It’s not that often that a clothing brand stealth takes over your Instagram feed. But whether you follow, say, Sophia Bush , or Abby Phillip , or First Lady Dr. Jill Biden , or Elaine Welteroth, or Kerry Washington , or Hillary Clinton , or Katie Couric (the list goes on), you’ll often see them wearing one thing at big work events: their Argent suits.

Even Meghan Markle recently got in on the Argent action, wearing the brand’s white knit top on her and Prince Harry’s recent tour of Columbia . And then, of course, there was the hot pink “Voting Suits You” collection in partnership with Michelle Obama’s When We All Vote nonprofit that went viral in October, encouraging women to head to the polls. It's safe to say that Argent is kind of everywhere right now and has become the go-to uniform for powerful women—an impressive feat in the brand's eight short years.

But for Argent's founder and CEO Sali Christeson, a former Silicon Valley tech executive, this was completely intentional: “Our goal was to give women confidence. We want to be that tool that helps women navigate their career.” Although, still, when Hillary Clinton unexpectedly pops up on the cover of her latest book Something Lost, Something Gained wearing your brand or the First Lady Dr.

Jill Biden appears at the first presidential debate in Argent, it's a lot. “I think what's happening now is pretty surreal, because women are reaching for it when they want to feel great,” says Christeson. But thi.