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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Natalie Holloway and her husband Max transformed a $5,000 side hustle into Bala, a nine-figure wellness brand that became synonymous with wearable weights and stylish fitness accessories. (01:30) Starting from a frustration during a yoga class, the couple bootstrapped their business while working full-time advertising jobs, shipping 75,000 units from their garage before appearing on Shark Tank. (17:04) However, their journey wasn't just a fairy tale success story – after growing from $2 million to $20 million in revenue during the COVID boom, they faced near-bankruptcy when the fitness market normalized, forcing them to lay off 90% of their team and rebuild from scratch with just three employees.
Co-founder of Bala, a nine-figure wellness brand that revolutionized wearable weights and became a household name in fitness. Previously worked in advertising at 72andSunny in LA before bootstrapping Bala from a $5,000 investment to global recognition, backed by Mark Cuban and Maria Sharapova after a successful Shark Tank appearance. She's now writing "The Bala Playbook" and mentoring other founders while leading one of the most recognizable fitness brands with 20+ products and major collaborations with brands like Spanx and Pucci.
Founder and CEO of Foundr, a leading entrepreneurship media company and education platform. Started Foundr as a magazine while working full-time, growing it into a multi-million dollar business that helps aspiring entrepreneurs through content, coaching, and educational programs.
Natalie and Max demonstrated the power of starting small and proving market demand before heavy investment. (04:00) They launched with just $5,000 – $4,000 for prototyping and $1,000 for basic marketing materials. They worked full-time jobs while treating Bala as a side hustle for two years, using a "sell two, buy one more" approach to fund growth organically. This lean approach allowed them to validate their product and build sustainable cash flow without the pressure of investor expectations or debt servicing.
After their near-bankruptcy experience, Natalie learned that profitability must be the foundation of every decision. (38:36) When they rebuilt from three employees, they implemented strict financial discipline, examining every line item in their P&L weekly and cutting anything non-essential. This shift from growth-at-all-costs to profit-focused growth allowed them to build a more resilient business model that could weather future market downturns while still achieving impressive scale.
Every founder has unique skills that can become their competitive edge. (05:19) Natalie identified that their "unfair advantage" was their marketing and branding expertise from their advertising background, which they leveraged to tell compelling stories and produce high-quality creative content. Rather than trying to be good at everything, they focused on amplifying their strengths while learning other business skills over time. This allowed them to differentiate Bala in a crowded fitness market through superior brand positioning and visual storytelling.
Working with a romantic partner requires strict professional boundaries and defined responsibilities. (47:21) Natalie explained that she and Max succeed by staying in their own "swim lanes" – rarely attending the same meetings and dividing business areas clearly. Max handles product development and legal, while Natalie manages operations and marketing. They also brought in a third person as Chief Brand Officer, creating what Natalie calls "the power of three" that allows them to cover more ground without constant collaboration friction.
While intellectual property protection is important, the best defense against copycats is continuous innovation and strong brand building. (41:43) Despite facing numerous counterfeit products on Amazon and international knockoffs, Natalie focuses energy on staying ahead through constant product innovation rather than getting "wrapped up in lawsuits all day." She advocates for basic IP protection like patents and trademarks when possible, but emphasizes that building brand loyalty and continuously improving products creates more sustainable competitive advantages than legal battles.