FINDING her way
How Eileen Zimmerman, ’98 economics, found creativity and balance by becoming her
own boss with Wander Wet Bags
Eileen Zimmerman.
Afew years ago, Eileen Zimmerman felt a little too much like she was running on a hamster’s wheel. If she wasn’t stuck in traffic, she was stuck in a meeting. When she got home from work, she felt rushed to put dinner on the table and put her kids to bed before it was time for her to go to bed herself and repeat the cycle. When one of her kids went through an adjustment period at school, she knew she needed to be home. Something had to give.
A fresh start
Without a plan, she quit her job as a product manager at a software company. At first,
she thought she’d go back into marketing consulting. It was something she had done
before and something she was good at. But around this same time, Zimmerman found herself
needing a bag to store her wet bathing suits and sweaty gym clothes in when she traveled
from the beach or gym. She didn’t want to use a plastic bag that could leak or cause
mildew to grow on her garments. She didn’t like the quality and design of the wet
bags she found in stores. So, she decided to make one herself. She hadn’t sewn since
7th grade, but she had a sewing machine, and she was resourceful. After some trial
and error, she was pleased with her results and gave a few of her bags as gifts. Zimmerman
put her sewing machine away. She thought she was done.
But then, her sister-in-law asked for one of her bags to take with her on vacation. A friend liked the bag Zimmerman had given her so much, she asked if she could buy six for gifts. To test if her bags were marketable beyond her friends and family, Zimmerman posted one on Etsy. It sold immediately. She was not only surprised by how quickly it sold, but by the fact it sold to someone in Alaska (and not LA or Miami like she’d expected). It was just one bag, but Zimmerman thought if there was interest in her bags in Alaska, maybe she was on to something.
Finding a way
What Zimmerman finds most surprising about her entrepreneurial journey is that the
old adage, “You can do anything you set your mind to,” is true. “Everyone has ideas,
but 99.9% of it is just doing the work.” When asked about how she found a manufacturer
for her bags, she says she Googled it, called people, and just figured it out. When
she heard a song that she thought would be perfect for a branding video, she researched
music licensing, called the musician’s record company, and in a matter of days secured
the rights to the song. “I just found a way,” she says. “Find a way” has become a
mantra that has worked extraordinarily well for her. Just three years after establishing
Wander Wet Bags, Zimmerman has sold her bags to an impressive list of clients. Her
biggest business comes from companies who order her bags for gifts. She recently signed
a contract with a luxury car company and a worldwide beauty brand. Her bags can also
be found at luxury hotels and resorts in the U.S. and abroad.
What’s also impressive about Zimmerman’s success is that she accomplished it without sacrificing her values. When she worked for others, she found herself saying, “When I’m CEO, I’ll pay people what they’re worth, not cut corners, etc.” Now that she’s the one in charge, she says, “I wanted to walk the walk.” All of Zimmerman’s bags are made in the USA and the materials are locally sourced. “I choose people over profits,” she says.
Everyone has ideas, but 99.9% of it is just doing the work.
The long view
This isn’t to say that Zimmerman didn’t hit any bumps along the way. One of her most
challenging moments came when her manufacturer lost the first run of her bags during
the shipping process. She remembers thinking, this is the point where people quit.
She had invested so much time and money into that first run and now it was gone. If
she hadn’t been so confident in her product, she might have called it quits. But she’d
received such positive feedback at pop-ups and farmers markets, she knew there was
demand. “My customers believed in me, so I believed in my customers,” she says. After
the blow of the lost order, Zimmerman says, “I pictured myself falling down on mile
seventeen of a marathon. At first, I thought, someone get me a stretcher and carry
me out of here. I let myself have a moment and then realized I hadn’t gotten this
far to quit. I was going to walk and limp if I had to, but I was going to finish the
race.”
Anteater forever
Through all the ups and downs of starting her company, Zimmerman is grateful for her
economics degree from UCI and the friendships that began there. “The general education
classes I took really changed how I viewed the world and how I understood how people
interacted with each other,” she says. “Plus, a lot of the foundational concepts like
opportunity cost, utility curves, and sunk costs are principles I routinely think
about for my business.” And the women she met through her sorority, Alpha Chi Omega,
are still some of her best friends.
Balance
With the creation of Wander Wet Bags, Zimmerman has found her calling. “I was good
at product management, but it wasn’t a good fit personality-wise. I love being creative
in a way I hadn’t realized and it took leaving my job to discover this. If I had listened
to myself more, about what made me happy and excited, it wouldn’t have taken me so
long to figure out what I really wanted to do.” Ironically, Zimmerman doesn’t have
as much time for the beach and gym classes that inspired her to create Wander Wet
Bags in the first place. And while she’s trying to make more room for recreation in
her life, the need for it feels less pressing. She may be working just as many hours
as she did before, but finding a work-life balance is much less stressful now that
she loves her work.
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