Episodi
-
Every minute, a garbage truck worth of rubbish goes into our ocean. If we don’t make drastic changes as a global community, there’ll be more plastic than fish in our oceans by 2050.
Despite what we've all been taught, recycling is not the solution. In Australia, just 15% of plastic that we send to recycling is actually recycled. The other 85%? It ends up in landfill or in the ocean. We have to shift our thinking to a refill model, reducing the number of new plastics that we buy while simultaneously removing existing plastics from the environment.
Mike Smith, founder of Zero Co, joins us for an eye-opening account on the environmental crisis we're in due to the prevalence of single use plastics. Mike shares lessons on how to crack the Kickstarter model - Zero Co ran Australia’s most successful Kickstarter campaign in 2019 - what it was like starting a business in the height of the pandemic and how building a passionate community has been crucial to Zero Co’s early success.
Changing consumer behaviour is tough. The price - quality - convenience trifecta is a key driver for consumers. Mike shares how he thinks about changing behaviour, and how it’s no longer enough to just launch a business. To grow, businesses now and in the future need to solve for the world’s biggest problems. Doing good and deep purpose has to be baked into the DNA of the company and their reason for being. -
Australia's used car industry's worth $55 billion and about 1 million cars are sold every year, some are new, some are used.
Despite the huge market for car sales and our reliance as a country on personal vehicles, the process of buying and selling used cars is fraught with risk and hasn't evolved a great deal over the years. Whether you're buying a car off Gumtree or from Dave at the dealership down the road, you never really know if you're getting an absolute steal, or a total lemon. Given the size of the market and the evolution in how we shop and buy almost everything else, it's incredible that the industry has seen so little disruption.
If you follow disruptors and innovative business models, you probably know of Carvana - they’re the fastest growing online used car dealer in the United States and were recently added to the 2021 Fortune 500 List. Well, Australia has its own disruptor in the car sales space.
Meet Cars24. Erin Williamson, Cars24’s Chief Customer Officer, joins us on the show to talk about used car horror stories, the opportunity Cars24 saw to disrupt the market and provide an alternative model for used car buyers, how their business model works, why Cars24 doesn't have sales people, and why their online model is the way of the future for car sales. -
Episodi mancanti?
-
Ever wondered just how the aged care and disability services industry actually works? Well, this episode's for you!
Like many developed countries, Australia has an ageing population. Today, there are around 3 million Aussies who are aged 70 and older, and just under half a million people living with a disability who access support services through the National Disability Insurance Scheme. Together, older people and people with disabilities who live in their own homes, with care and support, represent a significant proportion of our country and our community.
With a sizeable number of people accessing these types of services and a huge number of businesses operating in this space, why is the aged and disability care industry lagging behind when it comes to being truly consumer-first and delivering an exceptional customer experience?
This week, we're joined by Mable's Chief Operating Officer, Rachel Debeck, for a behind-the-scenes look into the aged and disability care industry, an industry under immense pressure to both evolve and meet the increasing needs of our population. We take a look at the systemic challenges that exist in the industry, gain an understanding of how complex the customer journey is and discuss why disruption hasn't occurred sooner.
We also explore the new, alternative model that Mable offers, a model that leverages a peer-to-peer marketplace to solve workforce shortages while also putting choice and control back into the consumer's hands. -
It’s been described as ‘TikTok for doing good’, a global impact loyalty program, and an app that empowers and challenges people to take action on some of the world’s biggest problems like hunger, poverty and climate change.
Founder Andre Eikmeier joins us to share where his inspiration came from, how he realised that he didn’t need to figure out how to save the world, plenty of smart people before him were onto that, he just needed to figure out how to empower people to take action and have visibility of their impact. Say hello to the next big thing: Good Empire.
How did Andre go from co-founding Aussie online wine retailer, Vinomofo, to building a new company that’s set out to tackle the world’s biggest issues? Change is hard, and humans love convenience, so how will Good Empire motivate people to take action? What advice does Andre have for entrepreneurs and business leaders? And perhaps the biggest question, what’s an app got to do with saving the world? -
Manuri Gunawardena was 24 and in her final years of medical school, working on a brain cancer drug trial, when she witnessed the inequities in the clinical trial industry and the impact on human life. One patient in the trial was able to navigate the complex system and access a clinical trial and drug that was successful in curing their disease, another was not and sadly passed away.
