The Wall St.Journal 24Feb2020

(lu) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, February 24, 2020 |B5


The bankrupt Philadelphia hospital will cover an insurance gap.

MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Clean Day that costs under $4
on Amazon.
“I’ve had to defend our
pricing,” Ms. Weeks said.
It is a multipronged de-
fense: Instead of cheaper
plastic, Ms. Weeks chose alu-
minum bottles (“aluminum is
infinitely recyclable, and it’s
also lighter than glass”) and
while the nozzle is plastic
(“not a lot of options there”),
it is clear and doesn’t contain
a metal spring, giving it a
higher value on the recycla-
bles market.
The bottle itself is reusable
and comes in a terra cotta
matte paint, chosen because
it will likely look attractive on
any countertop.
Customers will only ever
need that one bottle; Veles
plans to offer a $10 refill pro-
gram for its cleaning solution.
Amazon says it works con-
stantly to reduce waste, in-

cluding by collaborating with
manufacturers to monitor
throughout the supply chain.
Its sustainable packaging
initiatives have reduced pack-
aging weight by 27% per
shipment over the past four
years, according to a spokes-
man.
“For packaging Amazon de-
liveries, we’re moving from
mixed material packaging so-
lutions—paper with plastic
cushion mailers—to material
that is fully compatible in ei-
ther paper or plastic recycling
streams,” the spokesman said,
adding that the company ex-
pects the move to be com-
plete by next year.
Sixty percent of Amazon
packaging is compostable, he
said.
Sourcing materials is an-
other challenge for companies
that want to provide a certain
packaging experience. “How

SMALL BUSINESS


experience.”
These moments range
widely, from how a product
feels in a customer’s hands to
whether they feel guilty or
sanctimonious about discard-
ing the packaging later.
Startups in particular are
motivated to find ways to
stand out among larger, more
established rivals.
For some companies, pack-
aging creates a cachet
around the product—espe-
cially when it becomes the
subject of admiring “unbox-
ing” videos on Instagram or
YouTube.
“When you get a beautiful
package, you feel like you’re
part of the brand’s universe,”
said Dianna Cohen, founder
of Levitate, a brand strategy
and marketing consulting
company, and ofCrown Af-
fair Inc., a direct-to-con-
sumer hair-care line.
“You buy
something be-
cause it’s part of
your identity,”
Ms. Cohen said.
“To not address
that on the pack-
aging is a miss.”
The January
launch of Crown
Affair played out
in real time via a host of un-
boxing videos on Instagram
posted by early recipients of
the brand’s pale avocado-
green boxes, each of which
display Crown Affair’s signa-
ture brush, comb and hair oil
with museum-like care.
Other posts played up com-
postable and reusable ele-
ments of the packaging.
New packaging consider-
ations, however, can mean
more cost to companies.
To deliver a sustainable
packaging experience to peo-
ple who order Veles, a new
home-cleaning product made
from acetic and lactic acids
and water found in food
waste, founder Amanda
Weeks sources materials that
account for $5 of a $20 price
tag on a 16-ounce bottle.
This compares with a 16-
ounce bottle of everyday
cleaner from Mrs. Meyer’s

we got here is not glamor-
ous,” Ms. Katz said of Seed
Health’s low-impact packag-
ing system. “The best materi-
als for our future aren’t ready
for scale.”
It took over a year of
sleuthing for small vendors—
“the people on page 10 of a
Google search”—to find mate-
rials that met the needs for
sustainability and still looked
enticing, Ms. Katz said.
“It takes a lot of creativity
to make a mushroom tray
look beautiful,” she said. “It
can easily look like a block of
cheese.”
But the research is getting
easier, she said.
Seed Health shares its ven-
dor information on its site.
Further options can be found

on the website A Better
Source, an online eco-packag-
ing repository that launched
in the fall.
Created by Jennifer
Wright, a graphic designer in
Austin, Texas, the volunteer-
powered site surfaces packag-
ing ideas for small businesses,
and tracks new solutions hit-
ting the market.
“A lot of businesses we talk
to are realizing that consum-
ers are willing to pay more
for sustainable packaging,”
Ms. Wright said.
“There are so many beauti-
ful, fascinating materials
coming onto the market made
from things we wouldn’t ex-
pect,” she said. That tactile
novelty is really enticing to
consumers.”

