View Full Version : Ethiopia firm recycling tyres into shoes does big business via internet


abesha
January 4th, 2010, 11:01 AM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/03/ethiopia-internet-shoe-firm-solerebels


Old truck tyres never die, they just turn into sandals. For decades that has been the tradition in Ethiopia, where everyone from farmers to guerrilla fighters has fashioned worn-out road rubber into cheap, long-lasting footwear.

But now, thanks to a young woman entrepreneur who has combined the internet's selling power with nimble business practices more often associated with Asian countries, the idea has been turned into an unlikely international hit. By adding funky cotton and leather uppers to recycled tyre soles, Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu has sold many thousands of pairs of handmade flip-flops, boat shoes, loafers and Converse-style trainers to foreign customers.

In the run-up to Christmas, workers at the soleRebels "factory" – a small house on the outskirts of the Ethiopian capital – were frantically cutting, sewing and gluing to fulfil internet purchases from customers as far away as Canada and Australia. Alemu's brother packed pairs of cotton and suede trainers into a box about to be couriered to Amazon.com, the company's main customer, which receives the shoes in the US three to five days after placing its bulk order. "We are sitting in Addis Ababa but acting like an American company," said Alemu, an excitable 30-year-old former accountant who is fond of reeling off the numbers that illustrate her firm's rapid growth.

Just five years after start-up, soleRebels employs 45 full-time staff who can produce up to 500 pairs of shoes a day. More will be hired after next month once the footwear range, priced between £21 and £40, goes on sale online in the UK and Japan on Amazon's new footwear website javari.co.uk. The company's sales target for 2010 is an impressive £300,000, but Alemu's ultimate goal – one she seems deadly serious about – is far loftier: to become "the Timberland or Skechers of Africa".

The success of soleRebels, which has thrived in the global market with no outside support other than a government line of credit to help meet large orders, is challenging preconceptions both about Ethiopia and the best way to lift its people out of poverty.

Abroad, the landlocked country still suffers from an image of a hungry and often helpless nation, with 6 million people requiring food relief and billions of dollars of aid each year. But where some might see despair Alemu saw inspiration. While brainstorming for an Ethiopian-flavoured product that could be produced in a sustainable manner, she remembered the truck tyre sandals, which were used by local fighters who repelled Italian soldiers many decades ago, as well as the rebels who marched into Addis Ababa in 1991 and today run the government. "Recycling is a way of life here – you don't throw things away that you can use again and again," she said. "I wanted to build on that idea."

At the time other Ethiopian shoe companies were struggling to compete with cheap imports from China. SoleRebels decided to concentrate instead on the export market, where Alemu reasoned that customers would pay good money for uniquely designed products. She found a supplier who could deliver old truck tyres and tubes, and hired women to spin, weave and dye pieces of locally-grown cotton, jute and hemp using skills passed down through generations.

Tracking international shoe fashion trends on the web, Alemu designed a range of footwear. Some are simple cotton-covered or leather covered flip-flops and sandals with names like Class Act and Gruuv Thong. The bestselling Urban Runner takes inspiration from the classic Converse All Star "lo-top" trainer, with a piece of inner tubing for the toecap and organic cotton-covered footbeds. Virtually all the materials are locally sourced, including the camouflage material used on some shoes, which is cut from old army uniforms.

After receiving international fair trade certification, Alemu began bombarding US stores and websites with emails and samples. Shops such as Whole Foods and Urban Outfitters agreed to stock the shoes, which were imported duty-free under the US African Growth and Opportunity Act, helping prices stay competitive. As word spread, individual customers began buying directly from the soleRebels website - the Christmas order from Canada included a scanned trace of the customer's foot - with the shoes usually arriving by courier from Ethiopia within a week. But business really took off when Amazon signed up as a customer. Alemu is an evangelist for the online business model, saying it allows the company "to understand the market needs and demands in real time". SoleRebels negotiates directly with retailers, doing everything from ordering processing to credit collection itself, and ensures most of the final sales price remains in Ethiopia. As a result, Alemu said, she can pay her staff between £1.20 a day for trainees and £7 a day for experienced artisans – good wages by local standards. In turn, the government earns more taxes, spurring more development.

"In Ethiopia we have become used to taking money from the west, to always getting help," said Alemu. "That does not make for a sustainable economy. We need to solve our own problems."

The success has enabled soleRebels to begin construction of a solar-powered factory near the current workshop, to allow for expanded production. While it will better showcase the company's eco-friendly methods, that's not the main reason customers like the shoes, Alemu said. "People buy soleRebels because they are good, not just because they are green or from Ethiopia. Our product speaks for itself."


