Boosted by Troost, Ruby Jean’s pressing ahead with YMCA, grocery, Atlanta deals
June 23, 2018 | Tommy Felts
It’s Troost location will be a model for Ruby Jean’s expansion, said Chris Goode, but the juicery’s growth won’t be limited to standalone, brick-and-mortar sites.
“Ideally, the way we truly scale is our wholesale model,” said Goode, founder of the health and fitness-focused Kansas City-born business. “I’m in talks right now, trying to get it down to a science of how we create a co-packing partnership where we can leverage our grocery store and YMCA relationships to easily penetrate and get instant access to more than 100 other locations.”
With a grand opening set July 7 for a “Ruby Jean’s To-Go” inside the North Kansas City YMCA — the first time the 165-year-old organization has partnered with a third-party food and beverage provider, Goode said — momentum for Ruby Jean’s continues to build.
After opening its lauded Troost location in November, the juicery debuted its first self-operated grocery store location in late December — a collaboration with Ball’s Food Stores that put Ruby Jean’s in the Price Chopper at North Oak and Barry Road, as well as creating potential to enter Ball’s other Price Chopper and Hen House stores, Goode said.
“These are strategic partnerships with two mainstays,” he said of Ball’s and YMCA. “We’re working on early models, trying to prove out the concept to see if it makes sense.”
Ruby Jean’s Juicery was named one of Startland’s Top Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2018.
The business also is in the process of building a juice bar location in Stillwater, Oklahoma, with a licensee partner that already runs a Ruby Jean’s location within the coincidentally-named Ruby’s Market in Springfield, Missouri.
“It will be similar to the Price Chopper setup, we just don’t run it,” Goode said.
He also is working through the details of a partnership to open two licensee locations in Atlanta, Georgia, he said, noting it’s just a matter of time before the deals are done.
“When we look to penetrate a new market, we’re obviously looking for an area that’s underserved. But also we’re looking for a diverse pool of customers,” Goode said. “It’s not going to be hard to find a Troost-like area in some of these locations, but we really want to attract a broad audience — from the affluent to the opposite, and everything in between.”
Goode’s Troost model for Ruby Jean’s targets every walk of life — age, sex, race — and tries to be strategic in positioning for accessibility, he said.
“Starting in Kansas City, we came more from unexpected, urban roots — 40th and Broadway, 11th and Main, 30th and Troost — and will now start to expand toward affluent areas,” Goode said. “Not the opposite, which is most common: starting with the affluent and moving in the other direction. So we’ll try to keep that model in new markets.”
With his brick-and-mortar Kansas City operations largely focused on Troost, Goode said he’s reluctantly ready to let go of Ruby Jean’s original flagship location in Westport. The site closed in 2017, but previously was expected to relaunch this spring.
“We have a few other irons in the fire that aren’t solidified enough for us to mention, but Westport is no more for us, at least for the time being,” he said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘The people demand mustard’: This stained glass artist dipped into corn dogs (and hungry shoppers ate it up)
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. LAWRENCE — Selling holiday shoppers on stained glass corn dogs was unexpectedly easy, said Darleen Schillaci; adding mustard and keeping up with buyers’ appetite, however, proved the meatiest challenge. The…
Skip shopping and shipping: Your guide to last-minute, KC-made gifts you can still get in stores
Forget naughty and nice: one Kansas City-pieced business has a puzzling present for each person on Santa’s “weird and mellow” list. Locals can still find them on KC-area store shelves — while they last. Birdie — a sister company to Stefanie and Tim Ekeren’s popular Kansas City Puzzle Company — packs each eye-catching box with…
One issue cuts across all political lines: How it could be the antidote to a divided America
Entrepreneurship is a way to unify the United States at a time with great political division, said Victor Hwang. “It’s an issue that cuts across party lines,” explained the founder and CEO of Right to Start. “And it’s something Americans really care about.” Hwang, previously an executive at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, recently published…
Small biz makers worry Trump tariffs could be ‘recipe for recession’; Economists, farmers share concerns about trade war
An enthusiastic smile spreads across Katie Mabry Van Dieren’s face as three small groups of new customers flow into her Brookside Plaza shop — a space filled as high as the Shop Local KC owner can reach with colorful, off-beat, and functional goods and gifts from Kansas City makers. “We smelled something wonderful from outside…

