Editors’ Note: This is the transcript version of the podcast. Please note that due to time and audio constraints, transcription may not be perfect. We encourage you to listen to the podcast, embedded below if you need any clarification. We hope you enjoy!

This week we are joined by Emily Paxhia Co-founder of Poseidon Asset Management to discuss

  • Poseidon value add approach 
  • Undervalued assets in Cannabis 
  • A surprising state she has her eye on
  • And so much more
https://www.poseidonassetmanagement.com/

https://www.poseidonassetmanagement.com/

About Poseidon

 Poseidon was founded by siblings Emily & Morgan Paxhia in 2013, making their first fund one of the longest running dedicated cannabis investment funds. The Poseidon team has focused on a diversified strategy covering a range of company stages and industry subsectors across the capital spectrum. Now in the eighth year of conducting due diligence, deploying capital, and serving on multiple company Board of Directors, the team is considered a leader in the cannabis industry. This recognition, in conjunction with Poseidon being a first mover in the cannabis investment space, has led to a level of trust with industry insiders. Poseidon has forged a positive reputation in the cannabis industry by helping companies when others would not, resulting in proprietary deal flow.

This show is presented to by 8th Revolution:

At Eighth Revolution (8th Rev) we provide services from capital to cannabinoid and everything in between in regard to the hemp & cannabis industry. Our forward-thinking team can diagnose, analyze & optimize every detailed nuance of your company to keep your business safe, smart, and profitable. Our flexibility and experience combined with ongoing research create unique insights into how to best grow your market share. Contact us directly at [email protected]

Bryan Fields: @bryanfields24

Kellan Finney: @Kellan_Finney


[00:00:00]Bryan Fields: What’s up guys. Welcome back to another episode of the dime. I’m Brian Fields. I’m with me as always as ke Finn. And this week we’ve got a very special guest, Emily Pia, managing director of Passid and partners. Emily, thanks for taking the time. How are you doing today?

[00:00:15]Emily Paxhia: I’m great. And thank you so much for having me.

[00:00:17]Bryan Fields: I’m excited diving in Kell. How are you doing? I’m doing well.

[00:00:20]Kellan FInney: I’m excited to, to talk to Emily and I’m even more pumped that it’s another west coast. Isn’t that

[00:00:25]Bryan Fields: right, Brian. Yeah, I guess Emily can, can officially say she’s on the west coast, but I also think Emily does a lot of time out here on the east coast.

[00:00:33] And I know she’s got her eyes on New York. So again, I would say that’s more 50, 50 or 80 20. Depends on how you wanna split that.

[00:00:40]Emily Paxhia: Oh yeah. By coastal, but yeah, presently living and based in San Francisco, but every year we, I, I spend. For the last few years, the one exception being 20 and 20, of course. Um, we’ve been spending about a month back in New York, one, one to three months back in New York in the summertime.

[00:00:57] Cause I’m one of those, uh, people who actually loves [00:01:00] the summer of New York city, which might , might be crazy, but I just think it’s the best time to be there. It’s so fun.

[00:01:06]Bryan Fields: So awesome. So for our listener that are unfamiliar with you, can you share a little bit about your background?

[00:01:13]Emily Paxhia: Yeah. So I am a co-founder and managing partner side, inter managing director of both titles exist in my life.

[00:01:19] Uh, I co-founded the firm of my brother in, we put it together over 2012, officially stood it up in 2013 and started investing with outside capital in January of 2014. Right when Colorado opened our door. Um, so now Passid has multiple strategies under its. Umbrella and all dedicated to investing in cannabis.

[00:01:40] And, uh, kind of an interesting thing is when you wake up one day and realize that not only have you been investing in cannabis, but your invest reach across the investments in us, Canada, Western Europe, and Latin America. So it’s pretty exciting to see how this is so quickly developed into a, a global phenomenon.

[00:01:59]Bryan Fields: Before you [00:02:00] got into this space, were you always interested in being in cannabis? Was there something that kind of led you to that? Can you kind of take us before you hopped in?

[00:02:07]Emily Paxhia: Yeah, uh, no. I was not always interested in being in cannabis. Um, it, it’s funny. I feel like. Um, you know, there’s that expression of like, there’s no, there’s no such thing as luck.

