Junior Achievement honoring Ruby Jean’s founder with its 2022 KC Innovator Award

May 27, 2022  |  Startland News Staff

Chris Goode, Ruby Jean's Juicery

A group hoping to inspire the next generation of leaders, thinkers and doers has tapped a young entrepreneur with a healthy appetite for expansion as its next KC Innovator Award winner.

Chris Goode, founder of Ruby Jean’s Juicery, is set to be honored with the award Nov. 1 during the Junior Achievement of Kansas City’s signature JA Business Hall of Fame event. The gathering — set for the JA Youth Learning Lab, presented by the Mallouk Family Foundation — also will recognize three new Hall of Fame laureates.

Chris Goode, Ruby Jean's Juicery

Chris Goode, Ruby Jean’s Juicery

The Innovator Award is presented to those that positively disrupt their industries, create jobs and opportunities and apply innovation to solve critical social and economic problems. The 2022 winner, Goode, now operates three Ruby Jean’s locations across the metro — a flagship store on Troost Avenue, along with a space within Whole Foods Market near the UMKC campus and a newly opened store in Leawood — supporting a growing thirst for his startup’s menu of hand-crafted juices, smoothies, performance shakes and food.

“Chris Goode is a passionate entrepreneur who started his company in 2015 in honor of his late grandmother, Ruby Jean. Goode has made it his life’s work to educate underrepresented communities and integrate the juicing culture in his hometown,” said Junior Achievement, in an announcement of the award. “Ruby Jean’s has also launched a pilot program with Kansas City Public Schools to provide fresh juice to three schools; this is the first program of its kind in the nation.”

Click here to learn more about Ruby Jean’s Juicery or here to order for pickup or delivery.

Thalia Cherry, founder and CEO of sports and fashion apparel company Cherry Co., was awarded the KC Innovator Award in 2021.

2022 will mark the 22nd year of the JA Business Hall of Fame, which recognizes the efforts and accomplishments of those who are vital in building the past, present and future of the Kansas City economic and entrepreneurial ecosystem. Past honorees include such Kansas City business icons as Gary Fish, Peter Mallouk, Jeanette Prenger, Ewing Kauffman, John Thomson and Neal Sharma.

The 2022 JA Business Hall of Fame laureates include:

 

  • Carlos Antequera, Novel Capital — Co-founder and CEO of Overland Park-based Novel Capital, a revenue-based fintech platform that provides software entrepreneurs with non-dilutive on-demand growth capital and resources. Novel Capital recently raised $115 million in funding.

 

  • Darcy Howe, KCRise Fund — Howe’s accomplishments include building the largest Merrill Lynch Private Banking practice over a 32-year career at the firm. After a two-week “retirement,” Howe built KCRise Fund, a venture capital fund which invests in high-growth technology companies in the region. KCRise Fund is now a top venture fund in the country.

 

  • Fred Pryor, Fred Pryor Seminars — As a result of the overwhelming positive response to Fred Pryor’s teaching through the Dale Carnegie Program, he launched Fred Pryor Seminars, the prototype of a new industry of one-day public seminars, in 1970. In the years since, Pryor has delivered more than 8,000 speeches and his company has helped over 13 million learners and over 3 million businesses.
Fred Pryor

Fred Pryor

“The 2022 laureates are exceptional examples of the entrepreneurial spirit that Junior Achievement instills in Kansas City youth each day,” said Megan Sturges Stanfield, president and CEO of Junior Achievement of Kansas City. “When students see the likeness of leaders like Carlos, Darcy and Fred on our walls, they have the confidence to become business leaders and change-makers in the community.”

Click here to read about the 2021 laureates or here to learn more about Junior Achievement of Kansas City.

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

    How Trump’s win on DEI means fewer fresh foods for KC’s east side; USDA rakes back critical grant for farmers market

    By Tommy Felts | February 22, 2025

    An ambitious plan to create greater food security through urban farming won’t be entirely uprooted by efforts to dry up federal funding for projects linked to equity and access, said Alana Henry — but its harvest likely will yield dramatically less. “Doing right by people is always the right answer,” said Henry, executive director of…

    ‘Black-owned dining passport’ launches in response to Trump’s attacks on diversity

    By Tommy Felts | February 21, 2025

    A new effort encouraging support for local, Black-owned businesses — many in Kansas City’s historically redlined neighborhoods — is a timely reminder of the purchasing power in each diner’s hands, said Brandon Calloway. Kansas City G.I.F.T. on Friday launched the first edition of its “Savor The Flavor” Black-Owned Dining Passport, which features 13 restaurants. Diners…

    As ICE threat scares customers, Kansas City businesses urged to ‘protect people working for you’

    By Tommy Felts | February 21, 2025

    Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. After a highly publicized raid on a Mexican restaurant in Liberty, Missouri, earlier this month, immigration advocates and attorneys are rushing…

    In Good Company: This ‘hidden gem’ offers escape from club chaos, KC’s corporate nightlife

    By Tommy Felts | February 21, 2025

    A new East Crossroads venue on McGee offers no clues of what’s inside. The black facade out front features no marquee. No neon lights. It’s the first indication that In Good Company is something different from neighboring Power & Light District hot spots. The goal: Good people. Good drinks. Good vibes. “It’s not a club.…