Today on the podcast I'm talking to Ciara Westhead from Pico. Pico brings sustainability to all occasions with a current focus on children's events. Ciara sells sustainable partyware, and we had a really great conversation about why she chose to start a business selling these products, some of the issues around sourcing them, and other ways you can make a party sustainable.
Pico is a young company, with big plans. It was really exciting to learn about Ciara’s plans for the future, and everything that she has achieved in a short space of time. I found it inspiring, and I hope you do too.
Listen in to hear Ciara share:
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Welcome to the Bring Your Product Ideas To Life Podcast, practical
Vicki Weinberg:advice, and inspiration to help you create and sell your own physical products.
Vicki Weinberg:Here's your host Vicki Weinberg.
Vicki Weinberg:Hello today I'm talking to Ciara from Pico Party.
Vicki Weinberg:So Pico brings sustainability to all occasions with her current
Vicki Weinberg:focus on children's events.
Vicki Weinberg:So what Ciara sells is sustainable party wear, and we had a really great
Vicki Weinberg:conversation about why she chose to start a business selling these products.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, some of the issues around sourcing them.
Vicki Weinberg:What a sustainble party even is, um, Yeah, we covered all kinds of things.
Vicki Weinberg:I was super, super impressed, um, with everything that Ciara shared and
Vicki Weinberg:everything that she's done and her vision for the company, um, because
Vicki Weinberg:it's still a relatively new company and yeah, I was super impressed and
Vicki Weinberg:inspired by all that Ciara has achieved and all that she plans for the future.
Vicki Weinberg:So I really hope you feel as inspired by this conversation as I did.
Vicki Weinberg:And I'd now like to introduce you to Ciara.
Vicki Weinberg:So hi, Ciara.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you so much for being here.
Ciara:Oh, no worries.
Ciara:I'm really happy to be here.
Ciara:I'm really excited.
Vicki Weinberg:Oh, excellent.
Vicki Weinberg:Me too.
Vicki Weinberg:So can we start with you, please give an introduction to yourself,
Vicki Weinberg:your business and what you sell.
Ciara:Yeah.
Ciara:So I'm my name's Ciara, I'm the founder of Pico.
Ciara:Um, and what we sell in a nutshell is sustainable children's party products.
Ciara:So we started just over started trading just over three months ago.
Ciara:Um, but Pico has been in the making for just over a year.
Ciara:I first had the idea, um, start of April last year.
Ciara:Um, and basically why I started it was, I was really shocked about the lack of
Ciara:sustainable party products in the market.
Ciara:Um, and I really wanted to create a company that was,
Ciara:you know, also enjoying life.
Ciara:So having the parties, having these special occasions, um, but also kind of
Ciara:thinking of the planet at the same time.
Ciara:So all our products are completely plastic free and that's plastic free in
Ciara:the product and the packaging, because I used to get quite frustrated when
Ciara:I would order a paper party product and it would come wrapped in plastic.
Ciara:Um, so that's something that's really important.
Ciara:And the beginning of the life, the products have thought about.
Ciara:So they've either been made from recycled materials or from FSC paper.
Ciara:Um, tried to keep everything as in house in the UK as possible
Ciara:to reduce the emissions.
Ciara:Um, And also that afterlife has been carefully thought out.
Ciara:So, you know, making sure that these products can either be reused or recycled
Ciara:or either home composted as well.
Ciara:So I'd say that's in a nutshell what we do.
Vicki Weinberg:Oh, that's amazing.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you.
Vicki Weinberg:And I was about to ask you what sustainable partyware was so thank
Vicki Weinberg:you for explaining that as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Because that's really useful because, um, I wasn't sure if everyone would
Vicki Weinberg:you sort of know what that term meant.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, so could you maybe what might be nice if you can give us like, um, an
Vicki Weinberg:example of some of your products, because obviously I've had a really good look
Vicki Weinberg:at your website and your range, but not everyone has mm-hmm um, so what
Vicki Weinberg:examples of apart from, um, the sort of paper plates and cups, what are some
Vicki Weinberg:of the other products that you have.
Ciara:So, what we started with is three ranges.
Ciara:So I'm starting with children's products.
Ciara:Um, I, the reason why I did that is I come from a really big family.
Ciara:So I'm constantly surrounded by cousins.
Ciara:Um, and you know, most children do have, um, a birthday party.
Ciara:So we started with three ranges, which are dinosaur, under the sea and safari.
Ciara:Um, and we've started with tableware set.
Ciara:So in the tableware set, you get a place mat, you get the.,get the cups
Ciara:and you get napkins, and that's all included in the Pico party table set.
Ciara:Um, and they've been designed, really lucky, I've got a very close friend
Ciara:of mine who's an illustrated designer.
Ciara:Um, so she has designed all the products.
Ciara:Because another thing that I found with the market was there was, you know,
Ciara:few sustainable products, but the ones that were sustainable were quite boring
Ciara:and brown and you know, there's nothing wrong with that, if that's the kind
Ciara:of viable theme that you're going with for your party, but I wanted to create
Ciara:really great looking party products that, um, are stand out, um, but also
Ciara:have that sustainable aspect to them.
Ciara:So as well as like the tableware sets, we've also got like paper
Ciara:decorations, again, these paper decorations, we've got like garlands,
Ciara:we've got like honeycomb balloons.
Ciara:Um, I love the honeycomb balloons because they're shaped like balloons.
Ciara:Um, but they don't, but they, um, they're not actual balloons.
Ciara:And then we've also got the honeycomb balls as well.
Ciara:So it's, you know, small to start with we're only three months, but I really
Ciara:want to expand the range further.
Ciara:I'm already talking about what next tableware set we're going to add on.
Ciara:Um, and then hopefully, you know, I think the next year stay within
Ciara:children's parties, but then hopefully start to expand the ages even, even
Ciara:further to all different occasions.
Vicki Weinberg:Oh, thank you so much for explaining that.
Vicki Weinberg:And I'm glad you talked about the honeycomb balloons, because
Vicki Weinberg:they're my personal favorite as well from your website.
Vicki Weinberg:Because I just think they're so clever.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:And the fact that I guess you can fold them flat again and then bring them out.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I really, I really like that and that's something I've been trying to do
Vicki Weinberg:myself it's sort of buy a birthday banner, but you know, without an, an age on it.
Vicki Weinberg:So you can just bring out the same one every year.
Vicki Weinberg:And I think that's quite nice as well because it hopefully as well
Vicki Weinberg:as being sustainable, it will like for families create traditions.
Vicki Weinberg:If they always get out the same birthday banner or bunting or
Vicki Weinberg:whatever it is, I think that's, it's a really nice thing to have.
Ciara:Yeah, no, I a hundred percent agree and it's, you know, that reusable aspect.
Ciara:So at the moment, you know, we have to stock the paper decorations, but
Ciara:all of them are really good quality.
