FORMER amateur boxer and founder of clothing and equipment brand BOXRAW, Ben Amanna recently appeared on the Forbes 30 under 30 list in the retail category. He however is taking it all in his stride. โI know what Iโm doing. I know where weโre taking this. If you think that was cool, wait till you see what weโre about to do,โ he says.
It was Amannaโs own involvement in amateur boxing that inspired him. โI see what itโs done for me. It put in me the values of discipline, mindfulness, love. I saw how it changed kids in the street,โ Ben says.
Like Nike got people into running, he wants BOXRAW to get people into boxing. โBeing bullied as a kid, I didnโt have any nice clothes. When I did start to make money from selling sweets, I remember when I bought nice clothes and how I felt. I was so empowered. Iโm confident. I want to go out, I want to take on the world and I wasnโt getting that with anything I was wearing in the boxing gym. Even outside I wanted people to know I was a boxer,โ he continued. โWhen you buy a BOXRAW product you should own that for life. If you take care of it youโll own it for life. Itโs just the attitude that we try to do everything with. Weโre here to innovate, weโre here to create, weโre not here to copy.
โWe want BOXRAW to represent an attitude towards life. Itโs about that โgo getterโ mentality: weโre not where we need to be and we need to work to go after it. Very much transferring more into a lifestyle brand and representing something there and not just being boxed into this elitist boxing brand. Instead being something for everybody, aligning with our vision, to be the reason why the world got into boxing.โ
He is taking an innovative approach. โThe fashion or stylistic element is always last. Itโs function over form always. Whenever we create a product we try to be the best out there,โ Amanna said. โWeโve been working on our boxing gloves for four years now. I could have launched boxing gloves two or three years ago and just sold out.โ
That is something of a personal mission. Amanna had to stop boxing at 21 because of a hand problem. โIt shocked me that boxing gloves were made the same way for hundreds of years, little to no innovation. It was simple. We took the hand and we built something around the hand,โ he said. โIt was about how can we create a glove that can enhance a boxerโs ability. So weโve got six patent points on the glove that weโre launching.
โWe partnered with a very famous F1 team, using their wind tunnel to improve the aerodynamics of a glove.
โSmall changes but no oneโs thought to bring the innovation that people do on a rocket ship or an F1 car into the boxing realm.
โWhy has no one tried to innovate?โ
They have also set up a charity wing, โBoxing is Love,โ and are building a gym in Liberia through that. โIt comes back to this overarching vision. If I say I want to be the reason why the world got into boxing, I cannot disregard a third of the worldโs population because they donโt have access to this sport. Because Iโm from an Indian background and Iโve gone to visit places you notice instantaneously the lack of opportunity. It makes you very appreciative of what weโve got here and also recognising that thereโs people in other places in the world that donโt have these opportunities. So Boxing is Love is an extension of BOXRAW; how do we bring the world into boxing who donโt have access to the sport? Weโre building a boxing gym in Liberia, itโs built out of recycled shipping containers. So itโs scalable, sustainable. We provide value to the local economy as weโre building them. We staff these gyms. They double up as education centres. Once the first oneโs built, weโll scale this,โ he said. โWe also do offline events with emerging communities, weโre doing something in Coventry soon with disadvantaged kids
โYou see a change in the dynamic. Their whole being and their attitude toward life, it shifts. So if we can do that for kids, I can be happy. Itโs really exciting stuff what weโre doing there. It brings a lot of energy to me, the idea of taking this sport to a wider market.โ