The women at Wylder Goods had a big dream: to create the world's first online outdoor-gear retailer for women, bust into an industry overrun by bros, and save the planet. All in four not-so-easy steps.
Step One: Embrace Your Ambition
One night in March 2015, housemates and were sitting on a leather couch in front of a woodstove in their Northern California home, sipping Bulleit bourbon, eating Mexican food, and hashing out the details of their plan to infiltrate the outdoor industry.听
鈥淲e need to work with companies striving for social and environmental impact,鈥 Elliott said.听
鈥淎nd we want them to be disruptive,鈥 Dial added. She took a sip of bourbon and 颅rested her glass on the coffee table. Then reality 颅began to sink in.听
鈥淗oly shit,鈥 said Dial. 鈥淲e鈥檙e up against giants.鈥澛
There was good reason for trepidation. The duo were hatching the business they鈥檇 颅ulti颅mately call , the world鈥檚 first 颅online outdoor-gear retailer for women. Over the past decade, dozens of e-commerce聽sites have launched to sell gear from a broad range of brands. The biggest players, like and , generate tens of millions in revenue by offering massive 颅selection and, 颅frequently, big discounts. More recently, boutique outfits like have made their mark by presenting highly curated inventories that attract loyal, discerning buyers. But while some sites have sections for women鈥檚 products, nobody had tried to build a business catering primarily to female consumers鈥攅specially not core adventure athletes.听

Dial and Elliott envisioned a company that did exactly that. The gear would be 颅selected by 鈥攑rofessional athletes, photographers, activists鈥攚ho鈥檇 test each product for durability, fit, and function. Product descriptions would occasionally be raw. 鈥淭hings like 鈥楾his shirt contours your muffin top,鈥 鈥 Dial told me later. Wylder would also be one of the outdoor industry鈥檚 few benefit corporations, or B Corps, meaning that it would be obligated to donate, in its case, 2 percent of its proceeds to outdoor nonprofits.听
Dial, 36, had been nurturing the 颅Wylder idea since July 2013. At that time, she owned an adventure-travel company in Portland, Oregon, called , which ran small yoga, surfing, and rock-climbing trips along the Pacific Northwest coast. The job frequently reminded her about the dearth of solid, high-performing women鈥檚 gear. 鈥淭he stuff wasn鈥檛 cool,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was ugly. For women the options were khaki or paisley that none of us really wanted.鈥 After a year running it, Dial sold Nomad. 鈥淚t was a crash course in business,鈥 she says. 鈥淎t that point, I wasn鈥檛 willing to make the sacrifices necessary for it to be successful.鈥
While聽some sites have sections for women鈥檚 products, nobody had tried to build a business catering primarily to female consumers鈥攅specially not core adventure athletes.
Around then, Dial met Brad Parker, an accomplished rock climber and massage therapist, at a yoga festival in Squaw Valley, California. 鈥淲e started talking and didn鈥檛 stop,鈥 says Dial. 鈥淎fter three days, he told me he loved me.鈥 With nothing tying her to Oregon, Dial moved to Sebastopol, an artists鈥 hamlet an hour north of San Francisco, to live with Parker and work as a freelance web developer. A year later, he took her on her first climbing trip in Yosemite, where the two summited . After they descended, Dial remained at camp while Parker climbed one more pitch before dinner. That was the last time the couple would see each other: a few hours later, .
Whenever Dial tells this story, tears stream down her face, and she鈥檒l often look to Elliott for support. Dial spent five months barely able to get out of bed. 鈥淭he anguish and despair and mistrust鈥攖hat all your dreams could evaporate,鈥 she says. . A development associate for the , 颅Elliot, then 27, had befriended Dial about a year before Parker鈥檚 death. She鈥檇 recently broken up with her boyfriend and needed a place to live. 鈥淪he created a whole new space,鈥 Dial says. 鈥淗ope.鈥 The two would stay up late crying, drinking whiskey, and, later on, talking about Dial鈥檚 vision for 颅Wylder. 鈥淕rief has the ability to recalibrate everything,鈥 Dial says. 鈥淚 had an idea of what my life would look like, but grief comes and takes that away and leaves this vacuum. When you have nothing to lose, it makes it feel less crazy to take a big chance.鈥澛
In January 2015, Dial and Elliott attended , a biannual trade show in Salt Lake City that offers gear sellers a first look at the season鈥檚 new products. They鈥檇 come packing their concept for Wylder at an opportune moment. Industry brands had long treated the women鈥檚 market as an afterthought. Even the relatively small percentage of female-specific products created over the years were derivatives of stuff designed primarily for men, results of the 颅maligned 鈥渟hrink it and pink it鈥 approach. But outdoor companies were increasingly seeing 颅women consumers as a massive growth oppor颅tunity鈥攊f only they could reach them before the competition.听
