As an entrepreneur I am fascinated (unhealthily?) by what sparks ideas in other entrepreneurs. Most people would be familiar with wotif, an Australian success story. In 1999, Graeme Wood was a consultant when hotels presented him with their problem of last minute room availability. He saw this as an opportunity and founded wotif to make these rooms available at discounted prices…and now we have a global business.
I was presented with this same ingenuity when listening to Simon Griffiths (pictured) an engineer, economist turned entrepreneur.
Simon knew that biggest bug bearer for ‘not for profits’ and ‘charities’ is fund raising. They constantly have to get us to donate money and we on the other hand suffer from what is described as ‘compassion fatigue’. We are sick of constantly being asked for money or already have hand picked a few causes we support, but feel guilty or resentful and really altruism should make us feel better about ourselves and the world!
Simon then thought about this problem differently and came up with the concept of the ‘consumer philanthropist’. Instead of asking people for money, what if we looked at what they already consume and tap into that? So he set up ‘Shebeen’a non-profit bar in Melbourne. It sells exotic beer and wine from the developing world. The profit from each drink sale supports a development project in that drink’s country of origin. A drink for Kenya? Go for it. Today Shebeen supplies its beer to various venues. But then he hit his next hurdle, not everyone drinks beer and not everyone is happy to drink African beer. So what other consumer product could he tap into? He has now come up with his next venture, called ‘Who Gives A Crap’, which produces toilet paper manufactured entirely from recycled materials. 50% of the profits of this toilet paper will be used to build toilets in the developing world. Ingenious and the name always makes audiences roar with laughter.
Simon’s concept could revolutionise the globe – turning everyday consumers into philanthropists – let’s drink to that.

Story Mastery
Discover stories from leaders like you, who have applied these simple steps and achieved career-defining business results. Storytelling is not a natural gift, but a skill you can learn.
Recent Posts

Did you know art and presenting share a unique goal?

The oldest easy hack in the world

Enough craft, now to the art of presenting

What is the most exciting way to start a story?

Be Still My Beating Heart – Adrenaline in Auckland

The internet can sometimes make you feel 100 years old
Categories
- Books4
- Business storytelling articles37
- Business storytelling examples50
- Business storytelling techniques93
- Business Storytelling training66
- Case Study5
- Communication4
- Conference Speaker10
- Examples of Story66
- Inspiration39
- Interview with…7
- Latest Posts184
- Life hacks4
- Presentation Skills22
- Speaking23
- Technology3
- Thoughts113
- Uncategorized5
- Workshops2
- Writing3
- X Factor14