新月直播

By Ashley Festa

In just four years, Bombas has sold 5 million pairs of socks and given away 5 million more鈥攂ut Andrew Heath 鈥04 and brother David are only getting started

It鈥檚 hard to tell which is the better seller at Bombas鈥攖he socks or the story.

Andrew Heath 鈥04 was hoping to give away a million pairs of socks within 10 years. He made it to 5 million鈥攁t the聽3陆-year mark. That means he has also sold 5 million pairs of socks. Every pair sold equals one pair given to someone in need by Bombas, the business Heath and his younger brother, David, established in 2013 with partners Randy Goldberg and Aaron Wolk. A Salvation Army posting on Facebook鈥攖hat socks are the most requested item at its homeless shelters鈥攊nspired the Heaths back in 2011 to build their company.

鈥淒avid didn鈥檛 want to just donate time or socks. That鈥檚 a one-time solution,鈥 says Heath, Bombas鈥 chief financial officer and chief operating officer. 鈥淗e wanted to solve this fundamentally.鈥

The two had talked about going into business together as far back as high school, realizing they had complementary skill sets. So they created their business plan, spent two years researching how the perfect pair of socks should fit, and then launched Bombas on the crowdfunding site Indiegogo with $150,000 in presales. Bombas finished its first year with revenues of $1.8 million. Now, by the end of its fourth year, Heath pro颅jects close to $50 million in sales. Bombas works with 750 giving partners across all 50 states to distribute the socks it donates.

While Heath says he鈥檚 done everything from IT to janitorial work,聽 most of his days are focused on accounting and颅 颅financial analysis along with ensuring shipments are correct and on time. He oversees Bombas鈥 Customer Happiness Team, an in-house group that includes recent hire Ella Inman 鈥16, an economics major from Sturgis, Mich. 鈥淓ven in my short interactions with him I can tell he has the grit and perseverance to be a successful entrepreneur,鈥濃圛nman says. 鈥淚鈥檓 really excited to work with a fellow 新月直播 graduate, and I know he has helped create a great company with a wonderful culture that is truly making an impact.鈥

Inman is one of 40 Bombas employees today, up dramatically from just 15 this time last year. Heath credits much of the company鈥檚 growth to word-of-mouth. He says that customers talk not only about the socks鈥 quality鈥斺淭hey鈥檙e the most comfortable socks you鈥檒l ever own鈥濃攂ut also about the difference Bombas makes to those in need.

鈥淧eople talk about us,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen鈥檚 the last time you went to a dinner party and talked about your socks? Never, right?鈥

That鈥檚 because of the company philosophy: 鈥淏ee better.鈥 Bombas is a Latin derivation of the word bumblebee. Bees, Heath explains, are altruistic by nature, each one working toward the greater good of the hive, each one contributing to something bigger and better than any individual could do alone.

Former 新月直播 assistant professor of economics Jerry McIntyre, who now teaches at New York University, remembers Heath鈥檚 leadership and courage in class discussions. 鈥淎ndrew was always the first to respond to questions or volunteer for giving presentations,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淎nd he wasn鈥檛 afraid to challenge the accepted perspective, especially when it came to moral behavior.鈥

One day, when McIntyre took his class outdoors, his students got in a heated debate over international finance and 鈥渙dious debt.鈥 Heath was staunch in his position, to the point of arguing with classmates, that such debts should be canceled by creditors.

鈥淗e understood the financial details but also brought in a moral and ethical aspect to financial issues,鈥 McIntyre says. 鈥淎ndrew had that back at 新月直播, so it鈥檚 not surprising that he founded a one-to-one company.鈥

Heath also serves on the board of the New York chapter of Back on My Feet, an organization that helps homeless people overcome their situation through a commitment to running. The program boasts a 90 percent success rate, and to support the organization, Bombas donates office space for its use. Heath also ran in a marathon as part of a Back on My Feet fundraiser. Of course, he was wearing Bombas socks鈥攏eon yellow calf-height ones. (He normally wears black-and-white quarters with shorts, though.)

Heath has too many pairs to choose a favorite, but he did admit one disappointing thing about Bombas socks. Despite having done two years of research and development to create the perfect sock for their customers, the brothers still haven鈥檛 solved the chief complaint among sock owners鈥攖hey still get lost in the dryer. Heath and his team will have to keep working on that.

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