NZ Life & Leisure

CLEAN CONSCIENCE

COMBINING FRIENDSHIP WITH WORK CAN BE RISKY BUT TWO GO-GETTING TAURANGA WOMEN, EACH WITH A DESIRE TO CREATE A MORE SUSTAINABL­E WORLD, HAVE CHOSEN TO JOIN FORCES

- Two mums build friendship and finances from home bases in Tauranga

PACKING A PUNCH

The long driveway, flanked by an orchard of 400 mature avocado trees, suggests a stately home might emerge at its end. In fact, it leads to a packing shed that has morphed into a house. Tauranga architect Brendon Gordon and Sophia Ross of Cedar Ridge Interiors were responsibl­e for transformi­ng what was a large utilitaria­n building into a family home for Stine Smith and her family.

Set amid sprawling grounds above the Wairoa River, and with the Bay of Plenty’s iconic Mauao (the Mount) visible, the double-height pitched roof denotes the living area where the lounge, kitchen and dining spaces flow seamlessly. Full-height windows at either end of this spacious central axis make the most of the vista. Bedrooms are split between two wings, one for guests, the other for the family.

Sweeping lawns surround the house, making the property the ultimate boys’ playground. Signs of their sporting passions are everywhere: rugby posts, football goals, trampoline, tennis court, basketball hoop, cricket wickets and a large in- ground swimming pool. Stine also has an outdoor domain — the raised vegetable and herb gardens surrounded by box hedging.

Despite the house’s generous proportion­s, it was never destined to be the Smiths’ forever home. Plans for its replacemen­t, to be situated between the present building and the swimming pool, had been drawn up by Brendon Gordon Architects. However, the 2020 pandemic resulted in the new build being put on hold.

GONE ARE THE days when the school drop-off for Stine Smith and Kristy Hunter was about bundling the kids from the car and waving them through the school gate. While that early morning routine still takes place, these days it’s followed by a quick catch-up. The two mums call it a “huddle” — and it is strictly business.

“We have to begin with a good-news story,” says Stine (pronounced Steena). “We want to start each day on a positive note.”

“And we go through our top three on the to-do list – what we’re doing and a few things we need to get back to each other about,” adds Kristy. Meeting over, they jump back into their respective vehicles and go their separate ways.

Building a business from scratch can be consuming, particular­ly when done in combinatio­n with managing a home and family. But two years on, the duo’s business, Good Change, is flourishin­g and the friendship is intact. “We’re both quite nimble, we don’t sweat the small stuff, and we just get on with it,” says Kristy. “We have a good laugh along the way too.”

“We’re low-maintenanc­e people,” agrees Stine. “I can see how partnershi­ps such as ours can go wrong, but we make sure we have fun. Sometimes we laugh because our business is about something incredibly basic — a dishcloth.”

Careerwise, the humble dishcloth should be well out of Stine’s comfort zone. A change-management specialist, she is originally from Denmark. Her journey to New Zealand was via a circuitous route — university in the United States, jobs in Copenhagen and London and a transfer to a Middle East office on a threeyear contract.

She was in Dubai when she met the man she would marry. “One of our customers was sponsoring the rugby sevens tournament in Dubai and was handing out free tickets. I had a Danish friend visiting, and we decided to go; it was a chance to check out some fit men.”

However, it was a fellow spectator rather than a rugby player who caught her eye as they were leaving the stadium. “I bumped into this guy, he smiled at me, and I was like, ‘You’re the one, I want to have your children.’ We got talking. I thought he had a cute Australian accent, which I quickly found out was Kiwi.”

Stine invited the man, Jason Smith, to join her and her friend at a bar. Although the attraction between the couple was immediate, circumstan­ces dictated that their relationsh­ip be long-distance. Tauranga-based Jason traveled extensivel­y for his work, enabling him to meet Stine in Dubai every two to three months.

When Stine’s contract in the Middle East ended, she had the option of returning to London or moving to the other side of the world. She chose New Zealand. Soon, she accepted a role with Fonterra, splitting her time between Auckland and Tauranga.

However, when she got pregnant with the couple’s first child, the commute quickly became impractica­l, so she quit her job to move to the Bay of Plenty. That was nine years ago. Eldest son Frank (8) was born two weeks after she moved to Tauranga. He now has two brothers, Augustus (6) and Sebastian (4).

Kristy, also a mother of three — Polly (11), George (9) and Meg (7) — was introduced to Stine at a morning tea hosted by one of Jason’s neighbours the week Stine arrived in Tauranga, and the two quickly became friends. They had plenty in common; both were university-educated, widely traveled, had lived in foreign countries, and enjoyed fast-paced careers. Kristy’s background was in sales and marketing and recruitmen­t, and she combined being a stay-at-home mum with organizing fundraisin­g events.

As their friendship deepened, they mulled over what their futures might hold workwise. It turned out they were thinking similarly, wanting to create something that would go some way to making the world a cleaner, greener place in which their children would grow up.

“Once you have children, you become more aware of the world you’re passing on to them,” says Stine. “Also, we’re at a stage in our lives where we don’t want to work just to plough back money into ourselves; we want to work for a higher purpose.” [Some of Good Change’s earnings go towards providing clean water for families in Cambodia.]

Yet the idea of teaming up didn’t happen immediatel­y. Kristy began developing an anti-bacterial cleaning product and, in 2018, having made good progress with her concept, she and her husband Mark took their children to France for an extended break. Stine meanwhile was researchin­g cleaning products. When she came across a cloth made of cotton mixed with wood pulp that could be made into sustainabl­e dishcloths, she knew it fitted her brief. She also knew that she wanted Kristy on board.

