Close Menu
Alpha Leaders
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
What's On
Patriots quarterback Drake Maye still drives his 2015 pickup truck, despite  million contract

Patriots quarterback Drake Maye still drives his 2015 pickup truck, despite $37 million contract

7 February 2026
You’ve vanquished your rival in a CEO succession race. Now, how do you lead them?

You’ve vanquished your rival in a CEO succession race. Now, how do you lead them?

7 February 2026
Millennial jobseekers are giving their resumes a facelift by hiding years of experience to land jobs

Millennial jobseekers are giving their resumes a facelift by hiding years of experience to land jobs

7 February 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Alpha Leaders
newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Alpha Leaders
Home » From ‘Side Project’ to 8-Figure Business: Left On Friday
Living

From ‘Side Project’ to 8-Figure Business: Left On Friday

Press RoomBy Press Room27 June 20257 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp
From ‘Side Project’ to 8-Figure Business: Left On Friday

When Laura Low Ah Kee and Shannon Savage met while working at Lululemon in 2005, the Vancouver, Canada-based athletic apparel brand wasn’t yet the global phenomenon it is today.

Image Credit: Courtesy of Left On Friday. Laura Low Ah Kee, left, and Shannon Savage, right.

“The term ‘athleisure’ didn’t exist yet,” Savage tells Entrepreneur. “This whole world of women’s athletic apparel did not exist yet. So it was a really cool time to be involved in the company, and we just always had this love for this active lifestyle and product and fashion.”

Low Ah Kee and Savage both took on executive roles at Lululemon; Low Ah Kee went on “many journeys” during her tenure but primarily focused on merchandising, and Savage worked on the design side.

Related: After This LGBTQ Couple Lost Their Jobs Within 30 Days of Each Other, They Started a Business — With Goats. It Led to More Than $150 Million.

After a sabbatical partially spent in Maui surfing and kiteboarding, Low Ah Kee was catching up with Savage when inspiration struck. She’d worn Lululemon sports bras in lieu of typical swimwear for all of her water activities because they performed the way other products on the market couldn’t. What if they leveraged their expertise to create swimwear that merged fashion and function?

The duo continued their careers at Lululemon and worked on their passion product on the side, coming up with an exhaustive list of everything they wanted in an ideal bathing suit. But it wasn’t until they left their jobs at the athleisure giant that they got serious about starting a business.

“We wanted a name that had one part nostalgia and one part pure spontaneity.”

In 2017, amid a “booming” swimwear industry that still wasn’t designing the fashion-forward, high-performing products they wanted to see, the co-founders seized the opportunity to launch their own premium active swimwear brand: Left On Friday, headquartered in Victoria, Canada.

“ Laura and I are both the ultimate weekend warriors,” Savage says, “and we’re always off to have an adventure somewhere. We wanted a name that had one part nostalgia and one part pure spontaneity, a name that people immediately identify with, and it captures this idea of the ultimate weekend going away.  You don’t know where you’re going. Grab one swimsuit, you’re good.”

Image Credit: Courtesy of Left On Friday

The co-founders knew that “any great product starts with great fabric,” so they set out to find one that could address several major issues they saw within the existing swimwear market.

Related: The ‘Hustle’ He Started Out of His Station Wagon Became a Nationwide Business That’s About to Hit $300 Million: ‘Everything We Do Is Pretty Simple’

The fabric had to be compressive when wet and dry and provide “smoothing coverage.” “We did really find that most swim out there, once it gets wet, you do feel quite naked, but not naked in a great way,” Savage explains. “It shows every lump and bump.”

Additionally, the material had to be durable enough to hold up to an active lifestyle without sacrificing the handfeel. The goal was to design with a fabric that “as soon as you touch it, you’re like, I need to put this on my body, I want to experience this product,” Savage says.

