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Posts with term TerraCycle X

Loop to Launch E-Comm Platform Nationwide

Loop products in returnable packaging are scheduled for launch nationwide this month, while retail partners in the U.S., France, and Japan plan to offer Loop in their stores later this year. For those consumers going the e-commerce route, there is a $20 shipping fee for orders under $150. In addition, the tote used to deliver and return product comes with a $15 deposit fee. For those consumers going the e-commerce route, there is a $20 shipping fee for orders under $150. In addition, the tote used to deliver and return product comes with a $15 deposit fee. As of presstime, consumers across the U.S. who are interested in shopping online for a range of grocery, household, and personal care products in gorgeously designed, durable, and resusable packaging will have the chance in June, when Loop launches nationwide. Since May 2019, the ground-breaking Loop circular shopping platform has been available in 10 states in the Northeast and in Paris. According to Tom Szaky, founder of recycling company TerraCycle and of Loop, the 10-month pilot allowed participating Consumer Packaged Goods companies, retailers, and Loop itself to gain insights and tweak the program for wider availability. Just as exciting, if not more so, according to Szaky, is the news that Loop will be launching in retail stores, including Kroger in the U.S., Carrefour in France, and AEON in Japan, later this year. Currently 400 brands have joined Loop, 20% of which are now available for purchase on Loopstore.com and 80% of which are still in development. Says Szaky, it can take a CPG anywhere from six to 18 months from the time they join Loop until they have product ready to ship. Among some of the more well-known CPGs that have signed on are Seventh Generation, Clorox, Procter & Gamble, Nestlé, Unilever, and Mars Petcare. Loop also sells a “private-label” brand, Puretto, which Szaky says is being used by name-brand companies to test products on the platform while they develop their own, unique version. “As soon as that version is live, we disable the Puretto version,” he explains. Szaky notes that the rapid speed of the nationwide launch—Loop was only just unveiled in February 2019—is due to the fact that “it’s a platform and not a producer or retailer.” He continues, “By being a platform, it is really our fantastic brand partners that are doing all the production and ramping up, and the retailers that are doing the scale up and later the in-store deployments. What we really have to ramp up is the ability to accept that used packaging, sort it out, and clean it. And that’s an area that TerraCycle has almost two decades of experience doing in disposables. Now we just have to bring the same experience to reusables.” With the e-commerce model, all packaging—both filled and empty—is handled through Loop’s Northeast location, from which it sends orders to consumers and where it cleans the empty packaging. Loop will also soon be adding another location on the West Coast. “As the stores move into bigger and bigger volumes, we will deploy in total seven major facilities in the U.S.,” Szaky says. “I expect that to take about two to three years.” Outside the U.S., Loop has one facility in each country in which it operates and is planning to add more. When the in-store platform becomes available, CPGs will supply the stores with product directly. Then, when consumers are through with the product, they will drop off the empty packaging at the store, and Loop will pick it up for cleaning. For those consumers going the e-commerce route, there is a $20 shipping fee for orders under $150. In addition, the tote used to deliver and return product comes with a $15 deposit fee. Deposits are also required for every package and range anywhere from $1.25 for a glass liquid soap dispenser bottle from Soapply, for example, up to $10 for a rust-resistant metal container with one-touch dispensing lid for Clorox disinfecting wipes. One of the biggest learnings from the Loop pilot says Szaky is that the deposit costs have not deterred consumers from using Loop. “I thought they would be, but they haven’t in any capacity,” he says. “Even deposits as high as $10 have not been a deterrent. So we’re very, very happy about that.” Not only that, Szaky says, but they also found that within 90 days of purchase, there was a 97% return rate for the packaging by consumers. “I was surprised, but I think it has to do with the fact that people want the product inside, and they’re happy to have us professionally clean it and have it professionally refilled so they can access it again.” For the in-store business, the only deposits are for the containers, which consumers are refunded when they return the empty packaging to the store.  

A SERVICEABLE WAY TO STAY RADIANT AND SHEEN WHILE KEEPING TRENTON ENVIRONMENTS CLEAN

From coffee pods to razors to baby food packing and beyond, Trenton-based TerraCycle continues to make good on its promise to eliminate the idea waste. In its latest partnership, TerraCycle and ACURE discover a serviceable way for consumers to stay radiant and sheen while keeping Trenton, and cities across the U.S., clean.   With a passion for creating great skin and hair wellness products while also keeping the environments clean nationwide, ACURE is working with TerraCycle to bring its objective to life. Being a family-owned company, ACURE is on a mission to direct consumers away from harsh, toxic chemicals, toward more safe and healthy ingredients perfect for the skin and hair.   “ACURE is giving its customers the unique opportunity to divert waste from landfills by offering them a way to responsibly dispose of their skincare packaging,” said TerraCycle CEO and Founder Tom Szaky.   Aside from creating healthy skin and personal care products free of toxic chemicals, ACURE is now taking the measures to also ensure that its product packaging is recycled, keeping the environment clean and healthy along with their personal care products.   TerraCycle, which is listed at #10 in Fortune magazine’s list of “52 companies “Changing the World,” is taking the right steps to ensure that company products and packages are being properly recycled, rather than being landfilled or incinerated.   By signing up with this link, https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/acure, consumers can now send in ACURE skin and personal care product packaging and have them recycled for free, guaranteeing that all packages are reused. For every shipment of ACURE waste that is sent in, points are earned that can go towards a non-profit, school, or charitable organization, a perfect incentive while keeping Trenton environments clean!   ACURE products are plant + food-based, refraining from gluten, sulfates, synthetic fragrances, and animal testing. and healthy ingredients perfect for the skin and hair. As with Trenton and other nationwide cities, recycling efforts like these can slowly increase a clean environment by moving consumers away from single-use packaging.  