Ciara:So it means that like I've used some of the honeycomb balloons,
Ciara:you know, multiple times.
Ciara:Um, you just, as long as you're not like ripping things up and
Ciara:so forth, but you can, if you are careful, you can re-use them.
Ciara:Um, but you know, one occasion then another occasion, which
Ciara:is really, really great.
Ciara:Um, and yeah, like with the happy birthday banners, things like that,
Ciara:that's something we're looking to add.
Ciara:So then you can put it in the draw and then you can have it out.
Ciara:So you don't have to keep, I think we do have this culture of like, okay,
Ciara:it's a new party, it's a new event.
Ciara:We need to buy a new thing.
Ciara:But actually I think we really do need to change.
Ciara:And it's ging to take time.
Ciara:And I think even for myself, you know, um, you kind of have that culture of like, I
Ciara:need to buy a new thing for a new party.
Ciara:Like you need to buy a new outfit.
Ciara:Um, but trying to change that kind of mindset and trying to, you know, buying
Ciara:once and buying something that's, you know, fairly good quality and then
Ciara:you can keep it for years to come.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:And I think as well, it probably is cheaper in the long run to do as well, um,
Vicki Weinberg:when you think of like cost per use, I'm sure that if you are taking care of that,
Vicki Weinberg:you know, you've got a nice banner and you're taking care of it and you're using
Vicki Weinberg:it, you know, year after year, it does become cheaper than buying sort of cheaper
Vicki Weinberg:once, you know, one time use things every year or every couple of times, you know,
Vicki Weinberg:whatever, however, often you have events.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I definitely think it works out cheaper in the long run as well.
Ciara:Oh yeah.
Ciara:A hundred percent.
Ciara:And it's like, if you have something, like you said, that's a sentimental thing that
Ciara:you, you bring it out for every party, you can keep that from years to come.
Ciara:If it's something that's, you know, good quality and then you can pass it
Ciara:on, say to your child and then their child, and then they can keep it.
Ciara:It's a nice tradition to have.
Ciara:Um, so yeah, I completely agree with.
Vicki Weinberg:Definitely.
Vicki Weinberg:So I think your sort of inspiration and your vision for
Vicki Weinberg:Pico is so, so clear, Ciara.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, but how did you go from that to actually setting up your business?
Vicki Weinberg:So you mentioned you had a friend who helped you with, um, the actual
Vicki Weinberg:illustrations, but I guess there's so much else that goes alongside it.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I guess, and a big part of that, and I don't wanna preempt
Vicki Weinberg:anything you're going to say.
Vicki Weinberg:Be sort of finding suppliers that can deliver on your vision as well.
Vicki Weinberg:So do you mind talking this through, so you, you came up with the idea and
Vicki Weinberg:then, um, where you took it from there?
Ciara:Yeah, definitely.
Ciara:It was a long process.
Ciara:Um, so like I said, I started thinking about Pico in April of last year.
Ciara:And then, um, we launched in February of this year.
Ciara:So, I guess the reasoning behind Pico in a nutshell is, as I've mentioned
Ciara:before I come from a really big family.
Ciara:So my dad's one of 10 and my mum's one of four.
Ciara:Um, and I was constantly going to these, you know, uh, parties and
Ciara:it was just the, these products that were completely plastic.
Ciara:And I was just like, why is there, that's shocking that, is there nothing out there?
Ciara:Um, And to give you a bit more back of context.
Ciara:I, my last year of uni, I did quite a few modules on like ethics and
Ciara:sustainability in the circular economy.
Ciara:So it really kind of got my interest and I tried to be more
Ciara:sustainable and all my approaches.
Ciara:So it kind of just started out as me looking for products.
Ciara:Like I was like, let, I'm going to look for sustainable party products.
Ciara:And I was really shocked.
Ciara:I was like, there isn't really much out there.
Ciara:There was maybe a few companies that had like a small, sustainable
Ciara:range that was again, quite boring and nothing really that exciting.
Ciara:Um, and I was just like, is there not one company?
Ciara:Like their focus is about making, um, party products more ecofriendly and
Ciara:I just really couldn't find anything.
Ciara:So then I probably spent.
Ciara:Like two, three months really researching the market, looking at
Ciara:what the competitors were doing.
Ciara:Just really making sure that there was nothing out there.
Ciara:Not that it may would've stopped me, but just if there's someone already doing
Ciara:it really well, um, maybe it would've, you know, stopped me from doing it,
Ciara:but I just couldn't find anything.
Ciara:And then the more I started to do it, the more I kind of became obsessed with it.
Ciara:Um, so getting up really early, you know, working a full-time job, but then
Ciara:getting up at 5:30 to do Pico in the mornings and then Pico in the evenings.
Ciara:And I obsessed, I think in a really good way, you know, I, sometimes it
Ciara:was hard because I was working on out, but like, I just really enjoyed doing
Ciara:it and I really wanted to, you know, change, change the party industry.
Ciara:Um, so, and then in terms of like getting a supplier.
Ciara:Suppliers.
Ciara:It was hard.
Ciara:It was tough because, and then I started to realize maybe why there
Ciara:wasn't anyone in the UK doing it.
Ciara:Because it actually was really hard to find suppliers.
Ciara:Um, so traditionally with the party industry, um, and the kind of
Ciara:companies out there at the moment, they get everything from China.
Ciara:So they have one manufacturer in China and that manufacturer does their plates,
Ciara:their cups, their, you know, garlands does everything so they can make sure
Ciara:everything kind of looks, um, you know, united, um, and it's well as just
Ciara:easier, they can go to the supplier and just be like, can you get this done?
Ciara:I really didn't want to do that.
Ciara:I wanted to keep things more inhouse ,close to the UK, um, just to save on the
Ciara:admission costs and, you know, really to try to keep that sustainability aspect,
Ciara:but all times in all the products.
Ciara:So instead of going to one supplier, I had to go to multiple
Ciara:suppliers for different products.
Ciara:And that was tricky.
Ciara:I remember.
Ciara:I probably spent about five, six months just trying to find a supplier.
Ciara:And it was tough.
Ciara:Like I couldn't, it was, I couldn't find really ones at
Ciara:times that could do what I wanted.
Ciara:Like there would be sometimes that I would find one that could do what
Ciara:I wanted, but they wanted a hundred thousand minimum order quantity.
Ciara:And that was, you know, a huge investment for me at the beginning when I, I, I
Ciara:didn't really have the capital to do that.
Ciara:And I also didn't want to be investing in this huge stock and then not selling
Ciara:it and then having to pay for, um, you know, somewhere to, um, keep the stock.
Ciara:So it was a struggle.
Ciara:It really was, but I'm really glad I didn't give up because then I did
Ciara:find suppliers who could do what I needed and it's still, I would say
Ciara:not perfect, but it's definitely closer to what I want it to be.
