Long before Covid-19, it was the seasonal flu that people feared, and the 2017 flu season was a bad one. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 45 million people got sick that year, over 800,000 bad enough to be hospitalized, and 61,000 died. Of course, most Americans didn’t think about statistics like this back then—but David Rapps did.
Rapps is the CEO of iFly, a company that makes a budget-friendly line of luggage stocked by Target and Walmart. As a man who suffers from a chronic illness he’s had since adolescence, Rapps is always looking to reduce his odds of catching something. And since he often found himself on commercial flights, he’d long ago developed the habit of squirting some sanitizer into his hands and swabbing down the armrests with disinfecting wipes before buckling in. Members of his family would do the same thing.
Or try to. One day, Rapps recalled, “my cousin forgot her antiseptic wipes at home before boarding her flight,” so she flew with the germs. And then, once she’d landed, she told Rapps about the anxiety the experience had caused her. Which got Rapps thinking: “Wouldn’t it be convenient to offer health essentials like wipes and face masks in a kit?”
The idea of selling a flight survival kit complete with a face mask might have seemed like overkill to most members of the traveling public—but now that Covid-19 has rewritten most of life’s rulebook, it no longer goes.
“Airplanes, hotels, cruise ships, trains and subways are notoriously filled with germs,” Rapps told Adweek, “so we made our mission helping people stay healthy.”
The mission, as it were, takes the form of three kits that offer travelers the kind of germ-warfare weaponry poised to become standard equipment. These range from the $6.99 Germ-Free Smart Kit (it features hand gel, gloves and face mask) on up to the $9.95 Healthy Smart Kit, which comes with everything from antiseptic hand wipes to a headrest cover.
Rapp’s innate microbial awareness couldn’t have been better timed. While many brands have scrambled to get new products to market to deal with the realities of life during coronavirus, iFly’s original Healthy Smart Kit—which was in development for two years and meets both FDA and TSA guidelines—first hit stores in late 2019. Now, halfway through 2020, that kit has an established track record (including a four-star rating on Amazon), which explains why it nearly sold out once Covid-19 hit.
The company has already sold kits to major organizations including the New York Mets and the Visiting Nurse Service of New York. The demand prompted Rapp to add two more kits to his lineup, which are shipping out to retailers now.
“The iFly Smart Kit is well-suited for the corporate traveler as the country starts to open up again,” observed Jen Miller, who works as executive creative director of brand strategy shop Scrum50 and whose resume includes leading the U.S. digital launch of Dove’s “Real Beauty” campaign.
And even with business travel (indeed, all travel) at historic lows, Miller wagered that there’s still a need for a product like this. “While Covid-19 will have changed the way we look at business travel and many won’t require their employees hop on planes anytime soon,” she said, “those who find it a necessity will be looking for ways to keep their employees safe.”
In a Harris Poll last month, 48% of Americans vowed they wouldn’t fly until the pandemic is over—but that still leaves over half the population who will.
Rapp’s experience as a manufacturer has helped him get his kits into major retailers including Walmart, Staples, 7-Eleven, Big Lots and Walgreens. But the key distribution channel will be those everything stores you find yourself dashing into near the boarding gates to pick up that $9 bottle of water. The kits will sell at Hudson News, Paradies Lagardère and other in-terminal shops.
https://www.adweek.com/agencies/airplane-germs-sanitizing-kits-ifly/