UN World Oceans Day 2020 Virtual Event

  This year, owing to the coronavirus pandemic, UN World Oceans Day will be a free all-digital event that’s open to all. Streamed from 10am to 5pm EDT (UTC−04:00) on June 8th, the event, which is produced in partnership with non-profit organization Oceanic Global, aims to raise global awareness about the abundance our ocean provides humankind, and our individual and collective duty to use its resources sustainably. The program includes keynote speeches, panels, and presentations involving business leaders, scientists, youth leaders, cultural innovators, celebrities, and others, with a focus on this year’s theme: Innovation for a Sustainable Ocean.   At 12:40PM, Ellen Cuylaerts, curator of the UN World Oceans Day Photo Competition, hosted by DPG, will be joined by the contest judges—Adriana Basques, Adam Hanlon, Jill Heinerth, Darren Jew, Jane Morgan, Amos Nachoum, Miriam Stein Battles, David Salvatori, and John Thet—to announce this year’s winners. DPG will be announcing the winners shortly after, at 2PM EST. Check out the program schedule below and register at UNWorldOceansDay.org/2020.   SCHEDULE
Opening Remarks 10:00AM
High-level speakers will open UN World Oceans Day with remarks on the 2020 theme "Innovation for a Sustainable Ocean". Speakers H.E. António Guterres Secretary-General of the United Nations H.E. Tijjani Muhammad-Bande President of the General Assembly Remarks: Cara Delevingne
The State of the Ocean 10:20AM
Speakers will provide an overview of the state of the ocean and highlight the inter-linkages of the problems we face, as well as opportunities we can harness. Speakers Sylvia Earle President & Chair, Mission Blue Bill McKibben Co-Founder, 350.org João Miguel Ferreira de Serpa Soares Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs & United Nations Legal Counsel
"Spotlight Solutions" for the Ocean 11:00AM
This segment spotlights current projects offering innovative solutions that address the themes of the eight interactive dialogues of the 2020 UN Ocean Conference. Moderator Lucy Biggers Climate and Sustainability Correspondent, NowThis Speakers Peter Thomson United Nations Secretary-General's Special Envoy for the Ocean Francis Zoet Co-Founder & Director of Operations, The Great Bubble Barrier Ahmad "Aki" Allahgholi Founder & Managing Director, Coralive.org Olivier Ceberio COO and Co-Founder, Resolute Marine Michael Selden Co-Founder & CEO, Finless Foods Jossie Jasmin Dive shop Manager & Instructor at Amun Ini Dive, and Bigs Eggert Owner of Amun Ini Dive Dirk Rosen Founder & Executive Director, Marine Applied Research and Exploration Elisa Morgera Professor of Global Environmental Law, Strathclyde University Law School & Director, “One Ocean Hub" Jim Ritterhoff Executive Director, FORCE BLUE
The Cousteaus: A Multigenerational Conversation on Ocean Exploration 12:00PM
The Cousteaus will provide a multigenerational perspective on our evolving understanding of the ocean across time, highlighting certain innovations in science and exploration that have shaped our relationship with the ocean. Speakers Jean-Michel Cousteau Celine Cousteau Fabien Cousteau
OceanX: Innovation, Technology and Deep Sea Exploration 12:20PM
The segment will highlight exciting developments in the world of science, technology and exploration, with a particular focus on deep sea exploration, opportunities for future discoveries and the rapid progress in this field. Speakers Mark Dalio Founder & Creative Director, OceanX Edith Widder CEO & Senior Scientist, Ocean Research & Conservation Association, Inc.
UN World Oceans Day Photo Competition Winners 12:40PM
Announcement of the finalists and winners of the 2020 UN World Oceans Day Photo Competition. Curator Ellen Cuylaerts Freelance Underwater and Wildlife Photographer and Curator, 2020 UN World Oceans Day Photo Competition Judges Jim StandingAdriana BasquesAdam HanlonJill HeinerthDarren JewJane MorganAmos NachoumMiriam Stein BattlesDavid SalvatoriJohn Thet Remarks: Ellie Goulding
The Blue Economy and Private Sector Impact 1:00PM
This panel discussion will shed light on how the private sector is engaging communities to develop solutions for a healthy ocean. Moderator Curtis Brainard Managing Editor, Scientific American Speakers Tom Szaky Founder & CEO, TerraCycle Michael W. Lodge Secretary-General, International Seabed Authority Dave Ford Founder, Soul Buffalo & Co-Founder, Ocean Plastics Leadership Network Melissa Garren CEO & Founder, Working Ocean Strategies Deeper Dive One Ocean Foundation
Communities Innovating for a Sustainable Ocean 2:00PM
Panelists will provide examples of community-driven innovative approaches to effecting positive change in our relation with the ocean, highlighting key lessons learned. Moderator Andrea Thompson Associate Editor for Sustainability, Scientific American Speakers Gayatri Reksodihardjo–Lilley Director & Founder, Indonesian Nature Foundation (Yayasan Alam Indonesia Lestari - LINI) Julia Kumari Drapkin CEO & Founder, ISeeChange Asha de Vos Founder & Executive Director, Oceanswell Shanta Shamsunnahar Program Coordinator, MPA Program, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bangladesh Deeper Dive Christophe Bailhache Photographer & Filmmaker, Co-Founder of Underwater Earth
Youth Driving Innovation 3:00PM
Youth from around the world will share their solutions to drive innovation, engage their community and bridge generational gaps for a healthy and sustainable ocean. Moderator Jack Harries Filmmaker & Environmentalist Speakers Forbi Perise Eyong Nyosai Greening Forward Lilly Platt Environmentalist and Global Youth Ambassador for Plastic Pollution Coalition, WODI &Youth Mundus. Founder of Lilly's Plastic Pickup. Dylan Vecchione Founder, ReefQuest Foundation Callie Veelenturf Marine Conservation Biologist; Founder, The Leatherback Project and Rights for Nature
World Ocean Week Remarks  
Remarks on World Oceans Week and the efforts of the Friends of World Oceans Day (FOWOD) community. Speakers Francois Bailet Senior Legal Officer, Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea, Office of Legal Affairs, United Nations Lea d'Auriol Founder & Executive Director, Oceanic Global
A Concert for our Ocean 4:00PM
The Day will conclude with a celebration of the ocean through live performances from musicians around the world!
 

