Altruistic underwear maker MADI Apparel grows with chic, empathic approach

June 16, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

MADI Apparel founder Hayley Besheer

Hayley Besheer always considered herself to be a passionate and empathetic person.

But what she initially struggled with was to figure out how to best contribute those skills to the world.

“If you bring positive energy into the world, then you get it back,” Besheer said. “When you bring trust to the table, you get it back. I believe in that 100 percent.”

When Besheer first began developing her business in 2012, she didn’t have to try too hard. When the pieces fell  into place, it was her heart that carried her through with the idea to combine her benevolent nature with her love for fashion design.

MADI Apparel products

Her passion eventually manifested in the form of MADI Apparel, a Kansas City-based social venture that’s helping provide underwear to women in need.

“I just feel lucky that this was put on my plate,” Besheer said. “People are always asking me like ‘How did you plan this?’ and the answer is no, I didn’t plan it. … I was in my ‘hot spot’ or my ‘flow’ and I just figured it out.”

MADI Apparel is like the TOMS shoes for underwear. Selling high-quality intimates — made in Kansas City with bamboo fabric — MADI Apparel donates a pair of underwear to a woman in need for every item sold. Since the firm’s launch in 2014, Besheer has donated more than  4,300 pairs of underwear. MADI is an acronym that stands for “Make a Difference Intimates.”

“First, I thought we’d just donate a portion of the proceeds,” Besheer said. “But that wasn’t a wow factor enough. We decided to be the most impactful intimates company that there is.”

Underwear may not be the first item that comes to mind with donations, however, the need is significant. Underwear is, in fact, the most under-donated item of clothing in the U.S. and abroad, Besheer said.

And if that isn’t enough, Besheer also learned that at risk women are more vulnerable to sexual abuse if they do not have a pair of underwear.

“(Underwear) is a social and wealth standard,” Besheer said. “in many third world communities outside of the U.S., if you had underwear you were not as targeted because you are looked at as if you had more money, or a husband or a brother looking out for you. If you didn’t have underwear, it puts a target on your back.”

MADI Apparel doesn’t donate just any underwear — the women receive a MADI Apparel product made with top-quality materials.

“When we do our drop offs we set it up kind of like a pop-up boutique,” Besheer said. “Women can come up and pick their favorite style, and we’ll write them a handwritten note. We really want to get to know the women we serve.”

When Besheer chose the fabric for the products, she did so with these women in mind — not the customers. Viscose from bamboo is not only one of the most comfortable and sustainable fabrics, but it is super long lasting and fast drying.

“That way, if the women we donate to only have a single pair of underwear, it can dry overnight,” Besheer said. “We want the women to feel comfortable, it’s a dignity thing.”

Underwear, sexual abuse and poverty are not the most “comfortable” topics to chat about, Besheer said. But with her 1,450 square-foot flagship store in Kansas City’s Westside neighborhood, Besheer said she hopes to create a relaxed atmosphere where customers feel safe and comfortable.

“The cool thing is that if our team feels comfortable about the topic and about underwear, then I think we can emulate that it is not actually uncomfortable,” Besheer said. “Our store is so comfy in general that it is way different than a typical intimates story. We want it to look more welcoming and less super sexy.”

MADI Apparel has seen a 25 percent increase in sales each quarter since 2014, Besheer said. The firm now has donated underwear in eight countries and has donated to 35 total U.S. non-profit organizations.

The products are sold in dozens of boutiques in Kansas City and across the U.S. In May, the firm established its first partnership with a department store, Von Maur. Von Maur stores in Minneapolis, Chicago and Omaha are all carrying MADI products.

This summer, MADI Apparel is launching a new program that will employ at risk Kansas City women called MADI Makes.

“This will help us because we have a way higher volume of orders than we did a year ago and our current cut and sew teams cannot keep up,” Besheer said. “Not only will we be employing local women to sew our products, we’ll be employing at-risk women who need the job and the opportunity.”

MADI Makes is made possible through a partnership with Hope Faith Ministries, a Kansas City-based nonprofit that serves homeless and at-risk individuals.

Alfredo Palacol, grants coordinator at Hope Faith Ministries, said the donated underwear has been much needed for the organization.

MADI Apparel has been a great resource in not only donating high-quality women’s underwear but by advocating and informing the broader community of the needs of women at-risk,” Palacol said. “We’re especially excited about the pilot program, through MADI Makes, that will begin to address the economic root causes that trap women in cycles of homelessness and poverty.”

As MADI Apparel continues to grow, Besheer plans trust her gut instincts and adhere to her values. She credits her success thus far to doing the right thing.

“I want to stand behind every decision I make completely, or else I cannot move forward,” Besheer said. “My personal values will always outweigh any kind of money possibility.”

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

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg speaking at SXSW; photo by Channa Steinmetz/Startland News

        Five KC-area projects get green light for $48.2M in federal funds to bolster supply chain, support racial equity, economic growth

        By Tommy Felts | August 12, 2022

        A federal push to make U.S. transportation systems safer, as well as more accessible, affordable, and sustainable will boost a handful of Kansas City modernization projects — including two that would reconnect east-west communities within the metro, the nation’s top transportation official announced Thursday. Nearly $48.2 million in funding is slated for local planning and capital…

        Mike Plunkett and John Thomson, PayIt

        ROI from PayIt’s recent $90M investment displays value of MTC’s early support, agency says

        By Tommy Felts | August 12, 2022

        Marquee successes for two Show Me state companies — including a massive funding round for one rapidly growing Kansas City govtech scaleup — show the value of Missouri Technology Corporation’s early stage investment programs, said state and agency officials Thursday. A key example, they touted: PayIt, a SaaS platform that simplifies interactions between government agencies and…

        Window wordplay: More than meets the eye for lettering artist with a hand in Cafe Cà Phê’s new look

        By Tommy Felts | August 11, 2022

        Andrea Bosnak’s name and face might not immediately look familiar, but many Kansas Citians have definitely seen her signature work across the metro. The Spur & Serif lettering artist’s craft is featured at local hotspots like The Nelle, Café Corazón, Alma Mader Brewing, Classic Cookie, Rye, and now Cafe Cà Phê’s new brick and mortar…

        Can’t-miss Saigons: KC’s Vietnamese coffee shop debuting long-awaited storefront, new drinks after slow drip

        By Tommy Felts | August 11, 2022

        Two years after her Vietnamese coffee cart’s opening act — popping up in local businesses and parking lots across the city — Jackie Nguyen has found her audience, formed a community and will soon, finally, take center stage with her own standalone Cafe Cà Phê in Columbus Park. “When I moved to Kansas City, I…