How Poppy Dinsey went from fashion blogger to startup founder

Blogging

Fashion by its very definition is something thats constantly changing. And changing is something 24-year old blogger Poppy Dinsey knows all about.

Poppy set up What I Wore Today (WIWT) back on January 1st 2010, and it has always been a blog with a simple underlying premise: Upload and share one photo each day of Poppy in a different outfit. Interesting ideabut why?

With a new year underway, Poppy pondered whether she could create a photo diary of herself in a different combination of clothes for the next 365 days.

It wasnt so much about buying new clothes, it was more about making use of the extensive collection she had already amassed over the years.

Whilst many among us might dream up similar quirky plans and stick to them for a couple of weeks, Poppy didnt miss a single day.

WIWT has developed beyond its initial remit, and Poppy now also interviews celebrities on what theyre wearing, and theres even a section called The Lust List. Check it out for yourself.

With around 90,000 monthly visitors and a burgeoning reputation in the fashion blogging fraternity, Poppy has taken WIWT from a hobby through to a money-making business. And to capitalize on this, WIWT is about to relaunch as a community-based fashion website, where anyone can upload and share pictures of themselves in their latest clobber.

I caught up with Poppy to discuss blogging, business, estate agentsand her plans for WIWT as a fully-fledged startup.

The ! birth of a blogger

Poppy is from near Guildford, Surrey, and 13-year old Poppy also had a penchant for blogging, using Open Diary, way back in 1999. By her own admission, her first flirtation with the blogosphere was mainly fiction, made up stuff, and when she continued on through college and university, she moved over to Windows Live Spaces, before hitting the likes of Posterous and WordPress in recent years.

But it was during her time studying Economics, Business and East European studies at Londons UCL that Poppys blogging career really took off. And she wasnt writing about fashion, either.

Zoomf is a UK property search engine, and Poppy worked there whilst still a full-time student, from May 2007 until September 2008. It was whilst a Marketing Executive at Zoomf that Poppys passion for blogging was flamed, and was where she got the opportunity to write about one of her other interests.

I was one of these people who was obsessed with estate agent websites, says Poppy. A lot of girls are like thatthey want to move house the whole time. Id left home at 18 and at that point Id lived in about 6 different flats in London and Brighton. I was also looking for a Web job, and when I saw a disruptive startup involving property search, I had to go for it.

Poppy jumped ship for Zoomfs competitor Globerix, where she worked between September 2008 and January 2010. But it was through both her roles at Zoomf and Globerix where Poppy managed to carve a niche in the property blogging sphere.

I had studied economics, and I was reading a lot about the property market anyway, says Poppy. I managed to carve my niche through writing about the property market and its effects on the wider economy. But I wrote about it in this very cheeky, funny way. But, what shone through was a very in-depth understanding ! of what I was writing about.

In October 2008, whilst at Globrix, Poppy was voted the fifth most influential property blogger in the world by Global Edge, and it was during this time that she was invited to write for websites in the US and attend conferences Stateside too. So now Poppys made the move from freeholds to frocks, does she miss it?

Sometimes I still miss it, but theres only so long you can deal with estate agents and write about property before you get a bit sick of it, says Poppy.

After leaving Globrix in January 2010, Poppy worked as Marketing Manager at School for Startups with entrepreneur Dough Richard, at the same time as she was launching WIWT. She left School for Startups in June 2010 to commit to WIWT and its been an upwards trajectory since then.

It seems that working for the likes of Zoomf and Globrix gave Poppy the taste for the startup scene, something that may have been instrumental in her launching her own digital company.

I got addicted to the idea of working in small teams, you really know who did what, says Poppy. And you see the outcome of your work immediately, Id say Im quite an impatient person.

And you wont get many smaller teams than whats currently at WIWT. Whilst she does have support in the form of Shoreditch-based developers Caffeine Hit, Poppy manages and produces all the content by herself.

A passion for fashion?

So how much into fashion is Poppy?

Ive always been into style, but Im not a slave to fashion, says Poppy. Im not one of those people who buys hundreds of fashion magazines, but all my money has pretty much gone on clothes. Ive always liked having completely different outfits every day. Before I launched WIWT, I was quite often tweeting pictures of my outfits, and I just! realize d they were going nowhere, sitting in my Twitpic account, and it seemed like a wasted concept really.

When 2010 was over, Poppy didnt feel the need to continue with her new outfit each day philosophy, because strictly speaking, it was just a years challenge. But she still continued to upload new outfits on many days, and the content Poppy has built up over the past year and a half will soon be carted off into archive on a yet-to-be-determined website, to make way for the launch of WIWT v2.0:

The site is currently in beta mode and is invite only, and the site should be launched to the public some time in August, in plenty of time for Fashion Week which kicks off in September. Whilst the site could potentially exit closed beta now, a major part of the WIWT relaunch will be an iPhone app, which users can use to take photos of themselves and upload directly to WIWT.

And this is the main difference between the two sites. Whilst WIWT at present is largely all about what Poppy is wearing, the new site is about the community, where users follow each other and connect their profiles with Facebook and Twitter to share what theyre wearing with their own friends.

Will this mean that Poppy will be growing the company and taking on more staff and investments? It doesnt seem so.

Im being really frugal with the money, says Poppy. Someone asked me recently why I dont build-up my team now, but Ive worked at startups that have 20 people at the beginning and you just dont need that amount of people. These are the companies I think dont do very well in the long-run, I think. They take on a lot of investment, and grow way too quickly. Ive turned down investment, and its amazing how much I can get! away wi th not spending and I get by just fine. If its your money, you do tend to be a lot more careful.

Wise words from a young entrepreneur, who realizes that shes in a very good position to really take off into the fashion blogging stratosphere. This has the potential to be huge, says Poppy. Nows the perfect time to do it. Im single, I dont have kids or a mortgageits the most risk-free time for me to do this.

And is Poppy back to buying more clothes now that her years challenge is over? I get sent lots of clothes now, she says. But I do still buy clothes too.

At 24-years young, Poppy seems to be living the dream. But as the sole proprietor at WIWT, she works 16/7, and on a recent holiday, her beach doubled as a surrogate office. I dont particularly like having to work the whole time, but I like what I do, so its fine, says Poppy.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Indian e-commerce website Flipkart adds prepaid Wallet feature

Samsung ordered to compensate Huawei $11.6 million for patent infringement

Pour one out for the Tevatron particle accelerator, because it's shutting down today