Spinbrush: John Osher. The Electric Toothbrush That Sold for $475M

旋转刷:约翰·奥斯勒。售价达4.75亿美元的电动牙刷

How I Built This with Guy Raz

2026-02-16

1 小时 0 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Before Spinbrush became the top selling toothbrush in the U.S—and before Procter & Gamble paid $475M for it—John Osher was a teenager selling earrings for $4.99.  In this episode, John walks through the strange, scrappy, but disciplined path that led to one of the fastest consumer-product breakouts ever: from a six-year stint in a commune (where he learned plumbing and carpentry), to selling baby products and battery-powered spinning lollipops. Finally, the big bet: a $5 electric toothbrush that was cheap enough to compete with manual brushes, and good enough to become a best-seller. You’ll hear the make-or-break moment that many founders can’t survive: the decision to scrap 400,000 defective brushes before they hit the shelves. And then, the stealth move that turned a “licensing pitch” into a buyout —with one perfectly timed bluff. What you’ll learn: Why pricing is about what the market will pay, not what your product costsThe hidden power of packaging (How “Try Me” changed everything)How to recover from “entrepreneurial terror” Why scrapping inventory can be the most important decision you’ll ever makeThe acquisition formula: you get a lot more money when they want to buy… than when you want to sell Timestamps:  07:01 - A pricing lesson that John used forever: The 19-cent earrings that sold for $4.99. 12:04 - Six years in a commune and the unexpected skill stack: plumbing and construction. 22:09 - “Entrepreneurial terror” and a lifeline from Toys R Us  29:11 - Spinning lollipops lead to a $166 million Hasbro exit. 35:54 - What’s the real competition: $80 electric toothbrushes, or cheap manual ones? 38:42 - The design breakthrough: fixed + oscillating bristles. 55:43 - P&G admits: “We’ve bought three companies like yours… and ruined them all.” 58:07 - The earnout problem: What happens when Spinbrush performs much better than expected?   Hey—want to be a guest on HIBT? If you’re building a business, why not get advice from some of the greatest entrepreneurs on Earth? Every Thursday on the HIBT Advice Line, a previous HIBT guest helps new entrepreneurs work through the challenges they’re facing right now. Advice that’s smart, actionable, and absolutely free. Just call 1-800-433-1298, leave a message, and you may soon get guidance from someone who started where you did, and went on to build something massive. So—give us a call. We can’t wait to hear what you’re working on. This episode was produced by Katherine Sypher, with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant, with research by Rommel Wood.  Our engineers were Patrick Murray and Kwesi Lee.  See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Hey,

  • just a quick message

  • if you're building a business right now Imagine getting advice from the founder of tart cosmetics or Airbnb or Mark Cuban.

  • Well You can get that advice.

  • Every Thursday, we drop an episode of the How I Built This Advice Line.

  • It's where I bring back a previous founder we featured on a past episode.

  • And together, we help real entrepreneurs, people selling skincare,

  • dog toys, pottery, food, whatever.

  • We help them work through the challenges they're facing right now.

  • And the best part?

  • This kind of advice world-class battle tested is completely free.

  • All you have have to do is call 1-800-433-1298.

  • Tell us what you're building in under a minute and you might be the next guest on the advice line.

  • So give us a call or send us a voice memo to hibt.id.wondery.com and tell us how we can help you.

  • Our first 100,000 pieces were defective that we shipped.

  • Were defective?

  • Defective.

  • The water run right through the toothbrush and out the bottom.

  • It would break in a month.

  • I went back to my partners and I said, if I continue to sell this, it will die.