[00:02:19] There’s just knowing, having the awareness to recognize an opportunity when it comes along. And, you know, I do spend a lot of time focusing on mindfulness. I have been, I have studied to become a yoga teacher in the past. I’ve done a lot of things to try to, you know, increase my consciousness is an awareness of what’s happening in my.

[00:02:43] Circuitous route, um, the way that it first became, uh, clear to me that there’s an opportunity in cannabis. Well, a way to think about cannabis was unfortunately back when our parents both were sick with cancer first, our father, and it came [00:03:00] up as a palliative care option. That was still illicit, but it was just one of those things that came up and it was brought up by a hospice nurse.

[00:03:08] And then the next way it came to me was by way of when I moved from New York to San Francisco and saw the legal, the semi-legal market, it was a gray medical market that had been around since 1996. Um, but you, you know, there in this day and age, it’s a lot of retail locations that you see people lining up outside of the doors to get in.

[00:03:28] And that was. One of the first times, it really kind of like went off like a light bulb. And I remember one time I was riding in the back of my friend’s car. We were going over the golden gate bridge and I was flipping through the SF weekly and there was, um, advertisements for brands of cannabis. And I was like, what is going on here?

[00:03:44] And so I started looking more into what had been going on from a market stand. It started studying up on the history of medical cannabis. In California and, um, and that’s kind of how it came to be. But, um, you know, I personally did not have a [00:04:00] lot of relationship with cannabis because, and this is one of the reasons I’m so pro the legal market, I feel like access to was illicit market cannabis being, you know, in New York state, we didn’t of a legal market and.

[00:04:15] A lot of times when I would consume cannabis, it was way too strong for me. It wasn’t what I expected. And, and I didn’t always have the best experience. And now I’m a daily consumer of cannabis in different forms and fashions, like, be it a CBD tincture or a wonder beverage or a can, or, you know, um, Something from my ed Parker, cute little rolling papers or blow, you know, there’s just all these different ways I can interact with it.

[00:04:38] And my experiences are totally different. Um, now, because I understand what I am consuming, which is all about having a quality consumer experience. So, um, did I think I was going to ever be a cam. Cannabis investment manager. No. Um, but I just feel like it was one of those things where those opportunities come up and I still remember, um, I [00:05:00] live actually right around, this is another, it, it all ki when you pay attention things line up.

[00:05:04] So I live around the corner. Um, Right by hay Ashbury. And, um, I walk right by it all the time. And I remember I was on the phone with my brother, who’s my co-founder and business partner in 2012 when I called him. And I said, I don’t know. I feel like cannabis could be the opportunity of our generation. And that’s when we started talking about putting it together.

[00:05:27] So there’s a lot, lots of ways that we got into this. Uh, I

[00:05:31]Bryan Fields: love that you shared, and I think there’s so many important parts, you know, everything ranging from the personal history side also to like a. Finding the products that were beneficial for you, cuz I think there’s so many people, especially here on the east coast that have that same kind of challenge where they’ve had certain products that didn’t kind of fit for them.

[00:05:45] And then there’s this huge opportunity for them in the future where if they can get kind of back into the industry and try, you know, regulated products, it can really make a difference for ’em. So I wanna stay back in, in 2012, 2014, what was the cannabis in industry like back then?

[00:05:59]Emily Paxhia: Um, [00:06:00] What was it like?

[00:06:02] Well, I mean, it was interesting because it was everything from you had the APO stores, the spark stores, beautiful retail experiences that look like boutique hotels or high end cafes. And then you get in there and there’s a brownie with a business card stapled on a plastic bag, you know? And it’s like, yes, by the way, California was a leader in lab testing products.

[00:06:24] And I feel like that’s all been a very important aspect of how we’ve gotten this. To where it is today is by when you look at the cannabis industry, the operators are the ones who hold themselves to the highest standards in the legal market. So they were like, we have to be lab testing our products. So we know the potency of the product what’s in the product, making sure it’s safe for consumers.

[00:06:45] And they, they were always on the front end of that. So you’d have like a lab tested edible, but the packaging was very kind of rustic around it. And so. It was very different. Um, also, you know, when early days of investing in [00:07:00] cannabis, there were, um, serious limitations. So for example, in California, they were, you know, nonprofits or mutual benefits.

