This Entrepreneur Built a Business on Facebook Exclusively


Divas SnowGear

Plenty of businesses use Facebook as part of a larger marketing strategy. But Wendy Gavinski used it to market her business almost exclusively.

Her company, Divas SnowGear, is a retailer of women’s snowmobile clothing and accessories. Since snowmobiling has long been considered a male-dominated sport, Divas SnowGear was meant to be the alternative for women who wanted gear that was actually flattering instead of big and bulky.

That lack of female options is why Gavinski started the company in the first place. But it was that same hurdle that made her turn to Facebook for her marketing efforts.

Gavinski explained further to CNN Money:

“It was the only way I could reach my target customers. If I put an ad in an industry magazine, or a banner ad in a forum, the readership for both are men.”

Gavinski used $30,000 of her own money to start Divas SnowGear in 2010. Today, the company is profitable thanks in no small part to its Facebook page, which currently has more than 43,000 likes.

Gavinski uses the site’s targeted regional advertising to reach women between 20 and 50 years of age in areas near the more than 500 local stores that carry her products.

For companies like Divas SnowGear, Facebook offers a unique opportunity to target a very specific subset of customers. In this case, a specific media outlet for female snowboarders where Divas Snowgear could advertise didn’t exist. But Facebook has so many users in so many demographic categories. There are groups for snowboarders and snowboarding pages, not to mention the ability to target users who have visited certain websites.

And there are plenty of other businesses that could potentially benefit from this targeting. Small businesses are getting more and more specialized. So their target audiences are getting smaller and more specific. If there’s not a specific media outlet for your target audience, there’s still Facebook.

Each business and situation is different. But in Gavinski’s case, she had a very specific problem problem to solve with her marketing. Facebook ended up being the solution both because of the number of customers the platform reaches and the way it allows marketers to target specific segments of that audience.

In this instance, it’s hard to imagine a platform that could have allowed the targeting of such a specific type of customer so precisely.

Image: Divas SnowGear


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Annie Pilon Annie Pilon is a Senior Staff Writer for Small Business Trends, covering entrepreneur profiles, interviews, feature stories, community news and in-depth, expert-based guides. When she’s not writing she can be found exploring all that her home state of Michigan has to offer.

6 Reactions
  1. Above example cited of Wendy Gavinski is truly inspirational & motivational to know, as what it takes to make correct usage of social media & business successful with smart decisions.

  2. I have seen similar stories. Facebook and other social networks can really be turned into a goldmine as long as you properly engage your buyers to your page.

  3. If you’re trying to reach a very specific niche, you’ve got to go where they are. In this case, that was Facebook. Very savvy marketing.

  4. I think it’s great that Wendy came up with a business like hers. There was a need for it – a gap in the market. I also think it’s awesome how she was able to make it a success by reaching exactly who she wanted to reach via Facebook.