Queen of Raw: Turning Textile Pollution Into Profit
Problem: Broken Supply Chain - U.S. $120B worth of excess fabric is sitting in warehouses around the world. Awaiting its end of being burned or buried. It is a massive liability for the factories who over produced it and for the brands who over purchased it. Killing the environment and drastically affecting a business’ bottom line.
Solution: Global Marketplace & Blockchain-Enabled Supply Chain Management - Queen of Raw takes all the waste and debt in the industry and turns it into profit. Intelligently matching buyers with sellers, unused raw materials are sold quickly and easily at lower price points, giving people access to materials that they never had before. Sellers map, measure, and trace their supply chains, minimizing their waste streams going forward.
Sustainability: Queen of Raw has already saved 1B+ gallons of water. By 2020, Queen of Raw can save 4B+ gallons of water.
Saving the world, one yard at a time: Stephanie Benedetto, CEO & Co-Founder of Queen of Raw, is on a mission to solve the world’s water crisis. One tee shirt takes 700 gallons of water to produce. Textile production is the second biggest polluter in the world. With a family in the business for over 100 years, Benedetto saw the problem first hand and built the solution: a platform for businesses to recapture value from their wasted materials rather than burning them.
To put the problem into perspective, by the time you read this, businesses will lose $1.2M in unsold inventory, from raw materials to finished goods. In fact, one garbage truck of perfectly good inventory is landfilled or burned every single second of every single day.
Companies, large and small, lose substantial sums of money due to unsold inventory, despite their use of expensive and complex supply chain management systems. H&M burned $4.3 billion in unsold inventory in 2018.
For every $1 worth of unsold product, another $1.40 is spent on warehousing costs. To reduce costs, inventory gets landfilled or burned, causing significant losses, liability, and pollution. Every year Amazon destroys 3 million unsold products in France alone.
Bringing $120 billion worth of unused textiles back to life: If we do not make a change, by 2025, two-thirds of the entire world’s population will face shortages of freshwater from textile production alone. Queen of Raw has already saved over one billion gallons of water while saving businesses millions of dollars with supply chain efficiency. An optimized supply chain is the solution for people, for planet, and for profit.
Fabric. It’s everywhere. Michaels. $6B. Etsy. $1.8B. Jo-Ann. $1.6B. Massive businesses built on selling raw materials. Just like Queen of Raw. Except we’ve found a huge hole in this market--the unused leftover inventory for B2B--and we’re here to fill it.
Queen of Raw already has over 85,000 users. Named a Launch Innovator by NASA, NIKE, IKEA, and DELL. Co-host of top rated podcast “Material Is Your Business.” One of 10 globally chosen to be a part of Techstars Anywhere 2018. Grand Prize Winner of WeWork Creator Awards presented by Ashton Kutcher. MIT - Solve Circular Economy Challenge Winner.
Using blockchain and machine learning/AI to rescue fashion’s dead stock: Queen of Raw uses blockchain technology and machine learning/AI to salvage wasted clothing materials and turn that pollution into profit. With real time, end-to-end connectivity, decentralized control of supply chains, and optimized buy/sell matchmaking, Benedetto helps companies save significant time and money. Blockchain and machine learning/AI are the new reality for wholesale and retail.
How does it work? Sellers - Factories, brands, and retailers post their unused fabric and start selling in minutes. They manage all their excess inventory in one place and collect custom data and analytics. Buyers - Buyers find the fabric they’re looking for and purchase it straight from the seller. If they don’t use all the fabric, they sell it back on Queen of Raw.
- Accelerate economic growth and create high-paying jobs across geographies and demographics in Bangladesh, especially among marginalized populations and youth
- Reduce economic vulnerability and lower barriers to global participation and inclusion, including expanding access to information, internet, and digital literacy
- Technology
- Other
- Pilot
Queen of Raw’s online marketplace helps designers access surplus textiles, creates value for producers, and minimizes the flow of textiles to landfill.
Queen of Raw provides a platform for producers and purchasers of textiles to recapture value from what would otherwise become waste. It is a marketplace where manufacturers and stockists of textiles can sell their unused textiles, rather than storing them, landfilling them, or burning them.
