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50. People Helping People, Period: The Origins of a 23-Year-Old Founder & Transforming Your Business in a Pandemic, with Claire Coder
Podcast |
Gravity
Publisher |
Brett Kaufman
Media Type |
audio
Publication Date |
Jan 18, 2021
Episode Duration |
01:07:51

Claire Coder is a 23-year-old serial entrepreneur, a member of the Forbes 30 Under 30, and a proud college dropout.

Claire started her first business, a promotional products company, at age 16. In just two years, she was able to grow the business to employ eight independent distributors, sell in boutiques across the Midwest, and sell internationally online. That sparked her passion for building companies and led her to dropping out of college to launch Aunt Flow.

Headquartered in Ohio, Aunt Flow ensures every bathroom outside the home is stocked with freely accessible menstrual products. Four years of grit and hustle has positioned Aunt Flow to sell to hundreds of companies and schools, raise venture capital from top firms, and give back 500,000 menstrual products to people in need. 

What Brett asks:

  • [03:40] How old were you when you started selling beer to construction workers?
  • [07:25] What are the childhood experiences that shaped you?
  • [20:25] Connecting the dots from Claire’s perspective on death to creating a brand centered around menstruation.
  • [24:47] Is the education system really measuring how capable people are?
  • [40:02] Tell me about how you were hustling to pay the bills after dropping out of college.
  • [48:25] Tell us about how you got the idea for Aunt Flow and the early days of the business.
  • [51:25] How did you adapt and sustain your business during the pandemic?
  • [01:00:12] Can you talk about the future of Aunt Flow?

To learn more about intentional living, and for the complete show notes, visit: gravityproject.com

Resources:

Gravity is a production of Crate Media.

Claire Coder is a 23-year-old serial entrepreneur, a member of the Forbes 30 Under 30, and a proud college dropout. We talk about her unique relationship with death, being a proud college dropout, founding Aunt Flow, and pivoting your business during a pandemic.

Claire Coder is a 23-year-old serial entrepreneur, a member of the Forbes 30 Under 30, and a proud college dropout.

Claire started her first business, a promotional products company, at age 16. In just two years, she was able to grow the business to employ eight independent distributors, sell in boutiques across the Midwest, and sell internationally online. That sparked her passion for building companies and led her to dropping out of college to launch Aunt Flow.

Headquartered in Ohio, Aunt Flow ensures every bathroom outside the home is stocked with freely accessible menstrual products. Four years of grit and hustle has positioned Aunt Flow to sell to hundreds of companies and schools, raise venture capital from top firms, and give back 500,000 menstrual products to people in need. 

What Brett asks:

  • [03:40] How old were you when you started selling beer to construction workers?
  • [07:25] What are the childhood experiences that shaped you?
  • [20:25] Connecting the dots from Claire’s perspective on death to creating a brand centered around menstruation.
  • [24:47] Is the education system really measuring how capable people are?
  • [40:02] Tell me about how you were hustling to pay the bills after dropping out of college.
  • [48:25] Tell us about how you got the idea for Aunt Flow and the early days of the business.
  • [51:25] How did you adapt and sustain your business during the pandemic?
  • [01:00:12] Can you talk about the future of Aunt Flow?

To learn more about intentional living, and for the complete show notes, visit: gravityproject.com

Resources:

Gravity is a production of Crate Media.

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