Gwyneth Paltrow said she had to 'Google acronyms under the table' at Goop business meetings when she started the company
- Gwyneth Paltrow shared insight into her life as Goop's CEO at the Forbes Power Women's Summit 2024.
- She said she had to let go of her "shame" about not knowing things as she took on the role.
Gwyneth Paltrow is thinking about what she didn't know when she founded Goop.
On Wednesday, Forbes hosted its annual Power Women's Summit 2024 in New York. Paltrow spoke to Moira Forbes to kick off the summit, opening up about her experience as Goop's CEO.
Paltrow, 51, founded Goop in 2008 as a newsletter, and it has evolved into a powerful wellness brand over the past sixteen years.
Though Goop has become a household name in recent years, the Academy Award winner told Forbes she struggled when she first started the company because she didn't have a business background.
"As we monetized and as we got into e-commerce, I didn't understand anything," she said. "I didn't finish college. I didn't go to business school. I didn't go up through a corporate environment."
"I used to Google the acronyms under the table, and I was like, 'Everyone's gonna think I'm an idiot,'" Paltrow said. "And then I was like, 'Fuck it. I'm actually really smart. I just haven't learned this yet.'"
Paltrow said she became more successful when she let go of her "shame" about what she didn't know.
"I don't know why we have this shame around not knowing something," she said. "I don't know if you guys feel that, but I felt that so much, like I'm supposed to know. How am I supposed to know? Nobody's taught me."
"I decided I was going to be really brave around asking questions and that there's a difference between intelligence and just not having learned something yet," Paltrow continued. "So I empowered myself. Sometimes it was embarrassing. And then a lot of times people would be like, 'Thank you so much for asking that question.'"
Paltrow said she could have saved herself time by being more direct about what she did not know immediately.
"If you don't know something, ask it," she said. "I could have truncated my timeline in the beginning a lot if I had done that."
Goop in transition
PitchBook valued Goop at $433 million in 2020, though the company has experienced some upheaval in recent years. In 2021, Business Insider reported that over 140 employees left the company between 2019 to 2021, with some saying they felt underpaid and overworked.
And on September 5, Women's Wear Daily reported that Goop laid off 18% of its workforce amid a strategy pivot. Moving forward, the brand will prioritize food, fashion, and beauty and move away from sexual health, wellness, home, and travel, a marked shift for the company.
In her conversation with Forbes, Paltrow touched on the brand's ever-evolving strategy, saying that "intention" keeps Goop centered.
"We've been through a lot," Paltrow said. "Some years, we've doubled in growth. Some years, we are flat. Some years, we're down, then we're back up."
"We have a lot of intention around what we're doing, and I'm proud that we're still alive and kicking," she added.