Ciara:So for example, the place mats are made in the UK.
Ciara:And so the cups, um, and the napkins are made, um, in, in Germany.
Ciara:So again, it could be UK, but there was no one in the UK that actually
Ciara:could print napkins that I needed.
Ciara:Um, but that's something to think about for the future.
Ciara:You know, how I can bring that more in house, maybe making the napkins in house.
Ciara:Um, so yeah, trying to keep everything as close to the UK as possible.
Ciara:Um, but also having that sustainability aspect and the way the products are made
Ciara:and what the materials are made for.
Ciara:So, yeah, it was a struggle.
Ciara:It was.
Ciara:Um, but I think it worked.
Ciara:It.
Ciara:I kind of got there and I think the more I'm actually in Pico, actually, I have
Ciara:people reach out to me now, suppliers, which kind of blows my mind because before
Ciara:I was always trying to reach out to them.
Ciara:Um, so I think as we go, my aim is to just keep adding more products and
Ciara:really keep that sustainability, that ecofriendly aspect to them at all times.
Ciara:And I think we're just starting and I think there's so many
Ciara:more things that we can do.
Ciara:Um, But, you know, I think it's going to take time to get to, you know, make
Ciara:it even more eco-friendly as possible.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:I, I think I, I definitely agree that I'm sure that as the, you
Vicki Weinberg:know, years go by, you will be doing more and then things will change.
Vicki Weinberg:But I had to say I'm really impressed because I know you say it's taken a
Vicki Weinberg:long time, but really, and just over a year, you've done a huge amount.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, and.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah, I really resonated what you were saying as well about sort of
Vicki Weinberg:getting up early and doing a couple of hours before you started your day.
Vicki Weinberg:And I think that's just sometimes the way it has to be, and I'm really glad that
Vicki Weinberg:you got where you needed to be in the end.
Vicki Weinberg:And just, uh, when talking about the suppliers.
Vicki Weinberg:So how were you finding them?
Vicki Weinberg:Because I think that's something people might be interested in is,
Vicki Weinberg:you know, were you just using Google or were you going to trade shows?
Vicki Weinberg:What were.
Vicki Weinberg:What were you doing?
Ciara:So I didn't actually go to any trade shows, but I think
Ciara:that would've been something that could have been a good idea.
Ciara:Definitely.
Ciara:It was Google, but you know, not just, I was saying not just aimlessly
Ciara:kind of Googling and, you know, just looking, I had like a really detailed
Ciara:spreadsheet, just making sure, you know, every time I've contact probably,
Ciara:maybe 20 suppliers one morning.
Ciara:And then every time they got back to me, I would then comment if they couldn't
Ciara:do it or if they could, um, and making sure that, you know, I wasn't just
Ciara:reaching out to the same one twice.
Ciara:Um, but also, you know, talking to other suppliers.
Ciara:So.
Ciara:You know, if maybe one supplier can't do what you, you want.
Ciara:Um, just asking them, do you have any recommendations?
Ciara:You know, they've been in the industry normally for quite a long time.
Ciara:Um, and that seemed to kind of help as well, but yeah, it was Googling, um, was
Ciara:my main kind of way of, um, finding them.
Vicki Weinberg:Uh, yeah, I do think that's underestimated.
Vicki Weinberg:Sometimes when people ask me how to find suppliers and I say, Google, I think
Vicki Weinberg:people think maybe there's more to it than that, but Google in a, in a spreadsheet
Vicki Weinberg:is how I've always done it as well.
Vicki Weinberg:And, um, I don't know whether you found the same Ciara, but something that I
Vicki Weinberg:would add is, I always found that you had to go beyond page one of Google.
Vicki Weinberg:You had to go deeper into the searches than you would if you were doing like a
Vicki Weinberg:regular search in your day to day life.
Vicki Weinberg:Like sometimes the supplier you need might be on page four or page five, which most
Vicki Weinberg:of us let's face it don't go that far.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, but I found that sometimes there'd be a great supplier, but they're
Vicki Weinberg:a really small company based, you know, somewhere in the Midlands.
Vicki Weinberg:And so they're on, they're not on page one of Google, but they are
Vicki Weinberg:exactly what you're looking for.
Ciara:Yeah, no, a hundred percent.
Ciara:Uh, I did the same thing like you trolling through, um, Google and also
Ciara:trying to change what you are searching.
Ciara:So maybe it's changing like few words.
Ciara:Um, like I was looking for full coverage napkins, which no one does in the UK.
Ciara:Um, but trying to, you know, type it in, in a different way.
Ciara:When I, before I knew that, you know, it couldn't be UK based.
Ciara:Um, but just changing that search time a little bit.
Ciara:Seemed to help, but yeah, it, it was a, it was a struggle and it, you know,
Ciara:it, it wasn't the funnest thing to do.
Ciara:Um, it was exciting in a sense, because I was like, every time I got closer to
Ciara:finding a supplier, that was exciting.
Ciara:And then I got closer to making Pico, you know, the vision become reality.
Ciara:Um, but it's, I think it's definitely one of those things that.
Ciara:You can't give up because I remember there were points when I was like, I don't know
Ciara:if this is even possible, like I, you know, but I think you have to take, and it
Ciara:sounds so dramatic just trying to find a supply, but that's what I needed to then
Ciara:make Pico, you know, become what it is.
Ciara:Um, But I think, yeah, you just have to like, kind of not give
Ciara:up and just keep looking, um, and just keep reaching out to people.
Ciara:And it will, you know, it, it will happen, which thankfully for me, it did.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you so much for explaining all of that.
Vicki Weinberg:Because finding suppliers, obviously one of the most important things,
Vicki Weinberg:and I personally think it is.
Vicki Weinberg:Possibly the hardest and not hard in terms of what you have to do, because
Vicki Weinberg:I mean, it's relatively easy, isn't it?
Vicki Weinberg:What, what am I trying to say?
Vicki Weinberg:It is searching and reaching out to people which isn't like a, you know, it's a skill
Vicki Weinberg:that all of us can do it, but I think what's hard is the fact that it can be
Vicki Weinberg:quite boring and quite sole destroying.
Vicki Weinberg:And I like the point you made about trying different search terms in Google
Vicki Weinberg:as well, because I think often we don't really even know what we are searching
Vicki Weinberg:for, um, because sometimes searching, like, I don't know, napkin supplier.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I, I don't know if you found it the same, but often I think when you
Vicki Weinberg:do any of these searches, what you end up with is a lot of wholesalers
Vicki Weinberg:rather than the actual manufacturers.
Vicki Weinberg:So I think, yeah, learning how to sort of tweak your searches in Google.
Vicki Weinberg:It's definitely a skill as well.
Vicki Weinberg:And you do need a fair bit of patience.
Ciara:Oh yeah.
Ciara:A hundred percent.
