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Money | 03/04/2009 10:00 am

Fired and Fabulous!

Take it from Madonna, Suzanne Somers and J.K. Rowling — getting fired can be a great career move. Here are nine women who made it big after losing their day jobs.
By The Staff at wowOwow.com
J.K. Rowling © Getty Images

As more and more Americans are discovering, losing your job is rough and scary. But it can also be the jolt you need to launch a great career. Take it from J.K. Rowling, Suzanne Somers and Madonna, all of whom made millions after getting fired from an unhappy day job: Opportunity can be hidden just about anywhere — even on a pink slip.

Here are nine women who made it big after finding themselves out of work.

Click here for photos of some of these fabulous and fired women.

J.K. Rowling — A Wiz With Shorthand
As a secretary in a busy London office, Rowling’s boss often accused her of daydreaming, eventually letting her go. That gave the budding fantasy writer time to commit her tales of a young apprentice wizard and his adventures in a magical English boarding school to paper. Since then, the Harry Potter books have sold more than 400 million copies, spawning a billion-dollar blockbuster film series. Rowling is now among Britain’s richest women — and has a secretary or two of her own.

Madonna — Like a Munchkin
In the late 1970s, this future material girl was fired from a Dunkin’ Donuts in Times Square for squirting jelly at customers. Back then, the multimillion-dollar queen of pop had less than $100 to her name. A young dance student, she started performing with local groups, eventually forming her own band and recording a string of hit dance tunes. Last October, she signed a ten-year $120 million contract with Live Nation. That’s a lot of donuts.

Mary Kay Ash — A Career Makeover
A single mom in the 1950s, Mary Kay Ash was a top sales director for Stanley Home Products for a quarter century, but was routinely denied promotions and pay hikes. By 1963, a forced retirement left her jobless with a life savings of $5,000. With that cash, she opened a 500-square-foot cosmetics store in Dallas, hiring nine door-to-door "beauty consultants." Today, Mary Kay Inc. brings in over $1 billion a year, with more than 350,000 sales reps around the world.

Suzanne Somers — Three’s a Crowd
After a contract dispute led ABC producers to write her out of "Three’s Company" in the early 1980s, Suzanne Somers’s television career fizzled to pitching Thighmasters on campy late-night infomercials. But off camera, Somers was building a multimillion-dollar empire of branded health and beauty products sold through her own direct marketing firm. A breast cancer survivor, she’s also written a series of bestselling self-help books.

Mena Trott — Blogging for Billions
A victim of the dot-com bust, Mena Trott put her energy into blogging after both she and her husband were laid off from a small Web-design firm in San Francisco in 2002. Frustrated by lousy software, the couple created their own user-friendly blogging tool. Today, Movable Type is an industry standard used by countless bloggers around the world, from media elite to laptop literati. A superstar in Silicon Valley, Trott now heads a fast-growing software company worth millions.         

Martha Stewart — Stocks and Buns
A Wall Street trader, Martha Steward found herself looking for another job after the 1973 recession devastated the financial market and put thousands of brokers out of work (plus ca change). That year, she and a friend opened a bakery in Connecticut that grew into a million-dollar business over the next decade. These days, Stewart has cornered the homemaking market with a media juggernaut spanning television, magazines, books and a line of home and gardening products.

Pat Mitchell — Thanks to Viewers Like You
When Look magazine folded in the early 1970s, Pat Mitchell recalls managers serving reporters Bloody Marys, along with their pink slips. Out of work, broke and disillusioned with the magazine industry, Mitchell took a stab at television. Over the next three decades, she developed into a groundbreaking producer, receiving 37 Emmys, five Peabody Awards and two Oscar nominations. In 2000, she became president and CEO of PBS.

22 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

TerriD

Dear wowOwow,

Thank you for the e-mail addressed to me as "Dear Terri". After having been fired from my last position I have been actively searching for a new job. Of course with all the scaling back, jobs are scarce. The responses so far to my job search are very impersonal. Just a form letter thanking me for my interest. It’s disheartening enough to be rejected but to be addressed "Dear Applicant" makes me feel like another one-night stand. No,wait-I take that back. At least with a one-night stand I probably got something out of it. But how would I know? Haven’t even had one of those in over 12 years! Good grief-how depressing can I get?  Well, thank goodness I see my therapist on Monday. I’m thinking I have much too much time on my hands.

All I meant to say was—Thank you wowOwow for making my day!

By TerriD on 03/04/2009 11:23 am
BellaMia
One of my favorite books is "Failing Forward" about the multiple failures endured by some of America’s most famous people.  Failure is a powerful learning opportunity, but not always pleasant.  Sometimes it is mostly our own fault, sometimes it is the fault of the organization or people in it.  I think it is important to be encouraging even with those who have obviously sabotaged themselves.  The danger is becoming enabling, and government seems to be headed in that direction.
By BellaMia on 03/04/2009 11:26 am
AnneM2

Thank you wowOwow for this article.  I strongly believe that even in today’s downward economy WE as women can still "part sea’s"…

It may have seemed "easier" back in the early years, but today really is no different as success is within each of us and there are people still willing to "buy" what we have to say! 