[00:07:08] Corporations. And so you can’t really take equity, stakes and businesses like that, but you can lend money to them. And so there are ways you can start to think about participating. The same thing was true with, for example, in Colorado, unless you were a resident, you could not invest on the equity side into those companies.

[00:07:25] And so you have to get really creative and thoughtful about how you participate it. But when, for example, if you do participate as a lender to a business, , there are certain covenants that exist in place, such as reporting and, and having access to the financials. And it was becoming lenders to operating cannabis businesses that gave us incredible insight into actually how interesting the profile of these businesses are.

[00:07:52] And so back when we first started investing in cannabis, there were other firms that started to pop up and they would invest in cannabis, but they wouldn’t. Do quote [00:08:00] unquote plant touching operators. We would actually invest in plant touching operators because we couldn’t ignore the business potential of these businesses.

[00:08:08] And now we all know because we see the earnings calls or hear the earnings calls and see the reports that come out of these operators. And But I mean, when you’re looking at gross margins, some of these companies in the 60% you’re looking at EBIDA margins above 30%. I mean, these are very interesting business profiles and by the way, Experiencing massive growth year over year.

[00:08:29] So that was how our conviction around investing in cannabis was at strengthen. So it’s interesting how these limitations actually create opportunities when you, when you pay attention.

[00:08:39]Bryan Fields: Yeah. And especially early on in the process, right. You’re able to kind of see from just a small, small picture, if it’s just California, imagine what happens, you know, at, as you know, it grows out from the United States and then potentially globally.

[00:08:50] Yeah,

[00:08:51]Emily Paxhia: exactly. It’s really crazy. Pretty

[00:08:53]Bryan Fields: nuts. So let’s talk about beside partners. Can you share a little bit about the value it brings to the space? .

[00:08:58]Emily Paxhia: Yeah, so, [00:09:00] uh, paci was co-founded by my brother and myself. Um, so we came from a line of family, business and entrepreneurship. So I think it was just kind of in our blood.

[00:09:10] And, um, we’re both, we think similarly, but we also approach things very differently. And I think that’s really important when you’re in business together, especially in invest thing, cuz we. Look at it from different angles and test each other on it. Um, and then the firm has expanded from there. And you know, this year we had a really, or I guess technically 20, 21, we had a really exciting thing where we had Patrick Raya from canopy Boulder.

[00:09:34] And he was the, he was, we met him in January of 2014 at an arc view meeting. And I remember, or we were watching a pitch kind of competition and, um, we just hit it off with them and, and. Became pretty close and have worked together with them. We’ve co-invested with them. And I think his experience of launching and running a business accelerator in this industry gave him so much access to how these early stage [00:10:00] companies start up and run and, and the way that you can kind of help them to navigate through those stages and make connections.

[00:10:06] And it was something I always really admired. And then we decided to come together to launch our, our newest strategy. So. That’s been really great. And then we’ve got Andres on the team. Andres comes from an interesting venture and MBA background and he’s actually dual citizen, Columbian, United States.

[00:10:25] And so he actually spent a good chunk of the pandemic INTA, and, and now he’s actually based in Miami. And then we have, uh, Colin. Joining a team who comes from a background of doing research and an analysis on cannabis companies. So he’s got a really interesting background. And then we’ve got Tyler who, um, is running, helping to run our ETF.

[00:10:48] And he’s based outta New York comes from like Goldman background and, and has done a. Phrase of, uh, investment, um, processes along the way. So, you know, the whole team has built out and [00:11:00] it’s really exciting to see that we’re kind of spanning the us. We’ve got California, Colorado, Florida, New York. And I, I think there’s some great tent poles for for the firm, but, um, it’s been really great to grow it to wa how everyone comes.

[00:11:15] To the table with the same level of enthusiasm and passion for the industry, but also the same dedication to really delivering on our fiduciary responsibility of driving returns for our investors. And so, um, beside in our thing has always been. To be value, add investors. We don’t just typically we don’t just write checks.

[00:11:36] Although sometimes you just have to, uh, know where your attention is best received. Sometimes when you do invest into a company, they’re not as interested in having an active investor at the table, if they’re running their business as well, we tend to just say you’re. Good to go. But a lot of times we are actively involved and it’s something we set as an expectation at the outset of the investment for our founders is that we’re here.