Ciara:And I think like I had a lot of supplies say to me, like, why don't you just
Ciara:buy products that were already made?
Ciara:And I was like, no, I want to start something new.
Ciara:I want to, you know, do something fresh.
Ciara:Um, so, you know, and not.
Ciara:You know, sometimes you do need to listen to people and if they have
Ciara:experience a hundred percent, I think do, but sometimes if you're going with
Ciara:your gut feeling like there's so many times people said to me, why don't you
Ciara:just buy some things that are already made and, you know, resell them.
Ciara:And that probably would've been the easy route, but I'm really glad that I didn't,
Ciara:because now we, I think our products are great and they are really unique.
Ciara:Um, and that's kind of the Pico branding and that's what we want to be.
Ciara:And I wouldn't have been able to do that if I had products already in the market.
Vicki Weinberg:I'm so impressed, Ciara, that you've, how much
Vicki Weinberg:you've held onto your vision.
Vicki Weinberg:I just think that's so impressive.
Vicki Weinberg:And I think it just goes to show that having a really clear vision, I think
Vicki Weinberg:you, you do get there in the end because you, you, you know, it sounds like you
Vicki Weinberg:were so like laser focused on this is what I want and this is not what I want.
Vicki Weinberg:And I, I think that's honestly, I think that's really helped.
Ciara:Yeah, definitely.
Ciara:It's probably at times when, like, , I think my mum's like you put yourself under
Ciara:too much stress because you're like, she's like, you know, but, um, yeah, it's
Ciara:probably it's I think definitely that like going with your gut and, you know.
Ciara:Like I said going with like the vision, that's something that was so important to
Ciara:me and I knew what I wanted to create and I, but then also I not being so naive and
Ciara:just creating something that you want, but actually talking to your target market.
Ciara:So I'm not a mum myself.
Ciara:Um, so probably think quite mad and I'm targeting mums, but I have
Ciara:a lot of mums around me who, my cousins and my aunties, my family.
Ciara:But also going, maybe sometimes they will give me a mission, just that's
Ciara:maybe trying to make me feel better, that actually going to other mums and like I'm
Ciara:constantly when you know, on Instagram or like, um, mum's even just like, you
Ciara:know, talking to like next to a table that I've met asking them, like, what do
Ciara:you think to try and get their feedback?
Ciara:Um, because I they're, the people that, you know, are
Ciara:going to be buying the products.
Ciara:So I really need to, even though I've got this vision and keep it, um, within
Ciara:keep it like in a clear, sustainable, and good looking way, but finding out
Ciara:what they really want and they really need, and making sure that it's products
Ciara:that they actually want to buy as well.
Vicki Weinberg:That is such a good point.
Vicki Weinberg:And I'm so glad you brought that up as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Because you're right.
Vicki Weinberg:When you have a clear vision, it can be so easy to get stuck in your vision and
Vicki Weinberg:not think about people who are buying it.
Vicki Weinberg:But I guess they are, they're the same, but different also, I guess,
Vicki Weinberg:because I mean, your vision was, you know, to have products that
Vicki Weinberg:are sustainable and reusable.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, but then I guess to other things around sort of how they
Vicki Weinberg:look and sort of themes and colour.
Vicki Weinberg:I don't know, colours and, or I guess there's lots of other things that, you
Vicki Weinberg:know, it's great that your customers are able to give you input on.
Vicki Weinberg:And, um, yeah, it's brilliant that you were doing that and I
Vicki Weinberg:can see that from your post that you're still doing that as well.
Vicki Weinberg:So it's great that you are talking to your customers so much because
Vicki Weinberg:they will obviously tell you what they need and which will really
Vicki Weinberg:help inform things going forwards.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, what I am really interested in as in as well Ciara, is so obviously
Vicki Weinberg:tradition, I don't wanna say traditional.
Vicki Weinberg:I think, I guess, I mean, plastic, um, party products we've been around,
Vicki Weinberg:like, you know, since I was a kid and I'm quite old now, um, you know,
Vicki Weinberg:like balloons, paper plates that go in the bin and things like that.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, so, so what I guess is a two part question.
Vicki Weinberg:So are you finding there's a lot of education you need to do around, you know,
Vicki Weinberg:why people need to be thinking about more sustainable party products and if so,
Vicki Weinberg:sort of, how are you addressing that?
Vicki Weinberg:Because I guess that's quite a challenge that people might not be
Vicki Weinberg:always looking to buy sustainable.
Vicki Weinberg:Although I think things are moving in that direction and sorry I'm asking
Vicki Weinberg:you quite a lot of questions in one.
Vicki Weinberg:I was trying to think of it more succinct way of saying that.
Ciara:Yeah, no, no.
Ciara:That makes complete sense.
Ciara:So yeah, I mean, you know, I'm 23 now.
Ciara:Um, but I remember growing up and we had plastic, everything at my party was
Ciara:plastic, you know, party bags, plastic plates, everything was, um, And the more
Ciara:I kind of researched into, you know, why plastic was an issue was so only 9% of
Ciara:plastics in the UK actually gets recycled.
Ciara:So you put them into the bin.
Ciara:Um, and just the way kind of like our, um, waste infrastructure is that
Ciara:only 9% get recycled, which is huge.
Ciara:And then these plastic items, which we use once, um, take
Ciara:hundreds of years to decompose.
Ciara:And then they also think that in 20, 2050, there's going to be more
Ciara:plastic in the ocean than fish, which is a scary thing as well.
Ciara:Um, and obviously the, the micro, um, oh, forgot the word now.
Ciara:Um, Um, the plastic micro fibre, but that's it.
Ciara:Um, they're going into the ocean and they're going, and then the
Ciara:fish are eating them and then the fish, we are eating the fish.
Ciara:And then also, sorry, I can go into this quite, quite a lot, but, um, also, you
Ciara:know, if you have that plastic in the soil that goes to landfill, and then
Ciara:that goes, that can get into our water system, then we can drink the microfibres.
Ciara:So it's quite a scary thing.
Ciara:I think, to think that, you know, plastic, I know it seems harmless and you use it.
Ciara:That actually, you know, millions of people and millions of people do use these
Ciara:plastic items, then it can cause such like a damaging effect to, um our planet.
Ciara:And I think even though, you know, some plastics are recycled just because of the
Ciara:way the weighting structure is, it, it doesn't, it doesn't actually get recycled.
Ciara:So trying to move away completely from the plastic products.
Ciara:And as I said earlier, you know, plastic free in both the,
Ciara:um, product and the packaging.
Ciara:So, not just having like a paper product actually then having the packaging,
Ciara:um, be made tissue paper as well.
Ciara:So, um, it doesn't have the plastic aspect and I'm, I'm not, you know, saying
Ciara:plastic as like the worst thing ever, but I definitely want for me and the
Ciara:research that I've done, it doesn't feel right having any plastic in the business.
