Presentation to the International Society for Neglected Tropical Diseases - 12 Feb 2013
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Transcript of Presentation to the International Society for Neglected Tropical Diseases - 12 Feb 2013
ColaLife – emerging roles for the private sector 12 February 2013, London Simon Berry
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
The business model
2
The product
Our starting points
1
Where we are now
4
What next?
65
Private sector partners
3
• UK Charity• Independent – no
affiliation with Coca-Cola
• Running a trial in Zambia funded by:• DfID• Johnson &
Johnson• COMESA• Honda
• Two full-timers• Four trustees
What is ColaLife?
The business model
The product
Our starting points
1
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
4 5
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
The policy context for ColaLife (1). Under 5 mortality is unacceptably high.
1
The policy context for ColaLife (1). Under 5 mortality is unacceptably high.
1
The policy context for ColaLife (1). Under 5 mortality is unacceptably high.
1
The policy context for ColaLife (2). Diarrhoea is a key contributor.
1
If we can get fast moving consumer goods to remote rural areas, why can’t we do the same thing for essential medicines?
1Remote rural retail shop, Kalomo District, Zambia
Drug store room, Tiriri Health Centre, Katine, Uganda
The vision
Our initial focus was the use of unused space in Coca-Cola crates as a delivery mechanism, but we have gone on to create an ‘end-to-end’ value chain: using Coca-Cola’s techniques and advice; using their wholesalers, who are well known in rural towns and have good warehousing and inventory control practices.
So far none of our registered retailers have used this technique to transport Kit Yamoyos.
The practice (so far)1
The business modelOur starting points
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
5
1
The product
4
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
We have designed a 4g/200ml sachet of ORS for the home treatment of diarrhoea and this is now being manufactured in Zambia. We believe this is an ‘Africa first’. A mother using a 20g/1litre sachet (and following the instructions) would throw most of it away.
2
Kit Yamoyo assembly at Pharmanova in Lusaka, Zambia.
2
Packing of kits into cartons at Pharmanova for delivery to Medical Stores Limited.
2
We are paying the para-statal, Medical Stores Limited, who are seeking to become ‘more private sector’, to deliver Kit Yamoyos to Coca-Cola wholesalers in Katete & Kalomo districts.
2
Kit Yamoyo cartons in stock at a Coca-Cola wholesaler. Wholesalers purchase the kits from the project and make a 20% profit on sales to retailers.
2
Retailers buy Kit Yamoyos from the general wholesaler (who is also the Coca-Cola wholesaler) when they visit the district town for other supplies. Using a Coca-Cola wholesaler helps guarantee quality as wholesalers are required by contract to carry out good warehousing and inventory practices. In addition, all retailers know where the Coca-Cola wholesaler is.
2
Kit Yamoyos for sale on the shelves in remote rural retail shops. Retailers make a profit of 35% on the sale of Kit Yamoyos but care-givers get a product the majority can afford. The project thus creates an end-to-end value chain with profits for entrepreneurs along the way.
2
Care-givers get reliable access to a life-saving product close to home.
2
The Kit Yamoyo is an innovative product. The packaging is a measure for making the ORS, it is a mixing device, a storage device and a cup. The ORS sachets make up an amount of ORS that is appropriate for the home treatment of diarrhoea.
2
Where are the Kit Yamoyos?25 January 2013
2Lusaka stock
9,100Wholesaler stock
6,920
Purchased by retailers
13,730106 per day
Kits manufactured
29,750
ColaLife uses mobile phones to: provide an authentication system for the Kit Yamoyos; to deliver a Special Offer (50% off your next purchase); to allow promoters to activate vouchers before distribution and for voucher redemption by retailers.
2
The business modelOur starting points
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
5
1
The product
4
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
3
The ColaLife private sector partners
3
The ColaLife private sector partners
3
The ColaLife private sector partners
3
The ColaLife private sector partners
The business model
The product
Our starting points
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
4 5
1
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
‘When the poor are converted into consumers, they acquire the dignity of attention and choices from the private sector.’ CK Prahalad
4
4• Attractive• Affordable• Micro-porous, waterproof, tamper evident
sealing film• Branding carried on the instruction leaflet• SMS-based authentication• Contents based on a proven combined therapy
for diarrhoea treatment (ORS + Zinc)• Soap added to carry the prevention message• 4g/200ml ORS sachets (for home treatment)• Packaging is also:
• A measuring device for the water• A mixing device• A storage device (the soap tray is a lid)• A cup• And can be re-used
The product: Kit Yamoyo For a video demonstration of the kit in use please see:>> http://youtu.be/C9w1IN2Gq0c
The business modelOur starting points
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
5
1
The product
4
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
Dec 2011
We are here
The trial timeline
5
The business modelOur starting points
Where we are now What next?
Private sector partners
6
32
5
1
The product
4
ColaLife – ISNTD, London 12 February 2013, London
5
Our strategy is to generate robust evidence on the elements of our approach that work; encourage the big players (MoHs, CHAI, UNICEF etc) to incorporate these elements into their own programs. ColaLife does not have the capacity for global roll-out but could be catalytic in achieving this through multi-sectoral partnerships.
6
Contact informationSimon Berryproject manager | ColaLife Operational Trial Zambia (COTZ)founder and ceo | ColaLifem +260 (0)9755 72175e [email protected] sxberryw http://colalife.orgb http://colalife.org/blogl COTZ project office http://colalife.org/map
Photo creditsMenu slides: Option 2 – Elias Lungu; Option 4 – Simon Berry with graphic design by Guy Godfree; Option 6 – Claire WardSlide 9: Katine image – The GuardianSlide 10: Coca-Cola crate – Simon Berry; Retailer – Charlotte MwanzaSlide 12, 29 and this slide: Kit Yamoyo inset – Simon Berry with graphic design by Guy GodfreeSlide 17: Elias LunguSlide 19 and 20 – Claire WardSlide 24 and 27: Wholesaler – Rohit Ramchandani; Retailer – Elias LunguSlide 29: Albert SakaAll others – Simon Berry