Archive for the ‘ Save the Planet ’ Category

Interview with Seth Goldman, CEO of Honest Tea

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

“There’s a lot of impact still to make here and important work to do.  I also think in some ways we and I are uniquely suited to do that.”  – Seth Goldman, CEO Honest Tea

KissMyCountry had the rare opportunity to interview Seth Goldman, CEO of Honest Tea - in person!  When Seth realized we live near his company in Bethesda, Maryland he invited us to his office for the interview.  Enjoy our talk with Seth Goldman as he talks about building Honest Tea, taking it to national distribution this July, and his continued dedication to sustainable business practices!

Lexy:  Seth, it’s really an honor to talk with you and we appreciate your being so responsive to speaking with KissMyCountry for our series.   You started Honest Tea by experimenting in your kitchen.  Lots of people mix up things in their kitchen, but very few end up running a multi-million dollar business based on their creations – even those that start with an idea as good as yours and Barry Nalebuff’s.  Why did you succeed when so many fail?

Seth:  I just think we really were very passionate and still are very passionate about this.  This was something important to do.  There was a great deal of ambition and energy behind it and relentlessness too.  It’s interesting, there have been a lot of organic low calorie bottled tea companies that have come and gone.  Some people say we were just at the right place at the right time – lucky.  But a lot of that passion carried us when we weren’t running on much else.  I think that counts for a lot.  We’ve really been fortunate to be able to put together people who share that passion and that’s important too.  In the beginning we were probably a little too conscious of being purists or mavericks and we didn’t bring on people from the beverage industry.  On the one hand that hampered our growth but on the other hand that kept us mission-driven.  I know we made a lot more mistakes or didn’t grow as quickly because of it but in the long term I think it really assured our long term success.   We also had a lot of long-term thinking.  We weren’t trying to turn a buck and we focused on the future and especially given how challenging our growth was in the beginning if we had made our tea any sweeter or made it cheaper we could have grown more quickly but we really had our vision and we stuck to it.

Lexy:  I’m really struck by how admired you are by other CEOs in the Green and sustainable arena.  I hear your name again and again, which is impressive given the talent and success of this group.  You’ve clearly connected with and inspired many.   How do you feel about that, and – again – why you?  Why do you think you’re one of the most mentioned and admired in this arena?

Seth:  That’s nice.  It’s very gratifying.  It’s nice to hear.  I definitely do put a lot of effort into sharing this mission and spreading it.  I was one of the founding board members of Net Impact.  It’s a national non-profit focused on seeding the next generation of socially responsible entrepreneurs.   I was on the keynote closing panel at their conference this past fall and I’ve always supported it.  We hold an annual event here at our office in Bethesda and we’ll have that here next month to welcome all the Net Impact interns.  We’ve always hired Net Impact interns here since we started.   Certainly that is one way to help and also I think a model for building a sustainable enterprise.  One of the things we’ve always put on our shoulders is this feeling that this has to work not only because it’s our livelihood and we’ve got investors who are depending on us but because we need to show the world that this kind of model of business can succeed.  If we don’t succeed and we remain a niche business or we don’t really flourish then we satisfy all those skeptics who say you can’t really mix business and a mission-driven agenda.  And it’s interesting.  The first generation of socially responsible businesses like Ben & Jerry’s were one step  and I think we’re the next wave.  Hopefully, young entrepreneurs may be able to relate to us because it’s relatively recent that we’ve been around and we’re still growing quickly.  We still have a long growth curve.

Lexy: Who are your heroes?  As you face challenges at Honest Tea, who do you draw on for advice and inspiration?

Seth:  Gary Hirshberg at Stonyfield Yogurt is certainly one of my heroes, he’s been on our board and he’s someone who has played an influential role for me so we certainly see ourselves following in Gary’s wake as well.   Gary has played an important role because he took a product that was a healthy product and made it organic and increased availability by marketing it successfully to a larger audience and we see ourselves doing the same thing.  And then he also partnered with a large multinational and then managed to keep control of the enterprise and the brand and is still running it, which is also a great model.  We owe him a lot and continue to learn from him. Another great mentor has been Jeff Swartz, the President and CEO of Timberland.  He was on our board.  He was one of our first board members back in 2001.  He’s just been a great inspirational friend in terms of how to really be focused on your mission and focused on your brand and thinking long term.  He’s not on our board now, he transitioned off when Coke came in but is still somebody who I really admire.  The first person who really gave me a chance in this socially responsible business world is the co-founder of Calvert, Wayne Silby.  I was an intern for Wayne back in business school in 1994.  He’s still someone I continue to interact with because I’m on the board of the Calvert Foundation.  I see him at least on a quarterly basis which is fun.   I’m still in touch with him even though I’m not in the investment world anymore.  In fact the quote on our wall I first heard from Wayne    (“ Those who say it cannot be done should not interrupt the people doing it – Chinese Proverb “).  I certainly take it to heart here.  I brought him up to this office last year, and he saw the quote, which was really neat.  My parents are certainly in that group and we had a great experience just a few weekends ago when I was awarded an Honorary Doctorate at American University.   I gave the commencement address and my parents got to come to that.   That was for me a really nice feeling.  I am really honored by this, and it was really nice to be able to share that moment with my parents, they’re both academics and they have a real appreciation of what that means.  They’ve been an inspiration to me also in terms of always focusing their work on things they care about.  There’s a great quote, from Teddy Roosevelt, “Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing,” and they took that to heart.

Lexy: Honest Tea has grown into a well known –and well liked – brand.  In 2008 Coca Cola acquired a stake in Honest Tea, which seems to have benefitted both companies.  What advice do you have for other CEOs of green or natural products companies if a Fortune 100 company expresses interest in investing?

