Grown in a lab: Kansas City digital product agency Crema sells plant-care app to Bloomscape 

October 6, 2020  |  Channa Steinmetz

George Brooks, Crema Venture Lab

Sprouted from Venture Lab Fridays, Crema’s plant-care app Vera illustrated the possibilities of what setting aside work to grow creative and educational skills can bring, said George Brooks.

The idea behind Venture Lab: use every other Friday at Crema as a time for the digital agency’s staff to temporarily step away from client work and explore — and potentially launch — new application ideas.

Cue Crema’s recent sale of Vera to online plant retailer Bloomscape.

“We’ve proved that this business model works,” said Brooks, co-founder of Crema. “It’s exciting because it gives us a little bit of capital to fund working on more projects.”

Crema staff are given the option to either spend their bi-weekly Fridays learning new tools or teaming up in groups of three to six for Venture Lab, Brooks explained. One team in particular set out to “create the best plant-care application the world has ever seen.”

“[Vera] blew up, almost so far that we couldn’t manage it as an agency,” Brooks said. “It got to the point where it had over 150,000 users globally, and we started looking for partners … Bloomscape came in asking if we would want to sell it, and we went, ‘Oh! We’re going to sell one of our ideas!’”

When first launching Venture Labs a couple years ago, Brooks said, the hope was that the team would find something viable for intellectual property or a spin-off business that could be funded by Crema. Now, they are looking toward a buy-and-sell-off model. 

“What we primarily expected was that we would have a focused way for people to have an initiative or project to work on together that they culturally liked doing, and they learned something by doing it,” Brooks said. “The secondary output was the business model of it.

“Now we’re starting to flip that after Vera worked,” he continued. “We’re starting to now say, maybe the first priority should be that there’s a business opportunity. The second outcome of it is that you’re going to be learning as you go.”

Vera allows users to create a watering schedule and track one’s plant growth through a personalized profile that identifies the type of plant, its given name, the adoption date and photos. Vera also includes tips on how to care for specific plants, along with advice from Bloomscape’s Plant Mom team. 

Vera can be found on Google Play or the App Store. Click here to check out Vera by Bloomscape. 

George Brooks, Crema Venture Lab

George Brooks, Crema Venture Lab

Planted in startup culture

When Crema was founded in 2009, a majority of its work was designing and software engineering for startups, Brooks explained. In the past five years, Crema has pivoted to work primarily with scaling small businesses or global enterprises. 

“That being said — we love entrepreneurship; we love new ideas,” Brooks noted. “We love having a space to actually create ourselves.”

And employees love it too, said Alexa Alfonso, director of marketing.

“It’s amazing to have co-founders like George and Dan [Linhart] who encourage us to keep learning, exploring, experimenting and trying to find ways to improve our crafts,” she said.

George Brooks, Crema

George Brooks, Crema

Brooks enjoys seeing his staff get competitive and passionate about their various projects, he said. Yet, at the end of each Friday lab, everyone comes together and shows support for one another’s startup-like demo day presentations, Brooks added. 

Crema’s clients are also sometimes invited to watch demos. 

“We’ve found that clients love [our Venture Lab],” Brooks noted. “They get excited about how the learning is going to be applied to the work we are doing for them. 

“It’s even part of the sales process,” he continued. “One of the things we say [to new clients] is, ‘This happens to be a Friday lab week, so we are going to be a little quiet this Friday. But we’ll be back on Monday, strong — probably with even more energy because we just had a Friday lab.’”

Other top Venture Lab projects at Crema include an application for the ultimate coffee-connoisseur, a friendly workplace competition game and a personal memory log for everyone you meet.

Click here to learn more about Crema’s Venture Lab.

 

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

        Three-peat threads: 30+ Super Bowl-bound Chiefs fan fits (haters will say the refs wrote this)

        By Tommy Felts | January 27, 2025

        With the Chiefs ready to stand on business in the Big Easy, Kansas City fans — at home or at the big game — will need to dress for the win they want. Here’s how small business owners from across the region stand ready to help them suit up ahead of the Chiefs-Eagles Super Bowl…

        How ’bout those cheeeeeese mochis? Korean chicken spot gets into the game with its own head-turning plays

        By Tommy Felts | January 25, 2025

        After their decade of conversation got old, three lifelong friends finally achieved their dream of opening a restaurant together, Kue-Jin Hwang shared. Now they’re hoping to capture Chiefs’ fans’ hunger for a three-peat at their Overland Park restaurant. Hwang, Kyoungmin Kim, and Sung Jo — friends for more than 30 years (each represented in the…

        KC startup founder pivots into pickleball haters’ biggest complaint, eliminating court noise

        By Tommy Felts | January 25, 2025

        SLN/CR is serving the sweet sound of silence to neighbors of outdoor pickleball courts, said Eliot Arnold, a serial entrepreneur-turned avid pickleball player who’s taking a swing at the source of critics’ irritation. His Kansas City-based startup — pronounced “silencer” — offers a fabric-based noise mitigation system that uses nanotechnology to absorb nuisance noise, said…

        Kansas student’s mobility tech for visually impaired users wins Congressional App Challenge

        By Tommy Felts | January 25, 2025

        An Overland Park eighth grader’s app idea — using object detection and text-to-speech technology to help visually impaired individuals navigate their surroundings — earned him a visit to the principal’s office, then an opportunity to showcase his innovation in Washington, D.C. “I actually came across a video online, and it was about this blind woman…