“Why you should get a full night’s sleep.”, With Dr. William Seeds & Nicole Simpson

Get a full night’s sleep. Our natural night circadian rhythm places our body into repair mode and needs 6–8 hours to finish its cycle. When we don’t sleep, we don’t fully repair, and our mental function declines. I also love drinking a glass of alkaline water when I first wake and right before bed, as it helps with this circadian cycle. On nights that I can’t sleep, I take a tart cherry supplement. It helps.   As a part of my series about “5 Lifestyle Tweaks That Will Dramatically Improve One’s Wellbeing”, I had the pleasure of interviewing Nicole Simpson. Nicole is an accomplished beauty veteran in the aesthetics industry. As the founder of Amethyst Beauty, she proves her innovation in the beauty space with a skincare line entirely dedicated to healing & protecting the skin from environmental toxins and skin stressors.   Thank you so much for doing this with us! Our readers would love to “get to know you” better. Can you share your “backstory” with us?   I have been obsessed with skin and hair care products since I was a little girl. I remember being very young, maybe 6, looking up ingredient lists on the back of the shampoo bottles in my mom’s bathroom, asking her “mom what does this do?” It drove her crazy, but she soon realized that I was really into ingredients and science, and my parents cultivated a STEM environment for me. I was always at the science fair, discovery museums, volunteering with physicians at the local children’s hospital, and even playing chemist in my own kitchen. I became infatuated with the biochemistry of skin and its ingredients and made my first “potion” when I was 16 to help heal my acne (It actually worked!)   I worked for a short while as a chemist after graduating from university, but I hated it. I didn’t really know what I wanted to do, but I knew I wanted to be in the skincare industry, so I followed my absolute passion and became an aesthetician. The rest is history! I was recruited by a major skincare company to teach skincare from a scientific perspective to other aestheticians, physicians, and nurses. From there I went on to become the AVP of Global Education and Business Development for SkinCeuticals/L’Oreal. I traveled more than 32 countries, working with some of the most prominent physicians in the world to become successful with skincare in their practices.   It was during my travels that I started to see that in America, our reality is a bit different than the rest of the world. My time in China, India, and some European countries allowed me to see our future. The air is heavily polluted. The water is contaminated. There are places in China where food doesn’t grow because the soil is too acidic from acid rain. The University of California Irvine published a study a few years ago that showed that all of the smog that blows over from China adds 5–8 extra days of smog to Southern California each year. While we are not alone, the beauty industry is a major contributor to this. I made the decision several years ago that when I would create my own skincare line, I would do it as a platform to have an impact on this situation. While the industry is not perfect, there are things we can do today to reduce our global impact on pollution, and improve sustainability, which I am committed to being a part of.   Can you share the most interesting story that happened to you since you started your career? What were the main lessons or takeaways from that story?   When I was about 3 weeks on the job for the first major skincare company I worked for, my youngest brother passed away in a terrible accident. He was 20 years old; I was 28. It was devastating for our family. I remember having a very frank conversation with my boss at the time. She asked me if I wanted to continue. Every part of me was in pain from the loss. I could have gracefully resigned, but in my heart, I knew it wasn’t the right thing to do. It was hard, but I picked myself up, and I continued. I learned all about resiliency and determination. I knew that if I really wanted something, it was absolutely within reach. I was at rock bottom at a young age, but I quickly rose to the top by believing in myself and my goals. I also learned a lot about what is truly important and keeping that in perspective. These lessons have served me well later in life. While our wounds are healed, there have been many times where I have found myself caught up in “life”, especially in the corporate world, and all that comes with it. Thinking about that time helped me remember that there was nothing that anyone could do or say that was worse than anything I had already gone through, and if it was, I absolutely had the strength to pull through. It gave me perspective to know that we are on a journey, and each lesson is important, but it was okay to disconnect from all of that and live a peaceful life.   Can you share a story about the biggest mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what lesson you learned from that?   The biggest mistake I made when I first started was allowing the opinions of other people to define who I was. I would let people’s opinions of my performance mold my opinion of myself. It took me a few years to realize just how dangerous and toxic that was. I believe that when we go through times like these, it is important not to lose the lesson. Being comfortable in my own skin was something I wasn’t good at then, but I am good at now. When I spend time mentoring young women in the space, this is usually the topic where we spend the most time. I feel that this is a critical rite of passage when developing strong leadership skills.   None of us are able to achieve success without some help along the way. Is there a particular person who you are grateful towards who helped get you to where you are? Can you share a story about that?   The importance of people is often underestimated. I have villages (and I mean villages!) of people who have helped! But if I had to choose one, it is a woman named Dr. Sheila Marie Love. She was a pediatric orthopedic surgeon who repaired my broken knee when I was 15. She was a total badass. She was a female in a mostly all-boys club, who actually founded the surgical practice that was just her and 4 other male physicians. She sparked a passion for medicine at the time and allowed me to shadow her in the operating room for all 4 years of high school. She was the first true example I had of a woman stepping into her strength and taking on a very powerful leadership role as a minority in the space. I still think of her today when things get tough. In my career, I have been lucky enough to have found success at an early age. That did not come without discrimination on not only my gender but also my age. Dr. Love was gracefully strong. It was learning these qualities from her that allowed me to rise above the discrimination and become who I was meant to be- the CEO of a conscious beauty company that will use our products as a platform to spark some major changes in the world.   Ok perfect. Now let’s jump to our main focus. When it comes to health and wellness, how is the work you are doing helping to make a bigger impact in the world?   