How this entrepreneur became the shoe designer for Beyoncé and Lady Gaga

The legendary British fashion designer Alexander McQueen said, “You’ve got to know the rules to break them. That’s what I’m here for, to demolish the rules but to keep the tradition.”

That’s precisely how shoe designer Ruthie Davis has been able to create such a successful brand, which turns 10 years old this year. Her high-heeled statement pieces are favorites of celebrities like Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Demi Lovato and Christina Milian.

AN AVANT GARDE CAREER PATH
Most designers come from a traditional fashion track, working as a designer for a label after graduating from an art school like Parsons or London College of Fashion. But Davis did not start her career in high fashion or editorial. Instead, she got her MBA in entrepreneurship from Babson College. She took her first job in California, managing a design and marketing team at Reebok (ADS.DE). But she quickly outgrew the role.

“I realized I had better ideas that were making more money than what the designers were creating, so I made the conscious decision to steer myself more in the design route,” Davis says.

Her next role was at Ugg Australia (DECK) — where she found herself in a hybrid designer/marketer role. Davis was at the forefront of transforming Ugg from an outdoor retail product targeted at surfers to a “more East Coast friendly, luxury, fashion-forward product.” While at Ugg, she knew she wanted to create her own brand and was ready to quit her day job to pursue her passion. Until Tommy Hilfiger (PVH) gave her an offer she couldn’t refuse.

One day, Davis was returning from a business trip to Brazil. Exhausted, she hopped on a phone call with her husband, who asked her a single question that was a pivotal turning point in her life: Is your goal to be the CEO of Tommy Hilfiger or to be Tommy Hilfiger?

“Tommy Hilfiger, of course,” she told him. It was at that moment she knew it was time to make plans to launch her brand.

GAINING TRACTION
Davis describes her shoe as the lovechild of a classic, high-fashion Manolo Blahnik and a Nike sneaker. “My whole idea was to take the modernism, the comfort, pop colors, and sizzle of a brand-new pair of athletic shoes and marinate that with the elegance, fierceness, and edginess of an incredible dress shoe,” she says.

Ruthie Davis sketch & shoe
Ruthie Davis sketch & shoe

Davis sells her shoes directly to consumers online and in select boutiques. A pair of Ruthies cost a pretty penny — ranging from $595 to $1,248.

She says her shoes aren’t for everyone, and that’s intentional. “Ruthies have a very specific look. I’m a small independent label,” she says. “I can’t be everything to everybody because then I would be nothing to anybody. I’ve never been a mass appeal look; I didn’t get into the business to do that.”