The Economics of Everyday Things: Used Hotel Soaps

Episode Summary

The Economics of Everyday Things - Used Hotel Soaps In 2009, Sean Seippler wondered what hotels did with used soap bars left behind by guests. Hotels typically throw them away, amounting to millions of bars in landfills daily. Seippler took used hotel soaps and experimented with reprocessing them into new bars in his garage. The idea was to provide recycled soap to impoverished communities lacking access to soap and hygiene products. Seippler founded the nonprofit Clean the World to carry out this mission. They collect used hotel soaps, put them through an industrial process to create new bars, and distribute them globally. In the early days, funding was a challenge. Eventually hotels paid Clean the World to collect their used soaps, providing revenue. Today, Clean the World has recycling partnerships with hotels worldwide. While they've diverted millions of pounds of soap from landfills, it's still a small fraction of total hotel waste. Reducing single-use amenities could alleviate the problem. In the meantime, the vast majority of hotel soap bars continue to be discarded after one use.

Episode Show Notes

Hotel guests adore those cute little soaps, but is it just a one-night stand? In our fourth episode of "The Economics of Everyday Things," Zachary Crockett discovers what happens to those soaps when we love ’em and leave ’em.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_06: Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner. You are about to hear one more episode of our newest podcast, The Economics of Everyday Things. I hope you like it, and I hope you'll stick around to the end to hear my conversation with Zachary Crockett, the host of the show. And if you want to hear more, just look for The Economics of Everyday Things in your favorite podcast player and follow or subscribe. Okay, here's Zachary. SPEAKER_05: Back in 2009, Sean Seippler asked himself a question that has occurred to pretty much everyone who's ever stayed at a hotel. At the time, Seippler was a bit of a road dog. As a tech executive in sales, he spent around half his week traveling across the US, Minneapolis, LA, St. Louis, all over. This is a guy who racked up a lot of nights in hotel rooms. And on one of those trips, something caught his attention. That little bar of soap in the hotel bathroom. SPEAKER_02: There's a natural, I don't want to waste things in me. And as I would use a bar of soap one time, there was always a little nag inside of me that I'm leaving it here. So in that hotel room in Minneapolis, after a couple of cocktails, that nag led to asking the question. I called the front desk and asked what happens to the soap when I'm done with it. SPEAKER_05: From the Freakonomics Radio Network, this is The Economics of Everyday Things. I'm Zachary Krachet. Today, used hotel soaps. You may not think twice about those little bars they leave out for you on the sink, but a lot of thought went into putting them there. SPEAKER_03: Hotel amenities have evolved over the last 100 years. SPEAKER_05: Chekhatan Dev is a professor at Cornell University's Nolan School of Hotel Administration. And he says that the earliest hotels actually didn't give you any soap. In fact, they didn't even give you your own bathroom. SPEAKER_03: It's an early 20th century innovation that hotel rooms came with a bath attached. SPEAKER_04: In fact, Elswit Statler, the founder of the Stadl hotel chain, often used to use the line a room and a bath for a dollar and a half. So soap became the very first amenity in the bathroom. SPEAKER_03: And over time, soap became a default offering in many hotels. SPEAKER_04: The one thing I've learned about the hotel business in the 43 years I've been a student of the business is there's a lot of copycat, you know, they're doing it, we better do it. SPEAKER_05: These days, hotels stock their bathrooms with all kinds of toiletries. Many bottles of lotion, shampoos, conditioners. Recently, some big chains have replaced these single use products with refillable dispensers. But at most hotels, you'll still find a bar of soap next to the sink. And there's a reason for that. They are extremely popular. In 2019, Dev co-authored a study of in room amenities and found that 86% of hotel guests use those packaged soaps. They're more utilized than any other hotel room amenity, even the TV. SPEAKER_04: It's a self-fulfilling prophecy in the sense that it's used because it's there and it's there because it's used and guests expect it. It's also probably the one item that's most inconvenient to carry with you after use. So the solution was let's get the little bitty bars of soap that we can then leave in the hotel bathroom for disposal. SPEAKER_03: So what does that look like big picture? Let's assume there are between five and six million hotel rooms around the world and they SPEAKER_04: get used at even 60% occupancy year round. You do the math. That's hundreds of millions of room nights. It's a lot of soap. That's a lot of soap. SPEAKER_05: That takes us back to Sean Seippler, the guy who made that call to his hotel front desk back in 2009. He asked what they did with all that soap. And they said we throw it away. SPEAKER_05: Seippler could not accept that millions of bars of soap ended up in landfills every day. So he took a bunch of these half used bars with him and he set up a mad scientist lab in his garage with the help of some family and friends. SPEAKER_02: We're all sitting on upside down pickle buckets with potato peelers. We're scraping the outside of those bars of soap. My cousin Noel is taking this soap and he's grinding it through a meat grinder that then gets put into the cookers. I've done the research to know that I can rebatch it and make a brand new really good bar of soap. SPEAKER_05: How do you go about getting your soap