Its another amazing Tuesday and a really great opportunity for me to first celebrate on my blog, one of the people I love the most in this world. Many Happy Cheers to my younger sister, Felicia Eyang (Sisi Calabar), as she adds another great year. Sweetheart, YOU ARE SO PRECIOUS TO US AND TO GOD. HE WILL LIFT YOU BEYOND YOUR BIGGEST DREAMS AND MAKE YOU A 'THOUSAND TIMES' MORE THAN YOU ARE!!! WE LOVE YOU SO MUCH DARLING!!! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!
.. And to my dear readers, I sincerely love you too for allowing me one paragraph away from what I have prepared for you today. Its an invention you may find interesting - One you probably would not have thought existed. It is DRYBATH... Yes, a bath without water.
L
|
udwick Marishane from South Africa was 17 years old when he invented DryBath - the world's first germicidal Bath-substituting skin gel made from a blend of cleansers and moisturizers. This unique idea, borne out of a friend's lazy bath day has become one very relevant to meeting the needs of billions of people around the world lacking access to sufficient water. DryBath has also provided a bathing alternative to campers, soldiers in fields, prisoners, disaster relief charities and average household consumers wishing to 'save water' on some lazy days.
In 2011 and at 21 years, Ludwick Marishane was named the 2011 Global Student Entrepreneur of the year at the 2011 GSEA Global Student Entrepreneur Awards). His interview with Carol Roth (Huffington Post) last year, about his winning product and company gives great insight to his arrival at such unique innovation.
Carol Roth: What is DryBath and what problem does it solve?
Ludwick Marishane: DryBath is the world's first and only bath substituting skin gel... you apply it to your skin, then you don't need to bathe. I invented it to benefit people from the poorest communities in the world and for people in the developed world.
For people without water, Drybath provides empowerment as an affordable tool to achieve lifesaving personal hygiene without having to be dependent on stagnant community water infrastructure development. For wealthier communities, it offers a convenient way to save time and decrease their unhealthy practice of unnecessary daily bathing (which is proven to cause continuous drying of the skin), while achieving adequate personal hygiene. In both situations, precious water is saved, which can be put to better use.
Carol Roth: How did the idea for DryBath come about?
Ludwick Marishane: The idea came to me in the 11th grade in 2007. It was a cold winter's day; i was sunbathing with some friends of mine when one of my best friends had to go bathe. After we nagged him to hit the shower, he eventually said, "why doesn't someone invent something you can just put on your skin and avoid the need to bathe?"
A light bulb went on as I realized that I would be willing to pay money out of my pocket to buy such a product. Bear in mind that we were in the middle of the rural Limpopo province, with almost non-existent resources. I went home that day and used my web-enabled basic cellphone to research if such a product existed. My research showed that the product didn't seem to exist and there was a huge market of 2.5 billion people in the world without proper access to water who were in dire need of such a product (that number doesn't include the billion more like my friend, who were lazy to bathe). Coming from a poor background myself, I felt compelled to create a product. It took 6 months and endless time on Google and Wikipedia to do it.
Carol Roth: Tell us a bit about your background
Ludwich Marishane: I am the only child of Stanford Malatji and the eldest of 2 sons to Lovemore Marishane. My dad achieved financial freedom and has been able to provide me with great schooling and the ethic way of always pushing myself to do more; while my mom lives on the economic margin of society and has provided me with the emotional development necessary to seek improvement for the poor community I spent half my life growing up in. My dad ignited my entrepreneurial passion in my first year of high school and my love for science allowed me to indulge my curiosities of coming up with inventions for different opportunities I saw. In 9th grade, I formulated my own biodiesel fuel, invented a healthy cigarette; and in 10th grade I authored a mobile dictionary and attempted to publish a nationwide security magazine.
Carol Roth: What is the pricing of the product and how many units have you sold to date?
Ludwick Marishane: We're selling Drybath sachets to corporates at around USD 1.5 per sachet (1 sachet contains 25ml and replaces one bathe). For each sachet that corporates ppurchase, we provide a free sachet to our charity partners for distribution through their humanitarian work. We sell DryBath sachets on the retail market in poor communitis for USD 0.50 each, with an aim to lowering this price in half when we reach economies of scale. We have sold 162,000 sachets to date.
Carol Roth: How did you decide to participate in the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards?
Ludwick Marishane: I heard about the competition in 2009. During my first year of university, i entered and lost the South African regional. In 2010, I entered again and made it to global finals; and in 2011 I gave it one last shot and I'm glad to have brought it to African soil.
Carol Roth: How much prize money did you win and what will you be using those funds for?
Ludwick Marishane: I won USD 10,000 in cash, and more in in-kind prizes. I will be using the funds to finance my global marketing endeavor to secure contracts with armies, airlines (to put Drybath on long-distance flights). hotel groups (to save water), and to other travel industry services. These corporate markets will increase economies of scale to make the product cheaper on the retail market and allow DryBath to be a cheap commodity product democratically consumed by both poor and rich. It will save lives, time and water.
Carol Roth: Why do you think you won?
Ludwick Marishane: Mine was more than just a business and a product...it was a story about the journey of one kid who is in pursuit of changing the world and has committed 4 years to it thus far.
Carol Roth: What do you think are the most important factors that will make DryBath a success?
Ludwick Marishane: Great Marketing and sharing the common global dream of the impact that DryBath hopes to achieve with society.
Carol Roth: What words of advice would you give to other student entrepreneurs?
Ludwick Marishane: Find what you love doing, and exert all your effort on pursuing it.
Do as much as you can on your own and always ask for help when you need it. Embrace failure, because you will only ever experience it if you give up, not if you try and fail to succeed. I plan to use the title of Best Student Entrepreneur in the World to start the world's first entrepreneurship league and to roll this out globally over the next 5 years. I am dedicating my life to enabling the world's youth to follow their dreams and I urge other entrepreneurs to do the same...by first following their dreams!
...And we sure will Ludwick!
I hope you were intrigued by such unique innovation. I still am. Ludwick didn't sit back on such an idea, he produced it.
So, do you have an idea?
Would it solve a problem?
Have you tried producing it?
Sources:
Hmmm do I think I can stay without a bath n jst apply some gel without feeling dirty n sticky???Doubt dat..but good invention,thank God 4nigeria.
ReplyDeleteRub and shine? Lol! Bright kid tho!
ReplyDeleterub n shine alert....good idea especially for the soldiers and communities that lack water .
ReplyDeleteOk..... I 1st hesitated to comment, but dis kiddo see road oh. Thnking globally and all.. Just got my scope widened. Doin a gud job Amba.. God bless U, God Bless Naija, God Bless Africa #WeEpic
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Ubong! God bless you too.
ReplyDelete