Manuri made her own life-changing decision and, instead of becoming a clinician, founded HealthMatch. HealthMatch is a platform that empowers patients to identify and access clinical trials, changing the lives of people who need to access clinical trials and the future of medicine in Australia and across the world.
Clinical trials are worth $1 billion to Australia’s economy, yet 80% of trials are delayed or abandoned, impacting on the lives of the tens of thousands of people who need access to these often life-saving drugs. Why?
There are fundamental issues with the clinical trial model. It’s inefficient and inequitable, archaic and broken, the very opposite of customer-centric. We see data and technology used to drive innovation and create personalised experiences in almost every other industry, so why not this one? Why has the clinical trial industry fallen so far behind? -
From pet-sitting a Labrador named Honey for a friend, to establishing a game-changing partnership with Qantas, going public in the middle of a global pandemic and the acquisition of Waggly Club - Mad Paws' co-founder, Alexis Soulopoulos, joins us on Unconventional Business this week.
How did Mad Paws, a business founded on pet-sitting services, increase both bookings and new customer acquisition during a global pandemic, when the vast majority of Australia was grounded? What was the catalyst for the company to buck the trend and go public so early into their journey? How did Alexis and the team overcome the vast challenges that exist in building marketplace business models? And with 69% of Aussie households owning a pet, what does the future look like for Mad Paws and the pet industry? -
Tobi Pearce and co-founder Kayla Itsines grew Sweat, now a globally recognised fitness brand and one of Apple’s most downloaded health apps, from what was, in 2015, an e-book called the ‘Bikini Body Guide’' (or 'BBG', for those in the know).
Tobi joins us in a bonus episode of Unconventional Business, live from GROW, to talk about the brand’s explosive growth over the last seven years and how he and Kayla took the brand from e-book to app, and where they drew inspiration from.
Kat and Tobi dig into the critical role of customers in subscription business models, how Tobi thinks about driving value for customers, how the Sweat team harnesses the feedback and insights from their global community of more than 50M, where Tobi goes for innovation and what’s coming next for the homegrown success story. -
Back in 2015, co-founders and best mates Adam and Josh were looking for ways to give back to the world through business. They asked themselves: is there a way for us to break into an industry and set up our own social enterprise where we have 100% of our profits go towards closing the global education gap?
Starting out with no equity and sharing Adam’s salary on a handshake deal, they’ve built Humanitix into an incredible organisation, giving close to $1 million a year to education projects through their work in Australia and New Zealand alone.
How did the founders land on booking and ticketing? Why SaaS over fast moving consumer goods like many other profit-for-purpose brands? What does Humanitix need to win at as they take on global giants like Ticketek, Eventbrite and Ticketmaster? And how are they thinking about building awareness as they scale and grow internationally? -
Building an online community is tough. It’s something many organisations try, and often fail, to do. So how did She’s on the Money’s Victoria Devine build such a large and engaged community in such a short space of time? How did she think about community building? And how much of the brand’s success does Victoria attribute to their community?
Join us in a special bonus episode of Unconventional Business live from GROW ANZ, where James and Victoria talk about community building, the dire need for greater financial education in Australia, particularly among women, and why Victoria created She’s on the Money in the first place. -
A decade into Modibodi’s impressive journey, founder and CEO Kristy Chong joins us to talk about where her big idea came from, how she's harnessed the intersection between technology and sustainability, and the mountainous challenge of launching a new product when your category is as taboo as periods and incontinence.
We talk about competition and why Kristy’s not afraid of it, the critical role of trust for brands and consumers, how it felt to have one of the most-complained about advertisements in the country, and much more. -
Ben Holdstock and Pete Brennan, co-founders of Heaps Normal, are part of a movement to disrupt an entire category and have set out to change cultural norms around drinking and destigmatise non-alcoholic beers. They’re part of a movement to disrupt an entire category and have set out to change cultural norms around drinking and destigmatise non-alcoholic beers.
