Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘I Want To Make A Lot Of Money Doing Good’
‘I Want To Make A Lot Of Money Doing Good’
Aug 24, 2025 10:23 AM

Starting a business is a risky undertaking. You need money, a product or service people want and away to deliver that product or service that keeps some of that money in your pocket. For social entrepreneurs, the stakes are even higher: their goal is to do something good while making money.

Tom Szaky of TerraCycle is quite clear: “I want to make a lot money doing good.” And he just may do it. TerraCycle has been based in the U.S. for 13 years, but Szaky and his family munist Hungary when he was very young. The ended up first in Holland, then Canada, then the U.S. One thing that struck young Szaky and his father was the amount of “good stuff” people threw out:

In Hungary back then, you needed a licence for a TV set,” he explains.

You couldn’t just go and buy one. Instead, after applying for a licence maybe a year later you’d get a black and white TV, and you’d get the one state channel.

Tom says: “Only a few years later we end up in Canada where every Friday my dad and I would drive round and see mountains of TVs thrown out of every apartment buildings.

“We’d pick a few up just for fun – because we thought ‘who would throw out a TV?’ and they all worked and they were colour!”

This, he adds, got him to thinking about the concept of waste. At the same time, he was impressed and inspired by the entrepreneurs he met in Canada (parents of friends of his), and decided he wanted to run a business.

Don’t think of TerraCycle as a bunch of garbage-pickers, though. (They do have people who donate usable refuse.) The business has contracts with the likes of McVities, Johnson & Johnson, and Kenco. This $20 million a pany specializes in transforming “difficult” items:

pany’s business model is to find waste and turn it into something useful, for a profit. It collects things that are generally considered difficult to recycle – such as cigarette stubs, coffee capsules, or biscuit wrappers – and finds a way to reuse them.

That is done mainly through processing them down into a material and selling them to a manufacturer, and to a lesser extent by turning them into products such as bags, benches or dustbins.

TerraCycle offices tend to be in low-rent areas of the cities where they operate, decorated with graffiti, with “walls” made of soda bottles. Is it quirky? Yes. Does it work? You bet. Since it’s founding 13 years ago, TerraCycle has not only managed to make a profit, but donate $6 million to various schools and charities and is looking to expand business even further. Making money? Yes. Doing good? You bet.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Coronavirus quarantine: pontifical universities become enterprising in their instruction
Elias Sader (social sciences) and Eamonn Clark (theology) tell us how empty classrooms were immediately and smoothly substituted via digital instruction platforms. They remark how this has forced traditional teachers to e enterprising in their methodologies of instruction (especially with panying visuals) yet with some natural “learning curves” and unintended consequences. The good news is that the high-tech digital classroom models being developed and implemented may be a “beta test” for perfecting and later expanding some of the world’s best...
The most important truth in Cuomo and Trump’s ventilator dispute
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and President Donald Trump are verbally sparring over who bears the blame for the state’s lack of ventilators, a crucial need for patients suffering from the coronavirus. Beneath the incendiary rhetoric of the two leaders, neither of whom is a stranger to verbal fisticuffs, lies an important but little-remarked fact. The insight revolves around one number: 15,783. That figure spotlights failings well beyond this controversy. The battle of blame-shifting involves who should be purchasing ventilators...
10 ways businesses are helping you during coronavirus
As bination of isolation and bad news about the coronavirus pandemic depresses Americans, it is vital to look for the silver lining. The good news is that businesses from coast to coast and around the world are performing good deeds, whether civic-minded or profit-driven, that are making people’s lives better. Here are just a few examples: 1. Apple donates 10 million face masks to healthcare facilities. Last Saturday, Apple pledged to donate two million facemasks to healthcare workers. Vice President...
How to learn new skills in a challenging economy
People all around the world have embraced new responsibilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some continue to work providing needed goods and services, while others are discovering new ways their work can meet those needs while they are physically distant from their colleagues and those whom they serve. Some have embraced new roles caring for relatives and neighbors or educating children who are home from school. And far too many find themselves without work as businesses struggle and governments intervene to...
Acton Line podcast: A hopeful message in a time of crisis from Rev. Robert Sirico
In this episode, Acton’s President and Co-founder, Rev. Robert Sirico, offers some thoughts on what the role of the government should be during a crisis. When we’re confronted with unique crises, especially like the Coronavirus pandemic the world is facing now, there are justified government interventions. However, we can’t discount the principle of subsidiarity, as well as the division of labor and voluntary action. How can we wisely approach these principles in the reality of our current context? Rev. Sirico...
New issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (Vol. 22, No. 2)
The newest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality is now live on our website here and in the mail to subscribers. This issue includes an excellent lineup of scholarly articles ranging from Christian education, to private property in the early Church, to sixteenth-century political philosophy, to environmentalism, to the crisis of the public square. As a special feature, it also contains the papers from a symposium on the Dominican contribution to liberty, with contributions from Catherine Joseph Droste,...
Thoughts from Rev. Robert Sirico during the coronavirus pandemic (Video 1)
During uncertain times, Rev. Robert Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute, offers his thoughts on human flourishing, subsidiarity, and more. (This video was recorded and released on March 20, 2020.) Some of Father Sirico’s mended resources are listed below the video. Robert Higgs, Crisis and Leviathan (Oxford University Press, 1987) On the principle of subsidiarity On Smith and the responsibilities of the state, including in time of emergency On the failure of centralized supranational responses ...
How freer markets can help during the coronavirus crisis with Rev. Robert Sirico
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, Rev. Robert Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute, shares thoughts on how reducing regulatory and tax burdens can help our struggling economy as we fight the virus. (This video was recorded and released on March 25, 2020.) If you missed the first video in this series, you can view it here. ...
Lesser-known books by Wilhelm Röpke that you should read
With so many people around the world in moderate or full quarantines and lockdowns, many of them are turning to books to pass the time, ease their fears, or simply take advantage of an unexpected and involuntary opportunity to recharge their intellectual batteries. This being the case, I’d like to offer a short summary of some of the lesser-known books written by one of my favorite thinkers, the German economist Wilhelm Röpke, in the hope that it may entice some...
The other ‘coronacrisis’: Are our free associations heading to the catacombs?
As alarm bells continue ringing for the coronavirus pandemic, governments have aggressively stepped up heavy-handed measures to flatten the curve of contagion – especially through forced social distancing. While surely beneficial to slow the pace of infection, such radical isolation has halted virtually all public gatherings and most private free associations at work, worship, school and private charities. Should such lock-down procedures endure for a much longer-term and with greater severity, what will this mean? Will our free associations head...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved