Catch Up on Sleep Anywhere with This Customizable Travel Pillow
CORI adapts to you so you can fall asleep anywhere.
When you're trying to get a business off the ground, sleep is sometimes the first thing sacrificed. Especially when you're traveling around the country or globe trying to expand your business. Travel, however, should be a prime sleeping opportunity, not a work opportunity. You just need to have the right tools, like the CORI Travel Pillow.

Of course, it's not easy to sleep on planes, trains, or buses, and traditional travel pillows just always seem to get in the way and never make you more comfortable. The problem is, those pillows are a one-size-fits-all solution. CORI, on the other hand, is a customizable travel pillow. With CORI, you can create your own unique memory foam travel pillow that fits you and your preferred sleeping position. Its flexible design adapts to any space — even the middle seat — while the breathable fabric helps keep you cool and comfortable as you doze off. Before you know it, you'll be drifting off while in the sky, catching up on some much-needed sleep.
Normally $43, the CORI Travel Pillow is 23 percent off today at just $32.90. It's available in graphite grey, amethyst purple, cerulean blue, aquamarine, CORI blue, olive green, and tangerine.
Entrepreneur Editors' Picks
-
This Co-Founder Was Kicked Out of Retailers for Pitching a 'Taboo' Beauty Product. Now, Her Multi-Million-Dollar Company Sells It for More Than $20 an Ounce.
-
Have You Ever Obsessed Over 'What If'? According to Scientists, You Don't Actually Know What Would Have Fixed Everything.
-
After He Was Fired From the UFC, This Former Fighter Turned His Passion Into a Thriving Business
-
Most People Don't Know These 2 Things Are Resume Red Flags. A Career Expert Reveals How to Work Around Them.
-
How One Woman Turned Pandemic-Induced Boredom and a Makeshift Garage Art Studio Into a Thriving Franchise
-
Use These 4 Self-Care Rituals for More Resilience and Less Depletion
-
Shark Tank's Barbara Corcoran Wants to Invest in 'Someone Who Probably Needs a Good Shrink Instead of a Business'