In 2022, Michelle Cordeiro Grant moved from New York to Florida, and she started to see energy drinks everywhere.
“I thought, wow, I don’t drink these, but they’re everywhere,” she said. “Everywhere I go, teachers, workers, fitness girls. I read an earnings report from Celsius and realized that this is a $20 billion industry, with legacy brands I don’t connect with.”
So, Cordeiro Grant—who’d sold her venture-backed lingerie company Lively for $85 million to Wacoal in 2019—went to Whole Foods, looking for a better-for-you energy drink. She figured if it was anywhere, it was there. But no dice, since most existing energy drinks weren’t Whole Foods-standard (they contained erythritol and sucralose).
“I was like ‘ahhhhh,’” Cordeiro Grant makes a sing-song, gates-of-heaven-opening sound. “I put it on social media: What if I make an energy meets wellness brand? We got 100,000 likes and that was the day Gorgie was born.”
Gorgie has recently hit a key milestone, raising a $24.5 million Series A led by Notable Capital, Fortune can exclusively report. Coefficient Capital also participated in the round, as did Gorgie board members Jason Cohen and Yossi Nasser. To date, Gorgie has now raised $37 million. Notable was also an investor in Cordeiro Grant’s Lively.
“Our point of view is that we can treat brands like fashion brands, creating that emotional connection,” she said.
The investment comes at a tough time for consumer startup investing—the space has seen a pullback from VCs in the aftermath of the DTC boom. That being said, it’s also a time with some optimism, with some big-ticket exits materializing this year, especially PepsiCo’s $1.95 billion acquisition of soda brand Poppi.
In Gorgie’s case, the company isn’t disclosing revenue, but says that it grew fivefold year over year in 2024 and that, on average, customers are reordering from the website every eight days. The caffeine buzz off a Gorgie drink is gentle but perceptible, and Cordeiro Grant found it through trial and error.
Cordeiro Grant, a Victoria’s Secret executive earlier in her career, sees parallels between energy drinks and lingerie you maybe wouldn’t expect: Both are sectors filled with legacy brands that miss the mark on connecting with a key part of the marketplace. In Gorgie’s case, that’s women, but it’s also the Oura-ring-fueled, Erewhon-loving zeitgeist around wellness. Erewhon, for those not in the know, is L.A.’s uber-fashionable, celebrity-favorite market with prices to match. At Erewhon, you can sneeze and spend $40, and have an absolutely lovely time.
Gorgie has been in Erewhon since 2023, and the company says it’s since grown the posh grocery’s energy drink category. (Gorgie runs a little expensive for an energy drink, about $3.50 a pop in L.A. But that’s essentially on par with Red Bulls, depending on where you buy them.)
“Erewhon was shocking for me,” said Cordeiro Grant. “We had only been in the market about six months, and we got a message from them on social media. And I was like ‘no way, it’s spam.’ Our team said ‘we’re gonna respond.’”
Gorgie sent Erewhon all six flavors at the time—from Tropical Punch to Wild Berry. “In 48 hours, they said ‘we want all six,’” said Cordeiro Grant. Since, Gorgie has even gotten its own famous Erewhon smoothie, a signifier of L.A. royalty, usually reserved for stars like Hailey Bieber, Olivia Rodrigo, and Sabrina Carpenter.
Though stores like Erewhon are part of Gorgie’s origins, they’re far from the whole picture when it comes to the brand’s future—this summer, across the U.S. Gorgie will hit 1,900 Target stores. And that’s when something that started small, with a Whole Foods hunch, becomes ubiquitous.
See you tomorrow,