2019 Startups to Watch: Tea-Biotics Kombucha taps into thirst for better beverages

January 14, 2019  |  Tommy Felts

Lisa Bledsoe, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

Editor’s note: Startland selected 12 Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2019’s companies. Click here to view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch.

Tea-Biotics Kombucha’s elevator pitch: Tea-Biotics Kombucha is a live, probiotic, organic beverage that is handcrafted locally in Kansas City using the finest organic ingredients. The product is for people who are striving to live a healthier life.

Like the scoby organism that forms its base, Tea-Biotics Kombucha is spreading across Kansas City in hopes of ultimately quenching a regional and national thirst for more healthy beverages, said Lisa Bledsoe.

10) Tea-Biotics Kombucha

Founders: Lisa Bledsoe (investor/partner Rich Downs)
Founding year: 2015
Amount raised to date: $700,000
Noteworthy investor: KC Equity Advisors
Current employee count: 18

“This past year has flown by. We just can’t make enough, which has been the problem I’ve had all along,” said Bledsoe, who founded the company in 2015 after home operations forced her to expand the one-time hobby into what is now a thriving wholesale and retail business. “It’s just progressively getting us to the maximum capacity of wherever we’re trying to make our kombucha.”

Click here to read more about the origins of Tea-Biotics.

Though bottling operations only began in earnest in early 2018, the company has grown from 30 to more than 200 corporate customers, with annual sales jumping from $300,000 to “north of a million,” said Rich Downs, an investor-turned partner in Tea-Biotics. It’s available in more than 200 locations across Kansas City, including at a taproom in Lenexa.

The product has an almost hypnotic appeal, he said. After building and selling two businesses, Downs planned to invest in several small businesses. When he met Bledsoe and her customers, however, he fully committed himself to just one.

“The continued momentum of healthier options coming into the marketplace today was a big draw,” Downs said. “Soda is a $200 billion industry that’s getting crushed. You’re starting to see healthier restaurants, grocery stores, food and beverages. The space in general really caught my attention.”

Rich Downs, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

Rich Downs, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

Downs has been struck by the stories and behavior of some of Tea-Biotics’ biggest fans, he said. The business’ No. 1 retail unit in Kansas City is at St. Luke’s Hospital on the Country Club Plaza, Downs said.

“Information about kombucha’s benefits is trickling down from trainers, dietitians, doctors, nurses and others in the health and wellness space — especially now that we’re making it readily available for consumers,” he said. “It’s just growing like wildfire.”

Notable clients include professional sports powerhouses the Royals, Chiefs and Sporting KC.

“They all contacted us so the players would have access to our kombucha,” Downs said. “That’s pretty profound. For each one of those professional sports teams, we have a kegerator that has four taps with kombucha on it.”

The taproom in Lenexa offers customers from the public to access 24 flavors of Kombucha, six days a week, Bledsoe said.

“It’s a very unique experience for the consumer,” she said. “Customers always really enjoy the hands-on approach of coming in to fill up their bottles, get a sample, meet whoever is making the kombucha.”

Available flavors include Hibiscus Watermelon, Beach Life, Blueberry, Cherry Lime, Elderberry Mango, Immunity, Spiced Cider, Ginger Lime, Lavender, Turmeric Lime, and newly released flavors CBD Lemon Lime and Coffee.

Click here to find Tea-Biotics Kombucha on tap.

A new 12,600-square-foot facility is now under way, on the border of Lenexa and Olathe, and is expected to feature a second, oversized taproom, production tours and other interactive elements, Downs said.

“It’s essentially like building a brewery,” he said, calling mother-of-two Bledsoe the business’s masterbrewer and mastermind.

Having expanded to Columbia/Jefferson City and Springfield in 2018, Tea-Biotics now plans to open five new markets in 2019 and projects to double sales every year over the next five years, Downs said.

“We’re slowly taking over new territories as we can accommodate them,” Bledsoe added.

Startups to Watch in 2019

1) Bungii
2) ShotTracker
3) RiskGenius
4) Metactive
5) Pepper IoT
6) Signal Kit
7) Life Equals
8) Bellwethr
9) Homebase.ai
10) Tea-Biotics Kombucha
11) SquareOffs
12) Zohr

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Ben Hubbard and Bek Abdullayev, Super Dispatch COO

        Super Dispatch hires experienced startup driver as COO to navigate its global growth map for 2019 and beyond

        By Tommy Felts | April 30, 2019

        From the fifth employee at Webmail.us to No. 50 for KC-based Super Dispatch, a startup leader with a long track record of building innovative operations has joined the executive team alongside founder and CEO Bek Abdullayev. “Super Dispatch is taking off,” said Ben Hubbard, the company’s new chief operating officer. “They have things figured out…

        Thee Outpost at Collective EX, Thou Mayest

        Thou Mayest acquires Quay Coffee; three new locations to stretch footprint from River Market to Crossroads to Nelson-Atkins

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2019

        A Kansas City coffee brand just got bolder, announcing the acquisition of another coffee company and plans to open an entirely new concept in the Crossroads. Thou Mayest is now operating Quay Coffee — with its two locations in River Market and at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art — confirmed Bo Nelson, co-founder of Thou Mayest…

        Kansas Entrepreneurship Challenge

        $75K up for grabs in student pitch competition backed by Kansas Masons, K-State

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2019

        A cross-section of student entrepreneurs from across the state of Kansas are set to win big, Tuesday — if they can level with a room full of sharks at the K-State College of Business. Testing the power in their pitches, the Kansas Entrepreneurship Challenge is expected to award student innovators from 65 high schools and the…

        WeWork Corrigan Station, WeWork report

        WeWork report links coworking space to success of startups, Techstars KC, KC Collective

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2019

        Nearly two years after it made its Kansas City debut, WeWork is delivering a measurable impact on the startup ecosystem, the company said Monday. A first-of-its-kind WeWork research project — the WeWork Global Impact Report — examined the scope of the Crossroads Arts District co-working site and its influence on entrepreneurs metro-wide. Takeaways from the…