‘My soul is being fed’: Shonta Dabney sips the small wins in her round-the-clock quest to bring Black-roasted coffee home

February 19, 2022  |  Austin Barnes

Shonta Dabney, CoffeeFreshAF

While most kids were drinking milk, juice, or plain old water — Shonta Dabney held a warm mug in her hands, sipping coffee at the kitchen table with her grandparents, she recalled. 

“I have to be one of the very few Americans whose grandparents gave her coffee as a toddler,” Dabney laughed, looking back on where her love for java was first brewed. 

“Coffee, Pepsi, scratch off tickets — they just gave it to me,” she continued, noting the caffeinated vice eventually proved helpful when she grew up and took a job in the medical field, working overnight shifts — which quickly prescribed an addiction to espresso. 

Shonta Dabney, CoffeeFreshAF

Shonta Dabney, CoffeeFreshAF

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Dabney took a shot at something new, landing a job at Starbucks where she could get her fix for free, she quipped. 

“I am not going to lie, I had an absolutely amazing time. … I learned about the origins and the culture of coffee — and I decided to pursue it moving forward.”

Dabney now runs CoffeeFreshAF — her newly poured, premium, micro roasted coffee distribution company. 

“I wanted something to leave my children — a legacy,” she said of her decision to pour herself into an entrepreneurial endeavor. 

“I wanted to have a company where we offered high quality coffee — because most people, when they drink coffee, they’re used to this bold, acidic taste. They’re not that familiar [with] the background and how it’s grown and how it’s roasted,” Dabney explained, adding the opportunity to educate her customers on the processes behind crafting quality coffee has been a joy.

“I wanted to offer something different that they couldn’t get at the grocery store. When they drink it they get more of a smooth, fruity flavor versus a bold, dark taste.”

The company currently offers three roasts — Wired AF, Smooth AF, and High AF — and single serve coffee pods. Dabney sells her coffee online, at a retail shop and farmers market in her hometown of St. Louis, and at the Black Pantry and various pop-up shops across the Kansas City metro. Wholesale operations are on the menu for 2022, she said. 

Click here to learn more about CoffeeFreshAF — including its giveback business model that sees a portion of proceeds used to provide school supplies to a middle school in West Africa. 

“I drink it all. I drink my dark roast around five or 6 o’clock in the morning, I’ll drink my breakfast blend around lunchtime and I’m having an iced coffee in the evening,” Dabney said, pointing out she’ll never return to the grocery store coffee aisle. 

“My whole purpose is to take people from buying $6 coffee drinks to making their coffee at home.”

CoffeeFreshAF

CoffeeFreshAF

The opportunity to brew representation within the coffee space provided a further jolt of inspiration and purpose for Dabney, she said. 

“I wanted to start a business where I worked with Black-owned roasteries. It was very important to me to keep it all Black owned,” Dabney said, adding she sampled coffee from across the world — but the calling to elevate Black roasters through her business rang louder than the bold flavors any of them carried. 

“I was determined to stick with Black-owned roasteries because of other people who are looking for Black-owned products — [with CoffeeFreshAF] they have a Black-owned roasterie, a Black, woman-owned disruptor,” she continued. 

“Before I started my business I didn’t know [people looked for those markers], I didn’t know women looked for other women-owned businesses [to support]. All of that was new to me. I just wanted to drink coffee and have fun.”

By tapping into such networks, Dabney was able to partner the Black Pantry and groups that include KC Black Owned and Generating Income for Tomorrow (Kansas City GIFT) which awarded CoffeeFreshAF a $10,000 grant in December 2021. 

“That grant was right on time,” she said, noting that at the time she’d wanted to open a mobile coffee bar. 

“I didn’t get enough to actually get the bar — but I was able to pay off all of my debts that I accumulated. So, everything that I’m getting from all of my coffee orders [now] is profit.”

Dabney was also able to use the funds to expand her inventory and was able to stock things like reusable coffee pods and grinders to help customers create the perfect coffee experience. 

GIFT also provided Dabney with an attorney and an accountant who have helped her achieve critical milestones in launching her businesses. 

“It has been extremely beneficial. I did not expect to be able to add on all these things within less than six months [of operation], she said, impressed by her growth, surprised by her success, and eager to see what the future has percolating. 

“I don’t want to put so much [pressure] on me that I’m to the point that I’m not able to enjoy my small wins. I want to continue to have fun,” she said. 

“I’m not even thinking about money. The coffee culture — the coffee drinkers — when we’re coming together and tasting, its fulfilling. My soul is being fed.”

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.

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Investors, students find potential and power in High School eSports League

    By Tommy Felts | June 18, 2019

    Benjie Lewis saw potential in eSports from the beginning — first as a mentor, then an investor, he said. Rapidly evolving from recreational pastime to official leagues and high school sports programs, the competitive multiplayer gaming concept has created a new space for startup opportunity, he said. “When I was growing up … they weren’t…

    KCMO mayoral candidates Quinton Lucas and Jolie Justus

    Startup advocates to next mayor: Make KC more attractive to tech talent, women, innovation

    By Tommy Felts | June 15, 2019

    Months of candidate forums are complete. The door bells have been rung. Selfies taken. As the Kansas City mayor’s race heads to the polls Tuesday, the candidates are all business when it comes to courting the startup community’s vote. Jolie Justus — who has branded herself as the next “neighborhood mayor” — and Quinton Lucas…

    Councilwoman Jolie Justus, StartupKC Small Business and Entrepreneurship Mayoral Forum

    Jolie Justus’ open letter to startups: In many ways, the city has failed you — let’s do better together

    By Tommy Felts | June 14, 2019

    [Editor’s note: Startland News invited Kansas City mayoral candidates Jolie Justus and Quinton Lucas to compose open letters to address their potential constituents in KC’s entrepreneur community of startups, makers, creatives and risk-takers. Justus’ response is below. Lucas did not participate. The vote is set for Tuesday, June 18.] I trust this community to see…

    Industrious, Seattle

    Take a peek: Industrious offers glimpse of what new Plaza coworking space could look like

    By Tommy Felts | June 14, 2019

    Startup energy will soon take hold on Kansas City’s Country Club Plaza, as Industrious — the nation’s largest coworking space — prepares to set up shop in a 30,000-square-foot chunk of the historic retail and entertainment district, the company announced Thursday. “Kansas City is a dominant market in the Silicon Prairie.  As one of the…