The first timeSeed Health
Inc.’s probiotics arrive at a
new subscriber’s door, they
come in a handsome glass jar
with a powdery finish and
minimal branding. The cap-
sules nestle in a compostable
mushroom-fiber tray and a
recycled paper box that is the
same moss green as the jar.
This is the only time cus-
tomers will see this presenta-
tion. The following month,
capsules arrive in a com-
postable pouch with corn
foam padding that dissolves
in water.
Seed Health aims to de-
liver a specific experience for
customers: The feeling of
gaining membership to a
club, while making a virtuous
purchase.
“We try to think about the
ritual of filling up the jar
with new capsules—the feel-
ing that you’ve started this
ongoing relationship,” said
Ara Katz, who co-founded
Seed Health in 2018 and de-
veloped the sustainable pack-
aging system in-house.
Orders have increased
600% since early 2019, Ms.
Katz said, declining to be
more specific.
The age of e-commerce
and two-day delivery from
Amazon.com Inc. has
brought a storm of hastily
packed cardboard boxes and
plastic mailers with it.
Consumers received 8.6
billion e-commerce packages
in the U.S. last year, up from
7.6 billion in 2018, according
to ShipMatrix Inc., a software
provider that analyzes ship-
ping data.
More companies are trying
to drive business results by
extending their focus beyond
the actual products for sale
to concentrate on moments
that get increasingly bundled
under terms like “consumer

BYMARGARETRHODES

Startups Look to Feel-Good Packaging


Companies focus on
eco-friendly materials
and the experience
of opening them up

Hair-care line Crown Affair promoted its elegant design and
reusable elements in unboxing videos. The maker of Seed Health
probiotics, photos left, wants buyers to feel like part of a club.

SEED HEALTH (2)

CROWN AFFAIR

tors were in danger of having
their professional credentials
tarnished if they couldn’t find
replacement insurance.
The offer from Hahnemann
and its owners to provide in-
surance came after months of
talks spurred by a threat from
Judge Kevin Gross to oust the
hospital company’s manage-
ment from control, and put a
trustee in charge of Hahne-
mann’s bankruptcy.
Malpractice insurance was
due to be cut off in early Janu-
ary, but after Judge Gross
fired a warning shot at Hahne-
mann’s owners, the insurance
cutoff deadline was postponed
repeatedly.
In an email Friday, Jeremy
Ryan, lawyer for an informal
committee of medical trainees,
said the committee is pleased
with the offer of insurance
from Hahnemann, which will
allow new doctors to start
their careers without worrying
about their credentials.
Hahnemann and its owners
came through with the insur-
ance after an effort to sell the
hospital’s residency program
failed. The proposed sale was
approved by the bankruptcy
court, but foundered and was
terminated by the buyer, court
papers say.
Located in the heart of Phil-
adelphia, Hahnemann filed for
bankruptcy protection in June,
at the start of the medical
training year. Hundreds of
doctors scrambled to find new

berths, anxious to avoid an in-
terruption in their profes-
sional training.
As uncertainty grows about
the future of the health-care
system, the Hahnemann bank-
ruptcy and the insurance crisis
that followed raise questions
about the risks facing health-
care professionals working at
hospitals that depend on pub-
lic funding.
The decision to close Hah-
nemann came less than two
years after Mr. Freedman’s
buyout group acquired the
hospital. According to the own-
ers, government reimburse-
ment for treatment for the
poor and elderly wasn’t suffi-
cient to keep the doors open.
From Maine to Los Angeles,
hospitals that count on Medi-
care or some other form of
taxpayer backing are tumbling
into bankruptcy. Pennsylvania
health authorities warned in
court papers that the disrup-
tion in training and insurance
set off by Hahnemann’s bank-
ruptcy will make it even
tougher to fill a doctor short-
age in the state.
Many displaced Hahnemann
residents were taken on by
other Philadelphia-area hospi-
tals, but the rest scattered
across the country. Months
later, word began to spread
that Hahnemann didn’t have
enough cash to continue pro-
viding insurance to cover the
work the residents and fellows
had done at the hospital.
Volunteers cobbled to-
gether listservs and searched
phones, trying to track down
dispersed former trainees to
alert them to the brewing in-
surance trouble.
American Academic Health
Systems, the private investing
group that bought Hahnemann
and St. Christopher’s Hospital
for Children in 2018, didn’t file
for bankruptcy, and it still
controls the valuable real es-
tate that was the site of Hah-
nemann, close to the legal and
civic heart of Philadelphia.
St. Christopher’s was sold
as part of the bankruptcy case.

The defunct Hahnemann
University Hospital has agreed
to provide insurance for hun-
dreds of new doctors dis-
placed by the historic Phila-
delphia institution’s
bankruptcy.
The hospital and its insur-
ance company—also controlled
by Joel Freedman, the invest-
ment banker who led the
group that acquired Hahne-
mann in early 2018—will cover
a gap that had threatened the
professional futures of resi-
dents and fellows who were in
training at the hospital when
it closed down last year.
Hahnemann will pay about
two-thirds of the $9 million
cost of the insurance, and Mr.
Freedman’s affiliated insur-
ance company will pay for the
rest, according to a Thursday
court filing.
“I and the other former Hah-
nemann trainees I have spoken
with are very happy that the
hospital has agreed to do the
right thing,” said Sukhdeep
Singh, a doctor specializing in
obstetrics and gynecology.
The agreement ends
months of uncertainty for
hundreds of new doctors, who
were trying to find a way to
cover insurance premiums as
high as $95,000 to protect
against lawsuits that might
not be filed for years, stem-
ming from their work at Hah-
nemann. More than 900 doc-

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Closed Hospital Reaches


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