Seth:  One of the things that’s really helped with our relationship with Coca Cola is that we still control the brand.  We made it clear to them when they approached us that hey we’re happy to talk to you but we feel the need to continue to control this.  And the good news is that they recognized that.  Our agreement was legally structured that way.  That helped ensure that we would continue to build the brand the way we conceived it, maintaining our focus on healthier products and ingredients, more sustainable sourcing and an authentic approach to it. That was really important.  What I would say is one of the reasons we were able to do that is because we offered a great deal of value to them.  They offered a great deal of value to us.  There’s no question about their ability to help us distribute the product, their access to resources and money and all that.  Very powerful.  But we offered them alot, we offered something they didn’t have.  They didn’t have a premium tea line, they didn’t have an organic product.  They didn’t have a product that had this healthy positioning that we have.  That helped make it so that when we said we wanted to run the brand they understood why it made sense.  That was important.  What’s really going to be interesting is over the next 12-24 months because Coke does have the option to increase their stake and so let’s see how we continue to run.  There too I’d say Gary’s been a great role model because his company is now economically owned by Danone.  But, from the outside you wouldn’t tell the difference as a consumer.  We hope they will have a chance to be that way with us.

Lexy:  Seth, in 2008 you also founded Bethesda Green, a local sustainability initiative.  Bethesda Green seems very integrated into Honest Tea – it’s mentioned on your web site and is a part of your list of accomplishments as TeaEO of Honest Tea.   Is this mainly because of your personal commitment to Bethesda, or do you also want to inspire other CEOs to launch similar efforts in their communities?

Seth:  For our first 10 years we were acting globally.  We were looking at sourcing organics overseas and at tea gardens on the other side of the planet.  We really needed to think about what we were doing locally as well.  We’ve always been supporters of local races and charities.  It’s almost a joke these days that if you’re in Bethesda and you need someone to donate drinks that Honest Tea will donate.   And we’re fine with that.  We want to be supportive of our community and we’re bringing people together.  So that all makes sense.  But as we were negotiating our lease for this new office we realized we do have this ability to convene companies who have a lot more resources than we have and partially because of who we are and how we work it wasn’t hard to convince others  there was value in doing it and so it’s been really gratifying to see other businesses – whether it’s our landlord  Federal Realty or Chevy Chase Bank and Calvert obviously bringing resources to this initiative and so really having an impact on this community.  That’s been exciting from our perspective and we’d love to see how we can expand that.  In terms of the message I didn’t have anything particular in mind but it’s been interesting to see the reaction, even at Coca Cola.  I presented Bethesda Green at an international Coke conference earlier this month and I got questions from some people about how can we be doing this kind of thing in our community?  If we can take some of the things we’ve instituted and expand them with other resources, that’s great.

Lexy:  What’s next for Honest Tea?  What can we see from the company in the next few years?

Seth:  Certainly in the next few months we’re ramping up and we’ve got a lot of new products coming out.  Which you’re drinking (Half and Half).  That’s been getting a great response.  We’ve also launched this new line called Honest Kombucha which is a fermented tea.  I don’t know if you’ve had Kombucha before.  That’s certainly worth trying and it’s really unusual and different.   That’s launched in Whole Foods and in the West Coast as well.  The other really big thing is because we’re now partnered with Coke, between now and the end of July we’re going to be expanding our distribution nationally.  Before the end of July we’ll have Honest Tea distributed off the Coke trucks in every state.  So that’s quite a step for us.  We’re now in stores like CVS and Kroger and places where bottled drinks are sold.  That will really change the nature of our availability.  In conjunction with that we’re going to start doing some themed promotions that we’ve never really done before.  We’ve always tended to be very grassroots in our marketing and we’ll continue to be very grassroots but we’re going to do some larger spends that help make people more aware of where they can buy the drinks.  Billboards, we’re going to do some small radio stuff, very selective.  We just did this initiative in New York which was really fun where we put up a display on Wall Street the day that President Obama spoke on Wall Street, we put up a stand that said ‘Honest Tea Honor System, Pay a Dollar’ and then left the stand unstaffed to see what would happen.  I think the results were that Wall Street was about 89% honest that day, and it was fun to watch as a social experiment.  We like to do things like that that help to create a little curiosity.  We have plans to do that in different cities.  Personally I don’t have plans to move elsewhere than the beverage arena, I don’t have a potato chip company in my back pocket.  Twelve years ago we started this and we wanted to have an impact on people’s diets and have an impact on the beverage industry and we started from the smallest possible place.  Now we have this incredible opportunity and platform to really take that vision and expand it, which we’re just starting to do.  So in a way we’re really in the middle of it and a lot of the impact is still on the table.  There’s a lot of impact still to make here and important work to do.  I also think in some ways we and I are uniquely suited to do that.  In terms of what we owe investors certainly I feel obligated to see this through until the point when Coke buys the company.  So there would be that obligation to fill.  In terms of what I owe myself I feel that I started this vision and want to see it through.

Lexy:  And, what’s next for Seth Goldman?  Besides Honest Tea, Bethesda Green – and your recent appointment to the American Beverage Association board, any other new plans you’d like to tell us about? 

Seth:  There’s a lot.  One of the things that I’ve really had to do this past 2 years in particular is I’ve turned down a lot more than I accepted in terms of new responsibilities just because there is so much.  I really owe it to our investors to make sure we see this through to get the best returns.  And I owe it to myself because I’m an investor.  I have made no other plans to do anything except build Honest Tea.   As I said I spoke at this international Coke conference of Coke departmental folks from all around the world and so having that kind of platform was a chance to play a role in the larger system and I think that will continue.   Those kinds of opportunities will continue to emerge.   Certainly an expanded role not just within Coke but within the beverage industry is something that I can see, now being on the board of the ABA.   We just had our first board meeting where we talked about recycling initiatives and how can we get up the average recycling rate around the country.  The average recycling rate is less than 30 percent.   How do you get those numbers up?  There’s a lot of good things going on around sustainable packaging and the reduction of packaging but at the same time if only 30 percent is being recaptured we really need to increase that.  So there is still a lot there.  And also the broader role of being a leader in the socially responsible business movement.   Just this past week I’ve met – and I frequently meet – with other people I’ve seen as colleagues like the folks who run Method, I interact with TerraCycle with Tom Szaky.  I have a lot of interactions with this network of people.  We’re allies in a – I won’t call it a war but certainly a campaign, in a movement.  There is this whole issue of leadership.  Just two weeks ago I was invited to a White House conference on small business.  How do we spur the ‘gazelles’?  I’m coming at it from a lens of yes, of course it’s important to create jobs but how do we create more sustainable businesses?  And within that how do we change the conversation within corporate America too?  Even if my job description were to stay the same there’s an expanded role that’s important and I anticipate getting involved in that.  Right now I’m so Honest Tea focused.  I’m going to speak at a Wall Street Journal conference.  So those kinds of opportunities are fun too and I always get something out of those.  So there’s a lot going on and my plate is pretty full as it is.

