My point is that the existing companies failed to provide a product that consumers wanted, and VCs relied on the “fact” that the market is efficient to “prove” that Thinx could not succeed, since it did not bring anything to the table that the big companies couldn’t have done themselves..
Tampon producers make money by selling tampons that aren’t reuseable. They might lose money if women’s standard underwear absorbs all fluids and thus women don’t need to buy tampons anymore.
Kickstarter is part of the market so, from what you have described, Thinx is a market success story.
My point is that the existing companies failed to provide a product that consumers wanted, and VCs relied on the “fact” that the market is efficient to “prove” that Thinx could not succeed, since it did not bring anything to the table that the big companies couldn’t have done themselves..
Thinx disrupts the existing business model.
Tampon producers make money by selling tampons that aren’t reuseable. They might lose money if women’s standard underwear absorbs all fluids and thus women don’t need to buy tampons anymore.