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Dropping off to a good night’s sleep

ParmacyToday July2016

Pharmacy Today
July 2016

Dropping off to a good night's sleep

SleepDrops owner and founder Kirsten Taylor believes if everybody simply followed advice on her website about good sleep hygiene, she would go out of business.
Fortunately for her, the pace of modern life isn’t always conductive to following good sleep practices and, for many, it is easier to buy Ms Taylor’s SleepDrops and supercharging the sleep they do get, than changing their lives.
For other people, she says the drops can help hit sleeping problems on the head, before they develop into long-term bad sleeping patterns. Others use it to help with sleep when nerves prior to a one-off big event, like a wedding or work presentation, are keeping them awake.
Fortunately for customers, SleepDrops seem to really work.
If they didn’t, Ms Taylor says, they wouldn’t be stocked in almost all New Zealand pharmacies and at Watsons and Guardian pharmacies in Singapore. She also wouldn’t have sold over $1 million worth of wholesale product in New Zealand last year and have 70,000-plus customers each year.
The genesis of the company was a mix of Ms Taylor coming across sleep issues again and again in her naturopath business, and sheer financial desperation.
While treating the whole gamut of health issues in her role a naturopath, herbalist and nutritionist in 2003, she noticed while many of her patients also had sleep issues, none of them were seeking sleep support.
“Thirteen years ago on one was talking about sleep, now everyone is…These people literally didn’t realise the impact of sleep on their health,” she says.
However, Ms Taylor quickly saw if she sorted out her patient’s sleep problems, all her other treatments worked much faster and she began mixing individual sleep formulas for each patient.
After seven years of tinkering, she developed a remedy that worked for everyone.
The drops, sleep hygiene advice and Essential Sleep and Stress Nutrients with Tart Cherry, work because they act on most of the factors preventing sleep, with the drops combining herbs, flower essences and homeopathy to provide physical, nutritional, emotional and mental support, she says.
The problem was, Ms Taylor was ordering in lots of different powdered products from suppliers, and her clients would leave with a big basket of supplies and a big bill, but it was the manufactures who were making all the money.
When she took over the manufacturing, prices went down from over $200 to about $70.

Desperate and broke

If wanting to change people’s lives by bestowing sleep was the trigger for concocting SleepDrops, then Ms Taylor’s motivation for launching the business in 2009 was being desperate and broke, and needing to find a way of supporting herself and young son during the world financial crisis.
It was lean times on a benefit and she didn’t have any spare cash to hire a marketing manager or to throw away on dud campaigns.
She simply dug out her old notes from a Chamber of Commerce course and came up with a mostly radio-based campaign- so compelling that people would walk into stores asking for her product and the pharmacies would want to stock them.
Ms Taylor used every technique from her course to test each step of the campaign. Forcing every customer on her website to fill in a brief survey saying where they heard about SleepDrops gave her real negotiating tools when dealing with radio station, she says.
Despite fantastic support from pharmacies, being the underdog going up against big industry players has not been easy. She’s faced difficulties, including people she formerly worked with copying and undercutting her products.
This year Ms Taylor is trying to move into the US market, starting with an Amazon campaign. She also hopes to run some watertight clinical trials in either America or China.
She also wants to push her Daytime Revive stress-support product although it is not designed to help with sleep.
Her advice to anyone wanting start their own product line is: don’t just create something to fill a gap on the shelf; make something really good that will help people.

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Helping the world sleep

NZBusiness Cover September 2014
NZBusiness Cover September 2014

NZ Business
September 2014

Helping the world sleep

Kirsten Taylor has taken her SleepDrops business from garage start-up to million-dollar international player in just four years – and not a sleepless night in the process.

You’d think it would be safe to assume that Kirsten Taylor has a history of insomnia. Why else would this naturopath-turned-sleep-expert be so passionate about helping people get a good night’s sleep without resorting to medication? The truth is her interest in the subject was the result of two factors.
The first took place around 12 years ago. Her newborn son, whom she breast-fed, had virtually no sleep for the first two years. Turns out he had an allergy to dairy. It also meant that, until breast milk was off the menu, Kirsten got to experience severe sleep deprivation first hand.
The second, and primary reason sleep support became her life’s mission was the many patient clients she treated at her naturopathic clinic who were experiencing sleep issues for any number of reasons, ranging from GFC-induced stress to allergies.

Kirsten had a herbal dispensary and began formulating sleep remedies on the spot. She found that by helping people sleep better the healing process for their ailments happened a whole lot quicker. Before long a sleep tonic became a standard component of most treatments.

