Her growing success has landed her on the cover of Health magazine and she has appeared everywhere from The Today Show to The New York Times. You can also find her Blogilates-brand fitness products on store shelves.
In many ways, Whittier is where Ho began sketching the beginning of her career—literally. During one of her marketing classes, she doodled a logo design in the margin of her paper: “Blogilates,” in cursive, with a little heart to dot the “I.” Fashion design was always a passion, and early into her time at Whittier, a flirty and sophisticated “little black dress” she designed hit the catwalk during San Francisco Fashion Week after winning a student competition.
Her exposure to the fashion world was eye-opening. Ho, who majored in biology and minored in business administration, aspired to fuse her scientific and artistic interests through entrepreneurship.
Before crossing the commencement stage, she picked up soft skills that would serve her well on that path. Ho was a resident advisor, tutored her fellow students, and joined both the Asian Student Association and the Ballroom Dance club.
“Because I was so involved on campus while I was at Whittier, I learned how to be very resourceful,” she said. “I loved putting on events, so connecting with organizations and people all over campus helped me learn how to collaborate and make things happen.”
When she graduated, she created a send-off video for a few doezen Pilates students she had been instructing at her part-time job off campus. The 10-minute session, filmed in her living room, was the first video she posted on YouTube. She never expected anyone but those few dozen students to see it.
Ho picked a perfect time to join YouTube, which in the late 2000s, created a tidal wave of online stars.
Shifting viewing habits—especially among millenials—from traditional media to the Internet created a growing audience for people like Singh, Pansino, Tyler Oakley, and Lindsey Stirling, who all debuted within a year or two of Ho. As they accumulated millions of views from their living rooms, they were changing the way the world thought about celebrity.
There was never a particular moment when Ho realized that a true YouTube career was materializing. Everything happened gradually: she discovered there was an interest in her workouts (which she paired with pop music to create POP Pilates), she posted them on her channel, Blogilates, and views and subscriptions climbed. And climbed. And climbed.
“Being able to offer something of value to people all over the world helped me gain trust and an audience,” Ho said. She puts in a lot of effort for that growing fan base. On filming days, after scouting a location and prepping lights and sound, Ho powers through five to six full workouts—each with their own choreography. All that, plus hair, makeup, and outfit changes between each workout, and a lot of video editing back at the studio.
Thanks to her hard work, Ho led a global audience to healthier lives while listening to the likes of Carly Rae Jepsen and Taylor Swift, and as she accumulated millions of social media followers, Ho always remained herself. When she considers why her brand grew so enormously, she points to that authenticity.
“The community aspect of Blogilates thrived because of my honest and transparent approach to connecting with people,” Ho said. “I’m not afraid to be vulnerable, and I think a lot of people find that to be comforting and relatable.”
By 2012, monetization of her videos had become a significant portion of her livelihood. That year, Blogilates—with that cursive logo penned at Whittier—had accumulated more than 20 million views, and the likes of Forbes took notice. The business magazine heralded Ho as one of YouTube’s “Rising Women of Power,” and her name has only grown since. Twenty million views exploded to 300 million (included among them: Swift herself). It wasn’t long before Blogilates became the number-one female fitness channel on YouTube. In 2015, she signed the deal with 24 Hour Fitness to install POP Pilates as the gym company’s official Pilates workout.
Months later, she was sharing a stage with the likes of Virgin Atlantic founder Richard Branson and Sean Rad, the CEO of Tinder, at an entrepreneurship panel in downtown Los Angeles, talking about the future of global business.
“Not knowing what direction Blogilates was going, I had to trust myself, trust my community, and give them what they want. Because they’re the ones who basically gave me what I have today, so I am always grateful for this community,” said Ho during the panel.
That integrity and wholehearted service to her audience has helped her brands grow over the years. And, when her fans started asking for a clothing line, that’s what she did.
In an office filled with inspirational sketches, deadline-laden calendars, and a rainbow of fabrics, Ho made good on a longheld goal that she’d kept burning at Whittier to become a fashion designer.
For two years, Ho and her team researched the industry and traveled the globe to source every thread, trim, ribbon, and piece of fabric that would go into the line, cutting out the middleman to keep the price point on the line affordable for her fans. Starting from the ground up, they built relationships and ensured that the garment sewers and factory partners were happy.
In her spiral notebooks, Ho inked her ideas and collaborated with her employees on how the designs should look and feel. By December 2016, the line was ready. It draws its inspiration from nature, with collections like the pink-and-periwinkle Peony and the turquoise-and-magenta Mermaid.
“The work that goes into fashion design is extremely challenging. But, when we get it right, it is one of the most satisfying things in the world,” Ho said. “To see your idea—your sketch—go through several months of revisions, fittings, and for it to make it through production and end up on a real person’s body—I mean, wow, that’s chaotic choreography that was well planned and well executed!”
The new endeavor was a success. POPFLEX has become an international brand that, just earlier this year, Ho brought to its first industry trade show: Active Collective in New York City, where names like Lorna Jane attract potential buyers. It was surreal and a confidence boost seeing POPFLEX shine next to big players.
“I first started drawing my original sketches for my activewear line in college,” she said. “What I’m most proud of is the fact that something that began as an idea in my head truly became a reality.”
This article originally appeared in a 2018 edition of The Rock magazine.