O’Neill-Rauber: How my business failure begot confidence

November 19, 2015  |  Kate O’Neill Rauber

Photo by Austin Schmid

I recently closed a business.

O'Neill Rauber

O’Neill Rauber

Walking away, I feel a little lighter, a bit nostalgic, more confident and a lot smarter.

My business was an online clothing store called TallChicksRule.com. Great name, right?

If you know a female taller than 5’9”, you likely know the plight of tall fashionistas. I’m here to assure you: The struggle is real.

There’s this crazy misperception by clothing designers and retailers that if you’re a tall woman, you’re one of three things:

  1. 80-years old
  2. Amish
  3. A librarian

    “The difference between Kate today and Kate 2008 is I now have the confidence and business know-how to help them figure it out.” – Kate O’Neill Rauber

Seeing how I’m none of these — though I do like to read — I knew there had to be other tall chicks that wanted fashionable clothing options. After all, our petite friends have lots of choices. Why should tall ladies be shorted?

I launched TallChicksRule in April 2008.  For the next few years, I ran all aspects of the business. I negotiated with buyers and purchased inventory. Never done that before. I oversaw the company financials. Dude, I’m a public relations person — we just round. I handled all IT needs. Seems like a good time to share that I did not go to DeVry.

95 percent of the time, I had no idea how to do something or it was my first time trying. I just had to figure it out. And that’s where the confidence comes from my now closed business: I learned that I could figure it out.

TallChicksRule was not a commercial success. At one point, I owed $50,000 on a credit card. I’ll let that sink in.

(Pretty sure that day I started questioning my decision not to drink. And decided that a flask would be my next fashion accessory.)

But it was a professional success that will continue having a lasting benefit on my career.

The first 15 years of my professional life were spent in corporate PR. I can’t think of many communications positions that would have provided first-hand experiences like:

  • Figuring out how to stay self-funded and digging myself out of that $50,000 hole.
  • Attending the top clothing “markets” and pitching hundreds of manufacturers on the benefits of making special sizes for my clients.
  • Opening a brick-and-mortar location – despite having no retail experience – while continuing to run the ecommerce site and my PR consultancy – also known as my day job.
  • Learning how to navigate city, state and federal tax regulations. (Have I mentioned I’m not a mathlete?)

I now own just one business: a PR consultancy. My focus is on helping companies of all sizes tackle  their communication needs. TallChicksRule didn’t lead to the early retirement I hoped, but it did make me a better consultant.

I know what my small business clients face every day because I lived it. I get that their days are full of tasks they’ve never tried. And I know how it feels to stare at a to-do list and think “How will I ever…?”

The difference between Kate today and Kate 2008 is I now have the confidence and business know-how to help them figure it out.

After all, I’ve walked in their shoes. Mine are probably just a bigger size.


Kate O’Neill Rauber is a Kansas City-based communications consultant and founder of KOR PR with expertise in strategy, media relations, executive communications, messaging, social media and more. Connect with her on Twitter at @korauber.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Zach Sliefert, Tyler Beyer, Justin Verbenec, Joe Layne, Brett Karlin, Brent Sliefert, and Brandon Roberts, DashNow

        DashNow pivot from QR tech to text trigger helps keep JoCo startup, hundreds of restaurants serving 

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        In an entrepreneurial landscape chewed up by social distancing, it’s feast or famine for local restaurants — but DashNow has a recipe for recovery, said Brett Karlin.  “The value is being able to work with these local businesses. To help them out, to provide a product that they need to help keep their doors open,” added…

        A.J. Mellott and Heather Decker, Ronawk

        Ronawk cultivates first funding round, fight against COVID-19 from new Olathe lab 

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        As COVID-19 continues to wage war on the world, researchers in an Olathe-based lab are generating trillions of human cells that could be used to cure the ever-lingering virus.  “It eliminates a lot of the work that’s needed,” A.J. Mellott, president and co-founder of Ronawk, said of the health tech startup’s premiere product — Tissue Blocks…

        Kyle Smith, Determination Incorporated; and Sarah Muntean, All American Construction Contractors

        Rise Up, Get Started winners: Building a second chance as job market sputters

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        A slowly recovering job market is pushing more people — many of whom previously didn’t imagine ever running their own businesses — into entrepreneurship, said Kyle J. Smith. “The Kauffman Foundation would say they’re starting a business out of necessity rather than choice,” Smith elaborated, describing the importance of programs that provide a second chance…

        OYO Nova Gym by OYO Fitness

        Reluctant gym-goers help push KC’s OYO to $4.4M in pre-sales for latest home fitness device

        By Tommy Felts | June 24, 2020

        A month after breaking records as the most-funded fitness product in Kickstarter history, the KC-created OYO Nova Gym closed its crowdfunding campaign with $4.4 million in pre-sales. “To say that it exceeded our expectations is a total understatement,” said Graham Ripple, COO of OYO Fitness, the Kansas City-based startup behind the handheld home gym product.…