Worm poop. If you can sell that, you’ve got
a knack for business.
Now package that worm poop in old 20-ounce plastic bottles
and convince major stores to carry it on their shelves. Get
schools, stadiums, and businesses involved in a nationwide
effort to collect those bottles. In your factory, employ more
worms than you employ people — and then cover every square
foot of it with graffiti. If possible.
If you can do that, you’ve got a knack for revolution.
“Don’t think about business the way you thought about
business,” Tom Szaky, TerraCycle’s founder and chief executive
officer tells Cornell students who work at the company’s
Ithaca office. “If you have a good idea, we’ll make it real.”
Szaky’s good idea was — literally — garbage. During their
freshman year at Princeton, Szaky and his friend Jon Beyer
scraped together $20,000 to find a way to mass-produce “worm
poop” and sell it as an all-natural fertilizer. Think of
kitchen composting on a larger scale and you’ll understand how
TerraCycle got its start.
It is the first consumer product to be made from and
packaged in waste, according to the company’s website.
“In the next 25 years, business will have to fundamentally
change,” said Steve Kurz ’07, who started up the Ithaca office
last year. “We can’t keep using resources the way that we
have, so we have to find new ways.”
“TerraCycle is eliminating the idea of garbage,” Kurz said.
“We want to make it R to the fourth power — reduce, reuse,
recycle, revolutionize.”
This year, he’s assembled a team of seven Cornell students
to expand TerraCycle’s presence in Ithaca. They are Devangi
Nishar ’09, Danielle Haigh ’08, Mike Zhu ’08, Jenny Song ’08,
Marcus Gallagher ’08, Gabriel Lewis ’06 and Brian Warshay ’06.
“TerraCycle is the first company I’ve ever seen that has
really applied deep sustainability in the way they think.
They’re actually making waste a valuable resource,” said
Lewis, who will focus on research and development.
The company has wormed its way into Canadian big box stores
and is starting to pop up in stores around the states,
including GreenStar in Ithaca. This year the young company is
projected to gross $500,000.
“As a result of being environmentally conscious and
socially responsible, not only do we not sacrifice anything on
the financial side, we are actually more profitable,” Kurz
said.
Since TerraCycle packaging comes from consumer waste,
anyone who can toss a plastic bottle into a bin has the
potential to be part of the company’s production process.
“Having people collect the bottles, you have a generation
of Americans literally building the product,” Szaky said.
Kurz’s team is working to creatively expand TerraCycle’s
bottle collection initiative, Bottle Brigade. Their goal is to
set up the largest ever national recycling drive, and they’ve
started by reaching out to the local community. The group was
at Pyramid Mall this Saturday promoting the product at the
America Recycles Day event.
Already, TerraCycle has been working to introduce Bottle
Brigade at the Tampa Bay Lightning arena, and they are in
advanced stages of negotiations with major companies about
Bottle Brigade partnerships.
Additionally, the group is bringing the program to local
Ithaca schools. For every bottle schools can collect for
TerraCycle, they receive five cents. They can either keep the
money or donate it to a charity of their choice. They also
have the option of preserving rain forest space in South
America. Szaky, only 23, speaks to the Cornell team with the
calm, assured tone of a seasoned businessman.
“If we do this well — it is historic. You have a chance to
really change the way consumers think,” he said.
“He has a way of talking that really gets you excited about
it — I think that’s the reason that TerraCycle has done well,
he’s gotten people to believe that a college student can go
ahead and make this successful,” Lewis said.
“It’s going to be spectacular — either a spectacular
disaster or a spectacular success — but it won’t be anything
in between,” Szaky said.
As he speaks, he peppers his vision with both encouragement
and wisdom, setting the standard for TerraCycle’s business
dealings.
“Do not ever pretend,” he said, “that you know more than
you do. The moment you make something up, it’s over. Make sure
people know that you are a student. Every time you make a
mistake, they’re going to help you even more; they’re going to
help you grow.”
“You have to be kind. You have to be honest,” Szaky said.
“Hearing him talk really made me feel like I was a part of
something important and groundbreaking,” Haigh said. “Steve
and Tom really make you believe that this company will change
how business is done.”
While Nishar is in charge of setting up the schools
program, Haigh is working with sororities to introduce Bottle
Brigade on campus.
“Whichever house has raised the most money by the end of
the year will receive all the money earned from every house to
put towards their own philanthropy,” she said.
Meanwhile, Gallagher is finding ways to introduce the
collection program on a large-scale level in certain states.
“This could potentially blow up and be huge,” he said.
Kurz explains that if they can implement Bottle Brigade
state-wide, it would “effectively turn non-Bottle Bill states
into Bottle Bill states through TerraCycle’s collection
efforts.” ‘Bottle Bill’ states are those that offer deposits
on returned recyclables.
The company’s small size makes it possible for students to
have a large impact.
“I’m more involved than I thought I was going to be allowed
to be,” Warshay said. “We can call up the main company and get
any information when we need it. I have Tom’s cell phone
number, can just call him.”
“TerraCycle does business in a different way,” Kurz
explained.
From inviting local graffiti artists to decorate their
Trenton factory to housing summer interns in a “Real World”
style house and producing a reality-TV infomercial, the
company is keeping business fresh.
“It’s a little more exciting than I expected — Steve made
this so dynamic. Our input counts,” said Zhu, who is working
to bring Bottle Brigade to other university campuses. “We have
a lot of energy; we could probably find people at other
universities with the same kind of fervor as us.” “This
company is extremely appealing to college students. It’s
something that kids want to be a part of when they hear about
it,” Kurz said.
“I thought it was a great, environmentally-conscious
company,” said Warshay when asked why he joined TerraCycle.
Zhu was also attracted by the company’s successful
environmentally friendly model. “I’ve never seen it done
before,” he said.
And what does Kurz like best about TerraCycle? “It doesn’t
taste too bad.”
When you’re a guy selling worm poop, a sense of humor
counts.