Dial and Elliott came away from the OR show convinced of two things: nobody was attempting anything like what they had in mind, and several brands, including and , were struggling to get their women鈥檚 lines to consumers. 鈥淚t鈥檚 happening,鈥 Elliott confided to one of her friends when she returned to California. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure when, but it鈥檚 happening.鈥澛
Step Two: Network Like Crazy
By April 2016, it was, in fact, happening. The company finally had a name, which Dial had thought up one day in the shower. 鈥淚 took it from wilderness,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I liked the way the y looked.鈥 It also had a base: Salt Lake City, Dial鈥檚 hometown. Over the previous year, the women had developed key parts of the company鈥攔elationships with women鈥檚 outdoor groups, narratives for the website, and logos鈥攁nd consulted with e-commerce pros on everything from logistics management to back-end web design.听

They also created . 鈥淣either of us came from money, so we had to do something else,鈥 says Elliott. for outdoor companies. Kickstarter鈥檚 top three most-funded projects (two Pebble smartwatches and a cooler with a built-in blender and speaker) are active-gear oriented. The platform鈥檚 ninth-biggest campaign鈥攚ith 26,359 backers front颅ing almost $6.5 million鈥攚as built around a messenger bag from a San 颅Francisco鈥揵ased company called , a regular on the Outdoor Retailer floor.听
The Wylder Kickstarter campaign had two goals: generate enough money to get the company off the ground, and prove to outdoor brands that there鈥檚 strong demand for an online women鈥檚-gear retailer. It went live April 19, 2016, with a goal of raising $45,000鈥攅nough to build out the website, buy initial inventory, cover basic legal work, and, with whatever was left over, pay themselves鈥攁n amount they figured would come to only a couple of thousand dollars. They鈥檇 produced a , which, through trades and favors, had cost them less than $500. In the clip, you watch as women surf, run, and backpack. 鈥淲hat inspires me about Wylder is a chance to build a better business,鈥 Elliott narrates. 鈥淭he chance to take all the best things that are built to last, that are built with social and environmental good in mind, and celebrate them.鈥 For prizes, Dial and Elliott offered聽donors everything from trucker caps to a weekend bouldering in Moab led by the women and , a close friend. They mobilized a grassroots campaign, recruiting a network of brand reps, industry influencers, active women, and friends to spread the word.
I had an idea of what my life would look like, but grief comes and takes that away and leaves this vacuum. When you have nothing to lose, it makes it feel less crazy to take a big chance.
At 1:30 that afternoon, Elliot and Dial were holed up at Dial鈥檚 parents鈥 house in Draper, Utah, drinking LaCroix, eating dark chocolate, and staring at a computer screen. For four minutes nothing happened. 鈥淚t was the longest four minutes of my life,鈥 says Elliot. 鈥淭hen鈥攄ing! Backer alert!鈥 One of her high school friends had just donated $1, enough to encourage others to follow suit. Within an hour and a half, the women were scrambling to find more donor gifts. By the time the fundraising drive had ended, in May 2016, they鈥檇 received more than $54,000 from 606 backers. That, plus a low-interest loan from a friend, allowed the women to move forward with Wylder.听
鈥淭he Kickstarter campaign proved that we had buying power with vendors,鈥 says Elliott. Indeed, while 600 backers doesn鈥檛 sound like much, the sudden emergence of a passionate group of women willing to put money into the idea caught the industry鈥檚 attention. As Tyler Nelson, Patagonia鈥檚 sales representative in Utah, put it, 鈥淭hey have a following that established retailers would kill for.鈥澛
Step Three: Hustle聽
A few days into August 2016, I met Dial and Elliott at the , at Outdoor Retailer鈥檚 summer show, where the two ruddy-cheeked brunettes鈥攕o similar in appearance that they could pass for sisters鈥攇reeted me with smiles and an abundance of self-esteem. 鈥淪ee my key chain?鈥 Dial asked. Engraved in it were the initials JMFD. 鈥淛ainee Motherfucking Dial,鈥 she chuckled.听
Their website, , was about half complete, and the two were at OR to curate the products they鈥檇 sell through it. To control their branding, outdoor-gear manufacturers鈥斅璸articularly big dogs like the North Face and Patagonia鈥攃an be picky about who they let sell their products. I expected the Wylder women to have to plead with companies to hear out their strategy. So I was surprised when, during a meeting with , Dial and Elliott dressed down a marketing executive for what they deemed were products with a less-than-satisfactory environmental impact.听
鈥淚s Salomon talking about using the ?鈥 Elliott asked.听
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure what that is,鈥 the executive responded.
鈥淚t measures the impact of products on the environment,鈥 said Elliott.
鈥淚鈥檇 give Salomon a four out of ten on sustainability,鈥 Dial interjected.
鈥淵our competitors are using the Higg 颅Index, so you should at least look it up,鈥 said Elliott.
