Grown in a lab: Kansas City digital product agency Crema sells plant-care app to Bloomscape
October 6, 2020 | Channa Steinmetz
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
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.
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.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Look inside (and out): Corrigan Station expansion offers startups skyline views from within Crossroads
Decades have passed since the last new office building opened in the Crossroads Arts District, said Edna Martinson. In a matter of weeks, startups and small businesses can “create their own vibe” when the 22,910-square-foot Corrigan Station expansion project — led by Copaken-Brooks — unlocks its doors and opens them to Kansas City innovators, added Martinson,…
$18M buyout of TomboyX shares shows investing in women pays off, says Women’s Capital Connection
Women are winning in Kansas City, said Kelly Sievers as 24 members of Women’s Capital Connection receive their return from an $18-million buyout of their shares in a Seattle woman’s startup. “They’re getting a great infusion of capital to grow even more and we also still have money in the company because we invested a…
Bungii launches on-demand hauling in Chicago; quirks of new markets steering KC startup’s agility
Bungii is quickly seeing results in the third-largest U.S. city, as the sharing economy startup leaves its tire prints on yet another market. “It’s early, but we are seeing very positive KPIs [key performance indicators] from the Chicago launch. It’s our fastest-growing record to date,” said Ben Jackson, co-founder of Bungii, which was founded in…
Connecting for Good refurbishes The Surplus Exchange with merger championing digital inclusion
Two Kansas City nonprofits are melding their expertise into a spearhead against the digital divide. “This is just the beginning of what will be a long-term love affair between Connecting For Good, digital inclusion, environmental leadership, and the Greater Kansas City metro and regional area,” said Tom Esselman, CEO of Connecting for Good. The Kansas…