I thought this was a great article. We need more entrepreneurs like that!

Here's their website http://solerebelsfootwear.weebly.com/
Go take a look at the "Products" section. The shoes are really cute!

abesha
January 4th, 2010, 11:15 AM
Another article, this one from the Independent http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/ethiopian-cobbler-creating-african-nike-with-tyres-fabric-1801534.html

Ethiopian shoemaker Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu sees her eco-friendly "SoleRebels" brand of footwear, made of recycled tyres and traditional woven fabric, as Africa's answer to Nike.

In her workshop in Addis Ababa's Zenabework neighbourhood, a constant patter and the stench of glue fill the air as 40 cobblers hammer, trim tyres and stitch fabric to make the zero carbon emission footwear.

Launched in 2005, the SoleRebels brand features trainers, sandals and other trendy open shoes which are sold in the United States and Europe. It also provides livelihoods to at least 75 suppliers.

"For a long time, used tyres have been used here to make traditional sandals, so I decided to take the idea and develop it in Ethiopian traditional factories using organic cotton and local leather," the 30 year-old entrepreneur said.

The brand gets its name from the type of footwear favoured by Ethiopian rebel fighters in the country's recent troubled past.

Africa's second most populous country after Nigeria, with nearly 80 million inhabitants, Ethiopia is also one of the continent's poorest nations, with bouts of drought, famine, the overthrow of a junta in 1991 and a bloody border war with Eritrea in the 1990s that left 80,000 dead exacerbating economic woes.

"When I was young we were at war and rebels wearing that kind of sandals with used tyre soles were giving hope to people," said the youthful shoemaker and mother of two.

The shoes are wholly handmade and the workshop can produce up to 500 pairs of sandals, or 200 pairs of shoes -- priced between 15 and 30 dollars -- daily, exclusively for export.

Bethlehem projects around 500,000 dollars (342,000 euros) in earnings by next year.

"We are confident that SoleRebels has the potential to become Africa's Timberland, Adidas or Nike," she said.

Huge talent and lack of employment in the Horn of Africa country means that SoleRebels has no trouble recruiting its workforce. Added to that is the fact that the firm pays its workers nearly four times Ethiopia's average monthly wage.

The workshop has also encouraged employees to create their own businesses from skills developed during their stint at SoleRebels, Bethlehem said.

"I noted there was a lot of talented people but no opportunity for work. I grew up in this community, I know how they suffer... When we say we want to change people's lives, we have the obligation to give them a good salary."

Gesachew Sherefa, a 27-year-old supervisor, proudly counts benefits such as health insurance for his family as advantages unheard of in other artisanal enterprises.

"I get 3,000 birr (240 dollars) per month... If I could work here my whole life it would be very nice because here there is stability and security," he said.

For single mother Webayu Legasse, employment at SoleRebels is nothing short of a revolution. "Conditions are much better here than in the association where I was working before," she explained.

"I was earning only 350 birr a month and I could not survive, so after my work I had to go from house to house to wash and iron people's clothes."

SoleRebels also relies on Internet marketing to boost sales of its Urban Runner, Purelove, Freedom and Gruuverebel brands.

Yoniii
January 4th, 2010, 09:10 PM
This is great publicity for them. Good luck soleRebels!

yosef
January 4th, 2010, 09:40 PM
inspiring story, I love it. Homegrown ingenuity and self sufficiency is very important. thanks for posting.

Simfan34
January 5th, 2010, 02:09 PM
Catching on to what the Eritreans have been doing are we?

arzaranh
January 5th, 2010, 10:13 PM
here is her web site:http://solerebelsfootwear.weebly.com/index.html

the shoes are not really my style but i think this is great. :cheers:

Simfan34
January 5th, 2010, 11:17 PM
I really like them.

abesha
September 10th, 2010, 01:07 AM
She's been invited to speak at the Clinton Global Initiative meeting here in NYC!!

First time an African is invited.

http://nazret.com/blog/index.php?title=ethiopia_president_clinton_invites_soler_1&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1

Look at the list of attendees, Michelle Obama is one of many distinguished guests! I'd be shaking in my boots at the thought of speaking in front of all these people.

http://www.clintonglobalinitiative.org/ourmeetings/2010/meeting_annual_featured_attendees.asp?Section=OurMeetings&PageTitle=Featured%20Attendees

Ahadu
September 10th, 2010, 05:30 AM
http://www.clintonglobalinitiative.org/ourmeetings/2010/meeting_annual_featured_attendees.asp?Section=OurMeetings&PageTitle=Featured%20Attendees

I don't see her name in the list. There is, however, another Ethiopian....