It also unlocks a major supply of affordable, quality textiles for designers around the world who have trouble accessing these materials.
A 60 second video of our technology: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YTseXZEcgA
Benedetto uses blockchain to track the industry’s excess fabric, enabling it to be easily identified and resold. When a brand buys a monthly subscription, it will get a customized supply chain management system that’s designed to expose excess yardage and waste (water, chemicals, dollars) as they occur in real time.
“Let’s say I am the farmer,” Benedetto offers. “I get an alert on my phone and enter ‘I just took 500 pounds of raw cotton to X mill to get spun into thread.’ I upload a certification that it’s 100 percent organic, click, and save.” The mill operator does the same when he receives the cotton, and up through the chain.
The idea is that the brand can see why its waste is happening -- for example, a mill throwing out material because of a designer making changes too late. Queen of Raw's data can then help the company become more efficient going forward -- and be rewarded financially for taking action. As soon as the brand gets an alert of surplus fabric, even finished clothes, it can sell the excess immediately on Queen of Raw, without racking up storage fees. Everyone wins -- Benedetto, twice.
- Women & Girls
- Elderly
- Rural Residents
- Urban Residents
- Middle-Income
- Minorities/Previously Excluded Populations
- Burkina
- Canada
- China
- France
- India
- Indonesia
- Italy
- Kenya
- Norway
- Spain
- Sweden
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Vietnam
- Bangladesh
- Finland
- Japan
- Korea South
- Pakistan
- Turkey
- United Arab Emirates
- Hong Kong
- Burkina
- Canada
- China
- France
- India
- Indonesia
- Italy
- Kenya
- Norway
- Spain
- Sweden
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Vietnam
- Bangladesh
- Finland
- Germany
- Japan
- Korea South
- Pakistan
- Turkey
- United Arab Emirates
- Hong Kong
The $800 billion global apparel industry, with its ever-faster fashion, has become famous for its squander. It slurps up water like no tomorrow -- literally, because at this rate, it will cause extreme scarcity in countries like China and throughout Asia by 2030, according to a report by the Boston Consulting Group. And every year, fashion manufacturing produces 92 million tons of solid waste, most of which goes to landfills or up in smoke. Last year Burberry was called out for burning $37 million of clothes and goods rather than selling them at a discount -- a common practice to maintain a brand’s luxury shine.
And it’s not just clothes. Up and down the industry’s supply chain, there’s excess material coming out at the seams. “I saw a massive problem: factories, mills, retailers, brands sitting on hundreds of billions to literally a trillion dollars’ worth of unused raw material,” Benedetto says.
Queen of Raw takes all the waste that goes on in the industry and turns it into profit.
Beyond fashion, fabric has a role to play in almost every industry. Whether you’re sitting on it as a pillow at a restaurant, gripping it in the form of a leather steering wheel, or drying your hands with a bathroom towel, we are surrounded by textiles. Queen of Raw hopes to be just as ubiquitous. For the sake of the planet, we hope so too.
“We know that the best economies are circular,” Benedetto says. “They find underutilized resources and put them back into the chain of supply and demand. This is the future. For people. For planet. For profit. That’s Queen of Raw.”
Our goal is to provide our customers with frictionless participation in our marketplace.
For enterprise businesses, the process of manually identifying and on-boarding inventory took months.
So we built the tools our enterprise community requested to automate the process of on-boarding inventory and vendors.
This took the on-boarding process from months to minutes.
The tools we built are powerful.
Enterprise businesses can collect real time actionable data and create transparency around inventory’s journey from farm to finished good.
- I am planning to expand my solution to Bangladesh
N/A
Bangladesh is the world’s second largest Readymade Garment (RMG) exporter, just behind China. 81% of its exports come from the RMG sector, and the textile and apparel sector contributes around 20% to Bangladesh’s GDP. It employs around 20 million people in the country and is the major driving force of the country’s economy.
Bangladesh plans to get the middle-income country status by 2021, and RMG sector is going to play a major role in it. We can support Bangladesh with our global marketplace and offer it a platform to buy and sell unused textiles, keeping them out of landfill and turning pollution into profit. Our platform also supports the readymade garment industry with readily available materials accessible on demand with low minimums and discount prices.
