blogging as a way to be creative
and to create something. Thomas was always very entrepreneurial. He really excelled in school.
He loved business. And I was studying business, but I didn't necessarily feel passionate about it.
I had no idea what I wanted to do. I was concentrating in marketing, but I wasn't passionate about
marketing. And I also had no real-life experience to feel passionate about with marketing.
I mean, I always had jobs in high school and college, and I had a marketing internship as well
in college. I just felt this intense desire to create something online. I literally woke up
one day in college and said, I need to have something online. I don't know what it is, but I need
to create a website. And I found blogger. And it's just sort of
snowballed from there, but we really didn't set up strategically.
Yeah. I mean, luckily, we started at a time where we could kind of find our voice and
and kind of experiment. And if you look back and look at what we did in the first couple of years,
it's almost embarrassing, but it's part of like the-
It's all trial and error. Like we were figuring out. Go listen to the first five to ten episodes
of this podcast. Yeah, we almost murdered him. Yeah. Well, Thomas always says if you,
what's the quote you always like to say? Like if you're not embarrassed by your first product, then you
launched too late.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like I think it's so true.
You're never,
nothing is ever going to be perfect when you launch.
So just launch.
Just do it.
Don't try and like perfect everything.
And I'm so glad that we,
I had that sort of naive outlook.
I didn't even think twice.
I just did it.
And it was never,
I mean,
it was within maybe 24 hours that I created my blog from the moment I thought of it.
I literally called my mom.
I was like,
what should it be called?
And then we came up with a name.
I am a,
vitamin snob. It took me honestly so long to talk about vitamins on the skinny confidential because I
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How do you guys navigate?
And I'm sure this, maybe this is more of a question for Thomas because that's similar
for me.
She has an established brand.
It's online.
Her audience is primarily there for her in the beginning.
And then you jump in.
How do you navigate that as a man?
leaving another job.
I'd like to just hear how you did it because there's ways that I did it, but it's a challenge
when you're jumping into somebody's established brand, especially when it's your wife.
I mean, I've been involved the entire time, and even though, like, Julia's been doing the
nitty-gritty of the content, like I've always had more of an analytical approach, and that was
actually what I used to do at my previous job.
And I kind of looked at it from this perspective, and I think I could kind of work in any
business and I'm obsessed with the customer. I'm obsessed with our readers and trying to understand
how we can impact their life. So I think it's more just like focusing on them. And I was lucky.
I'm not sure what it would have been like if I wasn't involved in the first few years of it.
But I think I've always kind of, we helped us like find our voice. It was mostly Julia, but I mean,
I was there. You know why you're smart?
while you're smart.
And I always use this analogy.
There's always got to be one Mick Jagger,
and then there's Keith Richards.
And obviously Mick Jagger's the lead singer,
and Keith Richards supports that.
Yeah.
But a lot of husbands that are jumping into their wives' brands
are running into trouble where they're trying to be on, like, equal footing.
I don't want to say that we're not equal footing,
but there's got to be a front man.
It's equal in just a completely different platform.
Like our platforms are equal,
but the platforms are made out of two different things.
There's just got to be the front man, though.
Yeah.
So Lauren is the front man, obviously.
I'll be your Keith Richards.
Yeah, I was wondering.
I'm like, well, wait.
Do you get what I'm saying?
No, absolutely.
Also, I'm a dreamer.
Like, I think of crazy ideas all the time.
A visionary.
I wouldn't say that.
But I, and I want to act immediately, always.
And Thomas reels me back in.
Sounds familiar.
And it's like, okay, that's a great idea.
Let's tone it back a little bit and not do it right now, but let's come up with some steps.
and he always is thinking big picture, not short term.
Well, it's a very strong team effort,
but I guess the reason I was asking is there's a lot of people
that are running into trouble.
It's like, who is the lead person?
Yeah.
Julie is in charge, yeah.
I mean, we both are.
I never, honestly, I never think about I'm in charge
and he has to listen to me.
It's just whoever is the expert and leading whatever topic we're discussing,
that person should be the spearheading that.
And it varies all the time.
And it varies between our team.
It's not always just you and I.
So what would be some relationship advice for couples who are thinking about starting to work together?
We've talked about a lot, but it would be interesting to hear your take.
Yeah, Thomas.
Buckle up.
Yeah, yeah.
No, I always say it's one of the most challenging things I've ever done, but it is so rewarding.
And I feel like him and I have this layer of an onion of a relationship.
Yeah. Because we work together. You know, to go to bed and it's 1130 at night and he's asking
me questions about work. That's what he does too. And I'm like, let's turn it off now.
Because that's sometimes, if a thought pops in my head, I have to talk about it. I have to get around.
Yeah. I mean, I would say what's helpful is that we're very different people and we have very different
interest and very different reasons for, you know, why we love working on this business. And I think
it's important to have some at least, like, you can't be both doing the same exact thing. I think
that can create a lot of problems. It's important to have very clear boundaries and what the
work is that you're doing. It's also important to focus on the product and make sure that it's
about the customer and not about you and your relationship. It is important to have boundaries
at the end of the day. Like, hey, 10 p.m. is our hard stop time. I think that can be a hard stop time.
Yeah. I mean, it's much easier to say, you know, have a hard stop time. In reality, we really don't
ever. But we try, you know, or just trying to do things that aren't work related so that you
just kind of get your mind off it for a little bit. But I don't. But I don't.
think we could have built the business that we have without being around each other 24-7.
