How Meshuggah Bagels and Ruby Jean’s Juicery dealt with rapid growth
January 3, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
Imagine this.
It’s opening day at your quaint cafe and you hope Kansas Citians like your bagels.
It turns out they do — a whole lot. So much in fact that the line spills out the door for the next few weeks, spurring demand that’s more than 300 percent higher than anticipated.
Pair that challenge with the fact you’ve yet to hire a fulltime employee and there’s the plight Janna and Peter Linde faced in the spring of 2016 when they opened Meshuggah Bagels.
“The first three months were absolutely horrible,” Janna said. “We were exhausted mentally and just trying to get through.”
A sweet and sour predicament, rapid growth can deal a devastating blow to a business. Cash flow challenges, operational issues and customer service failures are but a handful of the possible outcomes a startup can experience when demand soars.
So how’d the Lindes handle it? Well, the pair initially chalked up the success as a fleeting trend.
“The big shock for us was that the buzz didn’t die down,” Janna said. “We were still busy every day, weekends there was a line around the corner. We just didn’t know what we were doing, we had no idea.”
Soon after opening, Peter retired to join Janna full time at Meshuggah. Though initially overwhelmed, the pair began to “play defense” to deal with the surge, ensuring a competitor wouldn’t capitalize on their discovery that bagels are big for Kansas Citians, Peter said. The two also became proactive in managing the growth by listening to their customers’ needs, he added.
Peter recognized that the majority of his customers were making a 20-minute drive or more to visit his Midtown location, and he wanted to ensure the bagel shop will stay competitive. In addition to its original location, Meshuggah Bagels will open two new locations in 2017 — one in Overland Park and another in Liberty.
Peter said that if you have a line out the door, you’re doing something wrong. You aren’t listening to your demand, which prompted the firm’s “defensive” moves.
“Playing defense is recognizing where somebody could go against you, and then get there first,” Peter said. “This isn’t the corporate world. At the end of the day, we’re going to get paid for how good or bad our decisions are.”
The couple partially attributes the firm’s success to the strong financial cushion they built for themselves before the launch. The pair saved enough to survive for six months without selling a single product, which also allowed it to respond quickly to the demand, Peter said.
Located in Kansas City’s Westport district, Ruby Jean’s Juicery faced a similar demand challenge for its first few months.
Ruby Jean’s founder Chris Goode said that while he was adequately prepared for the demand with resources, he was was surprised by the toll the traction personally wrecked on him.
“I think I underestimated how much I would have to be in the store. I worked day in and day out, sun in and sun down, and I made myself sick,” Goode said. “I knew it wouldn’t be easy but I underestimated how difficult it would be to really get it to a healthy point to where I could start to step away a little bit.”
Now past its growing pains, the health-minded shop is planning to open two new locations in 2017. He recommended that regardless of your company’s rate of growth, stay true to its mission and priorities will remain clear.
And as a result, his customers have responded.
“I wasn’t surprised (by the success) but I felt blessed and honored,” Goode said. “Even to this day, every time I hear the door chime and see a customer come in — I just smile.”

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Olathe-based Flow Forward raises $1M for vascular device
After completing a preclinical study, Olathe-based Flow Forward Medical nabbed another round of capital for its vascular device. The firm raised another $1 million from a group of unnamed, individual investors, bringing the firm’s total raised to $7 million. Flow Forward created the AFE blood pump system, which is designed for temporary use to quickly…
Park Hill toured the country for its new innovative learning program
The Park Hill School District is introducing a new approach to learning that aims to cultivate more innovative thinking among its students. Starting in Fall 2017, Park Hill conceptualized the LEAD Innovation Studio, a high school in which students will focus on project-, problem- and professional-based learning. The studio aims to not only address growing…
International coworking firm WeWork taps Crossroads for big space
WeWork, an international coworking firm with offices in 37 cities and 12 countries around the globe, is snagging four floors in Kansas City’s Corrigan Station for a new 40,000 square feet space. With locations in Hong Kong, London, Buenos Aires, New York City and many others, the cosmopolitan coworking company will occupy the third through…
Events Preview: Most Likely to Succeed, Digital Sandbox
There are a plethora of entrepreneurial events hosted in Kansas City on a weekly basis. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, investor, supporter, or curious community member — we recommend these upcoming events for you. Are you hosting a relevant community event? Feel free to add it to the FWD/KC calendar for increased exposure. Once your event…
