Pipeline pitch winner sells practical business moves (and leather) with socially conscious ethos

January 29, 2021  |  Tommy Felts

Brooke Mullen, Sapahn

Brooke Mullen’s ability to pivot with silky smooth ease helped the Lincoln entrepreneur build a bridge to surging revenue in 2020, as well as win best pitch Thursday during a showcase of Pipeline’s latest fellowship class.

Brooke Mullen, Sapahn

Brooke Mullen, Sapahn

“With a lot of our business being direct-to-consumer and actual live events, we had to completely change as all those events got canceled,” said Mullen, founder of Sapahn, a designer and producer of high-quality leather goods and fashion accessories for socially conscious consumers.

Shifting to online-only sales once COVID-19 hit, the company saw momentum throughout months of pandemic, she said, growing by 37 percent.

“We also launched five new product lines … [and] 12 new wholesale accounts — one of them has 20 stores nationwide,” Mullen said during her pitch to judges and the virtual audience for the Pipeline Innovators Daytime Showcase. “More importantly, we grew as a team. I hired my business partner and COO. We have a fractional CMO on our team and two full-time staff.”

Click here to shop Sapahn.

Success comes even as online customers are denied the in-person, olfactory and tactile interactions once-common with Sapahn’s previous pop-up shop-based business model.

“Our customers know quality, and they experience it first through smell,” Mullen said. “They’ll walk into our booth and go, ‘Oh, my gosh, this smells like leather. Like the real deal.’ And as they get closer to experience it and touch it, [they say,] ‘Oh, my God, Brooke, this feels like butter. This is how Coach used to make bags.’”

(The company pivoted much of its business in 2018 to leather goods after an accelerator helped Mullen to realize the vertical accounted for 90 percent of her revenue, she said.)

What is Pipeline?

Kansas City-based Pipeline is a fellowship of high-performing entrepreneurs, now boasting more than 130 members who employ more than 2,700 people in Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska, have raised more than $609 million in outside capital since joining Pipeline and are doing business in more than 85 countries.

But Sapahn — which means “bridge” in Thai — is about more than a trendy accessory that sells, Mullen suggested, noting the business’s emphasis on empowerment and human rights.

“Human rights are ultimately about putting people in a position where they can protect and advance themselves and their interests,” Sapahn’s website details. “If we want to have a positive impact in artisan communities, we have to start with human rights. We have to start with plans, processes and practices that enable everyone in our value chain to take action on their own behalf. Sapahn believes that this kind of human rights based approach is the only way to ensure that our brand is truly artisan friendly and artisan driven.”

Click here to learn more about Sapahn’s origins and the story behind the brand.

Judges for the Pipeline event appreciated Mullen’s transparency about Sapahn’s need to pivot, along with the socially conscious ethos at the company’s heart, said Elizabeth MacBride, an international business journalist and founder of Times of Entrepreneurship who helped judge Thursday’s pitches.

“It was a polished pitch with a good balance between the financials and a focus on the product — and a company geared to this time, when it feels like many of us are very focused on impact and on making the world a better place,” MacBride said when announcing Sapahn as the best pitch winner.

Pipeline Fellows 2020

Pipeline Fellows 2020; pictured in January 2020, photo courtesy of Pipeline

Pipeline’s Innovators Daytime Showcase was the first virtual pitch competition for the elite entrepreneur fellowship program, which annually presents its fellows to the public with a high-caliber demo day.

Among those Kansas City fellows taking the virtual stage to pitch:

Pipeline — which serves as a regional network across the Midwest — also draws heavily from Nebraska, as well as picking up entrepreneurs from outside Kansas City in Missouri and Kansas. Among those founders to pitch, in addition to Sapahn’s Mullen

Pipeline plans to reveal the incoming 2021 fellows Feb. 11 virtual happy hour that is open to the public and celebrates the Pipeline entrepreneurs who pitched Thursday.

Watch the full Pipeline’s Innovators Daytime Showcase below. Check out the 1:20:30 mark for Brooke Mullen’s Sapahn pitch.

Pipeline Pitch Event from BLUEFOX PRODUCTION on Vimeo.

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.

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    GEWKC submissions open: Organizers seek community-sourced ideas for fall event series

    By Tommy Felts | June 12, 2025

    One of Kansas City’s largest interactive educational experiences for entrepreneurs is inviting community members to drive the conversation when Global Entrepreneurship Week returns in November. Festivities are set for Nov. 17-22 at Union Station in Kansas City. The GEWKC event series’ programming is crowd-sourced through submissions from community members and organized by KCSourceLink. Selected concepts…

    Federal arts funding cuts hit AMERI’KANA festival in KC’s northeast; organizer says the show will go on

    By Tommy Felts | June 12, 2025

    Creating space for healing and connection in Kansas City’s historic northeast is too critical to abandon, said Enrique Chi, whose nonprofit — and a popular music and arts festival — faces federal funding cuts targeting heritage-related initiatives that don’t align with the priorities of President Trump. The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) recently rescinded $85,000…

    Call for Heartists: Sprawling sculpture project needs storytellers willing to open portal to KC’s soul

    By Tommy Felts | June 10, 2025

    When the Parade of Hearts returns in April 2026, as many as 150 pieces of Kansas City’s story will be scattered across the metro — offering a summer-long scavenger hunt of the region’s identity for hometown fans and World Cup revelers alike. “The Parade of Hearts is more than public art — it’s a catalyst…

    KCMO sets aside $1.4M to get small biz, artists in the front door before World Cup arrives

    By Tommy Felts | June 10, 2025

    A city-led and funded effort to fill vacant storefronts in downtown Kansas City ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup is still taking shape, officials said this week, noting that crafting the infrastructure for the program alongside private property owners is expected to extend through the summer. “The World Cup is just the beginning of…