I majored in Government and I’d always thought of myself as having an interest in politics.  I traveled after college and then I came back here and worked on Capitol Hill.  I haven’t ruled out politics at some point.  It’s exciting for me to see what kind of impact we can have on public issues and environmental and global issues as a private company.  That’s certainly not something that I anticipated in college – being able to have that kind of impact from the private sector.  In contrast I see what’s going on in Congress, and a lot of discussion of marginal change, and so much posturing and not real change happening.   Not the kind of change we’ve been able to help be part of here around like source reduction, sustainability, and healthier diets.   These are the issues that really define how we live,  certainly as a country and even as people on this planet.  People are passionate but I’m not sure they’re able to always make change happen.   In part what I see in politics is that you come in with a passion, and then you have to start getting into compromises and by the time you’re looking at what actually gets passed it’s such a dilution of what you stand for.  And what’s been so surprising and so satisfying is that I don’t feel that we’ve sacrificed or that we’re compromised by what we stand for.  We were the first to make organic tea and we’ve only continued to up the ante.  Everything is organic now.   And we were the first to make Fair Trade tea and we continue to make Fair Trade tea and continue to expand our commitment there.  And certainly around our source reduction whether it’s our partnership with TerraCycle or this new bottle that we just introduced that’s 22% lighter and we were the first to introduce that technology.  We all live in this contradiction that we’re focused on sustainability and we live in a consumption economy.  That’s a contradiction so I don’t want to make it sound like we’re pure and put ourselves on a pedestal.  But what is satisfying is to really come at this with an agenda and not have to encounter a lobbyist or some faction and there’s no question that our product isn’t for everybody.   So maybe if we were trying to be all things to all people we’d be diluted.   We know what we stand for, and our product is out there that way, and some people don’t buy it but some people love it and it feels very gratifying to feel like what we stand for is making change happen and that it’s been embraced by a lot of people.  If we can keep making change happen this way then that’s fine too.  I certainly know for me I’ve been running this thing for 12 years one way and I’m certainly not going to be interested in anything else.

Lexy:  Seth, at KissMyCountry we like to talk about the places we love.  What are your favorite places to live or travel?

Seth:  Certainly for living our house backs right up on a park.  So that’s just wonderful space and every day I’m in that park whether it’s running through it or after work biking through it.  It’s just this open space, an open green space and this is where people live.  People work, but the park is where people live.  You’ve got people out there playing, relaxing.  We have 3 sons and they’ve really grown up in that park.  That’s such a nice space for us, in fact my youngest son is having his Bar Mitzvah next month.  People have their special places where they go for the party, well we’re doing it in the park.  That’s where we’ll have everyone over on Saturday.  We’ll play Capture the Flag.  So that’s a really nice space for me.  Globally, it has to be the Tea Garden in India called Makaibari.  It’s almost a sacred place.  It’s such an amazing balance between plants and animals, between people and the planet, between the people who live there and the people who run it.  Even the climate.  We were there during  April or May, at the time there was this feeling of the balance even within the weather.  It was this incredibly moist place and you start the day with clouds hanging really low over the mountains and the temperature is kind of the same as your body temperature.  It’s just an amazing place.  We didn’t spend that long there but for our whole family it was a spiritual trip.  That was a special place.  I’m originally from New England – I grew up in Wellesley just outside of Boston.  I do miss seeing my family and we go there at different times during the year but Bethesda definitely feels like home for us.  We’ve been here 14 going on 15 years.  It’s certainly a conscious community of people, mindful of the impact their actions have on the world and the environment.

Lexy: Honest Tea’s headquarters are in Bethesda, Maryland.  What do you like about operating a company there?Seth:  This is just such a livable existence.  I bike to work.  Our kids’ schools are all within biking distance, so a lot of them will stop by on their way home to pick up a drink and say hi.  That just makes it very nice.  For our employees it’s all accessible whether by metro or bike path or walking.  Coming here doesn’t feel like I’m going to work.  As a community we’ve helped create this great ethos now.  It’s really nice to have this restaurant Sweet Greens downstairs.  Actually both Gary and I are investors in it. That has certainly enhanced the quality of my life for two reasons.  I love getting the salads but it’s also nice to go downstairs and see all these people drinking Honest Tea.  Yesterday I wanted to get some fresh air but I made sure just  to walk by to see the people drinking Honest Tea.

Lexy: And, where do you like to go in the neighborhood for lunch, dinner or just to relax with your friends or your family?

Seth:  Bethesda Bagel.  We always get stuff there.  They’re fun not only because they sell Honest Tea but because they’re both local entrepreneurs that I know and I’m friendly with.  Our whole family is vegetarian.  Raku or Redwood, which has a very good veggie burger.  Actually it’s funny.  This weekend we thought we were going to be allowed the chance to have dinner just the two of us, but that didn’t work out.  It’s striking still there aren’t that many restaurants that have real vegetarian offerings.  A lot of them just have pasta or they’ll do a little mélange.  There are different places that we go.

Lexy:  Thank you!  We’d like to stay in touch.

Seth:  Okay, sure.  Sure.

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Gulf Restoration Network – Ellis Pickett, Campaign Organizer

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

KissMyCountry had the chance to speak last week with Ellis Pickett, Texas Campaign Organizer for the Gulf Restoration Network.  As an environmentalist who previously worked in the oil industry, Ellis has a unique perspective and knowledge, and spoke with us about his work and his concerns for marine life in the Gulf following the BP “Oil Spill”.  KissMyCountry is supporting the Gulf Restoration Network with our Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas t-shirts.  As a ‘nod’ to Ellis, based in Texas, we feature our Texas t-shirt for the next few days and thank him for taking the time to speak with us!