Through client feedback, Kirsten tweaked her formulation over five years until she had perfected a ’secret recipe’ that worked for everybody. And it was only when she began taking the formula herself that she truly realised what she had in her hands.

Now she calls SleepDrops a ‘cheap life insurance policy’ “because [sleep] sets the foundation for every aspect of our being”.

Kirsten explains that there are 80 medically recognised sleep disorders — so rather than attempt to produce a ‘one hit wonder’, she produced three formulas: one to help those having trouble switching off from busy lives; another that feeds the nervous system and sleep pathways (“everything that’s known to interrupt sleep”); and a Daytime Revive product for people low on energy during the Daytime. Kirsten says you can always spot the people suffering from poor sleep — they’re the grumpy, impatient ones blasting their car horns!

Word about the effectiveness of SleepDrops spread — clients told their friends, who told their friends. In the beginning Kirsten was up ’till the wee small hours in her garage to meet the demand. Amazingly, in just three years SleepDrops has grown into a million dollar business, breaking records for retail growth. Kirsten’s products are now available in more than 900 stores New Zealand wide, including high-profile Health2000, who took the rare step of approaching her directly when individual store owners began fielding customer enquiries.

Around 25 percent of business comes through Internet sales, although Kirsten says they’ve been so busy building the local market that international Internet sales are far from their true potential.

Miracles happen

Prior to starting up SleepDrops International, Kirsten had been running her online business New Zealand Health Shop, along with her Auckland clinic — however, the demands of the new venture forced her to close the New Zealand Health Shop sites down and retire from naturopathy three and a half years ago.

“I really enjoyed my one on one time with clients and experiencing their [naturopathic] miracles, and I mean serious miracles, that happened,” she says. Somewhat surprisingly the now 40-year-old admits to not knowing anything  about naturopathy before age 25. It was her own miraculous experience with naturopathy while in ]apan suffering from kidney stones that convinced her to study this alternative to traditional medicine.

Kirsten has had a lot of financial support from friends and family to grow SleepDrops. “They were amazingly supportive,  and hopeful — even though they were probably thinking ‘gee I hope she does  this’!”

“When I went into retail and had massive orders coming in, my parents went in to bat for me again; Dad’s retirement fund is invested in the company. I have a lot of responsibility on my shoulders!”

She says the fact that they let her get on with running the company, and never look over her shoulder, is credit to them and their belief in her abilities.

These days sales momentum is being helped along by marketing coups, such as the story on TV’s 60 Minutes, and FDA approval, which will open up the US market (and, interestingly,  Thailand).

China is also poised to take off — to the tune of 400,000 units by the end of March 2015.  “The US distributor is expecting 80,000 units the first year and around 67 0,000 the second year,” says Kirsten.

SleepDrops is already selling in Hong Kong and  Singapore;  both South Korea and Canada are looking promising;  but Australia’s  on hold, as that would require disclosing her exact formulations.

With this being just the second year of retail sales and too percent growth each year for the past three years,  plus additional  products in the pipeline, the company’s value (and investor interest) has increased dramatically in recent times.

Growing pains

With such rapid growth inevitably there are challenges — managing cashflow being the major one. A lack of money makes it hard to outsource expertise, and can hold companies back.

Managing stock is another challenge — Kirsten says the response from the 6o Minutes programme pretty much cleaned out her stocks and with production geared to lead times, things got tricky.

She has also been operating out of her home, but recently signed her first commercial lease. Managing growth, it’s fair to say, is her single greatest challenge. “Trying not to grow too fast, so we don’t combust internally!

“Being an entrepreneur is not for the faint-hearted,” she admits. “You’re riding a rollercoaster. In the past year I think I’ve aged five years. Imagine what I’d look like if I wasn’t getting a good night’s sleep!”

Getting a good night’s sleep is Kirsten’s desire for everyone — and it’s a compelling cause. A quarter of the population is diagnosed with sleep disorders; up to 47 percent at any one time have trouble going to sleep, staying asleep, or both. In the US, at 46 percent, it has been declared an epidemic.

It all bodes well for SleepDrops — the task ahead is huge, but then so are the rewards. Kirsten has a wealth of miraculous stories. “Like the 80-year-old woman who hadn’t slept properly for 60 years, ringing us in tears after four nights on the SleepDrops range because she’d just slept for seven hours straight. She could not remember the last time she’d done that.”

For now Kirsten is totally focused on “helping people sleep” and refuses to get sidetracked. “The biggest lesson from all this for me is that business is personal. I’ll only do business with people I like — life’s too short not to.”

Her vision is for SleepDrops to be the world’s leading brand for holistic sleep and stress support products.

“So, my son says, every time a person yawns, someone else will say    ’SleepDrops’!”