You know, we work at a pace that not a lot of people can keep up with. And frankly, it's,
it's helped us build a business and get it to the point of where we're at now. And if we
were not together, if we were just business partners, not even living together, we would have
a set amount of conversations that we can have. And now we can really get into everything and
and go into the finer details because we have the time to do it.
That's the challenge though, right?
Because you're at dinner, you're at home.
Yeah.
Because we deal with the same thing, right?
We're with each other all the time.
I like Michael.
It's not like I like to be around Michael.
Exactly.
It's exactly the same.
Like we're best friends.
It's not forced.
I'm so grateful to have the relationship that we have.
And I know it's unique because people ask all the time,
how do you work with your husband?
I would kill mine.
And you do have to have sort of the purpose.
dynamic in order for it to work because I don't think every couple can work together.
Well, you're committed to building a vision or you're both on the same team towards that
vision. You make sacrifices because the rewards are so great. Yeah. And we also just have
so much fun. I mean, you know, we talk about turning off business, but some of our our best
business conversations are, you know, at midnight at a restaurant after sharing a bottle of
wine and we're just like spilling ideas and maybe we shouldn't be talking about business but it's fun
we love it we want to and we're dreamers and we're always thinking about what we can be doing better and
what the potential could be and we don't always want to turn it off I don't think I could be with
a woman who wanted me to turn it off all the time I always you know I always say couples have to
be matched in that way like if you have if there's one individual that wants to be turned on all the time
and talk about business and you can't talk about it with your significant other like yeah I don't know how
how much longevity there is in that relationship.
And so people was like, oh, you guys got to find time to turn it off.
But similarly, like, we don't always like to turn it off.
And that's why we're together, I think.
Yeah.
When did you guys decide and how did you decide to scale your business?
So you've, you know, I've watched you.
You've got this great platform.
You're doing collabs.
Like everything's going really well.
At what point were you like, okay, we need to scale this.
We need to grow the team.
And then we need to also do a product.
So it was in 2014.
and before talking about growing the team,
we knew that we wanted to go into product.
We always talked about where do we see ourselves long-term,
what scale meets glam potential,
and we knew that people came to us for a reason,
and we knew that people had sort of a defined reason
of why they were coming to us.
I have a very distinct style.
It's very specific.
I don't stray from it,
Even when I work with brands, you know, it's always very feminine, always very classic.
And we knew people were coming to us because they identified with that even if it wasn't style.
It was home decor or the way we travel or any of these lifestyle elements.
And so we really wanted to hone in on that and create something for our customers.
And it was without a doubt a dress line.
I never even questioned what it would be.
It was always going to be dresses.
And I actually saw a huge gap in the market for a product like that.
You were thoughtful about it.
I remember we talked at like a reward style conference.
Was that what we were doing?
You told me you were working on.
Yeah.
I mean, that was forever ago.
And I had, I mean, we'd been talking about it with people for years and years.
And at times it felt like it was never going to take off because, you know, we hit a lot of sort of stopping points in the process of trying to get it off the ground.
but we never, ever, ever strayed from our initial idea.
And the end result of our first collection was exactly what I wanted to create in 2014.
I never changed my mind along the way.
You could see it.
Yeah.
And, you know, there were many, many challenges, and it took four years to get it going,
and that alone could, you know, set somebody off to, you know, just give up or to do something else.
And I think also in launching a business, timing is so important, too.
When we first went out and we're trying to pitch manufacturers, four years ago,
it was a very different time in this kind of influencer space as well as on the manufacturing side.
Yeah, very little influencers had brands at the time.
The only one we could really point to was Kiara with her shoes.
Nobody else had launched.
So manufacturers were kind of being difficult or they weren't respecting the space as much?
Both, both. They didn't. If they were interested in the partnership, they were basically like, we know what works. You know, we know you have your ideas. We'll take them into consideration. But we know how to do this. Because I kept saying, you know, I know exactly what I want the product to be. I want to design it with a designer. I'm not a trained designer, but I have, you know, designs in my head that I just need to communicate. So,
somebody can draw it out and then I can work with them to create that.
You, I have so many parallels with you.
It's crazy.
We've got a lot of people on the show.
I have like you and I'm very, very, lots of similarities.
A lot of it is like basically convincing people to trust you in your vision.
No, it's also, it's very frustrating sometimes because you see and like you know what you
want to do, but like you said, you're not a designer.
Yeah.
Like even with when I wanted to launch a website, I'm not.
a website designer, but I saw what was in my head.
Exactly.
I almost can't sleep until I get what is in my head.
It's very frustrating, and you do have to be very patient.
Yeah, we had to be incredibly patient, and I was willing to be patient because I, it was
never a race for me.
It was, you know, we either do it right or we don't do it at all, and it was, you know,
we had some manufacturers that were very interested in partnering with us, but
I just knew at the end of the day they wouldn't, they wouldn't be.
right for what we wanted to create or there were some that you know had crazy demands like they
wanted us to make X amount of of money by year one or year two because they're used to doing
licensing deals with celebrities where you know they can just do crazy sales and we just didn't
want that kind of pressure on ourselves trying to build a brand we're trying to build a brand not you know
just make a quick dollar over two years or something so let me ask you both this when you
Being close to the influencer space, blogging space for so long and watching your peers launch product line, some of them doing it right, some of them doing it wrong, won't call anybody out.
What do you see as the biggest mistakes that influencers make when they're transitioning to product?
Yeah.
That's hard.
That puts you in the hot seat.
