Simply entitled: November Blog 🤓✨

Chantel Daniel

Hope all is well in your part of the world! Creating ethical solutions is no easy task but we are committed to bringing you these updates through these monthly blog posts. It has been a great way to draw insight to what we are working on and getting our audience more involved - and really would like to thank you all for reading! 🤓  As we step into a new month drawing closer to year end, it’s a great time to reflect on what a progressive month October has been for The Good Coffee Project! Black History Month here in the UK presented a...

Read more

You can make a difference in the world!

Chantel Daniel

Hey #GoodCoffeelovers! ☕️🌱👋🏽 Today’s blog is all about inviting in the freshness of the new month of September after the summer holidays and getting back to work… Since incorporating this company in July 2020 and launching the e-commerce site in October, The Good Coffee Project ™️ has seen tremendous organic growth! You may have noted, even more since our blog post in June that the world has gone crazy for cryptocurrency. El Salvador 🇸🇻 a nation well known for coffee has just one more week to go until they acknowledge Bitcoin as a legal tender that can be used everywhere!...

Read more

What a month that is October… ✊🏽🍂

Chantel Daniel

October 1st is a special date for The Good Coffee Project ™️ ☕️🌱 for a number of reasons. Firstly, it’s International Coffee Day; secondly, it marks the start of Black History Month and thirdly, it’s the first anniversary of the launch of our e-commerce store on Shopify, who is a huge supporter of Black-owned brands and initiatives. The culture, community and history that goes into making a single cup of coffee is mind-blowing to me, as an entrepreneur in this industry. When I was given the seed to buy my first coffee machine to build a profitable business from. Since making...

Read more

What would an Equitable Coffee Industry look like? 👀

Chantel Daniel

A fair and equitable world would be considered a utopia for the poorest people in the world, many of them who farm coffee. Those who benefit directly from the inequality frame the belief that such an ideal is impossible or not worth the effort to obtain. Let’s think of a utopian society where everyone in the market is treated with equal respect as equitable partners, determining value and benefit in accordance with their level of input. An equitable coffee industry where importance is placed on reinvesting value back into each component of the supply chain and the communities where coffee is grown, enabling the farmer to...

Read more