Ciara:Um, but also I know that paper, you know has its challenges as well.
Ciara:Um, paper is more likely to be recycled.
Ciara:And then if it went to landfill, it takes less, it takes a few weeks to
Ciara:decompose rather than a few years.
Ciara:Um, so that's why going more down the, and adding more reusable
Ciara:products is definitely something that, um, I want to consider and I have
Ciara:considered and want to add to, um.
Ciara:So, yeah, that's a nutshell.
Ciara:So I think I went on and waffled there.
Vicki Weinberg:No, you didn't.
Vicki Weinberg:That's so interesting.
Vicki Weinberg:And that fact, I don't know, if you saw my face when you said the
Vicki Weinberg:facts about, you know, plastic and the fish, I was like, what?
Vicki Weinberg:That's just scary and yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:And, and with, um, just, it is something that I don't know.
Vicki Weinberg:So with paper party products, so I'm thinking plates and cups.
Vicki Weinberg:Can they be, um, disposed or got rid of?
Vicki Weinberg:Are, can they, are they biodegradable or are they sort of recyclable?
Vicki Weinberg:Like you'd recycle cup?
Vicki Weinberg:Because I think once you, you, you have food on plates, you can't
Vicki Weinberg:recycle them, is that correct?
Ciara:Yes.
Ciara:Yeah.
Ciara:And I'm glad you brought it up.
Ciara:Because that is something that, you know, is on my mind actually constantly.
Ciara:So with the cups and stuff, it's fine.
Ciara:You can get rid of the, the drink and you can just put them in the recycling bin.
Ciara:But the cups that we have can also be, so it's quite confusing, but in
Ciara:the UK, we've got home composted and then we've got industrially composted.
Ciara:So industrially composted means that it goes to this waste unit.
Ciara:And it can, it can decompose, but it's done in, in industrial environment.
Ciara:Um, and there is a difference between home composting and industrial composted.
Ciara:Not all products can do both.
Ciara:With, um, our cups they can, they can be home composted.
Ciara:It can also be industrial composted and they can be recycled.
Ciara:I recommend.
Ciara:So we've got like a page, what we recommend to do.
Ciara:Um, I recommend always recycling them because then they can go back and they
Ciara:can be reused and made into new product.
Ciara:So that's what, um, my stance is, but say, if you did get them covered in
Ciara:food or whatever, then you could like cut them up and then literally put
Ciara:them in your compost, um, at home.
Ciara:And that wouldn't be an issue.
Ciara:Um, and similar with the plates.
Ciara:So with the plates, if you have, you know, Some kind of like, you know, like
Ciara:cake or something like that, that hasn't got food all over the cake, all over
Ciara:the plate, then it can be recycled.
Ciara:It goes into this big kind of container.
Ciara:Um, and like the water will kind of get rid of any of the residue and so forth.
Ciara:Um, But if you don't, say you get covered in ketchup and, um, other, you know,
Ciara:other pouring sauces and stuff like that, you can cut up the plates and you
Ciara:can put them again in your home compost.
Ciara:That's not an issue.
Ciara:Um, most household units don't have waste structures that go
Ciara:to industrial composted units.
Ciara:So I, I don't recommend that.
Ciara:Um, or it can go, if you do get food over, it can go to
Ciara:landfill, but it will decompose.
Ciara:In a few weeks instead of a few years, but that's definitely something that's
Ciara:on my mind with the plates, because even though they are better than plastic,
Ciara:I think we can do so much better.
Ciara:And I have don't want to let too much off, but I've got some ideas coming in.
Ciara:Um, you know, the next kind of six to eight months of what we can do.
Ciara:Plate wise.
Ciara:Um, so yes, so watch this space.
Vicki Weinberg:Oh, that's really exciting.
Vicki Weinberg:And the reason I ask that is, is because I didn't realize for a long time.
Vicki Weinberg:So, um, we obviously recycle cardboards, but I didn't realize for a long time
Vicki Weinberg:if cardboard or paper plates had food on and that they couldn't be recycled.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, genuinely didn't realize that.
Vicki Weinberg:And then when I did realize that I switched to not recycling them.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, but that's really interesting what you did at home composting.
Vicki Weinberg:So thank you.
Vicki Weinberg:That is a great tip.
Vicki Weinberg:So I could take leftover paper plates and then put them in the home.
Vicki Weinberg:That's thank you for that.
Vicki Weinberg:Because that's, you know, I think when we, when we want to be doing our bit,
Vicki Weinberg:it's really frustrating when you feel like you can't recycle something, but you
Vicki Weinberg:sort of, especially when you've bought paper plates, because you want to do your
Vicki Weinberg:bit for the environment and then you find out that you can't actually recycle them.
Vicki Weinberg:So that's really useful.
Ciara:Yeah.
Ciara:Just double check on, um, if you do buy paper plates or so forth, double check,
Ciara:they don't have a PLA lining, um, which is like a plastic lining because if they
Ciara:do, then they can't be home composted.
Ciara:Um, because the piano lines on it.
Ciara:So a lot of paper plates, that was another issue I came across,
Ciara:um, is, and that's why we haven't actually got any branded plates yet.
Ciara:Um, is because I couldn't find a manufacturer.
Ciara:I actually have found one now, which is great, but I couldn't find a manufacturer
Ciara:who didn't have that PLA lining on the um, so yeah, just something to think about.
Ciara:Think sometimes we think all paper plates, but actually if they've
Ciara:got plastic lining on, um, then you know, we wouldn't be able to do that.
Vicki Weinberg:I had absolutely no idea that was a thing.
Vicki Weinberg:So I'm learning so much.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:And speaking of that, so I guess there's two things.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, so you mentioned a page.
Vicki Weinberg:Did, is there something you send to customers when they order
Vicki Weinberg:from you then to explain how to be and recycle their products?
Ciara:Yeah, I actually have it.
Ciara:I'll quickly just show you here.
Ciara:It's like a little, um, so yeah, everyone listening, it's like a little
Ciara:kind of leaflet, um, thing, and then they can scan it and it scam me.
Ciara:Um, and it will tell them how to dispose of their products in the correct way.
Ciara:Um, because I think there is a lot of misconception about, but I've got
Ciara:this product what do I do with it?
Ciara:Like I'm constantly thinking that like I'll buy something from the supermarket
Ciara:and I try and buy, you know, zero waste.
Ciara:So I'll try and go more local and not have and go and get my fruit and vegetables.
Ciara:They're not wrapped in plastic, but I'm not perfect.
Ciara:And sometimes I might have to run to the, um, the supermarket to get it.
Ciara:Um, and.
Ciara:You know, sometimes they don't have it on the back, like what you need to do.
Ciara:And it's really frustrating because you're like, well, what
Ciara:do I do with this product now?
Ciara:So I've tried to break it down quite clearly and like how
Ciara:you dispose of each product.