What’s it like breaking in as a small player in a big market? What impact does their mission and purpose have on their work? And how do you change perceptions in a nation that loves a cold one on a summer’s arvo? Ben Holdstock and Pete Brennan, co-founders of Heaps Normal, join us on the show. -
Australia’s one of the biggest meat-eating countries in the world. And demand-supply is a very real issue. If we keep eating meat at the rate we do today, we’re not going to be able to sustain it.
Creating an alternative is all well and good, but as a brand, how do you change the hearts and minds of Aussie meat eaters? What does the future of alternative meat look like? And how much will brands matter in this category? Andrew May, v2’s Chief Growth Officer, joins us on the show to answer our many que -
Xero has changed how people think about accounting, challenging the status quo of dry & dull by going far beyond being a software provider, to impacting communities & the lives of small business owners.
Today, they’re a rapidly growing global brand. But how did they do it & what does it take to reach this level of success? Xero’s Chief Customer Officer, Rachael Powell, joins us on the show to talk about why they’ve never done things traditionally & what this means for their customers, people & th -
Owner or renter, we all have our property horror stories. Tenants late paying the rent, waiting weeks to have your shower fixed, no response from your property manager.
Property management’s an old school industry with rigid processes and a pricing model that makes little sense. Co-founder of Different, Mina Radhakrishnan joins us to talk about the opportunity they saw to disrupt the industry by bringing technology into what is a very human-oriented industry to create the experience customers crave. -
You probably don’t spend much time thinking about heavy construction machinery or how that industry works. It’s not exactly sexy or ‘cool’. But it’s often those very traditional industries that are ripe for disruption and ready for scale.
CEO of iSeekplant, now Australia’s largest plant hire marketplace, Sally McPherson, joins us on the show to answer the big questions. How do you digitise an industry when you’re told “the internet isn’t real”? And why have so many failed at what the -
Standing in the aisle of the bottle shop looking baffled, being guided by an ‘anything but the chardy Aunty Jan drinks’ rule. We’ve all been there.
Wine snobbery belongs in the past, according to this online wine retailer. Their dream is to democratise wine by taking out the bullsh*t, simplifying the decision making process and talking to customers in a language they understand. We taste test wine and find out how you delight a nation of wine lovers with Vinomofo’s Head of Marketing, Mariano Fa -
From one of Australia’s first ‘bed-in-a-box’ brands, to exporting their products, & exceptional service, overseas. Koala’s CMO, Peter Sloterdyk, shares why the brands that do it differently are the ones that win, the dangers of choice paralysis & the lessons learned when they exported Aussie sarcasm
Learn how Koala are thinking about localisation as they expand internationally, how they got consumers to ‘buy in’, & how you balance innovation and operations when you’re a growing business wit -
In an era where almost everything can be sold online, selling tiles online doesn’t sound so far-fetched. But despite consumer demand & an untapped market, Drew and Floss were repeatedly told ‘that’ll never work’ when they set out to build Australia’s online tile store.
We chat about transforming a traditional industry & the questions they had to answer. Can convenience trump price? Where's the sweet spot between being relatable & aspirational? And how do you fit one tonne of tiles in a Toyota -
When we talk about parcel delivery, the likelihood is that we think about our personal mail, those new shoes you ordered, how long they took to arrive. But what does it feel like when you’re that business trying to delight your customer through a great delivery experience?
We chat with Sendle's CMO, Eva Ross, on how you hit the trifecta of affordability, experience and being green, what it feels like to spur on change in your biggest competitor, Australia Post, & why Sendle turned down a $1M investmen -
Meet the Aussie brand that’s made toilet paper cool. We talk with Who Gives A Crap’s founder and CEO, Simon Griffiths, on all things toilets and toilet paper.
Tune in and hear Simon talk about building the brand and their mission, how he crowd-funded their launch (including sitting on a toilet, on live stream, for two days), why they chose not to set the company up as a not-for-profit, and why they’re so focused on the customer experience, after all, isn’t it just toilet paper?