[00:11:59] We’re [00:12:00] partners. Um, you know, at the beginning of the pandemic, we had an all hands meeting for the entire portfolio and brought on insurance people, lawyers. Accountants, just everything. So everybody had resources at hand for what appeared to be a black Swan event, a Sequoia capital called it. Um, you know, we may, we’ve been talking about maybe doing something again.

[00:12:21] If, if this, um, unfortunate situation with. The Ukraine escalates. I don’t know how much more can ask. I mean, there’s only a couple things and you don’t even wanna bring it up of what, where this could go, but it’s not good. Um, and we know that the inflationary impact of this and the supply chain issues are going to only be further exacerbated.

[00:12:39] But anyway, all of this goes by way of saying PSID is very actively involved. Um, you know, we out there a lot, um, but the way that we think about it is. The portfolio companies are the things that make our firm a success. So if they perform well, then we perform well. And, um, you know, we’re just here for them.

[00:12:57]Kellan FInney: I wanna say. And a good question. I have. So [00:13:00] you mentioned the accelerator program. Yeah. As well as being a value added investor. Is that kind of what led you guys to start the mastermind program?

[00:13:06]Emily Paxhia: Mm, the mastermind brand is a work in process. Yeah, that’s exactly right. So it’s kind of a. Inventing of the concept around accelerator programs and the idea of it is to be kind of more nimble and to formalize a process of mentorship and network support.

[00:13:24] Is it

[00:13:25]Kellan FInney: targeted at just your portfolio companies or are you guys opening it up to all kind of cannabis founders that meet specific

[00:13:30]Emily Paxhia: criteria? Yeah. So I think we are going to be opening it up and that’s something we’re endeavoring into in, in 2022. Um, you know, we still are, um, you know, we’ve got our actively managed funds, but, um, I think that we will be looking to open that up because we do think there’s an opportunity.

[00:13:49] To work with some companies. Like, for example, I think that the, this program could be helpful to those who are not necessarily in need of doing a full venture round of [00:14:00] financing, but they want to be able to kind of quickly get their businesses ramping and then maybe they can bootstrap them and do, um, more, um, You know, finite Ron’s of financing, where they take some money, maybe it’s in debt, or maybe it’s in equity with a way that they can dividend it out.

[00:14:17] But, you know, not everybody is a, a perfect target for a venture style of investment, but I do believe that there are small businesses that, that want to get started up in this industry that can benefit from that program. So of does that make sense?

[00:14:31]Bryan Fields: That does a hundred percent, especially with the experience your team brings to the table, because as we’ve seen cannabis is so hard in, in every other area.

[00:14:38] And having a, a valued partner like yourself kind of avoid those landmines could probably save companies, not only substantial capital, but also time and likely success or death given the variable. So I wanna stay with the value add, is there a certain strategy aspect? Is it more operational guidance? You know, what, what role does your team play in?

[00:14:57] Expanding on that. Are there kind of nuances that you can [00:15:00] share that you’ve learned from one company that you can kind of bring to the other? Or are they kind of separate entities that you don’t really wanna mix and match the

[00:15:05]Emily Paxhia: information? Yeah. Um, well the, you know, okay. So yeah, there’s, there are many areas where we try to be value up, so I’ll just.

[00:15:14] Start and run down. So we do try to be value add in terms of, we do a lot of, we spend a lot of time vetting and evaluating service providers. So maybe we can make great introductions for legal, for insurance, for outsource accounting support F P N a support. So those are certain things that, I mean, if you can save time as a founder and get good girls for good service providers, you’re already starting with a leg up, um, The other thing is that our team will also kind of vet and stress test financial models as we’re investing.

[00:15:45] And so we become an ongoing sounding board on that. And so, and like Andres on our team is really good at helping to model different things, including if a company is evaluating M and a or anything around that, he will be very. [00:16:00] In terms of modeling the outcomes of those different transactions or opportunities.

[00:16:04] And so, um, he’s done that countless times and it’s been very great value add. Um, the other thing we, I would say is that we really try to help set up these companies with good. Corporate governance, uh, not just in cannabis, but more broadly speaking. I think there’s been a real absence of strong corporate governance.