Ciara:And if it's got food on it, how to do it, if it's, you know, not contaminated,
Ciara:then what you can do with it.
Ciara:Um, and most people might know, but I just thought that sometimes, you know, you
Ciara:don't know and you can kind of be looking and it's kind of teaching and educating.
Ciara:What's the right thing to do.
Ciara:Um, so yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Absolutely.
Vicki Weinberg:And you're right.
Vicki Weinberg:I think a lot of people don't always know.
Vicki Weinberg:I mean I've certainly been in that situation where I've looked at something
Vicki Weinberg:and thought, can I recycle this?
Vicki Weinberg:Can't I recycle it.
Vicki Weinberg:And then obviously the rules for where you everywhere you
Vicki Weinberg:live can be quite different.
Vicki Weinberg:So where we live, for example, we can't recycle, you know, like Tetra
Vicki Weinberg:pack, um, like imagine you get, um, I'm thinking we have oatmeal
Vicki Weinberg:and it comes in these cartons.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:I think in some places you can recycle them, but we can't recycle them.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, and I think when it's, when it's confusing for people, when they're
Vicki Weinberg:like, what bin does this go in?
Vicki Weinberg:And can I recycle this?
Vicki Weinberg:Or what do I do with that?
Vicki Weinberg:Um, it just makes it less likely that people are going to do it, I
Vicki Weinberg:think because it's just not as easy.
Ciara:Oh, definitely.
Ciara:And I think we definitely have an, um, an issue in the UK because
Ciara:every council is different.
Ciara:So confusing.
Ciara:Like it took me when I was researching for Pico.
Ciara:It took me months to kind of work out what I, what you could do with these
Ciara:products and the difference between, like I said, industrial composting and
Ciara:normal composting and the different waste units that, um, different councils have.
Ciara:And I think you know, you have to take a long, like I took a long time researching
Ciara:this and a lot of people, fair enough to them, maybe haven't even thought
Ciara:about it or just don't have the time to, um, you know, so it, it is confusing.
Ciara:And I think we definitely, as, um, as a country, we have to get better
Ciara:because if we could get smarter and more efficient in it, I think it could
Ciara:be so much better, um, and really help to like reduce our waste as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Definitely.
Vicki Weinberg:And coming back to the sort of education around, around this, um, are you
Vicki Weinberg:finding, you're having to do lots of education before people buy from you?
Vicki Weinberg:So lots of posts and talking about the benefits of buying your products
Vicki Weinberg:versus traditional plastic ones, or are you finding that people are
Vicki Weinberg:generally already pretty brought in.
Ciara:I think, yeah, people are quite excited.
Ciara:The one, two things that I really wanted to have because is, you know, the, the
Ciara:eco friendly sustainable side and, you know, have that really strong that's
Ciara:like at our core, also have these really great looking products that, you know,
Ciara:people don't feel like, oh, I'll buy from them because they're sustainable.
Ciara:But actually like, oh no, I'm going to buy from them because
Ciara:their products are actually great.
Ciara:Like they've got, they look great.
Ciara:They've got that, um, ecofriendly aspect.
Ciara:Like, that's why I want to, so.
Ciara:It's like almost, you know, it's a really great benefit.
Ciara:They are sustainable, but they still want to purchase these products.
Ciara:They look great.
Ciara:Um, so, you know, there is a bit of an educational piece, but
Ciara:most people I've spoken to really like that, um, aspect of it.
Ciara:Um, and most people really like the designs as well.
Ciara:Um, which has been great.
Ciara:Um, So, yeah, I'd say a little bit, but mostly people are, are brought in.
Ciara:Definitely.
Ciara:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you for answering, I was just really curious.
Vicki Weinberg:I, and I think you're right, actually that I'm seeing just myself, just
Vicki Weinberg:when I go and, and look a lot more products now do seem to.
Vicki Weinberg:Be going that way.
Vicki Weinberg:Anyway.
Vicki Weinberg:So for example, um, if you went on Amazon and you searched for party bags, I, I, I
Vicki Weinberg:wanna say that the first, however, many, but first page of results are all paper.
Vicki Weinberg:I'm fairly sure that when I last looked, they were all, you know, paper bags,
Vicki Weinberg:whereas I'm sure 10 years ago, maybe even five years ago, The best selling ones
Vicki Weinberg:would've all been those plastic ones.
Vicki Weinberg:We remember when we were kids.
Vicki Weinberg:So I do think that things are definitely moving that way, which I think is great
Vicki Weinberg:because it's, I think it's always harder when you're having to sort of explain
Vicki Weinberg:to people why they need your products.
Vicki Weinberg:But I think, yeah, it sounds like that isn't needed, which is, I think it
Vicki Weinberg:makes it a lot easier starting point.
Ciara:Hmm.
Ciara:And I think so.
Ciara:I just want to like mention as well.
Ciara:It's like, I think definitely with sustainable products, they are a bit more
Ciara:expensive just because, you know, the route you've had, it's still a newish
Ciara:concept and, you know, plastic and so forth is a cheaper option at the moment.
Ciara:Um, but one thing that I really want is at the moment, you know, I probably say
Ciara:my target markets, people with a bit more money because they can, they can afford,
Ciara:you know, these, um, party products, but I definitely want, as we grow, um, I
Ciara:don't want to be an exclusive brand where it's like, you know, only if you have a
Ciara:lot of money, you can buy the products.
Ciara:I really want it to be a brand that is inclusive and still, you
Ciara:know, keeping that, um, like, um, eco-friendly aspect, but, um, you
Ciara:know, making it a bit, potentially a bit more affordable, um, for everyone.
Ciara:And I think with time as, you know, things go on, hopefully that
Ciara:will happen because, um, the kind of the paper products will come.
Ciara:The unit cost will become a bit cheaper, which will mean that I can, I can do that.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah, I really love the vision you've got.
Vicki Weinberg:Every time you talk about some of your plans.
Vicki Weinberg:I'm really just think I'm just so impressed.
Vicki Weinberg:I can't believe that you're 23 and you've got such a clear
Vicki Weinberg:vision for what you want to do.
Vicki Weinberg:And I, I don't mean that in a patronizing way.
Vicki Weinberg:I'm just thinking back to when I was 23.
Vicki Weinberg:I don't think I was very clear on anything really.
Vicki Weinberg:So I don't I'm I'm yeah, I'm not trying to patronize.
Vicki Weinberg:I'm basically thinking back to myself.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I certainly, yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah, I don't think I felt so strongly about anything.
Vicki Weinberg:So I'm super impressed and yeah, and I, I wonder as well, whether as things
Vicki Weinberg:change, whether there'll be more suppliers in the UK who can do what
Vicki Weinberg:you want, um, as the demand increases, which I think it, it will, um, like you
Vicki Weinberg:said, I think you, I think, am I right in saying you are the first company
Vicki Weinberg:to producing products at the moment.
