As the co-founder and CEO of Expectful, Nathalie Walton began 2021 by raising $4.2M to further to company’s ambitious mission: to become a holistic health and wellness platform for expectant mothers. But that was probably the least impressive she accomplished that year. Since then, Walton has transformed the company into a powerhouse of resources for maternal health. In addition to fertility-focused meditations, the app now offers parents access to lactation consultants, sleep coaching, nutritionists, bereavement specialists, fertility coaches, and live events.
“Really, the biggest thing that we did was this pivot into this vision of this holistic wellness platform for fertility, pregnancy, and parenthood,” Walton explained to Tech It Anywhere, “It’s really hard to find all the pieces that you need when you’re trying to conceive when you’re pregnant as a new mom, and so like, that’s our pivot into being that one-stop-shop for everyone in that space,” she added.
To support this larger-than-life vision, she’s also expanded the company, pulling in talent from all across the country and growing the platform’s network of service providers.
“A lot of people think that the hard work is the fundraising, and fundraising is hard, but the real work begins after that,” Walton elaborated.
The Why
Walton, who got an MBA at Stanford’s GSB and has worked at big names like Airbnb and Google, has a very personal connection to Expectful’s mission. Her own high-risk pregnancy and birthing experience prompted her to seek help coping with the emotional and physical toll they had taken on her. In a Medium article, she discussed the moment the doctor told her she was at risk for preterm delivery and that her baby might not survive. On top of all of that, she had just started a challenging new role at a large tech company.
At this point, she turned her entire focus toward taking the best care of herself so she could complete a full-term pregnancy. And she did it. She stayed pregnant for 262 days, surpassing her goal of 259 days. Then, everything came crashing down.
“The delivery doctor described my birth as an ’emergency of all emergencies’; my placenta had abrupted and my son, Everett, and I were fortunate to make it out alive. Had I not been in one [of] the country’s top hospitals, and had I not had access to every possible wellness resource that one can encounter, my story may not have had the same outcome,” she wrote in her Medium article.
This knowledge – that many women, especially Black women, suffer through high-risk pregnancies and deliveries without access to the resources she had – fueled her to find a way to help.
“The sad reality is that many families don’t survive. Black mothers are 3–4 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications (and are more likely to have pregnancy complications) than White women. Frankly, it wouldn’t have mattered if I were Beyoncé or Serena Williams; as Black women, they too faced life-threatening situations during their motherhood journey. Regardless of education, socio-economic status, or physical ability, to be pregnant as a Black woman in the United States is an existential risk,” she explained in her Medium post.
Plans
In 2021 Expectful launched Black Mamas Meditate, a free meditation collection designed by and for Black women to address the unique challenges Black mothers face in their fertility journeys. Additionally, Expectful remains committed to accessibility through its long-standing partnership with Johnson and Johnson to offer free subscriptions to anyone who needs them.
Walton’s plans for Expectful in 2022 are even more ambitious than for 2021.
“We built the foundation for this holistic wellness platform. And now I think it’s it’s doing the hard work of just making sure that this is the product that users want and love,” Walton told Tech It Anywhere.
That includes expanding their network of service providers even more and making Expectful as visible and accessible as possible.
“It’s exciting that people can see what we’re doing and in hopes of helping them. That’s what is most exciting to me,” Walton gushed about the platform’s growth, “I get DMs from people I don’t even know, and they’re like, just I want you to know how much your product helped me,” she elaborated.
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