Daily Dispatch

Retailer to pay back Ubuntu Baba

- WENDY KNOWLER

In the wake of Woolworths’s widely denounced copying of a Cape Town entreprene­ur’s baby carrier‚ her company will be given some of the proceeds of the sale of those carriers.

And key Woolworths staffers and suppliers will be undergoing training on intellectu­al property issues “to avoid a similar incident in future”‚ it was revealed in a joint statement released on Friday afternoon by Woolworths and Ubuntu Baba after the parties reached “a positive and amicable resolution”.

Ubuntu Baba founder Shannon McLaughlin had accused Woolworths of blatantly copying her Stage 1 and Stage 2 baby carriers – their design‚ colour choice and even their names – then undercutti­ng the price by two thirds by having them made of cheaper fabric in China.

She was in a bad place when she wrote her now famous “Woolworths‚ you have some explaining to do” blog in early January‚ fearing the loss of her business.

But two days later, the retailer had apologised to her in person‚ pulled their “rip-off” baby carriers from sale‚ and offered to refund those who’d bought one.

Friday’s statement said Woolworths would not be retaining any profits from the sale of its carriers – which bore what it termed “striking similariti­es” to those designed by Ubuntu Baba.

“We will donate a large portion of those proceeds to a credible institutio­n with a view to educating‚ supporting and de- veloping SMEs in SA,” it said.

“The remaining proceeds will be paid to Ubuntu Baba.”

Woolworths will donate its remaining baby carriers to parents in under-resourced communitie­s.

And those parents won’t be given Woolworths’s instructio­ns on how to fit them‚ as McLaughlin warned they were ill-advised and would put babies in danger.

Woolworths said those concerns were “being resolved” by both Ubuntu Baba and “credible internatio­nal experts” appointed by Woolworths.

In her initial blog‚ McLaughlin said that two separate Woolworths employees had ordered her carriers online prior to the launch of Woolworths’s carriers‚ suggesting the intention was to copy them.

We will donate a large portion of those proceeds to developing SMEs

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