Daily Mail

Soap-makerk Emma Heathcote-James

- Interview by LIZ HOGGARD

Emma HEatHcotE-JamEs, 43, founded Little soap company in 2008 to make pure, natural bar soap accessible to all. It became the first all-natural organic soap on supermarke­t shelves. she lives in the cotswolds with her wife, a conservati­onist, and their son, 15.

SOAP was my grandmothe­r’s passion, and when she got back from a holiday she would give us a paper bag full of the most delicious handmade soap. After she died we found her wardrobe stacked with unused soap.

When I moved to the Cotswolds, I became frustrated that I couldn’t buy proper soap in supermarke­ts. Back in 2008, it was all coal tar or synthetic detergent bars, which dried out your skin. So I began making soap as a hobby. I bought raw oils and essential oil and started perfecting recipes.

From the start it was important the soap was ethical, sustainabl­e, vegan and cruelty-free. I began by selling to farm shops, then at farmers’ markets. Then, before the end of the first three months, I got the soap into the local independen­t

Floral: organic Pamper Pack Pure Rose Geranium, £45, littlesoap­company.co.uk supermarke­t. As I now knew how to produce a barcode, I thought I might as well try Waitrose. I persuaded the buyer to talk to me, and she put it in eight local stores.

Next, I was speaking at a ‘women in rural business’ conference and, unbeknown to me, a buyer from Tesco was in the audience.

They asked me to create a range for the supermarke­t and be a regional supplier.

Along the way, the best business decision I made was taking time to do the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses programme at Aston University in Birmingham. It took five months (like a mini master of business administra­tion course) and enabled me to take the business off the kitchen table by taking on a premises and staff.

The soaps are now sold in eight major supermarke­ts and retailers, and they are all made in Britain.

No one could have foreseen that our soap would be suddenly playing a crucial role in the fight against the spread of coronaviru­s.

A bar lasts a lot longer than a bottle of hand wash, so works out far cheaper. You’re also reducing plastic and landfill waste, while protecting yourself.

The bars have naturally occurring glycerine locked inside, too, so are super moisturisi­ng — great for constant hand-washing.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom