Jan 17 2008
Seizing a Niche Market Opportunity: Recycling Technotrash
In many industries, some of the most promising opportunities are niche markets – requiring specialized products or services that are outside the mainstream. GreenDisk, a provider of nationwide* electronics recycling services, is an interesting example of a “green-focused” company successfully addressing a niche opportunity.
While GreenDisk offers a range of electronics recycling services, the company’s primary focus is on recycling “technotrash” for businesses and organizations (e.g. libraries and universities). Technotrash consists of all the little parts and pieces associated with electronics products such as electronic media (CDs, DVDs, videotapes, cassette tapes) and their cases, hard drives, zip drives, cables, cords, digital cameras and their chargers, handheld scanners, mice and more.
Greendisk offers secure, convenient, environmentally responsible disposal of these small items. Because the electronic media, in particular, may contain proprietary information or copyrighted material, GreenDisk will provide a certificate of destruction. This is particularly important to one of the company’s key target segments – the entertainment industry.
To meet the range of customer needs, GreenDisk offers three levels of service:
- Custom Electronics Recycling – They send a truck to pick up material – typically in the 1-3 ton range, but they will
arrange pickup for as little as a single pallet of e-waste and have even handled one project of 400,000 pounds. - Technotrash Pack-IT - The customer packs the technotrash in their own shipping carton and sends it to a GreenDisk facility, paying a recycling fee that amounts to about 30-35 cents per pound.
- Technotrash Can (the most widely used service) – GreenDisk ships a corrugated, shippable collection box to the customer; the customer fills it over some period of time, then downloads a shipping label and automatically orders a Fedex pickup.
I recently caught up with Mickey Friedman, the COO of GreenDisk. Several key themes emerged that seem applicable to many cleantech companies going after niche markets:
- evolving as the market changes – When GreenDisk started out almost 15 years ago, if focused on providing a service to companies like Microsoft and Lotus, who needed to securely dispose of excess software inventory. In those days, a box of software might include as many as 30 diskettes. As the market evolved and the nature of the disposal problem changed, so did GreenDisk. It began addressing the disposal needs of not just the manufacturer but also the end customer. Mickey expects the markets to continue to evolve and the company to evolve with them.
- creating the right business model – As a bootstrap operation, GreenDisk did not have excess cash to expend on building its own facilities and handling all aspects of the operation. The company focused on creating the right partnerships with recycling facilities, fulfillment operations and others in order to cost-effectively deliver a nationwide service.
- tailoring the value proposition – One of GreenDisk’s most important business segments is the entertainment business (e.g. studios and music production companies). For this segment, the secure, documented destruction of products is perhaps even more important than the environmentally responsible recycling aspect. Once again, this demonstrates that the “green” message is not always the most appropriate lead-in. (See also my post on “Tailoring Cleantech Messages to Your Target Market.”)
- marketing on a shoestring budget – The three most important elements of their marketing efforts to date have been: word-of-mouth, Google ads and search engine optimization (SEO). Mickey found that the SEO effort, in particular, was quite inexpensive and had a positive impact in a very short period of time.
- telesales is the next priority – Now that GreenDisk has implemented a financially sound business model, its next investment will be in a telesales program.
This niche market surely shows that one person’s technotrash is another’s treasure.
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* 48 contiguous states