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SuccessHow I made my first million

Emma Grede—the self-made millionaire behind the $5 billion Skims empire—says it all began with an audacious cold call to Kris Jenner: ‘The difference between me and someone else is, I made it happen’

Orianna Rosa Royle
By
Orianna Rosa Royle
Orianna Rosa Royle
Associate Editor, Success
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Orianna Rosa Royle
By
Orianna Rosa Royle
Orianna Rosa Royle
Associate Editor, Success
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 16, 2026, 2:29 PM ET
Emma Grede runs multiple businesses with the Kardashians. In an exclusive interview with Fortune, she reveals that empire can all be traced back to one phone call she made to Kris Jenner that changed everything.
Emma Grede runs multiple businesses with the Kardashians. In an exclusive interview with Fortune, she reveals that empire can all be traced back to one phone call she made to Kris Jenner that changed everything.Jeffrey Mayer—WireImage/Getty Images

You’ve probably heard of British entrepreneur Emma Grede because of Skims, the $5 billion shapewear company she runs with Kim Kardashian. She’s also invested in other brands with the family, such as cleaning products company Safely and Kylie Jenner’s clothing line, Khy. And the growing empire can all be traced back to one phone call she made to Kris Jenner that changed everything.

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It was 2015, and Grede had built her own entertainment and talent agency, Independent Talent Brand, which saw her jetting between London and L.A. “I knew every manager, agent, publicist, lawyer in Hollywood, that was my job,” Grede recalls in an exclusive interview with Fortune. 

It put her in a perfect position to pitch her new idea: a radically inclusive denim brand tailored for women who’d been overlooked by mainstream fashion. In her mind, she’d already picked the perfect partner for the brand: Khloé Kardashian, who “embodied that idea right from the beginning.” The star had often been honest about her experience as the curvy sister. 

But here’s the catch: Grede hadn’t run a fashion business before, and the two had never worked together. Instead of waiting for an introduction, she boldly called the family matriarch and “momager,” Jenner herself. 

“I had an idea, and I formed the partnership in my mind,” the now 43-year-old self-made millionaire says. “The difference between me and someone else is that I made the phone call, I took the meeting, and I made it happen.

“I have no impostor syndrome and no delusions of who gets to run a business,” Grede adds. “I just thought, ‘If not me, then who?’”

Jenner asked Grede when she’d next be flying to L.A. to discuss the partnership face-to-face. At the time, Grede was only flying that way once a quarter, but she quickly lied and said she was heading there the next week. So that’s exactly what she did—and the rest is history. 

When Good American denim dropped a year later, it made $1 million on day one, making it the biggest denim launch in apparel history. And since then, she’s gone on to sit on the board of the Obama Foundation and become the first Black female investor on Shark Tank. Most recently, she’s teamed up with tennis champion Coco Gauff for a mentorship campaign with UPS.

Today, Grede says, she’s always advising founders to copy her, be more bold, and put themselves out on a limb: “An idea in your head is just an idea in your head. A lot of people talk and speak about things a lot—sometimes you just got to do.”

Emma Grede says she’s always been ‘audacious’

Grede’s confidence isn’t luck—or even something she developed alongside the billion-dollar success of her businesses. It’s a trait she was just born with. “I’ve got a lot of audacity, and I think that you need that to get to where you want to go,” the East Londoner tells Fortune.

In her late teens, for example, Grede had aspirations of working in Britain’s equivalent of Broadway. When the theater bosses ignored her handwritten notes asking for work experience, she stormed in there in person.

“I remember pounding the pavement in the West End,” she recalls. “I just thought because I didn’t get any answers, that maybe they weren’t getting my letters. So I took to hand-delivering letters.”

Even when she was holding down a day job, she’d boldly ask customers with enviable careers for work experience—and it would work.

“When I was working in a clothes shop, I would talk to everyone. I’d be like, ‘Where do you work? What would you do?’ If a stylist came in on a Friday and was doing a shoot on the weekend, I’d be assisting them on the weekend. I did that multiple times.”

She says she would actively put herself into “situations,” versus passively waiting for opportunities to come to her. After finding out where customers worked, she would follow up with: “Do you need some help? Can I come?”

Grede’s advice for jobless Gen Z: Kill your darlings

Millions of Gen Zers are currently unemployed—or rather, NEETs, not in employment, education, or training. 

Grede, meanwhile, has been working since the start of high school.

“I have had a job since I was 12,” she says. “I started delivering newspapers, then I worked in a deli, then I worked in about four different clothing shops, then I spent a year and a half doing work experience in every small designer and PR agency in London. Then I worked for Quintessentially, then I went to Inca Productions, where I worked for a fashion show production company. And I changed my job after about three years there. So I went from being an event producer to running the sponsorship department, and then I started my own company.”

Essentially, each experience led to the next. She treated every role—no matter how unglamorous—as a way to collect skills, contacts, and credibility that stacked into her next move. Thanks to a habit of speaking up and standing out, she squeezed real, résumé-worthy experience out of even the most unassuming jobs.

Of course, even Grede experienced her fair share of noes along the way: “I got very, very, very comfortable with rejection. If I think about how many things didn’t work out for me, there are a lot more than the things that seemingly on paper did work out.”

But she dusted herself off and tried again. It’s why her advice for those struggling to break in is to look at every experience as a step forward—even if it’s not the dream role yet. 

“I would think about the idea of transferable skills,” she advises Gen Z job seekers. “We all set ourselves up to think about exactly what we might want to do. And the reality is that you can learn pretty interchangeable skills anywhere.” 

Growing up, Grede was fixed on the idea of working in fashion. “I could have got a lot of those skills in an advertising agency or working in another creative industry,” she explains. Gaining experience at an art gallery or boutique and then working your way up the ladder is much easier than pining for a job at a fashion house straight out of college. You just have to put aside your ego and prioritize building momentum over perfection.

“I’d do anything to get yourself going in forward motion,” Grede explains. 

“In England, we have that lovely saying, ‘killing your darlings,’ and sometimes you just have to kill your darlings. You have to do whatever you’ve got to do to move forward. It’s better to just think about forward motion as opposed to being so fixated on what you’d originally imagined things would be like.”

A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on Sept. 23, 2025

Read more success interviews from Fortune’s Orianna Rosa Royle:

  • L’Oréal exec cut her teeth at luxury brands Chanel and Kiehl’s. She says the secret to her success was always saying yes
  • TodayTix CEO took over at 31. He tells aspirational Gen Zers to ditch the ‘fake it till you make it’ act if they actually want to be successful
  • Scale AI’s 30-year-old billionaire founder still shops at Shein and pulls up to work in a Honda Civic: ‘Act broke, stay rich,’ Lucy Guo says
  • Too Good to Go CEO’s big break came when she left her consulting career without a plan. She says losing $100,000 is ‘pretty cheap’ to pursue your dreams
  • The millennial CEO behind Britain’s first compostable coffee pod unwinds by sitting in his infrared sauna after work
At the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit, Fortune 500 leaders will convene to explore the defining questions shaping the workforce of the future—delivering bold ideas, powerful connections, and actionable insights for building resilient organizations for the decade ahead. Join Fortune May 19–20 in Atlanta. Register now.
About the Author
Orianna Rosa Royle
By Orianna Rosa RoyleAssociate Editor, Success
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Orianna Rosa Royle is the Success associate editor at Fortune, overseeing careers, leadership, and company culture coverage. She was previously the senior reporter at Management Today, Britain's longest-running publication for CEOs. 

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