Bekele Geleta
Secretary General
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Society

abesha
September 10th, 2010, 06:48 AM
^^ The people listed are not the speakers, but the influential attendees.

lamrof
September 10th, 2010, 09:31 PM
First time an African is invited.


I don't know what to say Abesha. Is this great or is this silly?

abesha
October 1st, 2010, 07:35 PM
Here's a documentary CNN did on her. I'm proud she's Ethiopian. We need millions more like her.

http://www.tadias.com/05/30/2010/this-week-on-cnn-african-voices-solerebels-bethlehem-tilahun-alemu/

lizayuen
January 5th, 2011, 08:08 AM
"Ethiopian shoemaker Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu sees her eco-friendly "SoleRebels" brand of footwear, made of recycled tyres and traditional woven fabric, as Africa's answer to Nike."

Cool, this is great information. Using recycled tyres of footwear is an awesome idea. Good job man.

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Better boots for you (http://betterbootsforyou.info/Switch_it_by_Nan_Large_Insert_Womens__White.aspx)

abesha
December 13th, 2011, 02:48 AM
This girl is amazing.

Interview with Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu

New York (TADIAS) Last year, Mayor Michael Bloomberg launched the NYC Venture Fellows program, designed to connect promising entrepreneurs from around the world with mentors and investors from leading companies. The fellowship encourages national and international start-ups to locate and grow their businesses in New York City. The class of 2012 includes Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu, the Founder & Managing Director of SoleRebels — a fair trade certified green footwear company based in Ethiopia.

Bethlehem, who was born and raised in one of Addis Ababa’s most impoverished neighborhoods (Zenabwok, Total area), established SoleRebels in 2005 hoping to increase employment in her community. SoleRebels has not only created hundreds of local jobs, but it has since become an internationally recognized eco-fashion brand.

“Bringing SoleRebels directly to consumers worldwide is an integral part of our revenue and brand growth strategy,” Bethlehem said in a recent interview with Tadias Magazine. “With our unique focus on eco-sensible, recycled products as well as cultural artisan crafting, we feel strongly that it will excite footwear customers globally for a long time to come.”

The SoleRebels brand is offered online through both Amazon and Endless.com, as well as through the company’s own e-commerce website. Its products are also sold via brick-and-mortar locations like Urban Outfitters, a boutique in Addis, and a shared retail space in Asia. “We have implemented franchise agreements in Taiwan that opened two weeks ago,” Bethlehem said. “And we have franchise proposals for Australia, Italy, Canada, Israel, Spain, Japan and the United States.”

Bethlehem estimates the retail roll-out will generate over $10 million in revenue by 2016. “We feel strongly that people all over the planet want comfy, stylish and unique value priced footwear” she said.

What makes SoleRebels unique? “In three words: authenticity, style and value,” Bethlehem told us. “At our core we are artisans who aim to create the coolest and most comfortable footwear. We do this by combining our heritage with modern design sensibilities.”

SoleRebels shoes are made by hand using indigenous practices such as hand-spun organic cotton and artisan hand-loomed fabric. Tires are also recycled and used for soles. “The process is zero carbon production because historically that is the way it’s been done in Ethiopia,” she said.


Bethlehem has garnered international recognition, and earlier this year was also named one of the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders. In that role Bethlehem has been tasked to launch a program in Ethiopia called Global Shapers as a key initiative to create opportunities for the youth. With Addis Ababa preparing to host the 2012 World Economic Forum Africa meeting, the Global Shapers community will be able to collaborate with the Forum of Young Global Leaders while operating out of more than 75 city hubs – from New York to Mexico City, Johannesburg to New Delhi, and Addis Ababa to Adelaide.

“I have created a strategy to build our Global Shapers community by selecting my group based on input through outreach conducted via social media,” she said. “Under the title ‘Come Change Your World’ I am inviting individuals to express why they, or someone they know in the greater Addis Ababa area, should be chosen as a Global Shaper.” The process of outreach and selection includes gathering real-time input, insights and feedback. Global Shapers can jumpstart their entrepreneurial careers by interacting with Young Global Leaders, social entrepreneurs, technology pioneers, foundations members, global agenda councils and more. Bethlehem is also selecting one Global Shaper to address the upcoming annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Mayor Bloomberg is scheduled to address the 2012 New York City Venture Fellow program at a gathering here this month. As a Fellow, Bethlehem said, “I feel strongly that this is an amazing opportunity to take SoleRebels to the next level.”http://www.tadias.com/11/28/2011/spotlight-bethlehem-tilahun-alemu/

We need thousands like her.