Two years later, after another meeting during a Global
Citizenship conference, came Schmidt's Lily of the Valley
deodorant, co-branded with the Jane Goodall Institute, which gets 5
percent of proceeds. After initially being sold direct to Schmidt's
subscribers online, the deodorant is moving into Amazon's Whole
Foods with a temporary exclusive and in-store promotion aimed at
raising awareness and funds for Goodall's work.
And, no, it doesn't smell like monkeys.
"Schmidt's asked me what was my favorite flower scent, and lily
of the valley has always been my favorite," Goodall tells Ad Age.
"When I was growing up there were lilies of the valley growing
outside my front door, my back door and taking over my
grandmother's run of beans, and I just loved the smell."
Fans of "Breaking Bad" may recall that lily of the valley
berries can be poisonous, and used nefariously. But the Schmidt's
scent is perfectly safe, and avoiding anything poisonous is part of
the deal.
"The Jane Goodall Institute picks its partners very carefully,"
she says. "Their ethical values have to coincide with our own. This
partnership is benefiting us financially but it's also tying in
with our belief that we should not be buying products that have
harmed the environment, and we need to buy products that are
ethically made where we can feel very happy we are helping the
planet."
At JaneGoodall.org, consumers can already buy a lot of licensed
merchandise, including pendants, plush toys, water bottles and
infant onesies and beanies, mostly created under deals arranged by
Brand Squared Licensing. But this deal with Schmidt's was very
direct.
"We have to be extremely careful about who we partner with,"
Goodall says, "because we don't want to be making large amounts of
money from companies that aren't ethical and find out to our horror
halfway along that in some deepest part they've been financing the
manufacture of guns or something. These things can happen,
particularly when it's a big company. In this case, it's very
clear, straightforward and very ethical."
Schmidt's is run independently, Cammarata says. "We're owned by
Unilever, but we've also seen Unilever go cruelty-free with Dove in
their supply chain, so we've actually had a positive effect." He
credits former Unilever CEO Paul Polman and current CEO Alan Jope
for "pushing forward" with sustainability initiatives.
Cammarata says he was bent on doing an initial public offering
in 2017 when Unilever came calling, by which point Cammarata had 11
offers from strategic buyers and 38 from hedge funds. The interest
came after he built his Portland, Oregon-based company in less than
two years from four people in 1,200 square feet "and a turtle
running around the office" to "160 people, 30,000 square feet and
taking market share away from [Procter & Gamble's] Secret and
Dove."
Unilever's commitment to sustainability helped seal the deal,
Cammarata says. And its global reach actually appealed to Goodall,
because it will help with her primary goal of expanding her Roots
& Shoots environmental advocacy program for youth, from 50
countries now to as many as the 129 that Unilever reaches.
Goodall, who turns 85 on April 3, says she still travels 300
days a year and hasn't had a vacation in 40 years. Much of her work
lately is focused on building Roots & Shoots.
"We haven't inherited this planet from our parents," she says.
"We borrowed it from our children. But we haven't been borrowing
it. We've been stealing it. So it's desperately important that we
work with young people."