Elizabeth Todd used her Scripps College education to become a business and marketing pioneer in Alexandria, Virginia
Elizabeth Todd (BSVC â95) is still on cloud nine after celebrating a milestone that was once only a dream for a young college student. She recently marked the 10-year anniversary of a digital magazine she co-founded called â.â
âWhen I came to 91ÊÓÆ”, I wanted to work for magazines in New York City,â said Todd. âI didnât quite make it to New York, and the path was a little different than I had planned, but this has been a dream come true.â
Todd, a visual communication major, grew up near Columbus and came to Athens for college after learning about 91ÊÓÆ”âs strong journalism school. As a student, she wrote for ââ and learned about the power of storytelling and how to communicate a message clearly.
After graduation, Todd was awarded an internship with the Ohio Legislative Service Commission. The Legislative Service Commission (LSC) is a nonpartisan agency providing the Ohio General Assembly with drafting, research, budget and fiscal analysis, training, and other services.
âI didnât totally understand what I was getting in to,â said Todd. âBut luckily for me, an 91ÊÓÆ” journalism major was the press secretary for the speaker of the house and selected me to work in that department. Jo Ann Davidson was the first female speaker of the house in Ohio, so it was a great experience.â
After the 14-month internship was over, Todd was asked to stay on working as the deputy press secretary in Davidsonâs press office. She learned a lot about politics and eventually ended up getting hired by a marketing agency creating campaign-related direct mail pieces. When she got married, she moved to Alexandria, Virginia and thatâs when her career took a turn.
âI always traveled to other state capitals for work, and I didnât understand why places like Indianapolis, Indiana and Madison, Wisconsin had better retail stores than Alexandria.â
A friend suggested to Todd that she might want to open a shoe store in Old Town Alexandria.
âI jumped at the idea,â said Todd. âI was confident enough and ignorant enough to not know what it would take to do it. I opened my first store in 2003 called âThe Shoe Hive.â It was a tiny shoe store, but it had a lot of independent brands that you couldnât find other places.â
Todd expanded the store in 2009 and bought the building it was located in. In 2017, she opened a womenâs clothing store located about a block and a half away. Three years after that she moved the womenâs clothing store to a larger location and opened a menâs clothing store. All the stores are located within a two-block radius. But that wasnât the end of Toddâs entrepreneurship.
âLocal marketing has always truthfully been what I excel at and what I truly love,â said Todd. âIn partnership with the City of Alexandria, we started marketing the area as the âOld Town Boutique District.â Alexandria is a small town near a big city, and I wanted something that let people know what our stores offer and who the people are that are running them. So, we started âAlexandria Stylebook.ââ
The digital lifestyle magazine offers the latest trends, tips, and insight on all things style, beauty, design, fitness, and wellness in Alexandria. It contains blogs from business owners in the district who share all the best the city has to offer. âAlexandria Stylebookâ started out as a weekly newsletter with four stores participating. But it has grown significantly over the years now publishing four days a week with 32 businesses contributing.
Todd says she learned everything she needed to know to launch and grow âAlexandria Stylebookâ at 91ÊÓÆ”.
âI definitely learned how to write in journalism school and learned thatâs not a skill everyone leaves college with,â said Todd. âWorking for âThe Postâ was a great experience for me. 91ÊÓÆ” really encouraged me to try different things. It was the greatest four years of my life. Itâs magical.â