 
“I spent 20 years working in the oil fields.  I’ve spent time on those rigs.  I have expertise in this field that a lot of environmentalists don’t have.  This is a game changer.  One of the things it’s proven is that the unthinkable can happen.” –  Ellis Pickett, Gulf Restoration Network
 
A Day Spent Watching BP’s ROVs on Five Computer Screens
“I get up and I come to the computer, and then I stay on it until late at night.  On my computer at the moment I have 5 live screens from the BP ROVs (Remotely Operated UnderWater Vehicles).  These are real time.  I’m watching one of the ROVs apply dispersant,” Ellis Pickett says in response to a question about his day’s work.   As a Gulf watchdog for the past 15 years, members of the Gulf Restoration Network’s team are now focused on observing, measuring and recording information related to the BP Oil Spill.  “We’re trying to make sure that industry and government does the right thing,” says Ellis.  The Deepwater Horizon explosion on April 20 increased the group’s work enormously, and their entire team has been working many extra hours, with everyone pitching in.  Ellis, focusing on Texas issues, is working closely with team members focusing on issues in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida – watching BP’s ROVs, talking with experts as they prepare their comments for the media, and anything else needed.  “Everyone is working.  Volunteers are calling every day,” says Ellis.

Concern About Chemical Dispersants and Marine Life
Ellis has a perspective unlike most environmentalists given his previous work in the oil industry.  “I spent 20 years working in the oil fields.  I’ve spent time on those rigs.  I have expertise in this field that a lot of environmentalists don’t have.  This is a game changer.  One of the things it’s proven is that the unthinkable can happen.” As part of GRN’s support staff, Ellis focuses on sea turtles, dolphins, whales and other marine life in the Gulf.  He expresses greatest concern about the chemical dispersants being used by BP to break up the oil spill.  “Chemical dispersants break up the oil into smaller pieces.  It’s like putting sugar into water.  They’re emulsifying the oil.  If you were to take a drink you’d taste it.”   Ellis explains the oil is completely mixed into the surrounding water.  “If you are a fish and you’re trying to breathe as it passes through your gills would it cause you problems?” asks Ellis.  “Those dispersants work their way into the food chain.”  Ellis expresses concern about the Bluefin tuna in the Gulf because one of their spawning grounds is located just south of the Deepwater Horizon blowout.   Ellis is also concerned about the natural movement of the waters of the Gulf currents taking place below the surface.  “My concern is what’s below the surface.  Currents vary in the Gulf.  Currents vary like the clouds.  Some go north and higher up.  That oil could be anywhere in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Kathy – A Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle Traveling in the Gulf of Mexico
Another type of marine life to be concerned about in the Gulf of Mexico is the sea turtle, and Ellis gives us all a chance to follow the path of a sea turtle currently in the Gulf.   Kathy is a Kemp’s Ridley female sea turtle released into the Gulf of Mexico by biologists at Texas A&M University at Galveston (TAMUG) after she laid 102 eggs on Surfside Beach, Texas and was ready to return to the water.  Kathy’s eggs are now on Padre Island National Seashore for incubation and subsequent hatching release after being transported there by biologists.  Meanwhile, anyone can track Kathy’s journey in the Gulf of Mexico.  “She is not too far West of the mouth of the Mississippi”, says Ellis, “She may surface in the middle of an oil slick and not be able to breathe.”   The Kemp’s Ridley is one of five species of sea turtle in the Gulf of Mexico.

In “A Requiem for the Gulf”,  published by The Huffington Post last week, James Moore recounts the creation of a refuge on Padre Island in 1979 for Kemp’s Ridley sea turtles rescued from nesting grounds in Rancho Nuevo, Mexico threatened by the oil spill from the blowout of the Ixtoc.  Could this be the same spot where Kathy’s eggs will hatch?  If so, it is providing safe refuge once again for the Kemp’s Ridley species.

A Role for All Who Love the Gulf of Mexico
“I have great love for the Gulf of Mexico”, says Ellis, “We’re trying to make people aware and make changes in our own lives.  Everyone does have a stake and the opportunity to make something happen.  This is a multigenerational problem.”  As Ellis continues his work, and the rest of the GRN team continues to meet the challenge of this unprecedented crisis, we are thinking about all of the team.  We plan to stay in touch and keep posting about the Gulf Restoration Network and their work.  We’re glad the GRN has been there for 15 years, and we’re glad you’re there now.  Thank you for your work and for saving a place you love.

To learn more about the Gulf Restoration Network and their work, check out their web site.  KissMyCountry will continue to check in with Ellis Pickett and the Gulf Restoration Network as they continue their work in the Gulf.  Watch for our future blog posts, and consider helping the GRN directly.  Thank you!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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Gulf Restoration Network – Saving the Gulf of Mexico

Monday, June 7th, 2010

“Thanks for your concern about the Gulf of Mexico and the impact of BP’s oil drilling disaster.  The Gulf Restoration Network (GRN) would greatly appreciate being a recipient of your fundraising efforts”.  – Briana Kerstein, Special Projects Coordinator, Gulf Restoration Network

KissMyCountry is proud to announce our support of the Gulf Restoration Network with our Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas t-shirts.   Our support represents our goal to connect with environmental non profits in all 50 states and donate a portion of each t-shirt sold to a state-based group.  KissMyCountry is about saving the places we love and it feels great to show our love for the Gulf of Mexico and the Gulf Restoration Network through our t-shirts.  Enjoy learning more about the work of this dedicated group, thank you for showing your support and thank you for telling your friends!

Texas

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Monitoring and Advocating for a Healthy Gulf for Fifteen Years
The Gulf Restoration Network (GRN) is a 15-year old environmental non-profit and the only environmental organization working Gulf-wide in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas and Florida.  Cyn Sarthou is Executive Director.  The GRN is committed to uniting and empowering people to protect and restore the natural resources of the Gulf Region for future generations.  Staff is based throughout the Gulf Region to monitor environmental conditions in the air, water and on the ground.  Campaigns focus on fishing, healthy waters, species at risk and sustainable practices to save the Gulf and wetlands.  Check out their web site for information, videos, volunteer opportunities and how to donate.

Reporting on the BP Oil Spill from Day One
The GRN was the first group to fly over the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, and has been providing independent monitoring and advocacy focused on holding BP accountable and ensuring an effective and transparent response to the crisis.   Of great interest is the reporting by staff biologists on the impact of the BP oil spill on birds, animals and marine life in the Gulf Region such as Ellis Pickett on sea turtles and Aaron Viles on sperm whalesNews and commentary about the BP Oil spill are added daily to their site.