A lot of trial and error went into finding the fabric that could do it all. The co-founders ordered countless fabrics to experiment with; a friend’s mother sewed the first designs in her basement, and Low Ah Kee and Savage tested them out in different climates, from the desert to the beach. Finally, they landed on their Smoothing Dream Fabric.

“It started as a bikini side project and then became Left On Friday.”

Then it was a matter of coming up with a line of styles that each served a distinct purpose. The co-founders self-funded their business, investing their own money in the fabric, inventory and “making the best product possible.” “ Shannon and I really hustled, [but] more from like workload [hustle] versus hustle, get money,” Low Ah Kee recalls. “It started as a bikini side project and then became Left On Friday.”

By leveraging their extensive existing skill sets in the activewear space, Low Ah Kee and Savage launched their business online — and it was “immediately profitable.” Left On Friday continued self-funded growth via its ecommerce channel for a while, but eventually, the co-founders wanted a board of advisors “with skin in the game.”

“The goal of the advisors was to get some advice, to keep us accountable, to pull us out of the day-to-day, which we were very much in,” Low Ah Kee explains. “So we surrounded ourselves with three incredible advisors who we knew from our community, and they put in a little bit of money.”

Image Credit: Courtesy of Left On Friday

Related: Why Every Entrepreneur Needs a Board of Advisors

When the pandemic hit, Left on Friday had to navigate supply chain challenges, but the brand ultimately came out stronger and with more funds raised on the other side.

“We’re a very cyclical, seasonal business,” Savage says, “so when you get something like the pressure cooker of Covid, all the supply chains shift, so when we get a huge inventory drop in October, we can’t sell that. That ended up happening. All the timelines got shuffled, so we needed money when we didn’t have money.”

Left On Friday hasn’t raised more money since that point, and Low Ah Kee and Savage remain the brand’s majority owners.

“ The uniforms made such a splash. They were going viral in the Olympic Village.”

Another exciting breakthrough came in 2024, when Left On Friday designed the official national team uniforms for Canada’s women’s beach volleyball team for the Paris Olympics and World Tour. Savage designed a piece that lived up to the brand’s commitment to fashion and function: the one-shoulder suit left the players’ hitting arms free.

Image Credit: Coliena Rentmeester

“It was [a] career highlight, life highlight, brand highlight, everything that happened on this stage in the epicenter of fashion at the biggest sporting event that ever happens,” Savage says. “ The uniforms made such a splash. They were going viral in the Olympic Village, and everybody was talking about them. From a business standpoint, we got global awareness.”

Left On Friday saw a 136% increase in international traffic during the Olympics and a sustained sales growth of 67% in its native Canada in early 2025, per the company. The brand renewed its partnership with the team for another four years through 2028.

Related: This Couple Went From Olympic Champions to Small Business Owners. Here’s How They’re Bringing a Gold Medal Approach to Their Franchise.

In response to customer demand, Left On Friday has also expanded into other premium activewear, from sweatshirts to tights, playsuits and more, keeping its dedication to fashion and performance at the forefront of every design.

Now, Left On Friday is an eight-figure brand, and Low Ah Kee and Savage look forward to its continued growth in the premium activewear arena — and the chance to provide products that fit into women’s active lives.

“ I love that there’s still so much untapped potential in the market, in apparel and just in the space in general,” Savage says. “ It’s a very intimate place. Not everyone always feels comfortable in that place, so I love that we’re creating this product [that allows] women to have the ability to live their best life, if that’s being an Olympian or if that’s just going out and playing some casual volleyball on the beach.”