in those early days? Did you have a big first donor? The Holiday Inn at the Orlando International Airport. SPEAKER_02: I remember the general manager's name so clearly. It's Peter Fabior. He said, I've often wondered what we could do with this. And if there's something you can do with it, give me anything and everything you need to collect it and we will make sure that happens on our end and we'll get it back to you. Access to soap and collecting soap was not the issue. That was very easy. It just became a matter of, you know, when we got it, what are we going to do with this recycled soap? SPEAKER_05: Hyper found an unexpected answer to that question. SPEAKER_06: In order to succeed, startups need grit, talent and the ability to perform at the highest level. That's where Mercury comes in. Mercury is banking engineered for the startup journey, a modern solution to help your company become the best version of itself, to eliminate the hurdles that come with traditional banking, to offer a product crafted to help you scale with safety and stability, to go beyond banking and provide access to the foremost investors, operators and tools. When you can operate with confidence, building your company becomes an art form. 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SPEAKER_02: Every one of the studies showed that if you just gave them soap and taught them how and when to wash their hands, you could cut those deaths in half. SPEAKER_05: Getting soap to all those kids would require a slightly bigger operation. And that meant funding. Seippler spent $20,000 on grant writers and lawyers and sent out an application to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. His proposal was rejected. SPEAKER_02: That was a devastating, very emotional moment of what are we doing? Have I made a mistake in life? SPEAKER_05: Seippler decided to forge ahead anyway. He founded Clean the World, a nonprofit that provides soap and hygiene products to communities in need around the globe. Today, it's quite an enterprise. Typically, a room attendant will clean anywhere from 11 to 13 rooms a day. SPEAKER_02: That bag of soap is filling up. When they get to the end of their shift, there will be a Clean the World green bin for soap. Our system will route that box into one of our centers. SPEAKER_05: So how does an old bar of soap become a new bar of soap? The first thing we do is we put it into a big machine that's got a big metal screw in SPEAKER_02: it, just grinding that soap all the way through the very end, almost like a meat grinder. There's a very, very fine filter. That filter catches all the surface materials. So any plastic, hair, paper, dirt, that metal screw is just pushing tens of thousands of pounds of pressure. And that's really doing the initial surface cleaning. Those filters have to be changed about every 45 minutes. So it's almost like NASCAR. Every 45 minutes, we go in there with the big, you know, and we open it, we take one filter out, we put a new clean one in. SPEAKER_05: As a part of that process, they're blending together shreds from a variety of soaps that hotel chains send them. SPEAKER_02: Different types, different moisture levels, different fragrances. Looks like spaghetti noodles. I mean, you take it over to a mixer. And this is where the most important team member we have comes into play. That would be the soap whisperer. Our soap whisperer here in Orlando is Carlos Anderson. The affectionately nickname is Los D. He has to determine how much water has to get put in so that it doesn't fall apart, so it doesn't crumble, so it's not too hard. So it's not any of the things that we don't want. We're also adding some sterilization solution. What comes out the end is very marble, you know, tie dye looking bars of soap that have all these mixes, which actually makes a very cool, very unique bar of soap so that when we handed a bar of soap to somebody, there was some dignity, there was love. That palette is going to the Dominican Republic. It may be going into Nairobi. It may be going into Uganda. It could be going to the Philippines. It could go into Ukraine to help those that are being impacted right now. SPEAKER_05: It's a noble pursuit, but none of this processing or shipping is free. Early on, Seipler realized he was going to need a funding plan. SPEAKER_02: There was no business model. And really, myself and another close friend who was a part of this, we were really going through a lot of money at this time, not seeing a financial result. SPEAKER_05: How did you end up working around that issue? SPEAKER_02: There's value here to the hotels. This is a premium service for them. We're reducing landfill waste. We are sending soap back to countries and places where so many of the room attendants are actually from and are themselves sending money back to. In the state of Florida at that time, one third of the room attendants were estimated to be from Haiti, and we were getting ready to send a bunch of soap back to Haiti. There's a PR value here. So what's going on inside of me is we got to get hotels to pay for this. SPEAKER_05: And they did. It's over a decade later, and the average U.S. hotel partner now pays Clean the World 50 to 80 cents per room per month. About a quarter of that is what the hotels were previously paying to waste management companies just to get rid of the soap. And that's without the global benefits and the good PR. SPEAKER_02: We recycle 1.4 million hotel rooms on a daily basis. In 13 years, we have diverted 22 million pounds of waste, and we have distributed 75 million donated bars of soap to children, families across the globe. SPEAKER_05: It's a warm, fuzzy story for sure. Just remember, though, Clean the World can't save all the soaps. In fact, they'd have to multiply their operation by a factor of about 100 in order to do it. Cornell's Chikatan Dev thinks