I myself have been struggling with "doing my own thing" for years, and having recently relocated to another city, and the fear of the unknown is gradually weaning itself from within the deepness of my soul.  I am employed…and I thank God for that, however having my "own" is going to reap greater rewards in the long run.

March onward ladies…as our day is already upon us!  Great article wowOwow!

By AnneM2 on 03/04/2009 12:07 pm
BelindaJoy
Love, Love, Love this article, because it is Oh-So-True! Life is never over following the break up of a relationship, loss of a loved one, and CERTAINLY not because of a loss of a job. As an old saying goes, “The Lord never closes a window without opening a door” Getting fired from a job is a way to reset the clock and start over, and in many instances in a new direction. I have been dealing with A LOT of women and men who were fired and laid off from their jobs recently (I’ve been assisting them with resumes and cover letters) and it is amazing how many people confuse “what they do” with “who they are.” I should get paid for all the inspirational words of encouragement I have been dishing out over the last couple months. You would think I was a female Tony Robbins! :-) Life begins anew with each perceived setback, I really do believe that. And in this tough economic time when so many women are being fired or laid off, an article of this nature is just the boost women need to read. KUDOS wOw staffers!
By BelindaJoy on 03/04/2009 12:36 pm
DianneLopp

I love wowowow passionately but who who who is editing this thing?  In the blurb about Martha Stewart, the parenthetical reference "plus sea change" made me cringe!  I had to look at it three times before I realized you meant "plus ca change", a reference to the French axiom "Plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose" (the more things change, the more they stay the same).  Please proofread!!!

 

By DianneLopp on 03/04/2009 2:06 pm
Lee Harrison

but who who who is editing this thing?

Maybe the proof reader needs to "fail up" and be fired;-)  I’ve always like Mark Twain’s quote: "I don’t give a damn for a man that can only spell a word one way,"  but it doesn’t work so well when mixing foreign phrases with English.

By Lee Harrison on 09/02/2009 11:21 am
LindaFranklin1

Absolutely true.  We learn much more from our defeats than our victories.  Did you know that Mayor Bloomberg of NYC got fired from Salomon Brothers.  Look what happened to him!

By LindaFranklin1 on 03/04/2009 5:11 pm
nanchanu
And look what happened to Salomon Bros!
By nanchanu on 03/05/2009 11:21 am
DianneLopp
Thank you for correcting the error.
By DianneLopp on 03/04/2009 10:18 pm
nanchanu

This is a great article: I think that every family also has stories like these, and they are what give us strength through difficult times.

While my friends have been fantastic since I lost my job and started my business, there really is no amount of encouragement that takes the place of simply getting up after you’ve been knocked down and doing the hard work every day that ultimately will lead to success.  And if you fail a bit along the way, that’s ok too.  In the words of one of my favorite women, "Each failure is a step closer to success."

Thanks for a wonderful topic: I’d love to hear some stories from the WOW founders as well :)

By nanchanu on 03/05/2009 11:20 am
nanchanu

Last word on this one too:  my father had a wall of hate mail in his office (he was a lawyer).  I asked him once why he did that, and he told me that as an attorney, if he wasn’t angering at least 50% of the people he dealt with on a professional basis, he wasn’t doing his job right. So true…

By nanchanu on 03/05/2009 11:24 am
CoCoCoquette

Many Kudos to the Wow staffer who wrote this timely article.

More encouragement and inspirational pieces like this and less purposely divisive topics Wow, please.

By CoCoCoquette on 03/05/2009 2:47 pm
WorldlyWoman
I agree that being fired from a job isn’t the end of the world. But to be honest, nothing could have prepared me for the emotions I felt after it happened. It was gut wrenching, in part because I LOVED my job but also because I was suddenly faced with the reality that I couldn’t even apply for a credit card. The day after I was fired I found myself in church on a Wednesday morning, balling my eyes out! This wasn’t the strong professional woman who had run a large business. What I needed to do was to get the raw emotion OUT before I could forge ahead. I ended up owning my own retail business (which I ultimately discovered I disliked). Then a chance meeting with a former boss brought me back to my original career. I’m now President of a large company. It was ok for me to grieve the loss of a job. And it gave me courage to do just about anything professionally because I felt I had experienced the worst that can happen in a job. It’s not an easy thing to go through, and it doesn’t get fixed overnight….but there is much you can learn about yourself and the business world that truly does make you stronger in the end.
By WorldlyWoman on 03/05/2009 4:16 pm
DianaT
Sometimes losing one’s job can be just the nudge a person needs to take control over her life and pursue something she wants to do, to totally reinvent herself and end up accomplishing goals that she would never have imagined for herself.
By DianaT on 03/06/2009 1:29 pm
PatMullaly
Sometimes you just need to let go of what is not working for you. Even if it is someone else who is ripping your fingers from the doorjam.
By PatMullaly on 03/08/2009 5:08 pm