Nonetheless, the Salomon exec was soon fawning over the women. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not taking on more online retailers,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e gonna push for you guys.鈥 Walking to the next meeting, Dial explained that they鈥檇 become used to such receptiveness. 鈥淧atagonia wasn鈥檛 taking on more e-commerce sites, either,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut they made an exception for us. They even waived their minimum order requirement.鈥
The fact that outdoor brands are so eager to reach women gives Wylder an advantage over other gear-curation sites. Nike reported a 20 percent jump in sales of , while men鈥檚 products grew just 9 percent; it鈥檚 projecting $11 billion in sales of women鈥檚 products by 2020. This spring, , that included millions of dollars in ad spending and more than 1,000 events. Across the industry, while many segments stagnate, women鈥檚-gear sales are growing (by nearly 10 percent year over year in 2013, the most recent data available). The first online storefront to successfully tap this awakening giant is going to clean up. Of course, that requires building a functioning business. And fast.
Step Four: Buckle Up
In February, three months after the launch of the website, I meet with Dial, Elliott, and Gina Peters鈥攁 recent full-time hire who handles contracts and logistics with vendors鈥攁t their new office inside an old chocolate factory in Salt Lake City. They moved in last November, after working from Elliott鈥檚 living room for seven months.听
The office is cozy, just big enough for three desks, a couch, Elliott鈥檚 Lab-颅Doberman rescue, Moka, and a rug that doubles as Dial鈥檚 yoga mat. One wall is plastered with catalog clippings from various companies, products that will make it onto the website. A whiteboard, scribbled with sales goals, takes up another wall. Dial shoots all the product聽images for the site on a piece of white 颅butcher paper in a corner of the room, and the 颅women store inventory in a basement unit they share with . Five brands have agreed to ship 颅directly from their warehouses to consumers, 颅allowing 颅Wylder to carry more products, and the women have started experimenting with presales as well, to better gauge demand.听
鈥淭here are 2,000 reasons the world聽doesn鈥檛 want your business to succeed. I鈥檝e questioned my self-worth, cried myself to sleep, and asked myself more times than I can count, 鈥榃hat the hell was I thinking?鈥”
went live on November 23. To build its guts, the women hired a coder, but the style and design of the pages is all theirs. It鈥檚 attractive and easy to navigate, and will sell products from about 70 companies, including , , and .听
To date they have yet to make full use of their ambassadors鈥攚omen like , an Australian adventure photographer, and the , a pair of Alaskan anglers. The plan is to eventually pay them to help lead events, like a photography workshop or a fishing trip, as well as to write blog posts and promote Wylder to their followers on social media. More concerning is that sales have been slow. The company鈥檚 biggest day was in December 2016, when it sold 16 products and made around $2,000. 鈥淲e鈥檙e able to pay bills,鈥 says Dial. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e barely paying ourselves.鈥澛
There鈥檚 also an encroaching feeling of burnout. The women are constantly working to pack inventory and fill orders, market the company, and do the accounting. 鈥淚鈥檓 a basket case a lot of the time,鈥 says Dial. 鈥淭here are 2,000 reasons the world doesn鈥檛 want your business to succeed. I鈥檝e questioned my self-worth, cried myself to sleep, and asked myself more times than I can count, 鈥榃hat the hell was I thinking?鈥欌 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 not very good at faith, so often I just try to remind myself that on the other side of this sacrifice is a landscape that looks entirely different.鈥
Loss of momentum isn鈥檛 unusual for crowdfunded projects. In 2012, for one of the first rechargeable headlamps. He quickly sold 1,000 units, mostly to people who鈥檇 supported his campaign, and built another 2,000. Those sold, too, many to customers who鈥檇 received coupon codes from early Kickstarter backers. But scaling up proved difficult. In three years, Freschl was out of business. 鈥淭o a certain extent, I think Kickstarter made it harder for me to be profitable,鈥 says Freschl, who now works as a mechanical engineer for . 鈥淚t gave me the opportunity to launch a project without proper funding. I got in over my head without somebody with deep pockets behind me.鈥澛
But Dial and Elliott remain optimistic. To increase their reach, they鈥檙e partnering with women鈥檚 outdoor groups on the East Coast. They鈥檙e experimenting with Facebook ads. There鈥檚 talk of converting Sprinter vans into mobile stores. And in January, they began seeking out investors and talking with people from . 鈥淲e only want to be working with people keen on social-颅impact investing,鈥 says Elliott. 鈥淚n retail that鈥檚 a very tiny pool.鈥澛
On the day of my visit, the women have a conference call with David Stover, 颅cofounder of , a company that builds skateboards from old nylon fishing nets and also launched on Kickstarter. Three years ago, Bureo received a crucial second round of investment, from Patagonia鈥檚 capital fund, . 鈥淚t鈥檚 been an unreal experience,鈥 Stover says. 鈥淲e went from not knowing what that partnership would look like to鈥攆ast-颅forward three years鈥攚orking on the R&D of fabrics for a Patagonia line. We鈥檙e looking at sourcing our nylon to be used in jackets and other products. The benefits of the relationship have gone far beyond any financial support they provided.鈥
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a beautiful story,鈥 says Elliott.听
The call ends, and the two women look at each other and smile. Then they get back to work.
Correspondent Gordy Megroz聽() wrote about Kikkan Randall in March.