KC startup boosts overseas businesses
October 1, 2015 | Ashley Jost
Holly Godfrey’s business partners are in India, Nepal and Rwanda.
The timing works well, since their daytime falls during her nighttime. As she gets ready to shift her focus from her full-time day job as the rehabilitation manager at Truman Medical Center to her startup, Catalyst Scrubs, her colleagues abroad are just beginning their day.
Godfrey launched her company Sept. 1, and in almost four weeks, she has sold more than $3,000 worth of her product: scrubs.
She works with three businesses across the country that are owned and operated entirely by women. Her company partner in India produces the scrubs that Catalyst sells online, at pop-up boutiques in hospitals and in a growing number of retail stores. The businesses in Rwanda and Nepal create accessories like lanyards, keychains and nametag holders.
All of the businesses Godfrey works with are independent, which is important to her.
“I’ve been advocating for social justice issues for a long time,” she said. “I’ve been looking at what helps with empowering women and stopping human trafficking, and research shows that people don’t do as well with supporting general charities as they do with the idea of job creation. And women in some of these countries have a hard time creating jobs.”
Godfrey connects with her business partners via Skype and phone calls most nights around 9 p.m. after she’s out of work when they’re starting their day. It’s like most businesses, she said, we talk about their needs and what needs to happen to grow Catalyst as well as their overseas business to scale.
In the four weeks since launch, Godfrey said she has doubled growth each week.
There are eight women who are employed full-time at Alpha Fashions in India, where the scrubs are made. Back in the U.S., it’s just Godfrey with some support from her husband.
And she’s working toward fair trade certification. It takes one year of sales to apply, but Godfrey says applying the fair trade principles and ethics to the way she supports the businesses and the women she works with is the whole reason she decided to take this idea to the BetaBlox Accelerator in April.
Godfrey presented to 1 Million Cups in mid-September, and is a finalist in the Kansas City Kansas Community College Innovation Summit Pitch Perfect Competition on Oct. 2.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Farmobile lawsuit claims dismissed, CEO says ‘Truth won out and justice was served’
A more than two-year legal dispute over trade secrets has hit a milestone, Farmobile announced Friday, as a federal judge dismissed all claims against the Leawood-based farm data firm. “We welcome the court’s decision. Truth won out and justice was served,” said Jason Tatge, CEO of Farmobile. “Farmobile takes great pride in the development of…
Edcoda founder after pivot to new edtech app Boddle: ‘I wish I had failed faster’
Clarence Tan held onto his startup Edcoda longer than he should have, the founder admitted, but his pivot to a new edtech learning app, Boddle, should prove a more filling fit for users. “Boddle has a much better underlying vision and mission, as well as being better in terms of how it would work in…
New STEAM Studio ‘pop-up’ lab planned for Rockhurst library along Troost
With its quiet atmosphere and stacks of source materials, the bottom floor of the Greenlease Library at Rockhurst University is a great place to study or do research. But it doesn’t necessarily strike one as a state-of-the-art design thinking and learning lab — yet. Starting this summer, that section of the university’s library will be…
City: Best way to avoid tickets in downtown KCMO, Crossroads? Pay via ParkMobile app
Unsafe parking conditions in the city’s downtown business districts have spun out of control, prompting increased ticketing, said Matt Staub. The ParkMobile app can reduce such headaches for motorists searching for an open spot along busy Kansas City streets. “People are kind of making up their own parking spaces, parking in ‘no-parking’ zones — all…