a lot about this world of waste that we've created. SPEAKER_04: While I applaud Clean the World, I would like to see more efforts made at the root of the problem to give people an incentive to bring your soap with you. SPEAKER_05: Until then, every year, around three quarters of a billion barely used hotel soaps, maybe even yours, are headed to a landfill to join their friends. For the economics of everyday things, I'm Zachary Crockett. SPEAKER_06: So Zachary, thank you for making these episodes. I love them. And based on what we've heard from listeners so far, they did too. Were they as fun to make as they are to listen to? SPEAKER_05: Yeah, this has been insanely fun. The point that I just want to make in this show is that interesting information can come from anyone. So I have to say, I'm a little jealous because you get to speak with people who actually SPEAKER_06: do things and make things and figure things out. And I'm just talking mostly to academics, and they're great. Their brains are gigantic, but they're also, you know, on the nerd scale, they're like 11 out of 10. And I'm just curious how you got so interested in this kind of journalism. SPEAKER_05: When I was a kid, I never wanted one job. My dream was to work a thousand different jobs. And then I eventually found out that I could be a writer and interview all different kinds of people. And it was like having a different job every couple days. You get super obsessed with like dog walkers for a week. You understand who they are and why they do what they do, and then you move on to vending machine operators and start over again. SPEAKER_06: Can you talk about your methodology of reporting? How do you go deep into these worlds and find out enough to do a good piece? SPEAKER_05: I've found that oftentimes the questions that you ask are less important than who you talk to. People often turn to experts in our world, whether they're economists, PhDs, analysts. But if I want to know why there's a bus driver shortage, I'm going to go talk to a bunch of bus drivers. And then I'll learn something that I never suspected, like, maybe that a part of the reason is Amazon is poaching them all to be delivery drivers. And then in the process, I'll learn that the shortage of bus drivers might be worse in areas where Amazon has opened new warehouses. That's a fascinating connection I may not have learned from someone who's only looking at the problem through a broader economic lens. SPEAKER_06: But whether it's bus driver shortage or Girl Scout cookies or whatever, literally, how do you find the people who can tell you what you need to know? SPEAKER_05: One thing is I'm a member of 200 private Facebook groups. I'm in communities for rare aquarium fish owners, Hot Wheels collectors, lumber mill workers, rideshare drivers. And I'll just log in and see the strangest updates. I'll see an arowana fish owner talking about how the golden sheen on his fish is fading away. And then in the comments, there's a whole intense debate over whether he got taken for a ride by a black market fish dealer. I'll see posts from McDonald's franchise owners breaking down their business model and excruciating detail down to their monthly loss in ground beef. I'll see posts from ice cream truck drivers asking their colleagues how to deal with people stepping on their turf in local communities. I just want to find the extraordinary and the ordinary. You can read all these headlines about gas prices going up. And you can read about the supply chains of gas and international relations and all the macro elements that go into the prices you pay at the pump. But the people at the end of the supply chain often get left out of the conversation. Gas station owners don't generally find their way into high profile interviews and major publications. And they have a lot of interesting things to say. In some cases, they have more insight than the experts do. SPEAKER_06: Now, when you join these private Facebook groups, you are not, as far as I know, a girl scout or a rare fish collector. How does that work? How do you lurk and even interact ultimately without invading privacy? SPEAKER_05: I usually message the moderator and I say that I'm just someone who's curious and I state my case. And sometimes they let me in, sometimes they don't. SPEAKER_06: If they don't, do you try to work your way in a different method? Well, the good thing about these groups is that there are hundreds of them. SPEAKER_05: If I want to infiltrate a traffic light engineer group, there's 20 different groups that I can attempt to join. SPEAKER_08: Zachary, I'm so happy that you've decided to come play in our sandbox. SPEAKER_06: So thanks. Thank you, Stephen. So podcast listeners, that was the last episode of the economics of everyday things. For now, we very much hope the show will be back in the near future. To make sure you hear it, subscribe to the economics of everyday things in your podcast app. So far, Zachary has looked at the economics of gas stations, girl scout cookies, used hotel soaps and My Sharona. As you can imagine, the list of future topics stretches pretty much to infinity. What everyday things would you like to hear about? Let us know at radio at Freakonomics.com. In the meantime, we've got a lot of exciting stuff coming up right here on Freakonomics Radio. As always, thanks for listening. SPEAKER_05: This episode was produced by Sarah Lilly and mixed by Jeremy Johnston with help from Greg Rippon and Emma Terrell. Our executive team is Neil Carruth, Gabriel Roth and Stephen Dubner. We're sitting around with some friends in a garage cooking soap. What did that look like? SPEAKER_02: First time that the police drove by the garage. I remember one of my family members going, Sean, I think you're going to need to talk to them about this one. 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