WITH technology that facilitates pay-as-you-go waste collection, Waterford company, Kollect, is aiming to become the Uber of the waste industry.
The 18-month start-up has created a booking engine to provide an on-demand service to those who don’t need yearly contracts or weekly collections.
“Our target is the 5% to 10% of the population who want less regular collections than are currently available. They include holiday-home owners and small households, which don’t generate much waste,” said company co-founder and chief executive, John O’Connor.
It charges €12 per refuse bin, €10 for organic waste, and €6 for recycling for one-off collections.
Kollect, which employs 12 people, and which is about to launch in a third city, is the first company in the world to develop this type of system,” Mr O’Connor said.
“We are now fundraising in order to launch in the UK this year,” he said, adding that Kollect aims, in the long-term, to expand into Europe and the US.
The company’s three founders, Mr O’Connor, a business graduate, John Hegarty, an engineer, and Robbie Skuse, a business information systems graduate, met at a start-up event in Cork in 2013.
“We had a shared interest in start-ups, in technology, and in working out ways to do things differently, said Mr O’Connor, explaining that their first venture was upChore.
The Dublin-based company created a booking engine that allowed people to book a house-cleaning service online.
Spotting a gap in the waste market, they shifted their attention to bin collections, in 2016, and adapted their booking engine to it.
Moving to the City Enterprise Centre, in Waterford, they set up Kollect, partnered with a bin-collection company. They began providing a service that allows people to book once-off collections, or collections every three or four weeks.
“The booking engine operates by finding the next date that a partner’s bin truck passes a customer’s house. The revenue model is simple. Kollect takes commission for each booking and passes on the contractor’s percentage, once the bin is picked up,’’ he says.
Mr O’Connor says the service solves problems for consumers who want either one-off waste collection or a waste collection every three or four weeks.