I mean, I would say you can tell when a influencer who has an audience, they have a point of view, and then when they do a product, and that doesn't.
translate. Or they're not involved with it.
Right. I mean, they maybe have a couple meetings a year to approve a line sheet,
and it's kind of based on their style, but it's more the manufacturer or their license partner.
You don't want to just attach your name or something. No, I never, ever, ever want,
that was the opposite of. That's what I was fearful of. It's the white label. Yeah, it's the white label,
you know, where you can peel off the label and stick it onto another brand's line, and it looks,
I mean, we just did two market shows because we're expanding Galmi's Glam
collection into specialty stores and boutiques, and there's so much product out there.
And I kept telling Thomas, there's so much of it that just looks the same.
You could take one label off and put it on another.
And I wanted our line to be specific.
I only wanted to do dresses because I knew that we needed to be known for something,
and we didn't need to cater to everybody.
Our dresses are not meant for everybody's style.
but I wanted women that did identify with it to really identify with it and know why they were coming
to us.
And we've been able to create that.
And I just have to call your dresses out because I have two and they're beautiful.
Thank you.
You can tell they're so thoughtful.
They're so you.
They're so on brand.
I have the pink one.
Can you say the name of the one I have?
The Ellie.
Okay.
And then I have a navy one that's so cute that I wear with white tennis shoes.
Which one is that?
It's like a collar and it's short sleeve.
Um, short sleeve. If we, if we, um, if we, um, don't know the name, we can put it in the show
notes for you guys. Yeah. I'll also put it on Instagram. Why can I think Navy short slave? It's like
little tiny dots. It's navy. It's so cute. Okay. We'll put it in the show notes for them to check out.
We've done, I mean, you have 150, right? We have so many dresses. And right now, it's funny because
we're always working a year ahead. Right now we're designing fall 2019. So to put my mind back to,
like a year out. Mm-hmm. A year out.
So how did you decide that you were going to do 150 to start?
Like how are all these decisions made?
We didn't.
We, I mean, what we started out wanting to do was nowhere near what we ended up doing.
And it all really sort of evolved from the demand in the marketplace.
I wanted to do a really tiny collection.
And we weren't initially planning on launching every single month.
We were going to do seasons, you know, spring, summer, fall, winter.
resort. And just the demand in the market for our type of product was so big that the retailer
that we partnered with, Nordstrom, just said, you know, if you have more designs, like we're
interested to see them. And we just ended up creating a much bigger line than we had ever
anticipated because of their support at launch. And we just sort of have been able to keep up with
it since and we're expanding into more retailers in February.
I had a question.
You guys have kind of started a category if you think about it.
It is.
Yeah.
I mean, especially at the price point that we're hitting, there are very little, if any,
brands doing what we're doing and focusing on the type of product that we're creating.
Too many brands are worried about, especially affordable brands, are worried about catering
to every type of customer.
They're like, we need to get this woman and we also need to get this woman.
And let's not forget about her and her.
her and her. And we have one woman we're trying to cater to, and we're able to focus on her
and understand why she loves us. Why is she coming to us? And yeah, there's probably other women
who are also identifying with a few pieces here and there. But, you know, that's great,
but we're just focused on our core customer. I always say when I'm writing a blog post,
I have a girl that I'm writing to. Her name's Caitlin. And, like, I know her nail polished color.
I know what she's listening to on the way to work. Like, I think that that's so important.
to know who you're speaking to or who you're selling to.
I mean, instead of trying to get everyone.
I have a question for Thomas.
This is a left term.
So I always take left terms.
But so obviously I was always a behind the scenes person.
I never thought that there would be any kind of public persona at all, right?
I was running businesses.
I'm traditionally an entrepreneur behind the scenes guy, right?
Lauren obviously made the decision to be a public person.
You made the decision to be a public person.
You and I both did not.
How do you now deal with that?
because I don't mind it necessarily, like having that, you know, aspect of our life now,
but it wasn't something that I chose.
So I was curious on how you've dealt with that.
I can't say we ever made a clear decision to really bring me into it.
I think I've always just been part of the story.
Yeah.
You definitely didn't feel as comfortable in the beginning being in videos or being really vocal.
I was at a restaurant one time and somebody screamed across the street,
Susan, it screamed it.
I never anticipated that in my life.
That's kind of what I'm trying to get to.
It's like when people are...
I mean, people recognize him more sometimes than I do because I think also the glasses are very distinct.
I would say I enjoy it.
I mean, I like making the connection.
And I know some people, I actually, when we're walking on the street and this happens a lot in bigger cities, especially in New York, you can tell when people recognize at least Julia.
And Julia can't always recognize.
I never notice.
I never notice.
I always see it.
And so I can tell like,
what percentage of people actually come up and say hi.
And, you know, when I'm just by myself and Julia's not there, the rare occasion I'm by
myself and I'm on the street, like people will still come up to me and I enjoy it because
I think there's this, they see, they might be more intimidated to say hi to Julia, but they're
less intimidated to say hello to me.
There was a woman that ripped my phone out of my hand the other day when I was talking to
Lauren and just started talking to Lauren right in the middle of the street.
Oh my gosh.
She had spies of her.
I'll be out like having a coffee and her readers will be like, hey,
I see Michael right now, don't worry.
He's not doing anything weird.
Whenever he travels alone, I go, careful, I have spies.
That is amazing.
How do you guys deal with?
You would never cheat.
You'd be caught in two seconds.
Oh, my God.