Ciara:I haven't found any other company that, you know, their main kind of
Ciara:like route of their, like for party products that is, you know, they've got
Ciara:like a real focus on sustainability.
Ciara:If anyone listening has let me know.
Ciara:Um, but I haven't found any, um, yeah in the, in the market at the moment,
Ciara:I think with the UK, one thing that I'm really keen is I think more
Ciara:suppliers will hopefully come to the UK, which, which will be great, but I
Ciara:think maybe bringing it more in house.
Ciara:Um, so making the products actually, you know, I'd love to have, this
Ciara:is another really good vision.
Ciara:I'd love to have, you know, a place that we have.
Ciara:We get all, we make all the products ourselves like in, um, a unit.
Ciara:Um, and, uh, you know, it again, so it's not like we're, we're going all around
Ciara:the country and trying to get, um, trying to get, reduce the emissions even further
Ciara:if we get everything made made in house.
Ciara:Um, so that's, it's, it's it I'm not sure if that's definitely
Ciara:the way it's going to go.
Ciara:It might not be, but that's something that, um, yeah, I would love to do.
Vicki Weinberg:That makes total sense as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, I can see sort of having everything under one roof.
Vicki Weinberg:See, that would be a benefit and yeah, yet again, I'm really just
Vicki Weinberg:blown away by your, by your vision.
Vicki Weinberg:And I also feel as well, um, that while I think you are, it sounds
Vicki Weinberg:like you probably are the first or at least one of the first to do this.
Vicki Weinberg:I don't think you're going to be the last, I think that other companies are going to
Vicki Weinberg:start following what you are doing, which I think is amazing to be out there ahead,
Vicki Weinberg:but hopefully as more companies think, oh, actually we could, you know, as more
Vicki Weinberg:companies maybe spring up or adapt to become more sustainable, hopefully that
Vicki Weinberg:will change the, the supplier as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Because I guess manufacturers will then also have to adapt if companies are
Vicki Weinberg:saying, okay, we are moving away from plastic and we're moving more this way.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, it'd be really interesting.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, yeah, I would, I would love to see.
Vicki Weinberg:Well, hopefully I will be able to see in, so in 10 years time where we are
Vicki Weinberg:and how much things have moved on.
Vicki Weinberg:So I really think they will.
Ciara:Yeah.
Ciara:I mean, I don't think, you know, as a company you can stay in what was before.
Ciara:Um, and I have seen some party companies, you know, trying to change, um, a
Ciara:little bit of their product ranges and so forth, um, to align, to be more eco
Ciara:friendly and yeah, I, I think it's great.
Ciara:Um, Yeah, I think it would, if you stayed thinking, you know,
Ciara:we can just sell everything.
Ciara:I think as well, people have changed, like people's consume like what they want.
Ciara:Like, I think that cheap looking party, you know, like the foil type
Ciara:material, um, I just don't really think people want that anymore either.
Ciara:Like, I think people want something that looks a bit more slightly more premium.
Ciara:Um, so yeah, I think it, you know, as consumers, they are changing as well.
Ciara:So, and I think it is consumer driven that is making, um,
Ciara:these companies change as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Definitely.
Vicki Weinberg:And I wonder as well, if, you know, as not as well as the consumers,
Vicki Weinberg:I'm assuming that there'll be change legislation around, you know, what
Vicki Weinberg:products are made from, for example.
Vicki Weinberg:And I mean, I'm hoping anyway, that things are going to move in a way where
Vicki Weinberg:it becomes harder for companies to produce products that aren't sustainable
Vicki Weinberg:when there is a sustainable option.
Vicki Weinberg:Does that make sense?
Ciara:Yeah, no, a hundred percent.
Ciara:I mean, I think they're definitely there even there's even talk, you know,
Ciara:like, um, getting rid of like, um, single use plastic and stuff like that.
Ciara:Um, the government has spoken about it, so I think it is coming.
Ciara:Um, and yeah, I welcome it.
Ciara:Um, I think, and I think it's good.
Ciara:Like, I don't, I don't, I'm not naive enough to think I'm going to be the only
Ciara:eco-friendly you know, party business.
Ciara:Um, but I definitely, yeah.
Ciara:I want more businesses to be like that.
Ciara:And I, I think it's great that they, you know, people are
Ciara:thinking business is changing.
Ciara:Um, but I'm also thinking, you know, you need to be careful that these businesses
Ciara:aren't saying they're doing like, you know, greenwashing, they're saying
Ciara:they're doing something really great that actually, you know, they're maybe covering
Ciara:something up, they're doing one thing.
Ciara:That's great, but actually all the other things are not so good.
Ciara:So, and that's where again, we have to do like your kinda like consumer due
Ciara:diligence and that's, that's tricky because you know, you don't have loads
Ciara:of time to be reading up about, um, I mean, I do, I do read quite a lot on,
Ciara:um, like brands and stuff like that, but a lot of people don't, so hopefully
Ciara:I think laws will come in as well where people can't, you know, greenwash and say
Ciara:that something is when, when it's not.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, and actually, would you mind, I mean, I, I know what greenwashing is,
Vicki Weinberg:but would you mind just explaining for anyone who doesn't please?
Ciara:Yeah, I don't I don't know if I'm going to get the, um, the definition
Ciara:completely right but, um, it's where a business is claiming to be sustainable
Ciara:or eco-friendly, um, maybe they're saying they're doing one thing, but
Ciara:actually they're kind of deceiving the consumer and, um, they they're
Ciara:maybe doing one thing that's good.
Ciara:Or maybe even not really doing that thing, but then, but then actually in
Ciara:the background are not as sustainable or eco friendly as they're making out.
Vicki Weinberg:That makes sense.
Vicki Weinberg:So for example, maybe they're, you know, all their products, the products are
Vicki Weinberg:sustainable, but they're flying in the, over from China and causing, you know,
Vicki Weinberg:loads of emissions or something like that.
Ciara:Yeah, definitely.
Ciara:And they're not being completely transparent.
Ciara:Um, and I think that's really important to be, um, as transparent as possible.
Ciara:Like I've said before, you know, I think we're starting great, you know, um, making
Ciara:the products as standard as possible for what's in the realm, but I think
Ciara:there's still so much more that I can do.
Ciara:And so much that, um, you know, and I'm going to keep pushing to do.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah, and I have no doubt that you will,
Vicki Weinberg:and that you are doing that.
Vicki Weinberg:And before we finish, I've got, got few more questions.
Vicki Weinberg:First thing is, are, is there anything around your own sustainability
Vicki Weinberg:practices that you haven't mentioned?
Vicki Weinberg:Anything that you are doing, um, or you are moving towards
Vicki Weinberg:that you haven't talked about?
Vicki Weinberg:Um, because we know you are not greenwashing us because we can tell
Vicki Weinberg:that you are definitely really on board.
