‘I think I’m gonna make it’: How a pizza pivot could keep Fattyhead Keto Crust bringing in the dough through pandemic
April 28, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.
The new decade brought promise for Laura Manivong as an early stage entrepreneur, enjoying the rise of her company, Fattyhead Keto Crust.
2020 was poised to be a baking boon, with some of Kansas City’s most recognizable restaurants lined up, ready to spin pies atop the company’s signature product — a two-net-carb crust made from a blend of almond flour, cheeses, egg and herbs.
Then came the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and its crippling effects on the hospitality industry.
“March was madness,” the founder laughed, revealing a troubling data point for her startup: Fattyhead experienced a 90 percent drop in sales during a month where it had been expected to close a deal with food distribution giant Sysco.
“I just had to scramble to try to figure how to make some money,” Manivong said, noting a return to scrappier days where she met customers around town and sold her keto pizza crusts out of the trunk of her car in a QuikTrip parking lot.
“It was scary. I left my career in television [to become an entrepreneur] — I don’t ever want to go back to that,” she said. “I’m almost 53 — I will be in a week. I was waiting tables before that and I don’t have table waiting to go back to because the restaurants are closed.”
Click here to read more about the beginnings of Fattyhead Keto Crust, which recently celebrated its first year of business.
With her back against the wall, Manivong said there was no way she could throw in the towel. So, she topped her original startup idea — literally.
“I ended up deciding to make actual pizzas off of the Fattyhead [crusts], and offered those up to some restaurants and little shops around town. I’ve sold a couple hundred,” she said with an air of accomplishment, confident the pivot will be enough to keep the company on a stable path throughout the health crisis.
“I’ve got a whole new set of eyes on my brand — who never would have before — through these additional shops and restaurants and … I think I’m gonna make it.”
View this post on Instagram
Other businesses in the food and hospitality space haven’t been so lucky, Manivong said.
“[They are in] complete survival mode. Fight or flight. I mean, lay down and give up or get up and figure out how to survive,” she said of her friends and peers working to navigate the impact of rough economic times — especially Taps on Main, a rising star on the Kansas City bar scene.
“I’m constantly on social media [looking at what companies are doing],” she said. “In particular Taps on Main, which had closed down. They won best new bar last year! They had completely just closed.”
Baffled by the sudden turn, Manivong reached out — inspired by an article she’d read about the bar and grill’s owners, brothers Grant, Marc, and Jason Tower.
“It was really heartfelt and very difficult to read about how this brand was failing after it had such a great start,” she recalled, adding she later read the brothers planned to open their doors on Saturdays, selling only buffalo wings and beer.
“[They were doing this] as a way to barely make an income. … Their wings are on the keto menu and so I’m like, ‘Well, you know what, I’m going to offer them these pizza’s and see if they want to try it,’” she said.
The brothers took Manivong up on her offer and bought 10 pizzas.
“They sold out by about 3 o’clock that afternoon, contacted me and said, ‘Do you have any more?’ I’m like, ‘No,’” she laughed, noting delays in production with her kitchen, housed at the Ennovation Center in Independence, which — in the days of COVID-19 — prevents her from working weekends or after 5:30 p.m. on weekdays.
“These Saturdays were a good success story for them, so they announced that they were going to go ahead and reopen for carry out seven days a week and they’re carrying my pizzas on their menu for the curbside,” Manivong said
Fattyhead is also available at Old Shawnee Pizza locations and dozens of other restaurants and grocery stores. Click here for a full list.
Such a win is a sign of something bigger than sales for Fattyhead or for Taps on Main, she said, noting it symbolizes a community of Kansas City entrepreneurs, willing to help each other stay afloat.
“I am telling you what, William Walker with Old Shawnee Pizza has been just an extraordinary example of the kind of entrepreneur I want to be,” Manivong said of Walker, who supported Fattyhead with orders early in its journey.
“He’s got two restaurants and he is constantly coming up with new incentives for people to come into his restaurant and he’s constantly sharing everybody else’s offers — even his own competitors,” she said. “So that guy is just the beacon of the type of community food service person I want to be.”
Kindness and collaboration aren’t the only takeaways the pandemic has baked in the mind of the budding entrepreneur. It’s given her a fresh perspective on what leadership looks like, Manivong said.
“This has taught me to slow down a little bit because I was pushing so fast and so hard for wider distribution and I was in a constant state of anxiety,” she said.
“I’m realizing now there’s no reason I can’t take a step back and serve my own community with these pizzas,” she said. “We can truck along just fine and I can pace this out better. I don’t have to go a million miles an hour like I was trying to do before.”
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
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Cafe Cà Phê returns to the West Bottoms with second location for KC’s popular Vietnamese coffee shop
A Cafe Cà Phê satellite location inside 12th Street Post in the West Bottoms is the perfect step for continuing the mission of Kansas City’s only Vietnamese coffee shop, shared founder Jackie Nguyen. Just shy of the one year anniversary of its Columbus Park space, Cafe Cà Phê celebrated the grand opening of its new…
She wanted to bring her favorite foodie magazine to KC; her mother’s sudden death put this publisher’s plans on the back burner
Lauren Cook’s passion for Edible Communities magazine drove her appetite to revive it in Kansas City, she shared, but an unexpected life change has her hoping to hand the publisher’s apron to someone else. Cook purchased the license to publish the city-specific food magazine — each independently run by publishers in metros across the country…
Digital Sandbox alum earns new round of funding — this time for sports tech; Meet the latest batch of just-funded startups
From making the college admissions process easier for students to summarizing books and podcasts using artificial intelligence, the latest startups to join Digital Sandbox KC are a great example of the creativity of this region’s entrepreneurs, said Jill Meyer. The four newly selected companies are expected to receive up to $20,000 in project funding and…
Her red sauce is dynamite but Ragazza’s owner gives the chef title to her Italian heritage
Family is baked into the core of Laura Norris’ restaurants, she shared, from the Italian recipes served at Ragazza in Westport to the brother-sister duo running the new Enzo Wine Bar and Bistro together in the River Market. She opened Ragazza, which now sits at the corner of 43rd and Main streets, in 2013 and…