Stay Informed, Take Action, and Be Ready for the Long Haul
We’ll all be living with the BP oil spill for a long time – so get ready for the long haul – and thank you for supporting the Gulf Restoration Network if you love the Gulf Region or know someone who does.  Sta informed and take action.  We’re glad the GRN is in place and we know their job just got much larger.  We know we can count on them to keep us informed, and we want the GRN to know they can count on our support through our blog and our t-shirts.  We appreciate the work you do.

KissMyCountry will donate $2.50 to the Gulf Restoration network for each Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi or Texas purchased via our website and through wholesale customers.  Our Florida t-shirt supports the Loggerhead Marine Life Center in Juno Beach, Florida.  T-shirts are available in organic cotton or v-neck and are created ‘on demand’.  We thank you for showing your love for the Gulf Region!

Alabama

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Interview With Gene Banman, CEO Zero Motorcycles

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

“Building an electric motorcycle is about making a better motorcycle.  The electric powertrain has great performance, and the power curve of an electric motor is actually more applicable for how motorcyclists ride than the gasoline motor.” – Gene Banman, CEO Zero Motorcycles

Zero Motorcycles is taking off with their innovative and breakthrough technology for electric motorcycles – literally.  KissMyCountry had the chance to talk with Gene Banman, CEO about the company, about why their electric motorcycles are so exciting - about the best places for a meal and drinks in Scotts Valley, CA – the home of Zero Motorcycles.  You’ll enjoy hearing from Gene, a computer industry veteran now leading a team dedicated to building a better and more energy efficient motorcycle.  Enjoy!

Mr. K: Gene, since the beginning there’s been buzz, buzz and more buzz about Zero Motorcycles.  In your own words, what are the most exciting features of Zero Motorcycles?

Gene:  It’s the first new powertrain to be introduced to motorcycle technology in 100 years.  There’ve been electric motorcycles built down through the decades.  In fact the first one was in the 1890’s.  But they really didn’t go very far and didn’t have much power and so they never really took off as products.  One of the electric motorcycles that was put together in the 1940s ended up being the first project of the founder of ParCar which has become a major manufacturer of electric carts – golf carts and Meter Maid carts and things like that.  He started with a motorcycle back in the ‘40’s. So people have been thinking about electric motorcycles ever since powered vehicles got started.  But the battery technology just wasn’t up to the job until just recently and, as a result, now we really can introduce a commercial product that has this completely new powertrain.

Building an electric motorcycle is about making a better motorcycle.  The electric powertrain has great performance, and the power curve of an electric motor is actually more applicable for how motorcyclists ride than the gasoline motor.  The gasoline motor has this peak power at high RPM where an electric motor has maximum torque at 0 RPM.  So blasting off the line you’re going to get instant torque with an electric motor that motorcyclists really get a kick out of.  The motor has one moving part so it’s very low maintenance, there’s no oil changes, no tune ups, no rebuilds.  It just runs, for a very long time.  Very low operating costs.  Four kilowatt hours gives you an average of about 40 miles of range in an urban area and it only costs 46 cents to charge up those 4 kilowatt hours here in California.  So very low operating costs.  What we really think is going to happen over time is that we’re going to end up with electric motorcycles being superior to gasoline motorcycles in terms of performance, cost and ease of use.  We think they will go mainstream sometime in the next 5-10 years.

These motorcycles have captured peoples’ imaginations for a wide variety of reasons. For motorcyclists Zero offers great performance, low maintenance and a fun new riding experience. Those who want to improve the environment appreciate that Zero’s all electric motorcycles are highly efficient and have no tailpipe emissions.

Mr. K:  You have Dirt, Street and Dual Sport models. You’ve said you’re a dual sport fan. Is there anything you’d like to say specifically about your Dual Sport model?

Gene:  It goes 65 miles an hour so you can get it out on the Freeway.  You can certainly ride it around town.  The usage model is really an around town usage model.  But the dual sport version has street legal off road knobby tires and bigger suspension so you can take it out on the fire roads or the dirt roads and trails that might allow you to link up between surface streets.   A lot of our customers have back roads that they can take on their way into town or to work and with the dual sport it allows them to cut through these back trails and roads and through the woods to take it to work and they really enjoy that.  It’s sort of a dip into nature during your normal commute.  It also allows you on the weekend to go hit the trails.  My own passion for motorcycles got started on my dad’s Trail 90 and there’s been a lot of back country cruising around on that Trail 90 and that was one of the early dual sport motorcycles, if you will, that allowed that kind of thing.  This is our most popular model.

Mr. K: Gene, you came to Zero Motorcycles from Sun Microsystems, bringing years of experience, a global management background and a lifelong love of sport bikes.  What skills have you used the most from your time at Sun as you’ve built the company?

Gene:  The good financial controls.  One of the things about Sun and Zero which are similar is that both are rapidly growing companies.  The way you manage rapid growth is through good financial controls.  We have a very sophisticated financial system and forecasting and tracking system that allows us to stay on top of our spending, on top of our cash, on top of our build plans and so forth that allows us to keep the company in control as it grows.  That was one of the things that was key at Sun.  When I joined Sun there were 700 employees.  Fifteen years later when I left there were 46,000 employees.  So that was a great experience on how to manage a high growth situation and we’re certainly going through that here at Zero.

Mr. K: And where has your passion for dual sport bikes influenced your management of the company most?

Gene:  It really hasn’t influenced the management of the company but what it does provide is enthusiasm and a spirit and a kind of good feeling all through the company.  Most of the company is employees that are motorcycle enthusiasts as well as being professionals of one type or another.  Our director of Electrical Engineering is an AMA racer.  Our VP of Sales is a lifelong dirt bike rider.  A typical family vacation is to load up his trailer with a bunch of bikes and take his family out to the desert for a couple of days of bike riding.   So the company has allowed a lot of people to combine their personal passion with their work experience.  It just provides a lot of energy throughout the company.  As a company we manage it just like any other company and the professional skills that good team members bring to the table are finance, engineering, and manufacturing.  It doesn’t really change the work itself and the need to have professionals who do that work.

Mr. K: Has anything surprised you about running Zero Motorcycles – either good or bad?  Anything you didn’t anticipate at all about building the company?

