Tea-Biotics bottles $1.2M in quick funding round; taps into thirsty new markets for kombucha

July 22, 2019  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

Lisa Bledsoe, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

From jar-lined countertops in her kitchen to a 13,000-square-foot facility brimming with brew tanks, Lisa Bledsoe’s mission to pour Kansas City a more refreshing bottle of “booch” is scaling fast, she explained over a freshly tapped glass of her “Beachlife”-flavored kombucha. 

“I think it can be an inspiration for younger women or even other women looking to journey out and start a business,” Bledsoe, owner of Olathe-headquartered Scoby Master’s Tea-Biotics, said of the company’s growth — which includes raising $1.2 million in two weeks and finding success in a multi-state distribution deal with Hy-Vee. 

“If through it all, the journey inspired one other woman to go take a risk and build a business, then that’s pretty cool,” the mother of two and Tea-Biotics founder said in reflection of the company’s traction and what’s to come. 

Click here to learn more about Tea-Biotics, one of Startland’s Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2019. 

Sporting probiotic power

As Tea-Biotics continues to scale, the company has found support from local celebrities, now managing a freshly-inked endorsement deal with Hunter Dozier, third baseman for the Kansas City Royals, Bledsoe explained. 

Tea-Biotics cold storage

“Hunter’s just a big Tea-Biotics fan. And he said, ‘Hey, if I’m gonna support a product, I want to support a product I believe in,’” Bledsoe said of the deal’s origins. 

“To be able to have someone that, where their health and fitness is the No.1 thing in their entire life — that’s how they make a living at the highest level — to be able to share their experiences with the youth and maybe try to get them off of soda is great,” she said.

Dozier isn’t the only pro-athlete to take notice of Tea-Biotics. The Kansas City Chiefs and Sporting KC continue to crave the company’s 32 probiotic-packed flavors of kombucha, Bledsoe said. 

“The [Chiefs’] team stays in a hotel the night before a game, I guess for curfew, and they actually put a kegerator in the team hotel for the eight home games a year,” the result of a craving that grew out of a partnership that saw kegs at training camp and in the team’s practice facility last year, she added. 

Twenty-five kegs of Tea-Biotics have already been delivered to Chiefs training camp in St. Joseph where the team will begin reporting July 23. 

Additionally, University of Missouri athletics is set to install two kegerators in their facilities in the coming weeks, she noted. 

Click here to read more about the company’s operations which include a first-of-its-kind kombucha tap room. 

A taste for new markets

Beyond the world of sports, Tea-Biotics is rapidly finding its footing in new markets, Bledsoe explained. The company partnered with 25 St. Louis-based Dierbergs Markets grocery stores in April. 

“We’re up to 51 locations [combined with] different retailers throughout St Louis, so it’s going well already,” she said of traction in distribution. “We branched out into Dallas, Texas, and Oklahoma with a $7 billion retail company called Winnco. They’re massive up and down the west coast.”

On shelves for barely two weeks, Tea-Biotics Hibiscus Watermelon flavor became the No. 2 skew in the kombucha category for Winnco, the company revealed. 

“Our goal [for 2019] was to try to get outside of Kansas City and really understand if people enjoy Tea-Biotics because it’s local or do people enjoy Tea-Biotics because it’s a great tasting, probiotic beverage?” she said. 

So far, the company has found it’s the refreshing transparency of its brewing practices that keep customers cracking open ice cold bottles of Tea-Biotics kombucha, Bledsoe said, calling attention to what she said is a growing problem in her industry — fake products.  

“There’s people making kombucha and putting vinegar in it and calling it ‘kombucha’ because they can, because there’s no definition for us — or anybody to follow,” she said, giving insight into the industry that’s become increasingly popular. 

Educating consumers about the differences between mass-manufactured competitors and Tea-Biotics has become Bledsoe’s personal mission.

“We make all the tea here, we don’t use concentrates. We use a real scoby, the same one I’ve had since 2010!” she said. “It has grown all these thousands of scobys. We use cold-pressed organic juices and herbs and we use real flowers and real ingredients and purified water, which is really unheard of in the industry as a whole.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Brick by brick: How used LEGOs are making innovation more tangible for KC kids in need

    By Tommy Felts | March 31, 2025

    Solopreneur Rhonda Jolyean Hale believes that all children deserve access to play — no matter their circumstances. As the Kansas City ambassador for the Pass the Bricks initiative, she’s working to build that reality by giving new life to donated LEGO bricks. “We take gently used LEGO bricks — not the stuff the dog chews…

    Novel Capital teams with Crux KC to offer growth-focused marketing to early-stage tech companies 

    By Tommy Felts | March 31, 2025

    An exclusive partnership between two Kansas City-based innovators is expected to help remove a traditional financial hurdle to business growth, said Ethan Whitehill, president and chief strategy officer for the KC Chamber-lauded marketing firm Crux KC. The collaboration between Crux and Overland Park-headquartered capital provider Novel Capital is expected to offer B2B SaaS and tech…

    Neighborhood smart cans help Kansas Citians save the planet from their kitchens

    By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2025

    Newly introduced composting technology is already turning new ground in Kansas City, Kristan Chamberlain said, with more solar-powered compost cans arriving later this spring across the metro’s urban landscape. Her social venture, KC Can Compost, installed three of the devices in October — free to use for KCMO residents wanting to deposit their soil-making food…

    Voodoo Volleyball bounces back in OP: Father-daughter duo doubles as new venture’s setters

    By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2025

    Quinn Austin put several sports to the test as a preteen — racing from basketball practice to softball to volleyball. But she latched on to just one. “Volleyball. It was my sport. Everyone was having a good time,” she said. “We just loved the cheers — a cheer when we got a hit, a cheer…