Marc Ecko, American apparel designer. Named one of 40 Under 40, Crain's New York Business, 2005; named to DNR's Power 100 List.
Background
Marc Ecko was born Marc Louis Milecofsky in New Jersey in 1972. He was brought up with his twin Marci and an older sister, Shari, in suburban Lakewood, New Jersey, where his father was a pharmacist and his mother was a real estate broker.
Education
The siblings attended local public schools.
Career
He also founded Complex magazine in 2002. Ecko entered Rutgers University’s School of Pharmacy in New Brunswick, New Jersey after high school. During his time in college he dabbled in graffiti and became absorbed in drawing, taking “Ecko” for his tag.
In his third year, the school’s dean encouraged Ecko to take a year off and pursue his dream. “You don’t want to be 40 with regrets,” the dean said. Ecko never returned to pharmacy school.
He traveled to Hong Kong to learn about the clothing industry. Early clients like Spike Lee and Chuck D. helped bring attention to his fledgling business, as did a Good Morning America segment that featured his T-shirt designs. The company expanded further into hip-hop and skater styles, and began to sport a rhinoceros logo. eckō UNLTD has since grown into a billion-dollar lifestyle company, with full lines of urban clothes and accessories for young men, young women, children, and adults.
Since then, Ecko’s businesses have expanded to include a magazine for young men, Complex, video and social gaming, and venture capital funds. When Ecko was appointed to the Board of Directors of the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA). He was the youngest designer ever to receive this honor.
In 2008, he created the new jackets for the Iron Chefs on Iron Chef America
In 2004, Ecko founded a non-profit, Sweat Equity Education, to increase the success of urban, underserved students by providing opportunities for real-world design and business interaction. Student teams develop designs to meet challenges set by clients, engage in problem-solving, learn to collaborate, communicate their ideas, and may see their successful designs executed and on sale in a nearby department store. Ecko has also launched multiple social activism campaigns on behalf of U.S. students, including Unlimited Justice, which seeks to eliminate corporal punishment in U.S. schools, and Stop Dissing Me, which seeks to introduce students’ voices to the education debate.
On October 1, 2013, Ecko released his first book, titled "" In this book, heavily focused on the subject of authenticity, Ecko divulges how he turned a $5,000 investment into a billion dollar brand.
Achievements
Views
Quotations:
“You don’t want to be 40 with regrets,”.
Membership
Since 2010, he has been a member of the Emeritus Board.