Bangladesh has also attracted many major global retail brands, and with the technology and quality compliance parameters has also seeped in Bangladesh’s apparel manufacturing systems. Moreover, Bangladeshi manufacturers and exporters have built excellent vertical capacities, which only China could offer before, which help global brands to ensure more transparency and coordination in their supply chains. This has resulted in a substantially high rate of quality achievement and technical compliance in Bangladesh’s RMG sector.
We can support Bangladesh's technological advancements as well to position it ahead of the rest. This includes integrating our supply chain tools into Bangladesh factories, mills, retailers, and brands. Our tools use blockchain and machine learning/AI to bring radical transparency around waste and support supply chain efficiency.
- For-profit
N/A
We did all this as a bootstrapped company of three people strong: Stephanie, the hustler. Phil, the hacker. And Corbin, the hipster. Each of us come from a family of entrepreneurs. We've all been entrepreneurs. And we've worked at large companies developing deep expertise in how technology can connect textile’s past to its future.
Stephanie Benedetto – Chief Executive Officer
Graduated from University of Pennsylvania with honors with a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Earned her Juris Doctor from Emory University School of Law. Worked as a lawyer in fashion and technology and co-founded a textile manufacturing facility. An advocate for women in business and sustainability, she is featured in NYTimes, Vogue, Cheddar, WCBS, Fortune, Entrepreneur, WIRED, and Fast Company. Stephanie is a NASA/NIKE/IKEA/DELL Innovator, a Grand Prize WeWork Creator Awards Winner presented by Ashton Kutcher, and a Finalist for Rent the Runway/UBS Project Entrepreneur and the $1M Verizon Powerful Answers Award. She is a Founding Member of Wildlife Friendly Enterprise Network, along with Aveda, Kering, and Stella McCartney.
Phil Derasmo – Chief Technology Officer
Technology expert with 15+ years in the industry leading technology projects for startups and large companies, including high security applications on Wall Street. Was the co-founder and CTO of a social shopping site and the Director of Engineering at Mantl. Derasmo also worked for eight years as Vice President of and Manager in the Applications Development Division at Citi. An architect and engineer with CISSP certification, he mentors at the Richard Branson Centre for Entrepreneurship.
Corbin Chase – Creative Director
Concepted and created campaigns for Urban Outfitters, Free People, Nicole Miller, Milk Studios, and Nylon Magazine. Chase specializes in photography, video, and mixed media editorial content, as well as social media strategy.
Our strategic partnership include:
-Launch.org (NASA, NIKE, IKEA, DELL)
-WeWork
-Techstars
-thredUP
-Wildlife Friendly Enterprise Network
-Texworld
-Solve MIT - Circular Economy
Queen of Raw has over 85,000 users. For every sale, we get a 25% commission plus a monthly subscription fee from the sellers.
Queen of Raw has already saved 1B+ gallons of water. By 2020, Queen of Raw can save 4B+ gallons of water.
We are a Member of Pledge 1% and Founding Member of Wildlife Friendly Enterprise Network, along with Aveda, Kering, and Stella McCartney.
Unit Economics Highlights:
25% commission + MRR
<1% churn
Buyers become sellers and sellers become buyers
Customer Acquisition Highlights:
Co-host of top rated global podcast
Access to Techstars, WeWork, Texworld, MIT Solve, & Launch.org networks
Strategic partnerships with API integration
In addition to prize funding to support bringing our solution to Bangladesh, we are excited to connect with Tiger IT around strategic and operational support from their network of seasoned professionals and other entrepreneurs. I would like to learn from the experiences of the people who have been where I am now. Suggestions around business plan improvements, customer acquisition tactics, and best practices for business-to-business marketplace and software solutions particularly with respect to the Bangladesh market would be welcomed.
- Technology
- Other
- Distribution
- Talent or board members
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Bangladesh Textile Mills Assocation, Bangladesh Accord, Bangladesh PaCT, Brac
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Co-Founder and CEO