Gene:  It’s a lot harder to get these bikes into production than I would have thought.  My experience is with computers and while they certainly have their own complexities the technology for getting those things into manufacturing are very well honed in a large infrastructure.  Mechanical devices are just inherently much more difficult and so we’ve been working hard on addressing those issues and we’re now into volume production.  But I would like to see that go more smoothly.  The other thing is just how regulated this industry is.  Again the computer industry is very much a free market, lots of competition, lots of competitors come and go.  The vehicle business is much more staid I would say and there’s a lot of regulations that are built up over the years.   Some of the regulations of course make lots of sense around safety and vehicle qualification to get on the road.  Those kind of regulations make a lot of sense and we worked hard to conform to them.  But there are lots of business constraining regulations in the various states that allow you to sell or not sell vehicles in certain ways based on what local legislatures have put together in response to the dealer lobbies and the manufacturer lobbies. That was surprising; just how much business constraint there is in the vehicle business around the actual mechanics of doing business – who you can sell to and who you can’t, and how you can sell and how you can’t.  That’s very different than the free enterprise environment of the computer business.

Lexy:  You and Neal Saiki seem to be a great team and a great combination of skills – critical for a startup.  How is it that you came to work together, and why do you think it’s worked out so well?

Gene:  I think that having a clear division of labor is really important and he’s got tremendous skills in design and analysis and understanding the vision of the company as a Founder.  I’m a businessman and a manager and so he does the technical vision and investigation and I do the day to day management and it works out great.  We met because Neal was pitching to a number of venture capitalists to raise money and one of them connected him up with a friend of mine to do some preliminary marketing work for him.  My friend after meeting with Neal and knowing my interests called me up and said that I should go meet with this guy Neal because he’s doing something that you’d be really interested in.  My friend set up a meeting between Neal and I and we immediately saw the advantages of working together and so I came on board.

Lexy:  What companies do you admire right now in the electric vehicle space – either cars or motorcycles?

Gene:  I admire Tesla, they paved the way for startups especially the first management team that came in and got that off the ground.  Of course they’ve had a complete turnover now.  But the original management team at Tesla really got this whole venture capital, Silicon Valley machinery in gear to go support the Green tech space and the electric vehicle space and my hats off to those guys for doing that and getting that off the ground early on.  The other company that, believe it or not, that I admire is Toyota because of the established automotive industry they’ve been working hard in this electric vehicle direction with their hybrids, with their experimental Rav 4 electric vehicle that they came out with a couple of years ago and basically put the rest of the industry on notice that they’ve got to move in this direction and that’s been very helpful.  I don’t want to say too much about the motorcycle space because those are all my competitors.  I think we need each other to build this industry.   There’s a couple of other companies out there that have gotten into production and there’s a number of companies that have announced products and have prototypes and that’s important to get this industry going.  We’ll see some of the large incumbent motorcycle companies come out with products.  Honda and Yamaha have announced small electric motorcycle projects kind of replacing the 90cc kind of bike with electric powertrains.  KTM has announced they’ll have an electric dirt bike coming out next year.  This is all going to help the momentum of this industry.

Lexy: Who’s been your most surprising customer at Zero Motorcycles?

Gene:  The most surprising customer I really can’t talk about because we’re under NDA, and I can’t quite get past that one to think about the next most surprising customer.  When we started selling the product we didn’t really know who would buy it.   As customers identified themselves by placing orders and calling us we got to know them and got to know who was interested in these products and so then we started targeting them more closely as we got to understand them. Just as these motorcycles capture peoples’ imaginations for many reasons, people also have many reasons for why they finally become owners.

Lexy:  Gene, at KissMyCountry we like to ask people about the places they love.  What are your favorite places to live or travel?

Gene:  I’m delighted to be living here in the San Francisco Bay area.  This is one of the most exciting places in the world for business. It’s  beautiful with lots of places to go in just a few hours drive whether it’s Big Sur, or Yosemite or Tahoe or it’s pretty down here in the Santa Cruz Mountains.  It’s just a great place to live. A lot of fervent around business development.  That’s always very interesting. This kind of situation is unique in the world I think.  There’s so much start up activity and business ferment in a small area. For traveling I love to go to Europe, I love to go to Asia, I do love going back to Japan because I know a lot about it.  I’d like to go to Latin America, I haven’t really spent much time there, I’ve just been there a few times but look forward to it and it’s one of the places on my agenda.

Lexy: Zero Motorcycles is in Scotts Valley, California.  When people come to Scott’s Valley, where do you like to take them for a meal or for drinks?

Gene:  For lunch we’re very handy to a little shopping center around the corner where there’s a Cambodian restaurant call Jia Tella’s which is great.  There’s also a sushi restaurant called Yamamori Sushi.   For drinks down the road there’s an old hangout bar called Malone’s Grille.  That was the unofficial headquarters for Seagate Technology when they were big here and that’s a great place to hang out after work.

Lexy: We’re guessing that you spend a fair amount of time in San Francisco, a favorite city for many.   What are your favorite things to do in San Francisco?

Gene:  The city has so many great restaurants, events and beautiful locations. When I’m in San Francisco I like to take advantage of each of these.  I enjoy meeting friends at everything from a hole in the wall to the St. Francis Yacht Club where I also get to enjoy sailing on the bay and singing in the choir.  I have a boat in the Bay Area and we cruise over there once in a while and to have dinner.  I like going to the Farmer’s Market at the Ferry Building.  Of course the Broadway musicals in town and of course the de Young Museum is spectacular.  Those kinds of things.

Lexy:  Gene, thank you for talking with us.  It’s exciting to talk with you and exciting to hear about Zero Motorcycles.  We’d like to come back and check with you in about six months to see how things are going.

Gene:  Alright.   Sounds great.  Thank you.

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Marriott’s Barony Beach Club on Hilton Head Island – Beach Cleanup

Monday, May 31st, 2010

I was excited to learn that Marriott Vacation Club has a scheduled beach cleanup at several of their resorts, and first learned about this in January during a vacation at Marriott’s Oceana Palms on Singer Island, Florida.  That was a great experience, and it inspired me to contact Marriott Vacation Club about their beach cleanups and other Green initiatives at their resorts.  They were kind enough to have executives answer my questions, and I found that Marriott is doing a great deal in the Green and sustainable arena when it comes to their resorts.  In April I was on vacation at Marriott’s Barony Beach Club on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina and had the opportunity to talk with staff about Green initiatives at the resort.  This post is a combination of comments I received from Marriott Vacation Club and my experience at Marriott’s Barony Beach Club.

