Tina Sharkey has something to sell you (300 things, actually)

Tina Sharkey has something to sell you (300 things, actually) · TechCrunch

Brandless is an usual company. A direct-to-consumer purveyor of food, beauty, and personal care products, it says that every item it makes is non-genetically modified, kosher, fair-trade, gluten-free, often organic and, in the case of cleaning supplies, EPA "Safer Choice" certified. They are also priced at $3 across the board. The idea, says cofounder and CEO Tina Sharkey, is to "democratize better." She believes that Brandless -- which is very much a brand -- is selling items to people, often with dietary restrictions, who "couldn't shop their values" before Brandless.

That's no small thing to Sharkey, who cares very much about Brandless's customers, as anyone who has seen her speak publicly can attest. In fact, Sharkey, appearing at a StrictlyVC event earlier this week, spoke about the importance of shared principles in sweeping language that elicited fervor in many of the gathered listeners -- and some fatigue in others.

She talked of Brandless users who didn't have access before to affordable gluten-free and organic products or "who had to drive 100 miles round trip" or who "didn't know things existed like tree-free toilet paper, made with sugar cane and bamboo grasses." (This last product was news to us, too.)

Sharkey -- who has led a number of consumer-facing companies in her career, including cofounding iVillage and later serving as president and CEO of BabyCenter -- said she sees in Brandless users "all of America," not just those who "live in such a frickin' bubble on the coasts."

Elites in East and West Coast cities are "not our country" alone, she said. "Our country is filled with extraordinary people, and we have bifurcated and sliced and diced and segmented people to such a degree that we've forgotten that we're all awesome Americans, and American deserve better, no matter your politics."

If it was hard to remember at times that she was talking about a company that sells nearly 300 household items, from maple syrup to fluoride-free toothpaste, the crowd didn't seem to notice, nodding along in agreement.

Sharkey doesn't reveal much publicly about revenue or user or growth numbers, though in fairness, it's early days. She prefers talking instead about the roughly 70 percent savings that Brandless says it provides customers compared with more established brands of similar quality, whose goods are usually purchased on retail shelves. Brandless calls this mark-up a "brand tax" and has trademarked the term.