STARTING A BUSINESS: STINE & KRISTY’S BIGGEST LESSONS

▷ Every little brand emerges from a foundation of hard work. We have learned much from starting and growing our business. Being time- efficient is critical as we juggle running our company with bringing up young families. ▷ Action is everything and 80 per cent done is better than waiting for perfection. Also, systems and processes are essential for efficiency, and we try to automate or outsource what we can. We make a conscious effort to grab every opportunit­y that comes our way as it could lead to the next big thing.

▷ Embrace being a generalist. During a typical day’s work, we work across multiple areas such as accounting, e- commerce and product developmen­t. We recommend that specialist­s partner up with someone who can complement them in other areas.

▷ Don’t sweat the small stuff. As business owners, we need to solve problems every day, and we can’t afford to get hung up on the little things; it’s impossible to move forward.

▷ Having a business can become all- consuming. It’s easy to lose contact with friends, so try to book time in for them. ▷ Have a purpose. The market is changing, and businesses need to have a higher purpose other than adding just another product to the shelves. Good Change is focused on making a positive impact, and all decisions go through the filter of, “What good will this drive?”

▷ Have fun. Running a business will have ups and downs. But try and have fun — it’s a lot easier. goodchange­store.com

“As soon as I got home from France, Stine asked me to meet with her. After I’d done the school dropoff the first day back, I bolted across to her place,” Kristy recalls.

“That was when she presented me with the idea of producing sustainabl­e dishcloths.”

Like Stine, Kristy felt the concept was a winner, and she was happy to put aside her project and work with her friend to make Good Change happen.

That was in October 2018, and just nine months later their cleaning cloths hit store shelves in Wellington. The response was overwhelmi­ngly positive, and the products are now sold nationwide. (Good Change also produces bamboo wipes.)

The appeal of the Good Change range is two-fold — sustainabi­lity and eye-catching design. The cloths have a simple European elegance, their muted colour palette of grey, green, mustard, and black and white is produced from plant-based dyes.

“Our thinking is that everything else in a kitchen or bathroom looks quite tidy and well designed so we might as well put good designs on our dishcloth,” says Stine.

“They last six to nine months and can become an extension of your interior brand. You can leave them on display because they look good.”

Washing is easy: toss the cloth in the dishwasher or washing machine and then at the end of its life, dig it into the garden where it will break down in two to three months.

While Good Change is about a product, for Stine and Kristy it’s also about promoting sustainabi­lity and encouragin­g people to think about the products they purchase, the potential harm they might do, and how making changes will help make the environmen­t cleaner and greener.

“We try to communicat­e to our customers that we want them to make changes,” said Kristy. “It’s not about massive changes; it’s about small integral steps we can make in our day-to-day living. For example, I haven’t bought Gladwrap for 18 months or paper towels in almost a year. I don’t use plastic bin liners either; I just put stuff straight in the bin.”

Stine agrees: “What I saw from my change management background is that if you’re asking people to make changes, break it up into little pieces and they will be more likely to do so. If you change your dishcloth, that’s one step.

“And while it’s just a cleaning cloth it’s also so much more. It’s a mind shift for many of the people who buy it — they want to make changes for the better.”

Others agree. Good Change won two gold medals, a bronze and two editor’s choice awards in the 2020 Australian Non-Toxic Awards. It was also named as the recipient of the Social Responsibi­lity Award (Home category).

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FROM TOP LEFT: The design of the kitchen was kept simple because of its openness to the main living area. The oak benchtop ties in with the bookshelve­s and flooring in the living room; the large herb garden was created as a feature, its formal lines delineated by box hedging and pebble pathways. Jason built the raised beds. Stine’s favourite herbs are parsley, coriander and tarragon; the family often toast marshmallo­ws over the firepit in front of the house.
THESE PAGES, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: The design of the kitchen was kept simple because of its openness to the main living area. The oak benchtop ties in with the bookshelve­s and flooring in the living room; the large herb garden was created as a feature, its formal lines delineated by box hedging and pebble pathways. Jason built the raised beds. Stine’s favourite herbs are parsley, coriander and tarragon; the family often toast marshmallo­ws over the firepit in front of the house.
 ??  ?? THESE PAGES: The Smith family’s three-hectare avocado orchard is a playground for (from left) Frank, Sebastian and Augustus; the property was a deer farm 40 years ago, its thenowners responsibl­e for the planting the now-mature trees.
THESE PAGES: The Smith family’s three-hectare avocado orchard is a playground for (from left) Frank, Sebastian and Augustus; the property was a deer farm 40 years ago, its thenowners responsibl­e for the planting the now-mature trees.
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 ??  ?? Be in to win one of the three Eco Cloth Starter Kits by Good Change, valued at $58 each. For details, see thisnzlife.co. nz
Be in to win one of the three Eco Cloth Starter Kits by Good Change, valued at $58 each. For details, see thisnzlife.co. nz
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: The openness of the house works well for the young family. The renovated building was originally meant to become a guesthouse for family and friends, particular­ly those from Denmark who come over for extended stays, but thanks to the pandemic, plans for a new build have been put on hold.
OPPOSITE: Encouraged by the positive response to their reusable eco- cloths and bamboo towels, Stine and Kristy plan to launch new products in the coming months. Although growing their start-up is serious business, the duo is determined to enjoy the journey. “Who would have thought you could turn a dishcloth into something sexy?” says Kristy.
THIS PAGE: The openness of the house works well for the young family. The renovated building was originally meant to become a guesthouse for family and friends, particular­ly those from Denmark who come over for extended stays, but thanks to the pandemic, plans for a new build have been put on hold. OPPOSITE: Encouraged by the positive response to their reusable eco- cloths and bamboo towels, Stine and Kristy plan to launch new products in the coming months. Although growing their start-up is serious business, the duo is determined to enjoy the journey. “Who would have thought you could turn a dishcloth into something sexy?” says Kristy.

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