Students create custom clothes for cheap
Four of Kent State’s entrepreneurship
students are giving makeovers
to people on campus with a new personalized,
professional style, starting
with President Lester Lefton and
Robert “Yank” Heisler, dean of the
College of Business Administration.
“It star ts with the customer
because it truly is a customized
process,” said Shannon Gallagher,
a business partner for Get-In-Vestments,
a new customized clothing
business. “We are offering a one-ofa-
kind customized product made just
for you at an affordable price.”
Get-In-Vestments, which started
last semester in partnership with a
manufacturing firm in China, customizes
professional attire like suits,
pants, shirts and blazers.
“Alex and I came up with the business
idea because his father has his own
manufacturing firm in Shanghai, China,”
said Nathan Rango, co-founder of
Get-In-Vestments. “It just started out as
an idea in our intro to entrepreneurship
class, but we were getting such great
feedback from our professors that we
decided to turn it into our student-run
business for the major.”
The Get-In-Vestments team is
made up of co-founders Rango and
Alex Neal, fashion expert Shannon
Gallagher and overall operations
manager Kyle Hughes.
“Everyone has really stepped
into their own and we work so well
together,” Rango said. “If there is a
problem we communicate it and that
is one of the big things about running
a business, is the partnership.”
The team plans to premiere one of
the first orders they have received, a
classic blue blazer with Kent State’s
logo and embroidery of the College
of Business Administration, to Lefton
and Heisler this week.
“We had just finished up measuring
the dean for his blazer when we
found out we had 10 minutes to meet
with President Lefton,” Gallagher
said. “We were in our suits and ties
and we literally sprinted to the second
floor of the library to measure
him up.”
The students described their experience
talking to Lefton and sitting in
his office around a huge conference
table right next to his picture with
President Obama.
“I think the biggest thing to us is
not measuring President Lefton, but
being a student here at Kent State,
you always feel that you are just a
number or you will never get the
time of day,” Gallagher said. “But
the president and the dean support
us and took the time to meet and talk
with us about our business and what
direction we are going to take it in
the future.”
The students were excited to find
that both Heisler and Lefton took an
interest in their business and wanted
to help.
“There really is no other way
you can support a business like this
except buying a blazer,” Hughes
said. “We were actually going to try
to give the dean and president a discount,
but they wanted us to charge
a price where we could make a profit
off of them to help get our business
off the ground.”
Get-In-Vestments charges $135 for
a standard customized blazer and $35
for a shirt. The pricing is an advantage
for the business, even though the team
is finding that people are willing to
pay more for a customized product.
“When I go to Express, I can maybe
find a couple things I can fit into and
I’m paying $200 for a blazer and $50
for a shirt that’s not even fitted,” Rango
said. “We are offering a customized
product as we are beating the standardized
product through pricing.”
The business originally started
because the students saw a need for
clothing that fits people the right way.
Get-In-Vestments is not a clothing store
and they are different from a retailer
because they are making a product specifically
for each of their clients.
“There are so many different body
types out there, for example, you
have two similar-looking guys who
both wear mediums, but are completely
different.” Gallagher said.
“This is an opportunity to address
all the different people that haven’t
purchased clothing that they like or
are comfortable in.”
Their target market is not only
deans and presidents, but they want
to appeal to the students at Kent
State. Get-In-Vestments gets most of
its orders from alumni, students and
fraternities.
“Alex and I are in Sigma Nu, and
other fraternities notice our blazers,
they want them. And from a business
standpoint, we want to give them the
option to buy our product,” Rango
said. “The Greek community gives
us an entire network of options.”
After the blazers come in, the team
hopes to get more orders from other
deans, professors and students.
“Right now, we need to make sure
these orders are exactly how we specified
them and that we get them here
as quick as we can, but we also need
to have confidence in our process
and in our business,” Hughes said.
“We are going to be really proud and
excited when we see people like the
dean and the president wearing one
of our blazers.”
The students feel they have come
a long way from being students with
an idea to actually running their own
business that will hopefully grow
over time.
“We are just getting started and we
are going to keep doing this,” Hughes
said. “We have really good leads with
President Lefton and Dean Heisler,
and we just want to keep feeding off
of each of our successes.”
Contact College of Business
Administration reporter Kelly Maile