I would never, but still, like you're,
I can't even go down the street and get a coffee without someone reporting.
Like, hey, don't worry, I got eyes on this guy.
I love that.
How do you guys deal with, because we've dealt with it,
how do you deal with backlash and negativity online?
Honestly, I don't really pay attention to it.
The best thing I ever did for my,
myself was to realize that I can't please everybody and I can't make people like me because
there's going to be people that have no reason they just don't like you and it doesn't matter how
hard you try or what a nice email or comment you leave back to them they're still just not going
to like you and you just should not it's not your problem it's theirs because they shouldn't be
following you and there's truly nothing you can do so when I sort of finally embrace that idea
like stop obsessing over it or wondering what you can do to get them to like you, just let them go
and let them unfollow or go somewhere else because I'm not going to change who I am.
I'm not going to change how I write.
I'm not going to change my style.
I'm not going to change my personality.
For somebody I don't even know and they don't even know me and they're judging me on their perception
of me and you can't change somebody's perception.
You can only hope that you are being yourself and that people are perceiving.
receiving that in the right way.
You know, I don't, you know, if you remember this, but at the reward style conference,
I met you guys a long time ago.
This was like, this is like beginning.
I remember.
I remember.
Yeah.
And I asked to do that.
Yeah.
I don't, do you remember that?
Kind of.
It was like at the end of a really, like at the end of the party, right?
Yes.
It was late at night.
I said, because I was having trouble with it in the beginning.
What did I say back then?
You gave me the best advice.
You said, I don't respond to anything unless it's a constructive.
comment it's true it's true unless i know that something i can take something positive from it and
the person writing the comment can take something positive from it i don't respond to it because if it's
just negative negativity for the sake of being negative there's no reason i mean it's just it's
giving something attention that doesn't need attention versus if somebody is truly giving you feedback
from a loving perspective and and like they care about your brand they care about you and they've been
following along. I think, you know, everybody should be open to constructive criticism and feedback,
but there is a line that I think you have to recognize when someone's just being a dick.
Yeah, and there are many of those. And honestly, I just turn it off. I just don't pay attention
to any of that because just mentally I can't. I agree with you. And I do think it's practice.
The more you put yourself out there, the more you get used to it and then you just don't care
anymore and it's very nice like the longer you go on yeah I would say in the beginning when because at the
first couple years it was just all like butterflies and rainbows and then when like blogging really started
to get bigger and bigger and more people were like wait you know what's going on here then we did
sort of start to get some negativity and then once we just said you know nope we're not dealing with this
we're not addressing this this is a positive place and if people want to be negative
we're not going to engage with it.
And it's sort of panned off after that because they probably went elsewhere to get attention.
And, you know, I'm not entirely sure why always.
It's just it's something that we just can't control.
And I think you have to kind of let it go.
So I want to switch the gear.
You guys have a positive community that you embrace.
Yes, we do.
What is the recipe for building a positive community?
Imagine you're talking to someone that wants to get.
into the space. I'm a huge believer that this space is not oversaturated, that it hasn't even
started, that there's room for everyone. Say someone wants to get into the space, how can they
build a positive community like you guys have built? I mean, I'm a pretty positive person to begin
with, and I'm a happy person. I like being around happy, positive people. I don't like to
complain. I have truly nothing to, I mean, obviously, everybody has. Everybody has. I mean, everybody has
hardships and tough things are going through.
I complain sometimes.
I mean, I complain.
Don't get me wrong.
I just, I mean, on a platform, I don't ever want, I have nothing to complain about.
You know, like the people reading, I never want to sound ungrateful.
So I come from a perspective when writing to always be positive and to not complain and to just be grateful.
we also have a fine line of how much sort of personal moments that we share within our brand
and I would say it's pretty private.
I mean, everything.
There's so much, there's so much that we don't share.
Thomas, tell me about these private moments.
Yeah, you go for it.
Thomas, the moment.
It's just you and I talking to you.
If he would.
Let me know about the intimate moments.
If it wasn't for me, he would probably overshare.
I'm just not a natural overshare.
I hold stuff back.
And just in my nature.
I don't.
I just, that's how I am.
And he, I think, I don't want to talk for you.
I mean, I always say that I, Julia, on occasion, asks me to be funny for the camera,
which is very hard to do.
I'm a very naturally funny person.
See?
Yeah.
So I would actually rather have cameras or audio following me around 24-7.
Because you're not an actor.
You're just want to be yourself.
Right.
Okay.
Like what's off limits?
Because that's how I'm going to find out what you don't share.
I mean, I don't really videotape my day or talk to the camera that often.
I mean, you know, I'll try to, you know, if we're having a goofy moment, I'll try to, you know, bring out my phone and snap it.
And, you know, it just, it depends on, like, maybe he's not in.
a great mood to want to be on camera.
I'm not in a great.
It's so hard to find the perfect balance.
I'm not the type of person that wants to document my whole entire day.
And I never document when I'm with friends.
I never post when, you know, I'm at dinner.
I can get that with the friends because you have such a large platform.
They might be like, yeah.
I just, you know, my family members aren't interested in being on social media and, you know,
our team in the office.
I mean, there's, I would say like,
99% of our day is not documented.
I think that's part of your brand though.
It's like you're, it's a very positive, curated in the best way, whimsical space.
And it's not curated in the sense to make it look perfect.
It's just it's not in my nature to document everything.
And yeah, we love to take pictures because we love creating.
Creating is a good word.
