Every March, communities across the globe pause to celebrate women’s achievements, reflect on their journeys, and consider the mark they will leave on future generations. For Michelle Baptiste, a single mother of three and the founder of Trinidad and Tobago’s booming shapewear and wellness brand Selecfit, that question of legacy is not an abstract philosophical thought—it is a daily, lived reality shaped by decades of struggle, resilience, and deliberate choice.
Baptiste’s entry into entrepreneurship was not paved with privilege, generous startup funding, or ideal timing. Instead, it was forged in the fire of unthinkable adversity: she has weathered devastating personal loss, life-altering health crises, and extended periods of financial and personal instability that would have led most to abandon their goals. Rather than surrender to her circumstances, Baptiste made the conscious choice to rebuild her life from the ground up, for the sake of herself and her three children.
Starting with barely any capital, Baptiste launched her business while juggling a stacked roster of responsibilities: holding down a job, completing her education, and raising her family full-time. There were days she delivered customer orders with her young children strapped into the backseat of her car, and long nights spent poring over research, refining products, and nurturing the vision that would become Selecfit. What began as a simple strategy to put food on the table and secure stable housing for her family has grown into one of the fastest-growing wellness and shapewear brands in Trinidad and Tobago.
But for Baptiste, success has never been measured purely by revenue or market share. From the earliest days of her business, she has centered impact over profit, building a brand rooted in a far deeper mission: empowering women across the Caribbean to cultivate confidence from the inside out, reconnect with their intrinsic self-worth, and see their potential beyond the constraints of their current circumstances.
Her story strikes a particular chord with women across St. Kitts and the wider Caribbean, many of whom navigate the dual weight of building a business while shouldering primary responsibility for their families and communities. Baptiste represents a new model of Caribbean entrepreneurship—one that prioritizes lasting legacy over quick gains, and collective empowerment over individual wealth.
What makes Baptiste’s leadership unique is her ability to turn her own trauma and hardship into a platform for lifting up other women. Her personal struggles have shaped every layer of her business, from her product development to her community outreach. She knows firsthand that for many women, especially marginalized women navigating single parenthood and economic instability, entrepreneurship is not a distant passion project—it is a lifeline and a necessity. Because of that, she advocates for a new approach to business building: one that generates personal and community stability, boosts collective confidence, and opens long-term opportunity for other women, not just the founder.
Drawing from her decades of experience, Baptiste shares four actionable lessons for women ready to move beyond mere survival and build something that outlasts them:
First, start where you are, with what you have. Baptiste never waited for perfect funding, perfect timing, or perfect conditions to launch her vision. Legacy, she emphasizes, is built through action, not perfection.
Second, build your business around purpose, not just profit. Selecfit was founded to solve a tangible, widespread problem that many other brands ignored: helping women of all body types and backgrounds feel comfortable and confident in their own skin. A business rooted in genuine purpose, she notes, will always create deeper impact and more enduring success than one built solely for financial gain.
Third, stay consistent, even when every obstacle feels insurmountable. From selling products out of her car to opening brick-and-mortar retail locations across the region, Baptiste’s growth was not the result of luck—it was the result of slow, steady persistence. Legacy is not built in a single breakthrough moment; it is built through consistent effort over years, even when progress is invisible.
Fourth, always keep your vision focused beyond the present day. Baptiste’s work is not just for her current customers—it is a legacy for her own children to learn from, grow with, and benefit from. That intergenerational focus, she argues, is the true definition of what a legacy is.
For Caribbean women considering their own journeys, Baptiste’s story carries a clear, powerful message: legacy is not a gift reserved only for the wealthy, the famous, or the well-connected. It is built one small decision at a time, through daily discipline, and through the courage to keep moving forward even when the path is unclear.
As women across St. Kitts and the wider Caribbean reflect on their own goals this Women’s History Month, Baptiste’s journey offers both inspiration and a clear road map: You can build something meaningful. You can create lasting change in other people’s lives. And you can leave a mark that outlives you. Because at the end of the day, legacy is not just about what you achieve for yourself—it is about how many lives you lift up along the way.
This feature is based on a press release distributed by Carli Communications Trinidad and published by SKNVibes.com, which has not edited the content to reflect its own editorial views.
