Aussie social enterprise Thankyou Group has reached out to multinational conglomerates P&G and Unilever with a potential plan, and itโs calling on its supporters to show the collective power of people to help make it happen.
Thankyou has apparently sent unsolicited Zoom meeting invites to the two behemoths in the consumer good space, scheduling meetings for mid-October.
The teamโs proposition is for P&G or Unilever to manufacture and distribute Thankyouโs products.
The Aussie social enterprise directs all of its profits to a charitable trust focused on tackling poverty, so global distribution would allow it to scale that fundraising mission considerably.
In a campaign video, Thankyou co-founder Daniel Flynn said the two businesses โliterally run the worldโ.
โThey have hundreds of factories, and they make products for billions of us every day,โ he said.
The Thankyou team has been watching them closely throughout their own 12-year journey, he added.
โAnd to their credit, theyโve solved some really complex ethical and sustainability stuff. Genuinely, itโs impressive.โ
Now, he sees no reason why they couldnโt work together. But, crucially, Flynn isnโt proposing a sale or a takeover.
Adidas makes and distributes Kanye Westโs shoe brand, he notes in the video. And Nestle makes and distributes Starbucks coffee pods.
โIf the system can unlock a model like this for a shoe and a coffee pod, and in that same process make billions of dollars for its shareholders, could the world not turn that same key for a product that breathes in profit and breathes out social impact?โ
To add to the drama, Thankyou has sent the same proposal to nine of Unilever and P&Gโs biggest competitors.
โWeโve gone all in,โ Flynn said.
โIf the big two wonโt help us on this mission, maybe someone else will.โ
And, in one final wild twist, Thankyou plans to announce who has taken the team up on their offer on November 5 by plastering it across a billboard in New Yorkโs Times Square.
โIt was like a gold rushโ
The unveiling of this campaign follows a somewhat cryptic blog post from Thankyou earlier this month, alluding to a “moonshot” plan that had been on the foundersโ minds since the very inception of the enterprise.
And it follows the scrapping of Thankyouโs flagship bottled water product, as it pushed to reduce its plastic footprint.
But, according to Flynn, it also follows a pretty successful COVID-19 period, and thatโs partly been the driver behind doing this now.
โWhile the worldโs been in turmoil, some people got really rich,โ Flynn said.
โWe know that because weโre one of them.โ
As a hand wash and hand sanitiser provider, Thankyou made some $10 million in profits during the pandemic, Flynn said.
โIt was like a gold rush.โ
But, โthe whole reason we make money is to get it to the parts of the world that need it mostโ, he added.
If Thankyou existed not only in Australia and New Zealand, but in every country in the world, itโs fair to say those profits would have been considerably larger, meaning more cash to Thankyouโs partner organisations for tackling poverty.
โThat wouldnโt have been $10 million we made in a few months. It would have been literally hundreds of millions of our collective consumer dollars,โ he mused.
โCould a global movement take this idea to the world?โ
A new normal
This is a somewhat unorthodox plan, and thatโs something Flynn acknowledges in the campaign video.
But, thereโs power in collective pressure, he says.
The founder calls on people to post about the campaign on social media, tagging Unilever and P&G and using the hashtag #thankyoutotheworld, to get their attention.
In fact, this is a strategy that has worked before.
According to Flynn, when Thankyou was starting out it had some trouble getting its products into the duopoly of Australiaโs mainstream supermarkets. It was public petitioning that changed their minds.
โPeople petitioned. They sang, danced, rapped, uploaded videos โ two helicopter pilots even flew their helicopters for half an hour around their head offices for free,โ Flynn said in the video.
Eventually, both supermarkets gave in.
โThen, consumers used their choice,โ he added.
This may not be the traditional way for an Aussie business to take a step into global markets. But itโs 2020, and nothing is being done the traditional way.
โBusiness as usual is out the window, and we must forge bold new paths forward,โ Flynn said.
โToday, weโre flipping the game on its head,โ he added.
โWhat if weโre on the edge of a new normal, where the products we choose every day exist to right a wrong?”
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