I have developed every single product in the Amethyst Skincare range to promote the ultimate in health and wellness. Being a self-proclaimed nerd, I like to read the scientific publications surrounding climate change, which is a topic that is very important to me. The 2050 climate report is scary. Even if we could implement the best-case scenario today, which would be no CO2 emissions, our air quality is still going to get much worse before it gets better. As the environment continues to change, the way that our skin ages will also change. There was a study recently published that proved a group of women living in a city had skin that was 10% more aged than their same-aged counterparts living outside of the same city. The toxins found in our air, water, and consequences of poor diet and stressful lifestyle have significant impact to our skin. The ingredients in Amethyst Skincare were meticulously selected to nourish and protect skin, and promote the self-repair necessary to maintain its youthful state for the long-term.   The Amethyst stone has been known throughout history as the gemstone of youth. It also helps reduce stress. We believe it helps create the space needed for the type of self-care that results in stress reduction, contributing not only to healthier skin, but also the overall health and wellness of our entire being.   While we are not perfect, we are doing what we can to reduce our impact on the environment. We use glass bottles and recyclable cardboard. We haven’t been able to completely reduce plastic, so to help offset that, we have two programs in place. More than 85% of beauty packaging is not recyclable by mainstream standards, and even with our good intentions of placing it in the recycling bin, it still goes to landfill, and can end up in the ocean. We encourage anyone who makes a purchase on our website to send us back their packaging when it’s empty. We will send it to Terracycle, who can recycle all our components and ensure that no plastic goes to landfill. Additionally, we support a company called 4Ocean, who works tirelessly to clean plastics out of the oceans around the world. We reserve 5% of all purchases to pay for their famous bracelets to help them continue with their mission.   Additionally, two of our SKUs are waterless — the face oil does not use any water in its production. The Anti-Pollution Mist uses aloe vera instead of water to try and reduce our water consumption overall.   Our goal is to be completely carbon neutral in our production within the next 5–7 years. Additionally, our 3-year plan is for our packaging to become 100% sustainable. In the meantime, we are doing our best to make the least amount of negative impact possible to our earth.   Can you share your top five “lifestyle tweaks” that you believe will help support people’s journey towards better wellbeing? Please give an example or story for each.  
  • Diet and exercise go without saying. Choose the healthy foods and exercises that you love the most because it will be easier to be consistent. Self-love through meditation.
  • Get a full night’s sleep. Our natural night circadian rhythm places our body into repair mode and needs 6–8 hours to finish its cycle. When we don’t sleep, we don’t fully repair, and our mental function declines. I also love drinking a glass of alkaline water when I first wake and right before bed, as it helps with this circadian cycle. On nights that I can’t sleep, I take a tart cherry supplement. It helps.
  • Do brain games. We are sharper at everything we do when we are good about improving our memory. It helps keep our minds healthy and well for the long term in a very stressful world.
  • Sunshine, good food, laughter, and family are the best medicine. There are not many things in life that are worth stealing the joy away from any of these.
  • Eat lunch out with someone new once a week. There is a lot of importance in surrounding yourself with the right people. Taking the time to slow down and enjoy facetime with people is the ultimate in promoting wellness. Some researchers have compared having a weak social circle as the equivalent of smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.
  If you could start a movement that would bring the most amount of wellness to the most amount of people, what would that be?   This movement would definitely be environmental wellness and creating awareness as actionable steps for as many people as possible.   While the beauty industry is not perfect, we are doing what we can to reduce our impact on the environment. We use glass bottles and recyclable cardboard. We haven’t been able to completely reduce plastic, so to help offset that, we have two programs in place. More than 85% of beauty packaging is not recyclable by mainstream standards, and even with our good intentions of placing it in the recycling bin, it still goes to landfill, and can end up in the ocean. We encourage anyone who makes Amethyst Skincare to send us back their packaging when it’s empty. We will send it to Terracycle, who can recycle all of our components and ensure that no plastic goes to landfill. Additionally, we support a company called 4Ocean, who works tirelessly to clean plastics out of the oceans around the world. We reserve 5% of all purchases made on our website to purchase their famous bracelets to help them continue with their mission.   Additionally, 2 of our products are waterless. The face oil does not use any water in its production. The Anti-Pollution Mist uses aloe vera instead of water to try and reduce our water consumption overall.   Our goal is to be completely carbon neutral in our production within the next 5–7 years. Additionally, our 3-year plan is to become 100% sustainable on our packaging. In the meantime, we are doing our best to make the least amount of negative impact possible.   We are looking forward to inviting all who would like to join our journey.   What are your “5 Things I Wish Someone Told Me Before I Started” and why?  
  • The world might hate you once you start your climb. Do it anyway. As I started becoming more visible, I was also exposed to more opinions. I wish I would have learned to tune out the noise much earlier.
  • I came up in this very competitive industry assuming I couldn’t say no. I wish someone would have told me it is okay to stand my ground and say no. I said “yes” on far too many occasions that compromised my family time, quality of life, and even sometimes, my personal health.
  • The work you do today in the beauty industry will absolutely impact the quality of life for the multitudes of women tomorrow. The beauty industry goes much deeper than what it seems on the surface. We create products that boost self-esteem, improve health, and quality of life.
  • When women go together, they go further and stronger. I was not whole until I found my tribe of absolute superstar women that I could call at any time of day to speak to, learn from, bounce ideas, and have a compassionate voice of encouragement.
  • Community over competition. Period. There is enough space here for everyone. We can create more impact on the things that matter when we go together. Strength in numbers.
  Sustainability, veganism, mental health and environmental changes are big topics at the moment. Which one of these causes is dearest to you, and why?   All are very important to me. I believe sustainability and environmental changes go hand-in-hand. I want my children to grow up in a world where they can play outside, and their kids can play outside, and they can grow a garden, and drink clean water. I want them to be able to go on a safari and actual see a live animal. We all have a responsibility to act now and fast. We aren’t moving fast enough.

