
Thus far, Bite Toothpaste Bits has no outside investors and carries no debt. They also hand built their website (which was featured on a prominenent women's site) and have received 2,000,000 visitors. The product has currently been on the market for ten months and the entrepreneurs predict making $1,300,000 by the end of the year.
#Bite toothpaste bits amazon free
The entrepreneurs admit that there are several competitors to their product but that Bite Toothpaste Bits is the only one that is 100% palm oil free and that comes in a recyclable bottle. Once this launches, Bite Toothpaste Bits will then be the only flourinated tablet type toothpaste in the United States. And, in fact to Katrina's point, they are currently developing a flouride line that they will seek the American Dental Association's approval for. Pitched by an entrepreneurial team of a girlfriend and a boyfriend, one of them made friends with a chemist to help formulate the bits. Guest shark Katrina Lake speaks up and let's the entrepreneurs know that she likes the idea and has had simmilar concerns about toothpaste but stopped using other "bit" type toothpaste after a warning from her dentist that they don't include flouride. This then turns into toothpaste and does the job without all the attendent garbage (though it remains unclear how this helps with swallowing toothpaste.)īite Toothpaste Bits are flavored with natural peppermint oils to make them extra tasty. All one need do is pop a "bit" into their mouth, bite down, and then start brushing with a wet toothbrush.

To combat these evils of big toothpaste, these entrepreneurs have created Bite Toothpaste Bits that come in single serving sizes sold in recyclable glass jars.

Also, apparently, we also swallow about 1.4 gallons of toothpaste over an average lifetime. In the meantime, she claims, one billion toothpaste tubes end up in landfills every year. In fact, according to the entrepreneurs, the first toothpaste tube was actually invested in 1886 and hasn't changed much since. Bite Toothpaste Bits claims to be a re-invention of a product that hasn't seen much change in one hundred years.