[00:16:22] You can see how it’s played out, for example, with Theranos or, uh, WeWork. Um, some of those really big companies that, I mean, when you saw the board of directors at Theranos, I mean, it was basically like write a check, but did any of those people actually really know what they were doing from like, Okay.

[00:16:40] It’s time to get the firm audited. Where are those audited financials? What’s, let’s establish a budget. What are we doing in terms of the diligence process with fundraising? Like those are all things that are really important. Same thing with, I don’t even understand what was going on with WeWork. The fact that the IP was not even held correctly by the company and they were IP.

[00:16:56] I mean, there’s just like. A myriad of things that have [00:17:00] happened when people are moving FA like I look, I, I love Silicon valley. I think the innovation that comes out of there is, is critical. And it’s how we stay as a, an economy that actually grows and flourishes rather than becomes stagnant. and shrinks.

[00:17:16] Uh, but there are things this notion of move fast and break things. I do think creates a little bit of a challenge and I think we have to be a little and, and in cannabis, we I’ve said this before, we don’t have that luxury. Like we can’t move fast and break things. You can look at how, um, ill elicit operators move fast and break things and, and break things for the industry.

[00:17:36] For example, like the vape hysteria thing of 2019. That was just people really trying to move quickly, selling a lot of vape products, not getting them appropriately lab tests, et cetera, et cetera. Um, so we try to provide support on like Bo good board composition. We try to lend insight in terms of, um, diversity in teams and inclusion in teams, especially in upper level management [00:18:00] and recruiting.

[00:18:01] Um, and then we also, as a firm do. There’s a VC who I have a lot of respect for his name is and he always said his number one job as an investor is to be also be recruiting talent for his companies. And so we always spend time trying to make introductions and connections, even if it is just as an advisor.

[00:18:20] If it is. And so some, and even some of our, our investors have actually gone to work with some of our portfolio companies because they had expertise. They could translate from their existing experiences into these portfolio companies. So those are some of the ways that we try to add value.

[00:18:36]Bryan Fields: What area of the industry do you think is currently overlooked by a majority of the space?

[00:18:45]Emily Paxhia: Overlooked. I think the tech aspect of the industry doesn’t get enough attention. Um, I think what I see is there’s a lot of piling in, on technology where I think there are some founders that are really good at raising [00:19:00] money and that’s necessary for success because you know, the main way you fail is if you run out of money.

[00:19:08] But I do think. Again, that there should be prudence around how, when and what structure you raise money and the true use of proceeds for that. Um, but I do think that a lot of folks don’t truly understand just how much value is contained within these tech companies that are serving the industry because every operating company, meaning plant touching operator.

[00:19:33] It’s like, you have to stand up a whole new business in every state you go into. Right. But the technology platforms. Can much more quickly scale across these markets. And they’re the ones who are sitting at that 30,000 foot view of what this industry looks like. We’ve invested in headset data. We love the data.

[00:19:51] We use it all the time. And that is like, who, how could you have a better ringside seat to what is happening in this industry and the trends that we’re seeing in different [00:20:00] product categories, consumers, states, market by market, all of these things. But I just think that they’re, it’s just been a bit of a lag for people to realize that this.

[00:20:08] Technology is really, it holds a lot of value and, you know, I’ll just give a couple examples of analogs, cuz some people are like, oh, why can’t you just use Salesforce? Or why can’t you just use square? And we all know that there are the regulatory limitations around that, but there’s also optimization limitations around that.

[00:20:25] So if you tried to use that your business is not going to be as efficient as it is with a tailor made, um, cannabis platform and. You can see, like mind, body is a good example of a platform that was built for the wellness sector. That was absolutely exploding and it’s very similar to cannabis. So my body is a platform it’s like a point of sale platform, a booking platform for spa’s for yoga facilities and mind, body was launched, right?

[00:20:53] When. The yoga business was exploding when people were starting to realize they needed to get into [00:21:00] these alternative wellness solutions like acupuncture and massage. And so my body intelligently, what the cannabis guys have done and gals have done is like, oh my God, this is a rapidly growing underserved sector.

[00:21:15] And so if we can create a platform that’s meant for this and then capture the growth of that sector alongside of it. Then you’re going to have tremendous growth. And so some of our technology companies are going it over a hundred percent year over year. And so it’s very interesting.