Branding Business Ideas Buying / Investing in Business Career design Entrepreneurs Fashion Founders Growing a Business Health & Wellness Innovation Leadership Life Hacks Living Lululemon Making a Change Marketing Money & Finance Olympics Personal Finance Productivity Starting a Business Swimwear
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link

Related Articles

Freestyle skier Eileen Gu says she battled ‘post-Olympic depression’ even after two gold metals

Freestyle skier Eileen Gu says she battled ‘post-Olympic depression’ even after two gold metals

7 February 2026
Tech billionaires are watching their wealth free-fall—Larry Ellison and Jeff Bezos have lost more than  billion this year alone

Tech billionaires are watching their wealth free-fall—Larry Ellison and Jeff Bezos have lost more than $66 billion this year alone

6 February 2026
U.S. Olympian swimmer can barely cover her rent—she’s turned to social media for more cash

U.S. Olympian swimmer can barely cover her rent—she’s turned to social media for more cash

6 February 2026
Nestlé’s CEO drinks 8 coffees a day, but says Gen Z staffers are his secret to staying sharp by ‘learning constantly’

Nestlé’s CEO drinks 8 coffees a day, but says Gen Z staffers are his secret to staying sharp by ‘learning constantly’

6 February 2026
Anduril will fast-track your job application if you can win its AI drone flying contest

Anduril will fast-track your job application if you can win its AI drone flying contest

5 February 2026
Bob Iger last left Disney’s CEO post just before COVID. What will follow his handover to Josh D’Amaro?

Bob Iger last left Disney’s CEO post just before COVID. What will follow his handover to Josh D’Amaro?

4 February 2026
Don't Miss
Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

By Press Room27 December 2024

Every year, millions of people unwrap Christmas gifts that they do not love, need, or…

Walmart dominated, while Target spiraled: the winners and losers of retail in 2024

Walmart dominated, while Target spiraled: the winners and losers of retail in 2024

30 December 2024
Moltbook is the talk of Silicon Valley. But the furor is eerily reminiscent of a 2017 Facebook research experiment

Moltbook is the talk of Silicon Valley. But the furor is eerily reminiscent of a 2017 Facebook research experiment

6 February 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Latest Articles
What an Olympic Medal Is Worth

What an Olympic Medal Is Worth

7 February 20261 Views
Epstein’s crypto ties: Documents reveal early Coinbase investment, publicist’s view of ‘complete creep’ Michael Saylor

Epstein’s crypto ties: Documents reveal early Coinbase investment, publicist’s view of ‘complete creep’ Michael Saylor

7 February 20262 Views
Netflix’s co-CEO argues its WBD deal won’t hurt consumers. If so, they can cancel with one click

Netflix’s co-CEO argues its WBD deal won’t hurt consumers. If so, they can cancel with one click

7 February 20261 Views
Musk says more AI will be in orbit than on earth in 5 years, and SpaceX will be ‘hyper-hyper’ scaler

Musk says more AI will be in orbit than on earth in 5 years, and SpaceX will be ‘hyper-hyper’ scaler

7 February 20261 Views
About Us
About Us

Alpha Leaders is your one-stop website for the latest Entrepreneurs and Leaders news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
Patriots quarterback Drake Maye still drives his 2015 pickup truck, despite  million contract

Patriots quarterback Drake Maye still drives his 2015 pickup truck, despite $37 million contract

7 February 2026
You’ve vanquished your rival in a CEO succession race. Now, how do you lead them?

You’ve vanquished your rival in a CEO succession race. Now, how do you lead them?

7 February 2026
Millennial jobseekers are giving their resumes a facelift by hiding years of experience to land jobs

Millennial jobseekers are giving their resumes a facelift by hiding years of experience to land jobs

7 February 2026
Most Popular
Freestyle skier Eileen Gu says she battled ‘post-Olympic depression’ even after two gold metals

Freestyle skier Eileen Gu says she battled ‘post-Olympic depression’ even after two gold metals

7 February 20261 Views
What an Olympic Medal Is Worth

What an Olympic Medal Is Worth

7 February 20261 Views
Epstein’s crypto ties: Documents reveal early Coinbase investment, publicist’s view of ‘complete creep’ Michael Saylor

Epstein’s crypto ties: Documents reveal early Coinbase investment, publicist’s view of ‘complete creep’ Michael Saylor

7 February 20262 Views
© 2026 Alpha Leaders. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.