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Why the husband-and-wife duo behind reusable coffee pod business Crema Joe are going corporate

Reusable coffee pod business Crema Joe has launched a corporate subscription service in an effort to help businesses make sustainable choices.
Priscilla Pho
Priscilla Pho
Crema Joe Kayla Mossuto
Crema Joe co-founder Kayla Mossuto. Source: supplied.

Reusable coffee pod business Crema Joe has launched a corporate subscription service in an effort to help businesses make sustainable choices.

The business was founded in 2014 by Kayla and Piers Mossuto after the husband-and-wife duo realised the sheer scale of coffee-pod wastage.

โ€œAussies consum[e] six million pods a day,โ€ Mossuto tellsย SmartCompany.

They decided to take action, idenfitifying a gap in the market for a non-plastic pod alternative.

Initially, the family business solely serviced at-home coffee consumers, supplying them with reusable stainless steel pods.

After use, customers return the pods for cleaning, refilling and reshipping, closing the loop of production in the process.

โ€œWe need the product to be, ideally, infinitely usable,โ€ she says.

โ€œWeโ€™re doing all of the work to make it really easy for people in businesses to make the switch to our products.

โ€œWe came up with the idea [of corporate subscriptions] about a year and a half ago.

โ€œItโ€™s been a slow burn, I guess. The project has taken a bit to get off the ground,โ€ she adds.

โ€œReusing is simplerโ€

Mossuto notes a correlation between the rise in sustainability awareness and an increase in the business’ revenue.

โ€œOver the years, thanks to the War on Waste series and all the information weโ€™re seeing in the media now about the recycling crisis, weโ€™ve seen a lot of organic growth,โ€ she says.

However, it’s not all good news.

Mossuto has also noticed problematic issues relating to the marketing of recyclable goods โ€” what she describes as ‘greenwashing’.

While most consumers are aware of the problems inherent to single-use plastics, Mossuto says well-intentioned coffee drinkers are often misled about the benefits of โ€˜greenโ€™ options.

She says consumers who have made the switch โ€œare trying their best to make a planet-friendly choice, but there are a lot of issues to recyclingโ€.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of energy with recycling, from transport to producing products, to raw materials, to the final recycling process.

โ€œReusing is simpler and much more effective,โ€ she adds.

Similarly, biodegradable and compostable pods are often marketed without impertinent information about proper disposal etiquette, Mosutto says.

Contrary to the popular belief that compostable products can be thrown into the bin, she says โ€œthe majority of those kinds of products have to be broken down in industrial facilitiesโ€.

โ€œBut they end up in landfills and itโ€™s essentially just as bad, if not worse, than single-use, disposable capsules,โ€ she adds.

Peas in a pod

Running a small business, overseeing four part-time workers, and parenting a young child to boot, Mossuto definitely has her hands full.

The business is โ€œquite resource-poor,โ€ย Mossuto says.

It’s this lack of time and resources that has led the founders to outsource where they can โ€” and Mossutoย encourages other time-poor or family-run businesses to do the same.

โ€œDonโ€™t be afraid to get help,โ€ she says.

โ€œIf you have the cashflow to do it, it can be more efficient to outsource to someone who can do it quicker and better than you.โ€

Looking ahead, while reluctant toย move beyond bootstrapping, Mossuto says she is consideringย crowdfunding as a way to expand the business’ facilities.

โ€œWe have a few initiatives right now, and hopefully, as we increase our reach, weโ€™ll increase our resources.โ€

However, despite Crema Joe very much being a ‘family business’, the main priority for Mossuto will always be family.

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to find that balance, and it just means that sometimes family comes first.โ€

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