I think it's, it's, you can tell that there's just so many whimsical whenever I look at.
Is that the right word?
Yeah, yeah, it is.
And I think the one thing I struggle the most with is, and we both do, and we talk about it all the time, is should we be sharing more?
You know, are people connecting enough?
Like, are we sharing enough of our life of our personality?
But then we stop ourselves and say, you know, if that doesn't make us comfortable, then we shouldn't be doing it.
You should do what you want to do.
You should do it.
But at the same time, people are like, you know, you're not being real enough.
And it's not that you're not being real enough.
It's that, you know, this is business.
Do you go to your work and, you know, document everything?
It's just, it's tough because on one hand, your business is your life.
I could be rolling out of bed in my underpants with my hair everywhere looking like garbage.
Maybe I ate a bunch of pasta the night before.
And the camera will be on it.
I'll have no say.
It'll be posted before I even know it's there.
I'll tune in like 12 hours later and see myself.
It's all different.
I think that's.
But if I get the wrong angle with this one, she's like, take that down.
No.
Well, sometimes he gets an angle with like the.
Can you teach him about light, Thomas?
Can you please, please teach him about light?
Like, it's a double standard.
It's so bad.
Do you have any lighting tips for him?
It's a double standard.
There is a double standard.
I mean, I'm trying to think it's pretty practical.
If you're taking a picture on an iPhone, you should be able to see that the light is.
Just go for even light.
I know I don't like taking pictures.
Maybe if I spent some time with you and like learned some of the technical stuff and some of the things that would.
It's like you have five tips that you can.
Yeah.
Do you have any tips?
I just, I really.
really don't like taking pictures. So what I do is I kind of set the bar really low and make
them so bad that she just doesn't ask me anymore. I'm curious for myself, do you have any picture
tips that you can share with the audience? So light and composition are easily the most important
things about it. I think if you're a bad photographer or an average photographer, like I said,
even light, don't have crazy contrasty light. Don't have a really. Don't have a really.
really bright background and you're standing in the shade. If you can look and find even light,
that will just get you a long way. The other part is composition. I see all the time people
like pinching to zoom on a phone is like, oh, I cringe every time I see someone to do that.
But figure out like what are the most flattering. If you're taking pictures of people, like figure out
what are the most flattering crops. You know, you can crop at the waist. You can crop at the knee.
you can crop like full body.
After the picture or when you're taking it?
No, when you're taking a picture.
I mean, you can always adjust it to get it just right when you're editing.
The other thing too is on the spot.
Yeah, I know.
It's just, it's come so natural to me.
I just, I see a picture.
You have to have some type of eye and talent.
What is the camera that you have right here?
Oh, this is a film camera.
The other tip is angles.
Try different angles.
Yeah.
If you see a scene, shoot five different angles.
of it. And another pet peeve I see of people is like, let's say you're taking a picture of someone
and it's a full body. A lot of people will change the angle up and down. So they'll shoot it and the
person will either look really, most of the time they look really short. It's hard to describe it.
No, that makes sense. Or they get too low and then you look really awkwardly tall and long,
unnaturally. Your pictures are so beautiful. I always think if you're taking an iPhone photo of
someone, let's say full body, try and have the phone match eye.
level with them. So it should be just about at the same height and there should be no angle.
It should just be kind of flat on. Okay, that's a good, that's, okay, that's a good tip.
Because I think I'm probably going to get just mostly the iPhone things going, you know?
Yeah. I'd be nice if you could take a picture of me every now and then. Lauren, don't talk to me
about angles. You should see the angles she gets to me. I look like the guy from the goonies.
Oh, always move. Like, just, I think pictures look so much more natural if there's just
movement in it. You know, just sometimes it feels really silly to just move around, but it just
sort of add a nice element to a photo and it's not just very like posed and in stoic.
Why did you guys move to Charleston? Well, there's a couple reasons, but we sort of fell in love
with the city. After you just went and visited and said it's great. Yeah, we, I mean, we'd been
living in San Francisco. It is a huge move. We had been living in San Francisco and that's where we both
ended up after college. It's where we both got jobs.
I mean, we used to travel. We would go to London. We would go to Paris. We'd go to New York.
And we would say, you know, can we see ourselves living here? And I would say we could probably
move to London. I mean, we love London. But just with the international stuff and owning our
own business, it just made it really complicated. We had explored the option of trying to buy
something in San Francisco and things just weren't really working out. And then we kind of had
this moment where we realized, like, we don't necessarily need to live here. There's nothing that's
keeping us here. We both work for ourselves, and we just happened to go on a trip to Charleston.
And within, I would say, like, by the time we drove from the airport to our hotel, at least I was
considering moving there. His parents were the ones that kept saying, you guys need to visit Charleston.
It's so beautiful, because they would go all the time. And Thomas spent a lot of time in Georgia
growing up and we just loved that part of the world.
And funny enough, like in college, when we had no idea what we were going to do or where
we were going to live, you know, we used to watch HGTV all the time.
And I would always say, you know, what if we moved to Georgia and lived in the South?
And then we just never really explored it once the reality hit of, you know, where are we going
to get jobs, like just get a job after college.
And then once we had the opportunity to kind of live.
live anywhere. And we sort of have a nomad lifestyle anyways with always being on the road. And,
you know, we see our families as much when we live near them as we do when we don't live near
them because we're always gone anyways. So we just fell in love with Charleston. And we knew that
we're always going to need to be in a big city for work. New York is a really easy flight.
