John Foley
CEO changing the fitness game
Fitness startup 聽has transformed at-home workouts with a high-tech spinning bike and live online classes led by charismatic instructors. After six years of growth, in August the company received $550 million in new funding. For cofounder and CEO John Foley, an avid cyclist, guiding Peloton鈥檚 rise has been the ride of his life. 鈥擶ill Cockrell
Three days per week Foley was attending spinning classes when he came up with the idea for a virtual cycling class in 2012. 鈥淢y first love is outdoor cycling. But when you have kids and a job, efficiency becomes a big deal.鈥
Four-hundred potential investors who passed on Foley鈥檚 pitch between 2012 and 2015. 鈥淧eople said, 鈥榃ow, this sounds very hard and very capital intensive, and you don鈥檛 even know if there鈥檚 a market for this product鈥. I鈥檇 say, 鈥業t鈥檚 a new category, so there鈥檚 no research!鈥欌夆
Twenty-million dollars: the approximate amount Foley eventually raised from some 200 angel investors who took a risk on his concept. Most startups depend on funds from a few venture capital firms.
Two-thousand dollars: the price of a Peloton bike.
Thirty-nine dollars: the monthly price of a Peloton workout subscription. 鈥淥ver 95 percent of our bike buyers are still subscribers,鈥 Foley says.
Eighteen-thousand-five-hundred: the largest attendance at a single Peloton class to date.
Four-thousand dollars: the price of a Tread, Peloton鈥檚 treadmill (available early next year), designed to facilitate running and strength workouts. 鈥淭here are 85 SoulCycle locations globally,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are 1,000 Orangetheory studios. People like full-body circuit training.鈥
Four billion dollars: Peloton鈥檚 valuation as of October 2018.

Emma Cohen
Entrepreneur calling out all the suckers
This year the world decided to conquer its addiction to plastic drinking straws, and Cohen played a starring role. Americans alone use some 390 million plastic straws each day, with an estimated 7.4 million eventually winding up along our coasts. In 2018, Seattle and Miami Beach banned them; corporate giants including Alaska Airlines, Disney, Ikea, Marriott, and Starbucks committed to ditching them; and the Queen of England declared them unfit for royal palaces. All of which raises a crucial question: How will we slurp our iced macchiatos without them? Cohen鈥檚 answer: the stainless-steel collapsible ($25), which raised $1.8 million in 30 days on Kickstarter, thanks in part to a cheeky video featuring a mermaid, and began shipping in November. 鈥擬egan Michelson

Jonathan Cedar
Gear innovator powering the developing world
Since its launch in 2011, Brooklyn- and Nairobi-based 聽has taken a unique approach to product research and design, simultaneously creating camping goods for Western consumers and daily life tools for off-grid communities in developing nations. BioLite calls this model parallel innovation and is developing new technologies for electricity and clean cooking that can be used in both markets. The results have been impressive: the company鈥檚 clever twig-burning , which uses thermoelectricity to juice up phones and other devices, was a breakout hit in the U.S. in 2012. The next year, in India and Africa, BioLite introduced the HomeStove, which recharges electronics and reduces hazardous smoke inside homes.
鈥淲e thought, Could we build a company that serves families in a place where they need cooking fires and electric charging, while also satisfying the needs of campers?鈥 says BioLite cofounder Jonathan Cedar. 鈥淭he combination has enabled us to move the needle.鈥
Some of the same smoke-颅reduction design elements of the HomeStove were incorporated into this year鈥檚 $200 camping FirePit. The 20-pound unit, about the size of a large toaster, eliminates nearly all wood smoke and drastically improves burning efficiency with air jets powered by a rechargeable battery. Swap in charcoal for timber and it鈥檚 a pro-quality grill. 鈥擬.M.

Tyler Haney
Entrepreneur shaking up women鈥檚 athletic wear
When Tyler Haney founded Outdoor Voices in 2014, her goal was to create a line of leggings and tops that motivated people to get outside and do things. Fast forward to today and her brand has 11 storefronts and counting, 125 employees (80 percent of them women), and $56.5 million raised in venture funding. We spoke to Haney at her new Austin, Texas, headquarters. 鈥擬.M.
How did Outdoor Voices get started?
I grew up in Boulder, Colorado, at the base of the Flatirons, where the spirit of daily exercise was baked into my lifestyle. But when I moved to New York City after high school, I lost my motivation. I figured I wasn鈥檛 alone in that, and I thought, wouldn鈥檛 it be cool if there was a brand that prioritized getting out and being active versus being the first to cross the finish line?
What makes your stuff different?
We have hiking leggings coming out in 2019 that have a snack pocket. We want our leggings to say, It鈥檚 OK to stop and have a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on the side of the trail. We focus on exercisers, not athletes. That includes all shapes, sizes, and ages.
What鈥檚 behind the name?
When you鈥檙e little, your mom always says, 鈥淯se your indoor voice.鈥 I wanted to celebrate energy and enthusiasm.
You don鈥檛 like the term聽athleisure. Why?
Because it sounds very lethargic and because there are too many fashion brands applying a sport aesthetic to products that aren鈥檛 actually built to sweat in.
What鈥檚 your trick for getting unmotivated people to be active?
We鈥檙e inviting them to be part of a community without any pressure. At our stores, we host jogger clubs, stroller rollers, dog walks, and kickboxing and dance classes. I鈥檝e got rollerblades in my office right now. We put on what we call a hippie triathlon, where we bike to the trail, run, then jump in a pool. We want to find new, fun ways of getting out there.
Who is your biggest competition?
We鈥檙e going after Lululemon in a big way. I鈥檒l leave it at that.