Jasmine Diane: ‘My Girl Story’ empowerment is bigger than T-shirts, Instagram
September 18, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Jasmine Diane Cooper dreams of inspiring women across the world with the My Girl Story movement, she said.
“[As women] we will tear ourselves down or we look for things that kind of separate us, but we all have the same struggle,” said the social media influencer and rising star on the Kansas City marketing scene. “So why not come together?”
Every woman — regardless of her characteristics — is already enough, Jasmine Diane emphasized.
“‘Girl’ is enough,” she said of the My Girl Story effort. “You don’t have to change. You don’t have to look like somebody else. You don’t have to write like somebody else or do what somebody else is doing. You, in all your glory, is enough.”
My Girl Story begins with Jasmine Diane’s blog, where she posts stories of other women’s struggles and successes and sells T-shirts, she said. Instagram and Twitter campaigning augment the movement.
It’s foundation began to form in 2012 when she started the blog, which led to a journey across media platforms as she discovered which ones worked best for her Jasmine Diane brand. Next came internships managing social media for various entrepreneurs and companies, she said.
Success followed her at Kansas City-based marketing giant VML, which she joined in 2017 as a social media manager. Jasmine Diane launched the movement at the same time, starting with two shirts in black and white that read simply: ‘girl.’
After the shirts became her best sellers, she set up pop-up stores in St. Louis and Atlanta, with Kansas City in her sights next for her fall collection, Jasmine Diane said. A team of influencers, designers, and models are ready to push the ‘Girl’ deeper into her own community, she said.
“Right now, the movement is really on fire in Kansas City with a diverse group of women, different backgrounds, different races, different ages, just excited to share their stories,” she added.
In the future, My Girl Story will move into schools to help lead middle and high school-aged girls around stereotypes about women and their bodies, as well as building better self-esteem and confidence, she said.
“There’s so much negative stuff on social media related to women: how we look, or trying to be the perfect shape, what we think is perfect, because of what we see. This movement, ‘My Girl Story,’ is all about authenticity and growth, empowering, and positivity,” said Jasmine Diane. “Just girl power to the fullest.”
Since most women have similar struggles, she said, the movement empowers them to share the issues they have faced and the steps they took to overcome.
“This is bigger than T-shirts. It’s bigger than Instagram. It is a movement of the future,” said Jasmine Diane.
Empowering women feels like a calling, she said, noting other brands already focus primarily on men.
“I think men can take from ‘My Girl Story’ the same principles from reading the stories, but it’s geared toward women,” she said. “I think the more specific you can be with your target, the better off you’ll be.”
2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC on top: Hat maker’s best-seller spotted on ‘GMA,’ ‘Ted Lasso’ as brand shapes its national profile
Sandlot Goods wears the spotlight well, said Thomas McIntyre, noting each high-profile media close up of its signature dad hat is another step toward establishing Kansas City’s only hat manufacturer as a national brand. After being featured on the “Made In America Christmas” segment of ABC World News Tonight with David Muir, Sandlot was again…
Rooftop Cinema Club premieres its open-air movie theater experience in KC’s Crossroads
Pink dusk views of the Kansas horizon and a cityscape bathed in sunset only added to the silver screen experience for midweek movie-goers trying out the newly opened Rooftop Cinema Club in Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District. “Just the ambiance and what they did with the design is really cute,” said Emily Hendricks of Kansas…
Kauffman targets $250K grant toward vacant storefront revitalization as World Cup looms
Funding from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is expected to help Kansas City prepare for an influx of visitors cheering on competitors at the 2026 FIFA World Cup — activating vacant storefronts in key areas with retail, artist, and community-focused pop-ups, city leaders said this week. The KCMO-centered initiative — first announced in June and patterned…