Sometimes we take the 6 a.m. fly up and the 9 p.m. flight back. And, you know, we can do a day
full of meetings and sleep in our own bed at the end of the day.
Yeah, that's cool.
Which is really great.
But there's just this laid back sort of ease.
It has small town feels, but also.
All of like the cosmopolitan amenities.
So like great restaurants and shops and great people, beaches.
I have a selfish question.
Yeah.
What does your team look like?
And how have you structured that?
Because for me, it's so interesting to talk to other.
influencers because this business is so new. So it's like the Wild Wild West. Everyone says. So I would
love to know how you guys structure your team, your day. Are they in office? Are you using freelancers?
How do you guys structure that? Yeah. So the team has been slowly growing over a couple years as we
realize what our needs are. And I have a really difficult time giving off tasks that
I've been doing for years, but it's at the point where I can't keep doing all of these things
because I have more important things I need to be focusing on. So it was a huge learning curve
for me in the beginning to just be able to pass along things. But we have a really fantastic
team. It's Thomas and I. My mom actually works for us and she does, she has an HR background.
So she does a lot of HR, a lot of paperwork, works with our lawyers, sort of like manages the team
since we're always on the road.
We have one woman that focuses on content, editing photos, editing video,
coming up with sponsored brand campaigns.
She works on a lot of creative stuff with me.
We have another woman that does emails, blog emails, the email series.
She helps with the GALMEESCLIM.
GALMESCLM Instagram account.
We're now starting to do smaller influencer campaigns.
campaigns for Galmi's Glam collection and takeovers on social and stuff like that.
So she's sort of focusing on those things.
We have a part-time copywriter that we recently added to the team that helps with just all the
copy.
I mean, the amount of things that we write in in a single week is bananas.
And then we also have a part-time graphic designers slash brand.
Brand.
She's done all of our...
All of the branding.
All in Charleston.
We had an office downtown when we moved back into our home after renovating.
We moved to the office over there.
It's under construction right now, but it'll hopefully be done by the end of the year.
So right now our team is working out of her in the home office, and they all work from there.
We obviously work from there when we're home.
And then we have a whole separate team in New York for the collection that we're basically split our time between.
We live part time in New York, basically.
And the team there is vast.
I mean, it's part our manufacturers team from their end,
and then part our team from, I mean, we have, you know, seamstresses,
pattern makers, sales team, marketing team, design team,
which our design team is the smallest, it's just me and our head designer.
And then we have a fabric director, so he basically goes around the world
sourcing all of these amazing fabrics for me to go through and pick for the job.
can you guys think back on a specific I don't want to say failure or challenge along the way that at the time felt devastating but ended up turning into a blessing I would say specifically with the collection we had been in talks with a manufacturer based here in LA for about eight months we were at least eight months yeah we had been negotiating negotiating negotiating they had been trying to get kind of approval from everyone involved their investors and board and and we thought we were moving forward so we
essentially we spent eight months, let's just call it, like essentially a year.
Legal fees.
I mean, we had our lawyer negotiating that entire time, the contract.
So, I mean, almost a year.
And it's just, you know, in business there's restrictions.
You don't have as much resources or money or people, and they just, they went a different
direction.
And that felt very devastating.
We were boarding a flight and got the email.
And is your audience involved at this point?
Did they know that you're working on something?
No, we kept it very under wraps.
I mean, because we spent three years just meeting with different manufacturers and trying to find the right one.
And this was probably a year and a half in.
We thought we found the right people.
They were based here in L.A.
And we felt really good about it.
And the deal just fell through after almost a year.
And it just, it was, I turned to Thomas and said, this just isn't going to happen.
And maybe we should just give up.
But looking back, I think having that not work out, we really learned what we liked about them,
what we didn't like about them.
And then we figured, okay, how do we go out and find someone who's going to be even better
than what we thought that they could have been?
That's called.
I like to call that just refining, refining, refining, refining until you get exactly what you want.
That's what I feel like I do during my day.
It's like so much refinement always until you like whittle down exactly what it is you want.
Absolutely. And I'm so grateful for that looking back because our partners now are our family.
And they're so incredible. And there's no way that we could have had that with anybody else. I really don't think.
And we didn't really have the luxury that we had with the blog was we launched the blog in 2011.
We had this learning experience over time. But specifically with the collection, we knew that we had to do it right from the very beginning.
and because if it wasn't right and we didn't launch with the right product with the right user experience,
it just wasn't going to be the long-term brand that we wanted.
It would be really hard to gain people's trust again if, you know, we failed at, you know, from the start.
What are some routines that you guys do?
It could be a morning routine or a night routine that really set you up for success.
You're pretty serious with that coffee maker.
He loves routines.
Like he is a routine guy.
He loves structure.
So I feel like this is a you question.
Yeah.
I mean, I would say I love coffee.
I mean, I've been drinking it since I was, I think, five.
Wow.
I don't know what my mom was thinking.
How many cups a day?
Maybe like two.
I don't need coffee.
I just enjoy the taste.
I need coffee.
So Julia's day does not start until I make her coffee and our coffee maker.
I think he's more terrified.
I don't get a coffee.
I have a coffee heater by my bed and you don't do anything.
anything. It's empty every day.
Lauren's a Gemini. She's got about 11 personality, so it depends which one.
I can't wait to hear. I think he's more terrified of me in the morning without my coffee.
So he's always like, here's your coffee.
Thomas, only give the answer that's not going to make me look bad.
Thomas, give the real answer.