StartEngine Review: ‘Mr. Wonderful’ Approves This Crowdfunding Platform

Since its founding in 2016, StartEngine has raised over $125 million for over 325 companies. CEO Howard Marks co-founded what is now Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI), but most people couldn’t pick him out of a line-up. Look for him on Wikipedia and you’ll find a different Howard Marks, a billionaire whose Oaktree Capital Management specializes in distressed securities.   To gain star power, StartEngine recruited “Mr. Wonderful,” investor and Shark Tank talent Kevin O’Leary, as a strategic advisor and investor. StartEngine calls itself the largest equity crowdfunding program.   But don’t let that stop you from taking this incubator and crowdfunding enterprise seriously.  

StartEngine Review: What’s Under the Hood

  StartEngine is a full-featured crowdfunding enterprise that takes advantage of every opportunity.   Launched to do equity crowdfunding under the JOBS Act, StartEngine was approved as a broker-dealer in 2019 and accepts bitcoin as well as dollars from investors.   StartEngine crowdfunds itself. It closed its first Reg A+ round for $8.6 million, at $7.50 per share, then began a second round of $41 million at a price of $11.25, and it has filed for a regular CF offering at truCrowd, listing its valuation at $190 million.   Marks says he got interested in initial coin offerings in 2017 and launched its first ICO, for tZero, founded by Overstock.com (NASDAQ:OSTK) founder Patrick Byrne, in 2018.   StartEngine launched its first investor meeting, called the StartEngine Founders Summit, in 2018. The most recent one was virtual, a March webinar.  

The O’Leary Connection

  Marks said several of his companies had already been on Shark Tank before he approached O’Leary. In addition to acting as a strategic advisor and face of the franchise — with advice for entrepreneurs and StartEngine publicized through his fame — O’Leary is also a shareholder.   It’s Marks who runs the show. His aim is to provide a new base for companies, helping them sell equity from startup through public offering. He has an interest in every type of crowdfunding vehicle and wants crowdfunding to be as legitimate as Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS).  

Some StartEngine Successes

  StartEngine calls its crowdfunding efforts online public offerings.   One of past successes is BioClonetics, working on a cure for HIV using monoclonal antibodies. It raised $256,000 on a valuation of $15 million.   Farm.One uses vertical farming, hydroponics and LED lighting to grow rare produce in New York’s Tribeca neighborhood. It raised $446,000 on a valuation of $7 million.   A third funding winner, Mycroft AI, offers a voice interface that isn’t controlled by a large platform such as Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN). It raised $1.07 million at a valuation of $19.9 million.  

Current Offerings

  Here are some of the 76 current offerings:   TerraCycle says it can recycle the “unrecyclable,” turning things like toothbrushes and laundry bottles into plastic feedstock. The company made $1.1 million on revenue of $20 million in 2018 and pays a dividend.   IX Water converts industrial containment water, the kind you find around oil wells, into usable water. Drillers produced 150 billion barrels of this water last year, which IX calls a $75 billion opportunity. So far, it has raised $133,000 at a valuation of $13.1 million.   Knightscope offers crime-fighting robots in the form of machine-as-a-service tech. They range from stationary and indoor models to one that can roll across a variety of outdoor terrains. So far, it has raised $7.1 million at StartEngine, out of a total investment of $40 million.  

The Bottom Line on StartEngine

  While most StartEngine offerings are for equity, the company does host other types of offers, including those for a revenue share, convertible stock and debt. Investor money is held in escrow until closing, then disbursed to the offering company. The equity is in the form of a subscription agreement.   StartEngine is, like the companies whose offerings it sponsors, a startup seeking both a leadership position within its niche and legitimacy for that niche. It has already taken large strides toward that aim.   Dana Blankenhorn has been a financial and technology journalist since 1978. His latest book is Technology’s Big Bang: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow with Moore’s Law, essays on technology available at the Amazon Kindle store. Follow him on Twitter at @danablankenhorn. As of this writing he owned shares in AMZN.

ACURE Skin Care partners with TerraCycle to launch recycling points system

For every shipment of ACURE waste sent to TerraCycle, collectors earn points that can be donated to a non-profit, school or charitable organization of their choice.

ACURE, a skin and hair wellness brand, has partnered with TerraCycle to make the packaging for their line of skin care and personal care products nationally recyclable in the United States.   As an added incentive, for every shipment of ACURE waste sent to TerraCycle, collectors earn points that can be donated to a non-profit, school or charitable organization of their choice.   Through the ACURE Recycling Program, consumers can send in ACURE skin care and personal care packaging to be recycled for free. Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and melted into hard plastic that can be remolded to make new recycled products.   "ACURE is giving their customers the unique opportunity to divert waste from landfills by offering them a way to responsibly dispose of their skincare packaging," said TerraCycle CEO and Founder, Tom Szaky. "In turn, by participating in the ACURE Recycling Program, consumers can demonstrate their respect for the environment not only through the products that they choose to include in their beauty regimen, but also by how the packaging is disposed of."   The ACURE Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization.