Vicki Weinberg:Is there anything we haven't spoken about.
Ciara:Um, I guess I'm trying to think nothing really.
Ciara:The only other thing is, um, I guess trying to go with, um, I mean, I actually
Ciara:heard this in one of your podcasts before, we do plant a tree with every order, um,
Ciara:just to help, you know, reduce the offset, but at the moment, yeah, that's kind of
Ciara:like, I'd say with how the products are made and, um, yeah, the like life, the
Ciara:afterlife, and trying to keep things close to the UK those are the, the main core
Ciara:things that we have at the moment, but yeah, it's always looking for more ways.
Vicki Weinberg:I did see the planting about the tree on your website as well.
Vicki Weinberg:And I just want to make sure I gave the opportunity if you talk
Vicki Weinberg:about that, if you wanted to.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, and then finally, and this is the last question I ask everyone Ciara.
Vicki Weinberg:What would your number one piece of advice be for other product creators?
Ciara:Oh, yeah, I suppose, um, I would say time, just like give it time because
Ciara:you know, we've only been started for three months, but I am in such a different
Ciara:place to where I was when I first started.
Ciara:And I'm in such a different place to when, before I started, I know so much more
Ciara:now from three months ago and then three months before that I know so much more.
Ciara:And you just have, you know, I think we hear about these overnight successes of
Ciara:people that they start, and that's amazing that they do, they start businesses
Ciara:and they're success straight away.
Ciara:But actually I think, you know, to start a business, you really do need to have
Ciara:time and you also need to have resilience, which I'm sure you know, most founders,
Ciara:um, know about you just, you have to keep kind of going and don't burn yourself out.
Ciara:But give yourself time and really, you know, yeah.
Ciara:I would just say, keep going.
Ciara:And you'll be, if you're stuck in somewhere right now, take a break and
Ciara:then you, you know, take a moment to kind of think everything over and then in.
Ciara:You'll probably look back in three months time and be like, I got over that.
Ciara:And then I'm onto the next hurdle type thing.
Ciara:So yeah, just, I would say give it time, give it time to get orders up
Ciara:and give it time to, you know, learn so much more to get to the next stage.
Ciara:Yeah time . Thank you.
Vicki Weinberg:I think that's really good advice and you're right, because
Vicki Weinberg:I think it can be really tempting to, I would be really tempting to sort
Vicki Weinberg:of do thing quickly, or you can get really disheartening that things take
Vicki Weinberg:time, but I definitely think it's worth spending that time and that's or a
Vicki Weinberg:lot of the, what am I trying to say?
Vicki Weinberg:I think there's so much more time upfront than you realize, but it's
Vicki Weinberg:all the stuff that's really important.
Vicki Weinberg:Like all the research and the stuff that feels like maybe you're not actually
Vicki Weinberg:getting anywhere, but I think it's really good groundwork to be doing.
Ciara:Definitely.
Ciara:Like, I think about it when I was just, you know, sat on my, um, desk, um, every
Ciara:morning and Pico was really just a vision.
Ciara:I remember thinking, is it ever going to become like reality?
Ciara:Like at one point I was like, am I really going to get that?
Ciara:And if I can think of myself a year ago, I, I feel like really, wow.
Ciara:Okay.
Ciara:I did it.
Ciara:Like, it's just the start and there's so much to come and
Ciara:I'm so, so excited about that.
Ciara:But I didn't in a sense, I didn't think I'd be here at one point, but I am.
Ciara:And then hopefully, you know, I've got visions for the next six months and
Ciara:next year, and hopefully I can look back and be like, I actually did get
Ciara:here and, you know, be proud of that.
Vicki Weinberg:And I think as well that it seems like a long time,
Vicki Weinberg:but then I meant, I was mentioning big one before we started recording
Vicki Weinberg:that we last spoke last year.
Vicki Weinberg:And to me, the time.
Vicki Weinberg:Which between we last spoke and speaking to you today, when I look
Vicki Weinberg:at how much you've done in that time, I just go, wow, you've done
Vicki Weinberg:such a lot in a short space of time.
Vicki Weinberg:So I think often we are quite hard on ourselves as well, but, um, yeah,
Vicki Weinberg:whenever you speak to any, any sort of company founder, they've always,
Vicki Weinberg:always been working on it for much longer than, than you'd think.
Vicki Weinberg:And actually even a lot of like massive companies now.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, and I know we are all small businesses like when you even shop to massive
Vicki Weinberg:companies, they, some of them took like 5, 10, 15 years to actually get to be you
Vicki Weinberg:know, a household name or in some cases get to be selling anything much at all,
Vicki Weinberg:really, you know, see any kind of success.
Vicki Weinberg:So I just think, yeah, we're often quite hard on ourselves, but it really
Vicki Weinberg:doesn't matter how long it takes does it?
Ciara:No, I know.
Ciara:And I think that is again, maybe we have, like I said, you know, we, you see things
Ciara:like I even saw things and I was like, oh, but like you see these overnight success
Ciara:stories and all these kind of things, but most, I don't think most companies
Ciara:actually it does happen like that.
Ciara:Um, so yeah, don't be disheartened.
Ciara:That if, you know, I would say don't be hard if you haven't, if that
Ciara:doesn't happen for you, because yeah.
Ciara:There's so many companies that it didn't happen, but they have been
Ciara:huge successes, but it's taken time.
Ciara:So yeah.
Ciara:Just give it time.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah.
Vicki Weinberg:I think overnight success is actually a myth and, um, I'm pleased if anyone wants
Vicki Weinberg:to prove me wrong on that, that's fine.
Vicki Weinberg:But I would say nine times, that's, it's a myth.
Vicki Weinberg:And that actually that overnight success has probably been working away quietly
Vicki Weinberg:for much longer than any of us realize.
Ciara:Yeah, I agree.
Ciara:Agree.
Ciara:But yeah.
Ciara:Let us know anyone if, um, prove us wrong.
Vicki Weinberg:Yeah, I'm sure I will be proven wrong on that.
Vicki Weinberg:Um, well thank you so much Ciara it was so lovely to talk to you.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you so much for all you shared.
Vicki Weinberg:As I, as I said, I'm just so impressed by your vision and by
Vicki Weinberg:everything you've achieved and everything that's to come as well.
Vicki Weinberg:Because I've got a feeling that, yeah, there's a lot to come.
Ciara:Yeah, no, thank you so much for having me.
Ciara:I actually am someone who, um, really, I always listens to podcasts.
Ciara:So I it's kind of been a dream to be on a co podcast one day, so thank you.
Vicki Weinberg:Oh, you're welcome.
Vicki Weinberg:Thank you so much for listening right to the end of this episode, do
Vicki Weinberg:remember that you can get the full back catalogue and lots of free resources
Vicki Weinberg:on my website, vickiweinberg.com.
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