Marriott’s Barony Beach Club is located on the beach in Hilton Head, great for walking, kite flying, swimming, watching the waves or lying in the sun.  The resort has a friendly atmosphere with many owners who’ve come for years and many who stay several weeks at a time.  As a first-time visitor, I was drawn right in.  After spending a week there I can’t wait to return.  It was a place to relax and enjoy life with the ocean right outside my door. 

I also found it was a place committed to preserving the environment and helping others whenever possible.  Eric Priester, General Manager at Marriott’s Barony Beach Club, outlined their beach cleanup program for me.  “We hold our beach clean ups every four weeks on Thursday mornings at 8:30 a.m.  All guests and Owners are welcome to join, as well as any Associates who are able to spare an hour.  We provide all of the supplies (gloves, trash bags, etc.) and we ask guests to meet at the end of our boardwalk by the beach.  We do a quick overview and introduction and then begin to walk and search the beach for trash.  We cover the beach from our property up to Marriott’s SurfWatch, so it’s a little more than a mile of beach.  At the end, a resort van picks up the group and takes them back to Barony.  These beach clean ups started approximately three years ago through a joint effort between Marriott’s SurfWatch and Marriott’s Barony Beach Club.”

I had a chance to hear about other day-to-day Green efforts and activities at Marriott’s Barony Beach Club from resort management who were enthusiastic to talk about their initiatives.  It’s clear they’ve put many plans in place with more to come – and I found kindred spirits who love Hilton Head and want to maintain the beauty of the Island.  Besides the beach cleanup, the resort keeps an eye out to be Green whenever possible and turn recycling into donations to non-profits and local organizations as well – an added bonus and a pleasant surprise to hear.  For example, during the resort’s recent remodeling, appliances being replaced were sold and all funds were  donated to the Children’s Miracle Network.  Televisions were also donated to the local school system and Habitat for Humanity, and old carpets were used as padding for moving furniture and protecting walls as furniture was moved in and out of the villas.

Marriott’s Barony Beach Club follows brand guidelines to reduce their environmental footprint as well, and was recognized by Audubon International for their environmental planning.  There are low wattage light bulbs in the villas, automatic cutoff for air conditioners, and appliances have an Energy Star rating.  Their recycling program includes recycling bins in every villa.  Soap that is left behind when owners leave is sent to the Global Soap Project in Atlanta, Georgia.  This non-profit collects leftover soap from hotels, sanitizes and remolds it, and ships the new soap to Africa for refugees. Another great recycling idea with growing participation by hotels in the United States.

The beach cleanup – which started my inquiry into Marriott Vacation Club’s Green initiatives – has been popular with owners who stay for one or several weeks and is also an opportunity for associates to be involved in the resort’s Green initiatives.

Ed Kinney, Vice President of Corporate Affairs & Brand Awareness for Marriott Vacation Club International outlined some of the Green activities that exist for Owners at Marriott Vacation Club resorts.  “With more than 50 Marriott Vacation Club resorts in some of the most desirable locations worldwide, our resorts take great pride in caring for the surrounding environment and take special steps to include our Owners and guests in green activities. A few examples include:

 Marriott’s Mountain Valley Lodge – At Marriott’s Mountain Valley Lodge in Breckenridge, Colo., Associates, owners and guests participated in a tree planting program by planting 60 trees in an area of Breckenridge completely leveled by a Mountain Pine Beetle epidemic.

Marriott’s Oceana Palms & Marriott’s Ocean Pointe– Weekly beach cleanup activities are also offered to Owners and guests at Marriott’s Ocean Pointe and Marriott’s Oceana Palms on Singer Island. Every week, groups at each resort head out to the beach to pick up trash along a 2 mile stretch. At Marriott’s Ocean Pointe, guests also gather for a weekly “green update,” aimed at educating them about recycling and the steps they can take to “green” their stay. Furthermore, at Marriott’s Oceana Palms, guests are made conscious of their natural surroundings by reading information about the area’s treasured loggerhead turtles that is displayed on the beach access boardwalk.

2010 Earth Hour – On Saturday, March 27, at 8:30 p.m., local time, Marriott Vacation Club resorts worldwide turned out their lights, for one hour, in support of Earth Hour. Marriott’s Waiohai Beach Club included Owners and guests in this effort by distributing fliers and displaying information in the lobby.”

Marriott Vacation Club, thank you for talking with me and sharing information about your Green efforts.  As I researched and spoke with you, I admit I was surprised – and impressed – by the scope of Green initiatives in place.  It’s clear that Marriott Vacation Club is making an effort to conserve and recycle at their resorts.  Of course this saves money and makes good business sense – and we wouldn’t want it any other way.  But the commitment is clearly there, and not easy to achieve while pleasing a wide range of guests and owners in the process, each with their own ideas about the vacation experience.  So kudos to Marriott Vacation Club.  I’ll be writing more about your efforts in a future post!

For more information about Marriott Vacation Club, visit www.marriottvacationclub.com

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BP and the US Government – Getting Along Like Oil and Water

Monday, May 24th, 2010

We’re starting to realize we’re really in trouble here.  This is not going to be the usual ‘oh no, let’s get that fixed and now we just have the hearings to worry about’ scenario.  It’s a Pandora’s Box, a genie out of the bottle – a fix that still needs more fixing, news that the Gulf Stream could become the Oil Stream, and a US government that’s decided to play ‘Who Moved My Cheese?’ big time.  A liability cap that goes from $75 million to $10 billion (or maybe $80 billion?) and an MMS that might dissolve and turn into two agencies and a revenue collection group.  Poof.  This just turned from a sprint into a marathon, BP, with no end in sight.  Forget the Exxon Valdez, think Bikini Islands.

BP, in case you didn’t notice you are on your own.  We’re in the middle of the blame game right now with plenty to go around.  Politicians are using words like ‘cover up’ and ‘un-American’.  Nobody is going to own up to any part of this, nobody wants to appear sympathetic in any way.  Your private business friends?  Gone.  Deepwater Horizon’s in major protection mode, other oil companies are touting the super safe procedures they use (yeah sure), and we’re all wondering whether we’ll ever be able to go to a beach on the East Coast or the Gulf of Mexico again.  So, not a good time. 