10 Startups to Invest In With Equity Crowdfunding

Imagine walking in a Cupertino neighborhood in 1976 and finding two geeky kids holed up in a garage. “We’re building the world’s next great computer,” the lanky one says. You ask how much it would cost to go from garage band to full-fledged business, and they offer you shares in the startup. You’d walk away having invested in the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, and Steve Jobs gets to drive away with his Volkswagen bus.   Only this is 2020, where fledgling entrepreneurs can turn to crowdfunding to build the next great thing — be it the “Amazon of Pharmacy” or a fully autonomous robotic lawnmower. Anything is possible, if not incredibly risky.   In fact, there can only be risk when investing in startups. Many are pre-revenue, untested and banking on ideas that could be ahead of their time, just right on time or completely off the reservation. You could just as easily invest in the next Theranos before the next Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL).   That’s where we come in. InvestorPlace’s foray into private investing features many of our top writers and analysts. Each of whom have taken deep dives into equity crowdfunding offerings. Reading their insights can give you a leg up when investing in startups.   Here you’ll find snippets taken directly from the articles of our writers on various equity crowdfunding investments. Read through, breathe it in and step confidently into shoes that just 10 years were filled by accredited investors:     Equity Crowdfunding Site: SeedInvest Days Left to Invest: 17 days   Let me start this piece by saying three very important things:   First, I’d like to introduce you to NowRx, an on-demand e-pharmacy which — much like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) leveraged technology and same-day shipping to disrupt the multi-trillion dollar retail market — is leveraging technology and a same-day prescription delivery service to disrupt the several hundred billion dollar U.S. legacy pharmacy industry.   In this sense, I like to think of NowRx as the “Amazon of Pharmacy.”   Second, NowRx is not a public company. You can’t buy and sell shares of NowRx like you can buy and sell shares of Amazon. Bummer.   Third, thanks to some major advancements in crowdfunding technology and legislation, you can now invest in next-generation startups like NowRx for the long haul.   Simply go to SeedInvest.com. Create an account (it only takes a few minutes). Search for NowRx, and click the button that says “Invest in NowRx.”   It’s that simple.         Equity Crowdfunding Site: StartEngine Amount Raised: $3.19mm of its $12.75mm funding goal Hunting for the next Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) doesn’t necessarily mean you’re searching for the next big consumer tech explosion. “The next Amazon” largely means finding the next high-growth stock of the future. And the earlier you invest in these companies, the bigger the gains. Few options can beat privately traded firms in this regard, but private investing has historically held a high barrier to entry.   Does your net worth exceed $1 million (not including your primary residence)? Do you make more than $200,000 per year ($300,000 if you file taxes jointly with your spouse)? If you do, congratulations! You’re an accredited investor and can invest in private businesses.   If not, don’t fret. You can still invest in privately traded companies through equity crowdfunding … but, boy, if there were ever an area of the market that felt as if it were pioneered by the likes of Saul Goodman, it’s regulation crowdfunding.   That’s because regulation crowdfunding stipulates that firms raise no more than $1.07 million … per year. This severely hampers the quality of offerings, as few startups worth investing in need such small amounts of cash. Regulation A+ offerings, though, can raise substantially more. So when looking through offerings, I stuck to swiping through companies in the latter category … and I stumbled on an anomaly in TerraCycle.   Now I’m sure many of you have heard of this company in passing before, but what caught my eye was the amount it’s raised ($12 million) and the revenue it already brings in ($20 million in 2018).   By the end of its funding round, TerraCycle hopes to raise $25 million. Just what is this company that I’ve never heard of and how is it that it’s already profitable. And why does it continue to attract so much cash from everyday people?     Read more here.       Equity Crowdfunding Site: SeedInvest Amount Raised: $1.09mm raised   As readers of mine know, I’m hugely bullish on the equity crowdfunding space, seeing it as an enormous opportunity for retail investors to diversify their portfolio with potentially explosive early-stage investments in tomorrow’s most important companies.   With that in mind, one of the more interesting private investments that I’ve come across on crowdfunding platform SeedInvest is robotic commercial lawnmower maker, Graze.   In short, Graze is a pre-revenue company that has developed a fully-autonomous, robotic commercial lawnmower. Management believes this breakthrough technology has the power to disrupt the $54 billion U.S. commercial landscaping market, by addressing and eliminating the market’s biggest pain-points: labor costs, fuel costs, safety-related workers compensation and pollution.   Those pain-points are painful enough — and the benefits of Graze’s solutions clear enough — that I do believe this company has a good opportunity to become a meaningfully large player in the U.S. commercial landscaping market.   If so, an investment in Graze today could yield huge returns.   Graze’s current financing round on SeedInvest values the company at $23 million (pre-money). My modeling suggests that a $1 billion valuation is possible within the next decade. That represents several thousand percent return.   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: Republic Days Left to Invest: 59 days   Technology has certainly helped to deal with the terrible impact of the novel coronavirus pandemic, as seen with Slack Technologies (NYSE:WORK) and Zoom Video Communications (NASDAQ:ZM). But there are a variety of early-stage startups that are looking to provide solutions as well. Just look at Hearo.Live. The company’s mobile app allows you to chat while doing such things as watching movies, games, Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) streams or shows. What’s more, through the crowdfunding site Republic, you can invest in Hearo.Live.   The founders include CEO Edward Lerner and Dwight Kwok, the company’s vice president of business development. Lerner is the person who wrote Electronic Arts’ (NASDAQ:EA) first 3D game. He has also created companies likes Looking Glass and Multitidue. As for Kwok, he was the general manager in Greater China for Xsolla, where he was responsible for monetizing media and entertainment properties. So far, the company has raised $196,536 from 629 investors and the valuation is $12.5 million.   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: Republic Days Left to Invest: 75 days   Fleeting, which operates a platform to better manage trucking fleets, is using the crowdfunding site Republic to raise capital. So far, the company has received commitments for $219,559 from more than 1,000 investors. And the valuation is $10 million if you want to invest in Fleeting.   The company got its start back in April 2018. There are also three founders, which include:  