So I always say that I like to come up with like fake blog names.
And one of them would be call for coffee.
Because that's like anytime we're staying in a hotel this morning we woke up at 5.30.
It's always like, doing a call for coffee?
And so I know it's like if they don't have the right amount.
It's the first thing we say to each other in the morning in a hotel.
Julia likes almond milk with a side of coffee.
So she can just drink it like all day long and it doesn't really impact her much.
But yeah, if they don't, if the room service doesn't get the right amount of almond milk and they have to call again or I have to go down and get it, sometimes I'll just be like, can you just fill up the same amount of coffee that you bring?
Fill up the same amount of almond milk.
Okay, so you do coffee.
Is there anything else that you do at night or that you do in the morning that's on negotiable workout?
Could be anything.
You love to water the plants and listen to podcasts.
Yeah. Yeah.
He has his earbuds in and he's out on the porch, watering all the plants,
and he'll come in and tell me all about the podcast.
He just listened to.
So since we renovated our house, our sprinklers, we've been told not to turn them back on
until we put in a new system.
So I have to go out every single morning and water the plants.
or if I'm not home, someone has to come do it.
But it takes me about 30 minutes every day.
So I wake up and it's like the first thing I do,
I put on my headphones and just throw on a podcast.
That's therapeutic and meditated.
No, that actually sounds really really nice.
I'm not allowed to do it.
Like it's his thing.
Michael, like that.
We just got to L.A.
It's really fast.
Raina, if you're listening, I'm leaving.
I'm going to Charleston.
I'm going to start watering plants
and taking my life a little bit slower pace in the morning.
You'll really like it.
There's a house for sale down the street from us.
Done.
All right, we're going to close shop up at Dear Media.
I've got to get going.
Heading to go water the plants.
What's a day in the life for you guys when you're in Charleston working on the business?
What time do you wake up?
Well, like walk us through a day.
Well, the day kind of depends if we're working out in the morning or not because we're, let's go with we're working out in the morning.
We love doing orange theory.
So we usually wake up at 6.30.
We'll go to a class, be done around 8 o'clock.
A.m. class?
If we wake up at 6.30, normally it's a 7.30 class. So you're done by 8.30.
Well, it depends on what class we're taking, but you talk the day then.
He's got to dial her. He's holding, he's holding back. Has she had her coffee before Orange Theory?
No. Okay. No, I don't drink coffee before I work out.
Let's just say, if it's been the last six months, we haven't been so good at working out.
So let's just say our routine is not working out, which is more realistic. So I would say I wake up at like,
seven she'll wake up at 7.30 by the time she's up, her coffee has already been made.
And then literally we just jump.
Like, we might go for a walk in the morning if I don't make coffee that we'll go walk to get coffee.
It's a good way to just kind of get our...
I like moving my body first thing in the morning because you've been laying idle all night for, you know, five to eight hours.
And I just need motion.
So even if it's just like taking a loop around the...
the street.
Yeah, I got to do something, yeah.
So I would say by 9 a.m., you know, we're on our computers really working.
And 10 a.m., our employees show up to the house.
Any, like, big conversations typically take place before they show up, because it's not
like a typical office where there's conference rooms.
It's like our house and everything is open concept.
So it's all those conversations happen before they arrive.
Well, when we're in Charleston, we actually don't really shoot.
It's more we take all of.
of our business calls. We do all of our computer work. We do a lot of like bigger picture
brainstorming meetings and we do full team meetings, plan out the content calendar. It's just a,
it's a lot of computer work. I mean, I would say when we're in Charleston, we rarely leave
our house during the work week, very rarely, because there's just so much to catch up on.
because when we're in New York, I'm just focused on design stuff.
So I can't do anything blog-related or even collection-related that doesn't have anything to do with design.
It sounds like you guys time batch a lot.
Oh, yeah.
We do.
Yeah.
And then when we travel, so I say we spend about a third of our time in Charleston,
a third of our time in New York, a third of our time just traveling.
And so New York is design and focus on the collection.
Home is blog and collection.
and getting caught up on business stuff.
And then when we're traveling, it's very content focused.
I mean, we go out and shoot and we'll shoot all day long.
I mean, it's something that we love to do, so we're happy to do it.
That, like, fuels my creativity so much.
If we're in one place for too long, I start to get released or crazy
because I want to go out and create, or if we're at our computers for a whole week,
it feels very productive, but I feel like I'm missing something.
because I need to be out seeing things and shooting and creating.
But if he is out shooting and creating for too long, he gets stir crazy because he wants to be at
his computer.
So we get stir crazy for two different reasons.
So if someone is new to the Gal Meets Glam collection, how would you tell them to start?
Is there a dress that you just think is the dress that they should go to?
Yes.
Talk to someone that's listening that wants to go check out your collection.
Yes.
So our Edith dress is actually the first dress I designed, and it was the first dress.
Why did you name it Edith?
Well, funny enough, it was actually called the Julia dress, because, again, it was the first.
It was a little too perceptuous, huh?
No, so it was the first dress I had thought of way back in, you know, 2014 when we wanted to start the collection.
and it was the first dress that I saw the seamstresses making a sample of,
and I burst into tears the moment I saw it because I just couldn't believe that my vision
had finally come to life in a product, and it was beautiful, and that, you know, I wasn't crazy
with my ideas.