Truthfully, we’re all partly to blame.  We didn’t cause this, companies failed us and our government failed us, but we’re a part of the chain.  These companies took a risk and they’re paying the price, but they aren’t extracting oil in deepwater just for the challenge.  They’ve got customers, and their customers have customers, and eventually we’re the customer.  This is a hard wake up call, but with a clear message nonetheless. We don’t have another planet to move to. We’ve got to fix this as best we can, and we’ve got to encourage a different way to live.  We’ve got to seek and support solutions that are sustainable, renewable and safe.  And that save the places we love, not destroy them or put them at risk.

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MangoBunnies – Using Technology to Make Women Feel Safer

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

After Team Mentor Erin ‘Ed’ Donohue was our first guest blogger, KissMyCountry had the chance to meet the MangoBunnies  at the Microsoft Imagine Cup US finals in Washington, DC on April 26, 2010.  The team placed second in Software.  MangoBunnies Malisa Vongskul and Ashley Myers are attending college in Indiana while mentor Ed Donohue, who graduated from college last year, is working for a defense contractor in Colorado.  They are a dynamic trio, and we know you’ll appreciate the use of their talents and creativity to make women safer.  Enjoy!

A Well-Prepared Presentation and Rapt Attention By The Judges
The Imagine Cup challenges young adults to use technology to solve the toughest problems in the world, and the MangoBunnies rose to the challenge as the team faced the judges.  Malisa Vongskul began while Ashley Myers kept slides moving from a laptop.  “I’d like you to meet two people,” Malisa said as she pointed to photos of a young woman attacked while going home from a prom, and a young man who’d committed a crime just hours before in the same area.  As Malisa cited statistics about the high likelihood of young women in the US to be a victim of violent crime, you could hear a pin drop.  The judges were motionless, listening.  A tough problem and a well-designed solution.  Thank you, Mango Bunnies.  You go girls, I thought.

Using a Cell Phone To Feel Safer
The MangoBunnies have developed a mobile application using GPS technology via cell phone to help women to be aware of recent crimes in areas they frequent.  LightAlert combines information from police reports with information sent by individuals in real time to create targeted broadcasts.  Women can use the broadcasts to check areas they’re in, allowing them to circumvent places that appear dangerous or questionable.   With LightAlert women can feel safer using something that’s with them all the time – their mobile phone. 

The idea for LightAlert came after the team heard about a program in development for women in Africa, based on access to a web site.  Thinking about young women in the US, the MangoBunnies knew they needed something that would give young women instant access to knowledge about crimes.  An application for the cell phone would be best – young women carry their cell phones everywhere and all the time.  Smart thinking, and LightAlert began to take shape.

Turning a Judge’s Question Into New Ideas
When it came time for questions from the judges – a fairly intimidating group – Malisa and Ashley responded confidently and in detail, and turned the judges’ questions into an active exchange – more of a conversation than a Q&A.  One judge asked if the MangoBunnies were going to create a system like eBay where individuals can achieve higher status as a known and reliable informant.  “We hadn’t, but that’s a really good idea!” said Malisa.  The MangoBunnies are open, using good ideas from others to make LightAlert as useful as possible.  I actually think Yelp’s Elite Squad is a better example, although the judge made a good recommendation, and I’ve got a question myself.  When is this in Beta?

Foursquare, Gowalla, Take Note
MangoBunnies, get ready for the world to come knocking at your door.  Geolocation’s been all the rage this year.  It’s the next everything.  But there’s debate.  The privacy issue is huge – do we really want to reveal our physical location to anyone?  Yet the MangoBunnies – young women at school in Indiana – have created a way to make us feel safer, not more vulnerable, using geolocation technology.  They’ve put control of our privacy and our safety right in our hands – literally.  Foursquare, Gowalla, take note.  The MangoBunnies have got some great ideas and you might want to reach out.

MangoBunnies, with LightAlert and CAMRA, the project that brought you to last year’s Imagine Cup finals, you’ve made a great start.  We know that Ashley will head to Seattle as she graduates this year.  Malisa, enjoy your last summer as a college student – you’ll be heading somewhere exciting next year for sure!  Ed, all the best as you continue to work in Colorado.  We want to stay in touch and see what you do next – we know you’re just getting started!

This post is part of a series related to Microsoft’s Imagine Cup.  To learn more about the Light Alert mobile application please visit their web site.  KissMyCountry also just published a blog post about Team Blob,  the other all-female team competing in the Imagine Cup US finals this year, and a post about the Gaming finalists by Mr. K.  We will continue to follow the Imagine Cup as the international finals in Warsaw, Poland approach in July!

 

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PepsiCo’s “Dream Machine” – Recycling 400,000 Containers A Year

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

PepsiCo, we’ve been reading a lot about you lately, and we like where you’re going.  At KissMyCountry we’re not shy about recognizing companies who are saving the planet.  We voice criticism, too – don’t get the wrong impression.  But you’re doing a great job – first with the Pepsi Refresh Project, which we’ve written about as well as interviewed Ben Jervey, Planet Ambassador.  Partnering with GOOD was a wonderful idea, and it’s great to see your CMO join GOOD’s Advisory Board.

But we really like your latest – the Dream Machine and your goal to recycle 400 million plastic and aluminum containers a year.  And we like the way you’re partnering with Waste Management and Keep America Beautiful.  Both have been saving our planet for a long time and we’re glad to see they’re involved.  And building in the incentives is a great idea – nice touch, PepsiCo.  We know it’s a first step, and we know you have your critics – but we have hope for the Dream Machine.   One hope is that one of the 3,000 kiosks you’re setting up this year lands in our neck of the woods – we’d be honored and we’re waiting.

We also hope the program grows and grows and grows.  We hope you collect a lot of plastic and aluminum that wasn’t going to get recycled otherwise – and we hope you collect more than 400,000 containers a year.   We hope you collect so many containers that you don’t have to make any new ones for a year.

We know that’s ambitious.  But we have dreams too.  We dream about saving the places we love.  And PepsiCo, you – and Waste Management and Keep America Beautiful –  just helped us all take a step in that direction.

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