  • CEO Pierre Laguerre: He has 11 years experience as a CDL Class A Truck driver and owned his own operation, which generated $1 million in revenues during the first year. Laguerre has started several other businesses, with the aggregate revenues of $4 million.
  • CTO Anil Jagarlamudi: He has over two decades experience in the software industry and has held executive-level positions at companies like Luma and AirWatch, which was acquired by VMware (NYSE:VMW).
  • COO Paul Munguia: His background is in the fintech industry. He also co-founded Upright, which helps to build startups.
  Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: Republic Days Left to Invest: 60 days   Genobank.io, a startup that is developing a secure DNA kit, is currently raising a round of capital though the Republic crowdfunding platform. So far more than $325,000 has been raised from more than 1,000 investors. The valuation is set at $10 million.   The founders include Daniel Uribe, who is the CEO, and Everardo Barojas. Uribe is a serial entrepreneur and has worked at companies like Sun Microsystems. Some of his areas of expertise include cybersecurity, blockchain, and cloud computing. He also has a degree in electrical engineering and an executive MBA from Stanford GSB.   As for Barojas, he is a PhD candidate and has a computer science degree. His main focus at Genobank is on the technology side, such as with the development of the RexChain fork for encrypted data.   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: Republic Days Left to Invest: 121 days   The past decade has seen much transformation of transportation, as seen with breakout companies like Uber (NYSE:UBER) and Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT). But for the founders of startup Upshift – Ezra Goldman, who started a dockless bikeshare service in 1999 and Ayako Hiwasa, a social entrepreneur – believe that there is still much room for interesting ideas in the space.   Now Upshift is essentially reimagining the traditional car purchase model.   To prove this out, Upshift is raising capital on the crowdsourcing platform, Republic. The valuation of the round is at $8 million.   Then how does Upshift work? Let’s take a look at the workflow. If you need a car, you text Upshift for where you want the vehicle delivered and at what time. The company will then drive it to you, all gassed up and clean.   You can then take it anywhere you want. Keep in mind that there are no mileage restrictions. And when you are finished, Upshift will pick up the vehicle.   OK, why do this instead of getting a ride from Uber or Lyft?   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: Republic Days Left to Invest: 10 days   Teooh, which is a developer of a mobile app for virtual events, is attempting to raise a round of capital. The approach is to use a crowdfunding platform called Republic. For Teooh’s funding, the valuation cap is $10 million.   OK then, let’s get some background on the company: When Don Stein graduated from college, he moved from Detroit to San Francisco, with the goal of becoming a venture capitalist. But this proved extremely difficult as he had few contacts in the industry. He kept networking and met a prominent angel investor, who liked Stein’s approach. With the investor’s help, he seeded a small venture fund called Candela Partners.   A key part of the strategy was actually to host events with the portfolio companies. Yet there was a nagging issue: Only those around the Bay area could attend.   Stein wondered if he could use cutting-edge technologies like Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) to create virtual events. In other words, would it be possible to replicate the face-to-face experience?   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: StartEngine Days Left to Invest: 29 days   I recently wrote about three equity crowdfunding investments raising funds on StartEngine, which the 2020 Inc. 5000 calls the 10th fastest-growing private company in the state of California. The star of the article was BrewDog USA, the American subsidiary of the U.K. craft brewer, that’s used its Equity for Punks platform since 2010 to raise millions of dollars of capital to fund its growth. In both crowdfunding and craft beer circles, BrewDog’s reputation is legendary. In addition to Brew Dog, I recommended investors check out two other StartEngine equity crowdfunding investments worthy of consideration. One of them was ModVans, a California-based manufacturer of CV1 modular van conversions.   “Why do I like it?” I stated April 19. “Millennials will love the company’s CV1 campervan. Plus, it already has $3.7 million in sales.” How popular are campervans with millennials? Thor Industries (NYSE:THO), the largest manufacturer of motorhomes and trailers in the U.S., has big plans for this segment of the RV market.   “We see growing potential for [the camper van] product category in North America,” Thor Industries CEO Bob Martin said in April. “Last year, the camper community there grew by 1.4 million households — 56 percent of which are millennials. These new participants are often returning to the roots of campervanning and prefer a lifestyle that involves less effort while offering more adventure and experiential quality.”   Read more here.     Equity Crowdfunding Site: StartEngine Amount Raised: $7.12mm of $11.75mm goal   Founded in 2013, Knightscope is the developer of fully autonomous security robots or bots. The company’s mission is “to make the United States of America the safest country in the world.” But is Knightscope a business you can invest in?   The company is actually raising capital through an online crowdfunding platform, called StartEngine. The goal is to raise $50 million.   Note that Knightscope has already raised $46.6 million from prior rounds of financing, such as from family offices and retail investors. So let’s get a backgrounder on the company and its prospects.