But it's called the Edith because when we launched, we named all of the dresses on our e-commerce,
and Nordstrom didn't want to take those.
names because that's just not the way that they they had their products. It was more
city crepe, fit and flare, midi dress. You know, it was more the description and I think
that's more for like SEO purposes, but they realized on our launch day that all of our customers
were coming to Nortrum.com and searching. Or in the stores. Or in stores. They were asking for,
oh, do you have the Samantha dress? Or, oh, do you have the rose dress? Or they were seeing that the
searches come on their website.
They called us at the end of the day and said,
can you send us a list of all the names we need to go and change all the product names?
And so by that time, I had taken that dress was a Nordstrom exclusive at launch because they loved it so much.
And it's actually our bestseller.
I'm Googling it right now as you speak.
It's our number one bestseller.
They now restock it throughout the year because it's just a classic dress, a year-round dress.
And because it was a Nordstrom exclusive, I still wanted a Julia dress.
on our e-commerce.
So we didn't name it the Julia dress
because I wanted to be able to call something
the Julia dress on our site.
And then by the time Nordstrom introduced it to their site,
it was sort of too late to switch.
So it's called the Edith.
I just looked it up and you know what it says?
Sold out.
Yep.
It is just a beautiful, classic Gal Meets Glam dress.
It embodies everything that I love.
It's simple.
It's timeless.
The skirt is really full.
It's so flattering on every single body type.
Everybody that wears it just looks absolutely stunning in it.
And it just hits a huge different age range too.
You know, a girl who's 18 compared to her college graduation,
and we've had women who are 75 send us pictures in it.
And it looks age-appropriate.
It's a huge range.
It looks age-appropriate on everybody,
even though, you know, it's very hard to have a lot.
a product that looks age-appropriate on somebody that's 18 and somebody that's 75.
So you got, so for our listeners that want to go and check it out, what's the, what's the link
or the site they can go to?
And I know you have an offer code for them as well.
Yeah, it's shop.gallmeets glam.com.
And the blog is galmeets glam.com.
But our, the dresses are on shop.com slash.gallmeatsglam.com and the code.
TSC 15?
TSC 15.
And that should give a 15% off discount.
Cool.
Yeah.
Before we go, one book.
Podcast resource quote that you guys could recommend to our audience.
It could be anything.
Anything that inspires you, business, personal.
I've been listening to a lot of podcasts as we talked about.
My favorite one right now is Masters of Scale.
Rheathman?
Yeah.
And I know a lot of people I mentioned earlier,
and the quote that he talks about all the time about launching.
And we get so many questions from people that saying,
oh, I want to start a blog.
I want to get started.
I want to do this.
But they're not ready to jump in.
And that quote of like if you're not embarrassed by your first product you launched too late,
I think that really applies to when you're getting going and started.
You really don't know what you want to do unless you're already an expert in the field.
But I don't think people who are experts would be asking us how to start.
So I think that's probably my favorite.
There's never been one venture my entire life, my entire career that I've been a part of where the beginning I wasn't a little shaken or embarrassed by the initial launch.
It could be applied across product.
to try to date me.
Well, yes, but maybe that's the one area that I was extremely confident.
But no, I think that that's good advice because, like I said, whether it's product, whether
it's content, whether it's service.
Like, it's always rough in the beginning and then you adjust along the way.
Yeah.
I think, well, for me and our team as a whole, we love using business of fashion as a resource.
There's so much, so many great articles on there.
even just on the business side, but because we're in fashion, just knowing what's going on in the industry
and what's going on in the marketplace, it's really important for us to keep up with that.
And there's, I mean, every single day we're probably sharing an article to our team to read that is relevant to us.
And I think just a lot of people in general.
Slack or email?
Slack.
Yeah.
Thomas got us on Slack a couple years ago.
and it's a hard transition once you get on you like it slack and air table our life
has changed since air table yeah it's incredible it's incredible and everybody that we've referred it to
is like this is a game changer we need to get air table because we're using a sauna asana
right now we used to use asana and i never got on it's very rare for me to get on board with
sort of a task management system or a platform because that's just not the way i work well you also
were managing so many different platforms that getting on board with
something else is like, oh my God.
It's overwhelming.
It is.
So, I mean, Airtable is amazing for your team, but also for outside sources to access.
I mean, I don't really know how to explain it.
You could, but it's amazing.
I mean, it's a database for everyone.
I'm kidding.
I'm kidding it.
Where can everyone find you, pimp yourself out, share your Instagram handles, website, everything?
My Instagram is Julia H. Engel, E-N-G-E-L, and the collection Instagram is just at GalmeetsGlam.
And our website?
Our website is galmeet's glam.com and shop.gallmeet's glam.com.
And you can also shop the collection on Nordstrom.com.
And Thomas, because you share a lot of photography checks.
Where can everyone find you, Thomas?
At T-B-B-B-E-R-O-L-Z.
So I actually deleted all my, or I archived, all my previous photos, and now I only post film shots.
He rebranded recently.
I love a rebrand.
I think I have to do a couple of things.
You need a rebrand on your Instagram.
There's a lot of yellows and oranges popping.
Well, common misconception is that I edit all the photos, but I've never edited the photos.
But the great part about shooting films is that you just get it back and you can post it.
Oh, cool.
I mean, it takes three weeks to get it back, but.
That's awesome.
Maybe I need to get one of those.
You don't have to edit it.
I'll take some pictures of you after this and I'll send them to you in like three weeks.
I just have to stand in the good light.
Tell me where to stand and I'm good.
Thank you guys for doing this.
Thank you so much for having us.
Yo, guys, I have an ask.
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