High demand, low profits: Happy Food Co pulls meal kits from stores, pivots to catering

February 19, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Happy Food Co., Get Happy Catering

Love wasn’t enough to sustain the original model of Happy Food Co., but the meal kit company’s ability to pivot opens new doors, said Kiersten Firquain.

Get Happy Catering team

“For a startup in Kansas City … it is difficult,” Firquain, head chef and co-founder of Happy Food Co., said of geographical challenges that contributed to its restructuring, a move that cut its staff to 8 people — a 60 percent reduction — at the end of 2019. 

“It sucks,” she continued. “We had a really great team, that we can no longer afford to keep and so we had to let a lot of people go and it was a really tearful day. … We’re seeing it in the news now. Companies that we know the name of are having a hard time and no startup is immune to that, I guess. No matter where they are.”

Happy Food Co. isn’t hiding from the harsh reality of business, Firquain said as the company shifts its focus to innovation in catering.

“Change and chaos is kind of the way it goes,” she said. “Although it was difficult, everybody understood the new direction and they’re still totally supportive, which is cool.”

Started by Firquain and co-founder Jeff Glasco in 2015, Happy Food Co. saw success with its farm-to-table meal kits, but the model ultimately became tough to maintain, Firquain noted. At its height, the company offered kits in about 60 stores across the metro.

Click here to read more about the beginnings of Happy Food Co. 

“We loved doing it and we loved producing a product that people wanted. But we couldn’t figure out how to make it profitable, delivering to retailers every day,” she said, adding the startup will continue to sell meal kits from its Overland Park headquarters while turning its attention to something more profitable: catering. 

“I had a catering company called In Home Bistro for about 20 years and we decided to rebrand it as Get Happy catering and bring that under the healthy food umbrella,” Firquain said, further explaining the pivot.

A portion of the Happy Food Co. production facility is expected to be converted into an events space with the startup regularly hosting community events. Traditional catering — including in-home dinner parties in partnership with Somerset Ridge Winery — also is on the menu. 

Welcoming customers to the Overland Park space has increased Happy Food Co.’s abilities to interact with customers, which has been a newfound blessing for Firquain, she noted. 

“We know that we’ve got a product people want,” Firquain said with optimism for the company’s new direction. “It’d be different if we were putting out something that nobody was buying, but we were literally selling out of everything we put into the market. So we just have to figure out a more profitable way to deliver that convenience, really high quality service that we know people want.”

Despite changes in scale and structure, Happy Food Co. will continue to partner with more than 75 local vendors, she added. 

“We still want to produce good food for real people,” Firquain said. “No matter the setting, no matter if it’s a meal kit, no matter if it’s a dinner party, appetizers at a non-profit event. That’s our driver.” 

Click here to explore Happy Food Co. catering options.

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

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

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Thee Outpost

        Explore inside: Thee Outpost offers fresh brew of Thou Mayest, Collective Ex coffee-creative collaboration (Photos)

        By Tommy Felts | July 11, 2019

        The way is open and a new era has begun for Kansas City’s dreamers, doers, makers, and caffeinated creators.  “I’m really pulling that curtain back [and letting] makers do what they do,” explained Johnny Dawbarn, founder of Collective Ex — a collaborative of artisans, designers and creatives at 519 E. 18th St., now open to…

        Brandon Love and Michelle Bolser, Alchemy Bath Co. Crumble

        Bath boon: Crumble molds new product line, adding Alchemy Bath Co into its aromatic recipe

        By Tommy Felts | July 10, 2019

        Like freshly poured wax, the latest product from Crumble Co. founder Brandon Love has cured in Kansas City — scented this time with collaboration as the company melts into a merger with Alchemy Bath Co., he explained.  “We came to them and were like, ‘Hey, can we order bath bombs from you?’ … We were…

        Summer Trep Series

        OHUB x KCUP set to debut ‘18th & Vine Summer Trep Series’ for black, Latinx startup builders

        By Tommy Felts | July 10, 2019

        The first spoke of Opportunity Hub’s arrival in Kansas City debuts July 19 with a new monthly event series dedicated to business builders from black and Latinx communities. “This is a celebration of unity, creating a healthier ecosystem within Kansas City, Missouri,” said Jamilah Jones, a business development officer at the Economic Development Corporation of…

        Laura McCoolidge, Sofia Fund

        Minneapolis angel investment firm expanding to KC, names McCoolidge managing partner

        By Tommy Felts | July 9, 2019

        A former leader of the Mid-America Angels fund could be the secret to establishing Minneapolis-based Sofia Fund as a new investment resource for women-led companies within Kansas City, said Cathy Connett. “The Midwest continues to be a hub of startup activity,’ said Connett, Sofia Fund CEO. “Extending our footprint to Kansas City gives us access…