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| Entrepreneur Turns Worm Waste
Into Profit |
UPDATED - Sunday December 11, 2005 4:03pm |
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 | TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Tom Szaky is wearing what he
calls his "greed hat," turning worm excrement into profit.The
23-year-old Princeton dropout set out to be a smart entrepreneur,
not an environmental hero. His growing business is built on organic
fertilizer made from worm feces, then bottled in recycled plastic
bottles.
The company, TerraCycle, markets plant
fertilizer created by "vermicomposting" — harvesting worm excrement.
It sells the product in 20-ounce plastic soft drink bottles, many
gathered by school children. It employs 10 people in a warehouse in
economically depressed Trenton.
Those business
choices were born not of idealism but to maximize efficiency and
keep costs down.
"We're in Trenton because the rent
is very cheap and labor is abundant," said Szaky (pronounced
SAH'-kee). "The decisions were made by wearing the greed hat ... but
ironically we're doing the right thing."
TerraCycle Plant Food has
sold for around $7 since early 2004 in organic groceries and
independent garden shops, and earlier this year began appearing on
shelves in Wal-Marts across Canada and Home Depots there and in New
Jersey. Sales for 2005 are expected to reach about $500,000, and
Szaky hopes to triple that next year with a planned launch in Home
Depots and Wal-Marts nationwide.
There, where the
majority of Americans buy their gardening goods, TerraCycle will go
up against fertilizing powerhouse Miracle-Gro.
"We
don't want to be just be an organic plant food sold in little
organic stores," he said. "We want to compete on their playing
field."
Born in Hungary, Szaky moved with his
physician parents to Toronto at age 9. He entered Princeton to study
behavioral psychology and economics in 2001.
While visiting a
friend in Montreal that fall, Szaky was intrigued by the success his
plant-loving pal was having with homemade fertilizer generated by a
box of compost and some worms.
"It wasn't an environmental
thing. It was `Wow, this is a cool business model,'" Szaky said.
"The light bulb went on, and it never went off."
Szaky and
Princeton colleague Jon Beyer submitted their idea to a campus
business plan project, and were rejected. Undaunted, they purchased
a "worm gin" — equipment that houses red worms while they chew their
way through decomposing food scraps — with $20,000 borrowed on
credit cards. By summer 2002 the fledgling company was near
failure.
Szaky went on an AM radio station to talk up the
concept, and fielded a phone call from an investor offering $2,000
to keep TerraCycle alive. Szaky accepted, quitting school at year's
end to devote himself to the business.
The company took up
residence at Rutgers University's EcoComplex, an environmental
research facility run in partnership with Burlington County Landfill
near Bordentown, about 12 miles south of Trenton. While a TerraCycle
researcher there is still tweaking specialized formulations for
orchids and African violets, the company now purchases the worm
waste from suppliers and focuses on packaging and
marketing.
A private investor in Florida owns a 40 percent
interest in TerraCycle, which is purchasing the 20,000-square-foot
Trenton warehouse as a permanent headquarters. TerraCycle spokesman
Barry Brinster said the company is not yet making a profit, but
expects to break even in 2006.
Along with the full-time
laborers, TerraCycle has about 10 professional staffers — including
chief technical officer Beyer, now a Princeton graduate — working
for "nonprofit wages." A number of those looking after the startup's
research, legal and financial concerns are relative
grayhairs.
In August Eric J. Smith, who spent 15 years in top
sales positions at such companies as Procter & Gamble Co. and SC
Johnson & Son joined TerraCycle full-time.
Smith, 39,
working from his Atlanta home, compared Szaky to the founder of
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. for his willingness to rely on his staffers'
expertise.
"He is our Sam Walton. He has surrounded himself
with individuals that were leaders in their respective fields,"
Smith said. "I've worked for 55-year-olds who couldn't hold a candle
to him in empowering people to do their jobs."
An 80 percent
pay cut has been a bit of an adjustment.
"My wife is confused
and my mother-in-law won't talk to me," Smith joked. "But I kind of
got addicted to what he was doing. Tom's one of the best I've seen
in knowing his product, having a passion for it, and being able to
communicate it."
———
On the Net:
TerraCycle http://www.terracycle.net/
Copyright 2005 by The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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