‘People pay for value’: How a young mom’s plan to hold passion tight drives her baby apparel side hustle
February 11, 2025 | Startland News Staff
Coming from a family of business owners, Riley Rhoads knew she wanted to pursue entrepreneurship: starting her own business — but with a goal to help others, the founder of Hold Tight Baby said.
“When I hear people talk about, ‘Oh, I want to be an entrepreneur; I want to start and own my own business and I can make a bunch of money,’ it gives me the ick. I’m like, ‘Please stop,’” Rhoads said with a laugh, speaking with Sam Kulikov, co-founder of Social Apex Media, for a new UMKC Student Venture Series podcast from the Regnier Institute at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
“If you start with a passion and you really want to help people, the money will always come later,” she added, acknowledging the struggles that could come with avoiding an aggressively profit-motivated strategy. “God has a plan for me, and I’m going to be OK.”

Riley Rhoads, a UMKC business student, and her daughter pose with UMKC’s Adam Larson after being announced as the winner of UMKC’s Side Hustle Challenge; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
In November, Rhoads earned a big win at UMKC’s Side Hustle Challenge with the apparel brand Hold Tight Baby — a venture the young mom launched as a business student in the university’s Bloch School. She’s set to graduate in May.
“Once I had my daughter my sophomore year of college, things definitely changed. She sparked the idea for what I’m working on now,” Rhoads explained, describing how Hold Tight Baby evolved out of empathy for her fellow busy mothers. “It’s a brand that supports parents by simplifying the baby clothing experience; reducing the mental load for busy moms like myself, giving them more time to hold their baby and build secure attachments.”
ICYMI: Young mom’s apparel for crawling babies wins best fit for UMKC Side Hustle Challenge
Himself a UMKC graduate and serial entrepreneur with his hand in everything from branding to esports, Kulikov used the podcast to showcase where Hold Tight Baby — and Rhoads’ philosophy — fits into the uniquely American business landscape.
“The free market allows you to create value for society. And people pay for value,” said Kulikov. “So when you’re thinking of people, you’re creating a product that helps them. When you instead try and think of ‘How do I make money?’ you stray from creating value, and you stray toward grift.”
Watch the full podcast below — and click here to check out Kulikov’s interview with Lesly Romo, UMKC’s 2023 Student Entrepreneur of the Year and founder of Golazo.
The Regnier Venture Creation Challenge returns to campus April 25. Students can win $15,000 in awards at the competition.
Featured Business

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
WISE Power generates plans for 9,000-square-foot entertainment lounge at Hy-Vee Arena
Hy-Vee Arena is the perfect place for a WISE Power demo site, said Brittany Williams, but it also is an opportunity to bring innovative leisure to Kansas City. The startup’s new showroom doubles as an entertainment lounge providing food, drink and virtual reality. “We figured we needed demo space — like the Tesla space on…
Pure Pitch Rally winner says local investment will push Fast Democracy toward focus on KC politics
Offering voters a crystal clear look at the legislative process is winning support for Fast Democracy within the Kansas City startup ecosystem, said Jill Kline, the CEO behind the evolving bill tracking platform. “This was always the roadmap. We started out with some of these basic features, wanting to help the general public get their…
Skipping the line: PayIt driver’s license renewal tech iKan puts DMV stigma in reverse
The market is hungry for consumer-grade digital experiences, said John Thomson, founder and CEO at Kansas City tech startup PayIt. Tuesday’s launch of the firm’s iKan driver’s license renewal technology is a step toward satisfying motorists starved for time and frustrated with inconveniences like long lines and packed parking lots at licensing offices. “Kansas residents…
KCultivator Q&A: Pennez’s Rebecca Dove on pushing past a world that says ‘No’
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by WeWork Corrigan Station, a modern twist on Kansas City office space. Pennez is working to combat childhood illiteracy by bringing its technology to after-school programming, said founder Rebecca Dove. The…
