In 2011, Kristy Chong was on maternity leave after having her second child, when the idea for Modibodi came to her. She was training for a marathon; her period had not long returned, and she was experiencing some light bladder leakage.
โOn one of those training runs I realised the options available to me and to many other women, were pretty uncomfortable, irritating and didnโt give me a lot of dignity,โ Chong tells Shirley Chowdhary on the latest episode of The Leadership Lessons.
From that moment, the idea was clear: why hadnโt anyone developed something better to manage our periods and light incontinence?
โThe developments in the period products space had been very limited,โ Chong adds. โWe know that the original tampons and pads were developed by men, and the way they were positioned was using blue liquid, it was very much medicalising the problem โ because it was a โproblemโ.โ
A decade on, Chong is the proud founder and chief executive of the well-established ModiBodi, the original leak-proof brand for period and incontinence underwear. Her products are also reusable, offering a simple and sustainable solution to disposable period products.
Sheโs also just picked up yet another award, recently named the Australian winner of the Bold by Veuve Clicquot award, which celebrated Chong for the millions of products Modibodi has sold as well as her work producing more sustainable products.
โWhen I created this brand, I wanted to give people a very simple solution,โ Chong says.
โOften the sustainability world is complex but with our undies you just need to wear them, rinse, wash, hang them to dry and repeat. Itโs not that hard.โ
In the early product development stages of ModiBodi, Chong says the response to her idea for leak and period-proof underwear was mostly positive. Generally, people were willing to jump on board with her innovative product ideas.
Any backlash against her disruption of the status quo came later โ notably in 2020, when Facebook pulled a Modibodi advertising campaign that showed period blood. Red, blood-like liquid was shown on disposable pads, on sheets, and tricking down a womanโs leg in the shower. For people who menstruate, these scenes are nothing out of the ordinary.
For Facebook, it too โsensationalโ and โgraphicโ. Chong said the decision honestly shocked her, as she thought weโd reached a stage where conversations around periods were beginning to normalise.
โAll we are trying to do is normalise what 800 million people globally experience. It can be icky, thatโs the reality weโre trying to show,โ she said.
โThis is what I say to people: most likely the person next to you is bleeding from their vagina. The reality is thatโs going on. Itโs part of my life, itโs not gross or shameful.โ
Eventually, after whirlwind of support for the campaign, Facebook overturned its ban, and we moved one step closer to normalising periods.
Chong explains her mission is to bring authenticity, realness and rawness into the way we all think about normal bodily functions. Itโs a philosophy she brings to the operational side of her company too, where she prioritises leading her team with empathy.
โAs a leader in the new age, itโs about empathetic leadership. Trying to listen to your customers, your staff and empathise with weโre theyโre at, instead of just pushing them do things and meet your agenda,โ Chong said.
โWho I am at work is who I am at home. Iโm a very conscious leader and itโs a style I try to encourage in my leadership team. We need to listen to everybody, ask for their opinions and draw them out.โ
Chong has extended this empathy to her staff by making menstrual, menopause and miscarriage leave available to her team, a policy she says ensures that these parts of life are normal discussions in her workplace.
โThere are so many people who are experiencing physical and mental pain in relation to a very normal monthly problem being menstruation or menopause, and then miscarriage too,โ she said.
For the staff who had taken up the leave, Chong says they tend to come back with their loyalty to the company increased, and without the feeling of shame that is so often attached to these issues in other workplaces.
In the podcast, Chong shares that since establishing ModiBodi, sheโs learnt that her best strengths are problem solving and activation. Sheโs always felt a need to prove herself to herself, and wonโt settle for defeat.
โCoupled with the right idea, it just seems to have worked.โ
This article was first published by Women’s Agenda.
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