Not that long before Adrien Bettio and Hyla Nayeri were hanging out on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list, they were hanging out in first-year commerce at Queen鈥檚 University with few clues as to what the future held. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what I wanted to do, but I figured business would factor into [it],鈥 says Ms. Bettio.
The two students-turned-friends-turned-roommates got along swimmingly: both came from Toronto, both craved a smaller community in which to study, and both chose a third-year European internship with warm weather in mind.
鈥淲e both really like hot places and beaches,鈥 Ms. Bettio jokes.
Who knew that the beach was where inspiration would strike?
鈥淥ne day when we were getting ready for the beach, we looked at the bathing suits we鈥檇 packed and decided none of them were flattering,鈥 says Ms. Nayeri. 鈥淭hey were all catered to taller and slimmer bodies. Suits for curvier bodies were frumpy and definitely not sexy.鈥
Unwilling to settle for the boring and unflattering swimsuits companies were producing for real bodies, Ms. Bettio and Ms. Nayeri decided to do something about it 鈥 and the popular swimwear brand 437 was born.
Named for their address in Kingston, though by pure luck it鈥檚 also Toronto鈥檚 newest area code, 437 went from vague idea, to maybe-doable proposal, to viable business during their fourth year.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 know much about design, and nothing about manufacturing, so it was a long learning process,鈥 says Ms. Bettio.
Luckily for the then-20-year-olds, starting from scratch was also a fun learning process.
鈥淲e鈥檇 cook dinner and eat and do business all at once,鈥 remembers Ms. Nayeri. Suits were sketched on paper, sent off to be made into samples, tried on real bodies (theirs, naturally), and then tweaked and re-tweaked until perfect. Though 437 now has a dozen swimwear styles available, some of those initial designs remain the company鈥檚 top sellers.
437 was up and running by 2017 and perfectly timed to the zeitgeist. While the body positivity movement has existed in many forms for decades, social media has given people real-time power over corporations.
Mattel was giving Barbie a body makeover, plus-size model Ashley Graham scored the Sports Illustrated cover, criticism of fat-shaming and #bopo and #NoMakeup selfies filled our feeds. Celebrities from Chrissy Teigen to Demi Lovato to Kelly Clarkson lashed back hard at haters and gossip rags by proudly posting their so-called flaws.
Photoshop was out and perfectly imperfect bodies were in 鈥 both good news for 437, which would build its brand by embracing and showcasing bodies of all kinds.
鈥淎ll of our shoots have a small, medium, and larger model,鈥 says Ms. Bettio. Since all bodies buy and wear swimsuits, she adds, 鈥渟howing just one kind of body is a big problem.鈥
Many brands have since made massive shifts towards inclusivity, but 437 launched with that message already entwined into its mandate from the beginning.
The first line featured four still-staple styles: the Aubrey, Sanders, Kenzie, and Johnson in classic black, white, and pink. They鈥檝e since added many more styles, colours and prints 鈥 with annual revenue growing 500 per cent for three years in a row 鈥 and moved their inventory out of their parents鈥 basements and into a swanky downtown loft where women come to shop, snack on candy, and just hang out at monthly events with movies and pizza.
Their growth happened organically, and with big help from social-media influencers, who found and loved 437 largely of their own accord 鈥 and told their followers.
鈥湷扇舜笃 six months in, we landed on an influencer list,鈥 says Ms. Nayeri. 鈥淭hat was a really encouraging moment that maybe we were really onto something.鈥
Soon their suits would be seen on Kylie Jenner and in the pages of Vogue, landing Ms. Bettio and Ms. Nayeri on the 2021 Forbes list.
But it hasn鈥檛 all been smooth sailing for the swimwear company. In spring 2020, 437 was ready to launch a new line of 鈥渢ravel-based, summer-heavy鈥 apparel. The timing was unfortunate, given the global pandemic that then descended on the world; nobody would be travelling in cute clothes in 2020.
In the face of a disappointing but inevitable failure in the making, Ms. Bettio and Ms. Nayeri put the line on the back bur
鈥淲e knew we needed to change the business model,鈥 says Ms. Nayeri, 鈥渁nd focus on at-home styles.鈥
Flexibility is key, even for a sexy swimwear brand, so 437 added sexy sweatpants to their shop: five luxe two-piece sweat sets in extra cosy fleece (each accompanied by a matching bikini, of course).
Going with the flow might be the secret to any successful business, and it鈥檚 a lesson the pair are trying to master. Pinned to Ms. Nayeri鈥檚 office wall, for instance, is a handwritten reminder that sometimes you need to let go and see what happens.
鈥淚t really captures what we鈥檙e trying to do,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut also that sometimes you need to be agile and try something else.鈥
Neither can imagine what they鈥檇 be doing if not for 437 鈥 鈥淯m, marketing?鈥 guesses Ms. Bettio 鈥 but in the same moment she acknowledges that running a fashion business isn鈥檛 as glam as it once seemed.
鈥淎 lot of people aspire and idolize a career in fashion. We certainly did,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut your life is not just made once you have it. Running a business is hard.鈥
Accordingly, and now at the wise old age of 25, Ms. Bettio and Ms. Nayeri make sure to stay balanced.
鈥淲e make sure we don鈥檛 overwork,鈥 says Ms. Nayeri. Free time is written into the plan with everything else. 鈥淲e set schedules and make sure we take time to do other things or nothing. We make sure there鈥檚 time to eat and sleep well, to work out, to meditate.鈥
Ms. Bettio concurs: 鈥淒ays can go from zero to 100 in just a few minutes, so we have to be ready emotionally.鈥
The most exciting curveball they鈥檇 love to have thrown their way? 鈥淕otta be Beyonc茅 [wearing 437],鈥 says Ms. Nayeri.