As a new parent, there is no denying the fact your #1 customer is going to be elbows to eyeballs in the less desirable end of their baby for the next 2-3 years. 100% of your customers are buying diapers, but what choices are they making and where are they buying them from?
Babies poop. All of them. Make the best of it!
Kanga Care makes it easy to tackle the cloth diaper decision -- it's a no-brainer. Whether your sleepless nights come from running a business, being a new parent, or BOTH, we could all use a little more of these simple choices.
The Heath of Baby:
Cloth diapers are a healthier option. Cloth diapers are chemical free and as easy to wash and care for as a load of t-shirts. Cloth diapers have revolutionized the diapering industry in the past 10 years. Modern cloth diapers, like the Rumparooz® by Kanga Care, now offer a realistic and easy-to-use option over disposables. The ease of a disposable diaper is compromised by the chemical exposure and damage posed to our environment. Families no longer have to accept this compromise. The Rumparooz® have patented leak proof technology and get the diapering job done -- better -- with, no leaks, no rash, no trash and and NO chemicals. All this while being so ridiculously cute that parents are going out of their way to have that fashionable print poking out of the back of baby's pants.
The Health of the Pocketbook:
Cloth diapering families save a minimum of $3,010, per child, over the cost of disposable diapers. One set of cloth diapers will cost a family $500 -- less than most strollers these days. This one set of cloth diapers will last 1 baby from birth (6lbs) through potty training (40+lbs). To diaper a baby using disposable diapers from birth to age 3, a family will spend a minimum of $3,510, not to mention those additional costs such as diaper rash ointments, wipes, diaper pail refills, training pants, and swim diapers.
The Health of our Planet
One set of cloth diapers for 1 child will keep roughly 9000 disposables from entering our landfills. Disposable diapers take more than 500 years to decompose, if at all. We know there are roughly 11,000 births per day in the US. Over the course of 1 year, the babies born on the 1st day will add 33 million diapers to our landfills. One entire year of newborns will add 12 billion disposable diapers to our landfills. And that number only reflects the newborns! At today's rate of use, it is estimated that our landfills are going to have to accommodate 13 trillion disposable diapers before we have hopes of the very first disposable diapers starting to decompose.
info@kanga-care.com