World Wisdom: Acure Recycling

ACURE®, a leader in skin and hair wellness, has partnered with international recycling leader TerraCycle® to make the packaging for their line of skin care and personal care products nationally recyclable in the United States. As an added incentive, for every shipment of ACURE® waste sent to TerraCycle, collectors earn points that can be donated to a non-profit, school or charitable organization of their choice.   Through the ACURE® Recycling Program, consumers can now send in ACURE® skin care and personal care packaging to be recycled for free. Participation is easy: sign up on the TerraCycle program page  https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/acure and mail in the packaging waste using a prepaid shipping label. Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and melted into hard plastic that can be remolded to make new recycled products.   “ACURE is giving their customers the unique opportunity to divert waste from landfills by offering them a way to responsibly dispose of their skincare packaging,” said TerraCycle CEO and Founder, Tom Szaky. “In turn, by participating in the ACURE® Recycling Program, consumers can demonstrate their respect for the environment not only through the products that they choose to include in their beauty regimen, but also by how the packaging is disposed of.”   The ACURE® Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization. For more information on TerraCycle’s recycling programs, visit www.terracycle.com.   About ACURE® ACURE® is a family owned and operated company founded on sustainable principles and accessible price points to steer people away from toxic chemicals, proving that you don't have to sacrifice your health for beautiful skin and hair. Each of our products is gluten free and free from animal testing, parabens, sulfates, phthalates, synthetic fragrances, harmful preservatives and artificial colors. Our plant + food based formulas are clinically driven to provide optimal performance at a cellular level. Because it's not enough to be natural, it also has to work. Available at retailers nationwide and at acure.com.   About TerraCycle TerraCycle is an innovative waste management company with a mission to eliminate the idea of waste. Operating nationally across 21 countries, TerraCycle partners with leading consumer product companies, retailers and cities to recycle products and packages, from dirty diapers to cigarette butts, that would otherwise end up being landfilled or incinerated. In addition, TerraCycle works with leading consumer product companies to integrate hard to recycle waste streams, such as ocean plastic, into their products and packaging. Its new division, Loop, is the first shopping system that gives consumers a way to shop for their favorite brands in durable, reusable packaging. TerraCycle has won over 200 awards for sustainability and has donated over $44 million to schools and charities since its founding more than 15 years ago and was named #10 in Fortune magazine’s list of 52 companies Changing the World. To learn more about TerraCycle or get involved in its recycling programs, please visit www.terracycle.com.  

More of COVID-19’s Twists and Turns—Focusing on Recycling and Sustainability

In this month’s edition of Business Report, we return to highlight the sometimes unexpected twists and turns resulting from the coronavirus pandemic, this time focusing on recycling and sustainability impacts. TerraCycle’s Szaky noted that though refillable container use at grocery stores has certainly suffered as a result of the pandemic, its Loop initiative, whereby consumers ship back reusable containers to consumer product companies and retailers through the LOOP system, has continued to gain traction, with 15 major retailers, 400 brands and 100,000 consumers participating, though it needs more scale to become  profitable, which it anticipates will take two to three years. And, packaging firm Ball Corp. continues to work on its aluminum drinking cup efforts, touting aluminum cups as infinitely recyclable.

The world’s first plastic-free coronavirus visor that can be composted in your yard

The world’s first plastic-free coronavirus visor that can be composted in your yard is sold at 50p per mask
  • Kit is made from responsible paper and cellulose from wood pulp
  • It will be priced at 50p per item if it goes on sale this week
  • A Plastic Planet, Reelbrands and Transcend Packaging have developed the PPE
  • Here’s how you can help people affected by Covid-19
  By Luke Andrews for Mailonline Published: 22:01 BST, June 2, 2020 | Updated: 22:01 BST, June 2, 2020   The ‘first’ plastic-free coronavirus visor in the world that can be composted in your backyard is on sale for 50p per mask.   The Plastic free PPE REELshield, sold in boxes of 150 for £ 75, consists of an adjustable responsible paper headband and a transparent cellulose visor extracted from wood pulp.   Once used, the designer says it can be disposed of with organic waste.   The US Composting Council adds that there is “no risk” of compost spreading coronavirus because it will decay in heat and humidity within three days.   International campaign group A Plastic Planet and packaging experts Reelbrands and Transcend Packaging have developed the PPE to reduce plastic pollution. The mask is made of responsible paper for the headband and cellulose extracted from wood pulp for the transparent visor   “No one wants to compromise the safety of workers and the public, but the plastic PPE visors are used once and then exist for centuries,” said campaign group co-founder Sian Sutherland.   “We wanted to set a good example and show that we can protect ourselves and our planet.   ‘We can no longer sacrifice nature without consequences. The public supports a green recovery from the pandemic because we simply cannot isolate or vaccinate against the climate crisis.’   The personal protective equipment is CE certified by the European Economic Area, which means that it has been extensively tested to ensure that it meets the same standards as the plastic alternative.   It has also received a Plastic Free Trust Mark from one of its designers, A Plastic Planet. The mask is a response to millions of plastic items that are feared to pollute the ocean. PPE masks have been washed off above on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, May 27   The PPE will be made available to companies this week. Some have already been picked up by delivery company Yodel and fish product company Three Oceans.   It can be bought by individuals or by companies looking to place larger orders, a spokesperson said.   For those concerned about composting, there will be a special service where used PPE can be disposed of in a specialized bin.   The stock is collected by Terracycle and taken to a location where it is recycled or composted.   Factories are poised to produce over a million plastic free PPE kits every week, with plans to start producing more in the US and distribute them in East and South Africa. “The virus is not a living organism, but a protein molecule covered with a protective layer of lipid (fat),” they said.   “Because the virus is not a living organism, it is not killed, but perishes. The disintegration time depends on the temperature, humidity and the type of material where it lies: between three hours (drops in the air) to 24 hours (porous surfaces such as fabrics or cardboard) to 72 hours (hard, smooth surfaces such as plastic).   “At least it won’t survive the weeks or months in your compost pile, not even a not very active one.”   As of February 2020, an estimated 761 million pieces of PPE are distributed across the UK.