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Two days on the loo: The extreme lengths this founder went to launching charitable toilet-paper company Who Gives a Crap

In 2009, Simon Griffiths, Jehan Ratnatunga and Danny Alexander launched socially-conscious toilet-paper brand Who Gives A Crap.
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell
Who Gives a Crap
Who Gives a Crap co-founder Simon Griffiths. Source: supplied.

Itโ€™s often said it takes blood, sweat and tears to start a successful business, but what they donโ€™t tell you is in some cases it also takes 50 hours on a toilet.

To be fair, Simon Griffithsโ€™ experience is different than most, being the founder of socially-conscious toilet-paper brand Who Gives A Crap, which dedicates half its profits to building toilets in the developing world. His business has recently expanded overseas, spreading its feel-good rolls to the US and UK.

But six years ago Griffithsโ€™ business started like many others, with an idea and a crowdfunding campaign.

โ€œBack in 2009 I was working in and around social businesses, and one day I walked into the bathroom and just thought โ€˜why donโ€™t we sell toilet paper that builds toiletsโ€™,โ€ Griffiths told SmartCompany.

โ€œI called three friends with the idea, and the last one I called said he was keen to get on board, and we started developing the idea.โ€

That friend was Jehan Ratnatunga, who joined Griffiths and other co-founder Danny Alexander to launch Who Gives a Crap after the three won a spot in a social-business incubator in Colorado, United States. But it took three years to get the product to market, and the business relied on a crowdfunding campaign to get the capital needed to launch.

โ€œWe were selling the most boring product in the whole world, and we didnโ€™t have the sort of cult following needed for a successful crowdfunding campaign,โ€ he says.

โ€œSo we came up with the genius idea that I would pledge to sit on a toilet and not get off until weโ€™d hit our minimum.โ€

Herein lies the reason Griffiths spent the first 50 hours of his businessโ€™ life on the toilet, and also the reason Who Gives a Crap exists today. The team raised its $50,000 minimum and picked up the desired cult following along the way.

โ€œI think we ended up getting the equivalent of about one million in PR spend thanks to the stunt,โ€ he laughs.

Word-of-mouth sells out

Following the campaign, the team shipped its first batch of toilet paper in mid-2013, confident their three month’s worth of stock would be sufficient. However, orders began to double day-on-day, and the company sold out within weeks.

The three were baffled, as the business hadnโ€™t started any serious marketing efforts yet. Digging into the source of their customers, Griffiths found the companyโ€™s word-of-mouth advertising was incredibly strong, with their crowdfunding userbase sharing their funky toilet rolls with their friends, families and colleagues.

โ€œWe had to triple down on our order volumes, and we were sold out of the product for about three months during 2013,โ€ he says.

โ€œThat was five and a half years ago now, and today weโ€™ve bootstrapped the company to growing three times year-on-year, and we now have almost 50 employees. Weโ€™ve also donated $1.83 million towards building toilets in developing countries.โ€

While Who Gives a Crap has seen resounding success Down Under, the team is focused currently on its UK and US launches, which kicked off in late-2017. This isnโ€™t the first attempt the companyโ€™s had at cracking the US market, running operations there for six months after completing the crowdfunding campaign.

Australia and the US were the two countries contributing most to the campaign, says Griffiths, leading to the company deciding to sell in both markets from the get-go. However, this stretched resources too thin, leading to Who Gives a Crap shutting its US operations โ€œuntil we could build a bit more capacityโ€.

Red tape slowing expansion

Despite now having the capacity, Griffiths says the businessโ€™ international launches have been far from a cakewalk.

New research from payments company Stripe has revealed red tape is stymieing Australian businesses looking international, with 40% saying operating internationally today is harder than it was five years ago, pointing to tariffs, taxes and regulatory barriers as some of the main contributing factors.

From the businesses surveyed, nearly 30%ย estimated they spent between $68,000 to $139,000 per year on compliance, with another 30% saying that cost could reach as high as $670,000.

Griffiths says the amount of compliance his business faces when operating across three markets is a โ€œslogโ€, with the business needing nearly a year of preparation for each market before it could commence trading, and only now are the respective markets starting to take shape.

โ€œItโ€™s one thing running a business, but itโ€™s another thing running a social business. Youโ€™re held to a higher standard by not only regulators but also your customers. Itโ€™s a fine line,โ€ he says.

The main issues Who Gives a Crap faced involved opening new bank accounts, complying with different statesโ€™ tax requirements, and coming to terms with what it could and couldnโ€™t say in its marketing.

โ€œWhen we were launching in the US, I was back in Australia for a few months, and the bank in the US needed me to verify who I was on the phone,โ€ he says.

โ€œI accidentally fat-fingered it and pressed the wrong button while on the call, and asked if I could try again. They told me no, and said Iโ€™d have to come into a branch to verify myself and access my account.โ€

โ€œSo we didnโ€™t have a bank account for the first few months of trade in the US.โ€

Reflecting on the process, Griffiths says thereโ€™s definitely an opportunity for government and other startups to streamline the regulatory process for companies heading international, saying its currently an unsolved and complex problem.

โ€œItโ€™s like the boss level of a video game. Regulation is the number one thing that makes running a startup so challenging, and itโ€™s a massive problem,โ€ he says.

โ€œWeโ€™ve definitely had our fair share of letters from the IRS.โ€

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