Shantel Jackson remembers the exact feeling that changed everything. She was standing in a pair of heels she loved — the kind that looked worth every inch — and her feet were telling a very different story. Rather than accept discomfort as the price of style, she decided to solve it.
That decision, made sometime around 2009, would eventually become Shoe Gummi, a footwear comfort brand that has quietly grown into one of the more compelling entrepreneurial stories in fashion and wellness. Jackson, who built the company largely through self-directed research and relentless product testing, launched with a patented outer sole designed to reduce the strain that high heels place on the foot. What followed was something she may not have fully anticipated: women actually wanted more.
The Product Line That Grew With Its Customers
The Shoe Gummi collection today extends well beyond that first sole. Jackson has expanded it into a range of targeted solutions built around the specific ways that heels fail the body. The current lineup includes:
- Gummi Dots
- Gummi Straps
- Gummi Inserts
- Toe Gummi
- Arch Gummi
- Luxe Slippers
- Comfort Socks
Each product targets a distinct discomfort — whether that is toe pinching, arch fatigue, or straps that cut into skin. Jackson has described her goal as building what she calls a foot comfort powerhouse, and the breadth of the collection reflects that ambition. It is not a single fix. It is a system.
Shantel Jackson and the Miss Universe Connection
Perhaps the clearest signal that Shoe Gummi has arrived came through its partnership with the Miss Universe Organization, where the brand serves as an endurance sponsor. The logic is simple and surprisingly underexplored in the industry: women competing in pageants spend hours in high heels under demanding conditions. Jackson saw an alignment that went beyond marketing.
The partnership reinforced something Jackson has always believed — that comfort and confidence are not opposites. In the world of pageantry and fashion, where performance is visual and physical endurance is real, Shoe Gummi occupies a space that few brands have thought to claim.
Building a Brand on Camera
Jackson has also leaned into transparency as a brand strategy. Her YouTube series, Let’s Get Down to Business, documents the unglamorous reality of running a company — the campaign decisions that do not always go smoothly, the moments of self-doubt, and the incremental wins that rarely make headlines. It is a candid portrait of what entrepreneurship actually looks like, and for many of her viewers, that honesty is the product itself.
The series is not polished in the way that most brand content tends to be. That appears to be the point. Jackson has spoken openly about living inside her work, and the vlog reflects that intensity. Viewers are not watching a success story from the outside. They are watching it get built.
Shantel Jackson on What Success Actually Means
Jackson’s understanding of success has shifted meaningfully since she started. In the early years, doing everything herself was both a necessity and a point of pride. Now, she talks about team building as a defining measure of how far the brand has come. Having people around her who understand her vision, she has said, is what allows Shoe Gummi to keep growing without losing its identity.
That identity is rooted in something she returns to often: authenticity. Jackson does not position Shoe Gummi as a product she invented in the abstract. She is the customer. She has worn the heels, felt the pain, and used every item in the lineup. That lived-in credibility shapes how she talks about the brand and, by extension, how her audience receives it.
For women who have quietly accepted that looking good sometimes means hurting, Shoe Gummi is making a different argument. Style and comfort, Jackson insists, were never supposed to be a trade-off. She is betting that the market agrees — and so far, it seems to be proving her right.
The full Shoe Gummi collection is available at ShoeGummi.com.

