![]()
Miki Agrawal is a social entrepreneur with extensive experience using community-led local development to build sustainable, profitable green businesses. She is an advocate for localizing economies and encouraging communities to come up with their solutions when it comes to waste disposal issues.
View this post on Instagram
Agrawal currently serves as the CEO of Tushy, an inspired bidet attachment platform. Tushy is a fast-growing company whose mission is to help distribute bidets and other hygiene products globally.
She has a track record of building profitable companies aligned with her values. She is using this model to positively impact women, the environment, and local communities worldwide.
Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out and loudly proclaiming “Wow! What a ride!””
-Hunter S. Thompson”— . (@twinmiki) October 6, 2022
Agrawal has been committed to solving the plastic waste problem and is determined to make sure that environmentally harmful materials can be reduced and better used.
Miki Agrawal’s passion has always been to help communities get better at doing business so that they can impact their environment and the global economy in a positive way that is aligned with their unique cultural values. She talks about how the world can innovatively, through technological advancements, adopt reusable products to mitigate the environmental effects it has on our environment.
She believes that bidet technology is part of the solution to eradicating third-world sanitation and hygiene problems for the world and saving millions of trees that would have been cut down. She is leading a large-scale effort to bring this technology to the developing and developing world, where the need for accessible and affordable hygiene solutions is greatest.
Miki Agrawal has been very in helping communities build sustainable business models to tackle the global waste crisis and poverty. She believes communities should have a seat at the table where they can discuss the issues they experience to find actionable solutions that will help them improve their lives and make the world a better place.