In January of 1948, an enterprising young man named Ed Lowe, the
heir apparent to his family's coal, ice, and sawdust supply company, gave the name "Kitty
Litter" to a product manufactured by his family, known as Fuller's
Earth.
The product consisted of kiln dried
clay, and its intended use was as a non-flammable, industrial absorbent. Ed aspired to expand his family's
business by marketing the tiny nuggets
of clay to chicken farmers as nesting material for their chickens,
but failed in his attempts to do so.
At the same time, Kay Draper, of Cassopolis, Michigan, sought
sand for her cats' litter box, as the pile she drew from had frozen
solid in the cold, Midwest winter, and the ashes she used from her
fireplace, out of sheer desperation, proved to create quite a mess.
The sawdust she tried, though much tidier, did not work much
better.
A frazzled Kay opted to visit the
Lowe factory, in hopes of obtaining some sand, where she encountered
the eager and youthful Ed Lowe. Sensing an opening, Ed gave his pest
sales pitch on the merits of using Fuller's Earth as an absorbent
for cat waste instead of using sand. Kay loved the product and gave
Ed free word-of-mouth advertising, and came back for more. She also
sent Ed a faithful following of feline owners requesting Fuller's
Earth for their cats.
Ed took the initiative, packaged the dried clay in ten 5 pound
paper bags, which he labeled "Kitty Litter." Even at the bargain
basement price of $.65 per bag, Ed could not sell his bags, so he
decided to give them away for free to a local pet shop. The shop
owner's customers so liked their free samples of Kitty Litter that
they were willing to open their change purses to pay for it.
Enterprising Ed took his feline phenomenon on the road, targeting
pet shops and cat shows in hopes of promoting his pet project.
Eventually, the seed that he planted in Cassopolis, Michigan took root, and Kitty Litter sparked a feline
frenzy. Sales boomed, and a private investment group by the name of
Golden Cat made Ed an offer he could not refuse, 0 million dollars
plus stock options. Naturally, Ed accepted the offer, retired, and
generously established a foundation bearing his name to help other
entrepreneurs achieve the same fame and fortune he did with his
granules of clay.
Ed died in 1995, leaving behind a legacy of cat litter that
dominates the market at 55%, and sparking an industry of cat foods,
toys, and other paraphernalia catering
to the cat lover. His persistence, ingenuity, and flexibility should
serve as a lesson to all that even nuggets of clay can be
transformed into nuggets of gold with perseverance, patience, and a
positive attitude. |
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note:
enterprising: 有事业心的 sawdust: 锯屑
kiln: 窑,炉
absorbent: 吸收剂 nugget: 矿块
frazzled: 疲惫的
take root: 生根
paraphernalia: 随身用具 | |