Emily Hosie, Artsciā04, was in the midst of a rewarding and successful retail career when she decided she was ready to start her own business. After having her first child, she identified a gap in the retail market for baby gear, so she created , an online marketplace that connects brands and mass retailers with parents to shop overstock and open-box (returned) baby gear at up to 80 per cent off regular retail prices. Five years later, it is the largest baby gear liquidator and returns e-commerce platform in North America, with operations in Toronto, Brooklyn, N.Y., and Lebanon, Tenn. She credits her Queenās experience for playing a role in what she decided to do in life.
Tell me about your successes with Rebelstork.
My entire background has been in retail. Specifically, off-price and value-channel retail are what Iām passionate about. I was vice-president of merchandising for the TJX companies, which is the largest off-price retailer globally. Prior, I was vice-president of merchandising and vice-president of product development for Saks Fifth Avenue. I was on the Saks Off 5th team, so again, the outlet division.
I have a six-year-old and a three-year-old. When I first got pregnant, I couldnāt find the value-channel store for baby gear, so I asked friends in the industry what they did with their excess inventory or returns. They didnāt have an answer. The U.S. estimates it has more than $800 million worth of returns annually, and itās growing rapidly. Itās a trillion-dollar problem there. I realized that you can create a zero-per-cent return rate on your balance sheet if youāre throwing out the product and writing it off. So thatās where Rebelstork started. We asked how we could partner with the largest retailers and brands by taking their overstock and returns and vetting them and selling them at a discounted price on our platform.
Can you quantify your growth in the first four years?
We have more than 40 full-time employees. Weāve achieved upwards of 300 per cent growth year over year and weāre proud to be venture-backed. Being a female founder is rare in its own right, but only about five per cent of companies achieve venture funding and of that, only 0.5 per cent have female founders. So, we are proud to be female-founded and considered one of the most innovative companies in Canada.
You were in labour when you completed a pitch that led to a venture-capital (VC) investment. Tell me about that.
My water broke, but I was about to start a VC partner pitch by teleconference. I didnāt tell my husband. I knew I was fine at the time, so I carried on and did the pitch. At the end, [a VC partner] asked for a document. A colleague said, āIāll send that; Emily needs to go to the hospital.ā By the time my daughter Piper was born, I had the documents. Thereās a photo of me lying in my hospital bed with my baby, signing them.
āI had a mind shift when I was working in retail from āIām really lucky to have this jobā to āTheyāre really lucky Iām working here.āā
What is your first memory of wanting to be an entrepreneur?
I always knew I wanted to be my own boss, but felt I needed to work under someone to learn how to run a business. I discovered I wanted to go into retail at Queenās because I volunteered for a charity that held a fashion show as its big fundraiser. I was the stylist and spent every spare moment doing it. I thought if I could spend this much time when Iām not even being paid, thatās the path that I should follow. I made a list of companies I wanted to work for. I had a mind shift when I was working in retail from āIām really lucky to have this jobā to āTheyāre really lucky Iām working here.ā Thatās when I knew I was ready to do something on my own.
Why did you want to be your own boss?
I like moving quickly. I didnāt always want to have to get my ideas approved. Big companies can be slow. At Rebelstork, we talk a lot about how things happen gradually ā and then suddenly.
Can you share a piece of advice from a female mentor along the way?
Being creative and going against the norm is something I learned from all my mentors. I worked under some creative, out-of-the-box thinkers. I also learned to be a good leader. You donāt have to be nice; you have to be kind. Thereās a difference. Direct feedback is kind; avoiding direct feedback to be nice isnāt kind.
Whatās your best piece of advice for would-be entrepreneurs?
You have to have thick skin. If youāre doing something thatās never been done before, you will get pushback. You have to believe you have the solution and you have to educate along the way. Donāt underestimate the power of educating on your idea.
Rebelstork was named one of Canadaās most impactful companies, and youāve received a Veuve Clicquot Bold Woman Award. What do those mean to you?
Itās more about the company that our team has built. We worked so hard. Half of our employees resigned from TJX to work at Rebelstork. We wouldnāt be where we are without this team. Itās awesome to be recognized for the work weāre doing. Every article you read about start-ups says, āIt started in our basement.ā That is what happened with us. My husband delivered our first shipment on his bicycle with our son in tow.
Youāve saved 180,000 pieces of baby gear from going to a landfill. What does that mean to you?
Weāre a certified B Corp, which weāre really proud of, so every decision we make has to have social and environmental ethics involved. What does a landfill with 180,000 strollers and things even look like? To know that we can divert the resalable product away from landing there and into the hands of parents across North America at up to 80 per cent off makes us proud.
Does Queenās learning figure in your day-to-day?
University for me was about how could I learn. Could I develop good habits? It wasnāt what I studied; it was the habits and the work ethic I gained. And I met many of my closest friends at Queenās.