[00:21:29]Kellan FInney: One technology company I think is interesting is packs, right?

[00:21:32] Mm-hmm . And so I have have a couple questions associated with packs. So my first question is, did you guys invest in packs prior to them launching the actual vape pen? Because originally they were just like herbal vaporizer hardware. Right. um, and so just getting in before that, and then they’ve also been interesting as like a technology platform, because they’ve recently.

[00:21:51] Became a pseudo plant touching business with their now like branded through a doit. Right. Or, uh, I can’t remember exactly [00:22:00] who they partnered with, but they is, it DOCI right. That they’re actually launching their own, uh, oil pen now as well.

[00:22:07]Emily Paxhia: They’re doing, I can’t remember what the relationship with dos is, but they are doing well.

[00:22:12] I mean, packs. Right. I like to joke that they named it after us, but that’s a whole other, I like the

[00:22:19]Kellan FInney: name. It’s good brand.

[00:22:20]Emily Paxhia: It’s really good brand. I did actually. That is how I got my first, uh, packs, uh, herbal, uh, product as I was like, uh, You do realize what my last name is? I deserve the product, right. Or CCS.

[00:22:34] Yeah. I was like, I’m coming for you. Um, no, we invested in pack at a really interesting time. They had gone through a bit for a long time. They did not associate themselves at all. Period, full stop with the cannabis industry. They really carried the party line of like we are or herbal and dried tobacco inhaler or, you know, breath, whatever product, um, vaporization product, um, But I always admired their branding.

[00:22:59][00:23:00] I always admire, I mean, it showed up everywhere. I remember I was at a comedy festival in Austin and there was a big packs display. So, and I’m like, yeah, we’re at a comedy Fest and you’re talking about, or. Verbal inhalation. Okay. Um, but you know, they, they’ve always had a really good looking technology, really effective technology.

[00:23:20] I actually still think my packs too is one of my favorite ways to consume flour because you can actually taste the profile of it. You should try the packs three. I have it I like my packs too, cuz it’s a pretier color. Okay. It’s a whole thing. Um, but the, uh, what was I gonna say? But, so we invested right when they were launching the era and at that time,

[00:23:44]Bryan Fields: why’d you invest at that time?

[00:23:46] Like what, was there something that you felt in that calm conversation? Did you feel like they had a us P like, what was it about it?

[00:23:53]Emily Paxhia: Uh, you know, the vapor category was growing rapidly. Uh, the pod aspect of it, I thought was [00:24:00] very interesting and I liked the, that they were kind of doing the razor razor blade model, which is that they were going to be able to work with partners.

[00:24:07] So they weren’t gonna take on the capital. Intensive aspect of cultivating processing and infusing the pods themselves. They were gonna work with some of these well known brands like jet extracts in order to do it. Um, and the razor razor blade model is great because it’s, it’s a light touch, but then you have a pretty strong impact and a great, um, brand experience.

[00:24:26] The. You know, and I thought the technology was really strong. I also really liked the CFO, um, in the cannabis industry. And I think in all industries, you really try to make sure there’s a financial controls group at the table that are going to help to shepherd this. They’d also gone through some supply chain issues early on in, in the company and they had righted some of those challenges So we were pretty excited about it. Um, The, you know, the, an interesting aspect to it was that at that time, Juul was a part of Paxs I think a lot of,

[00:24:57]Kellan FInney: I was gonna ask that cause it’s, the technology is [00:25:00] identical, you know? I mean, I’m like there has to be some sort of IP overlay

[00:25:02]Emily Paxhia: between the two of, and there is, and, um, That has been an interesting experience to have been invested in that as well, because they spun ju out.

[00:25:13] Um, but a lot of people, because Juul became so huge so quickly because of the fact that it’s the total dressable market is the entire United States and, and also it’s nicotine. So it’s addictive. So it’s a very different, um, but, um, you know, they obviously had some missteps, but, but Juul was born out of Paxs And so that’s. That’s something. I think not everybody quite realized is you guys seem like you’re. I thought it was the

[00:25:39]Kellan FInney: other way around. I thought packs was born from Jules, but that’s good. Oh, no learning right there.

[00:25:44]Emily Paxhia: So appreciate it. There you go. um, so yeah, so it was a number of things at that moment of why we wanted to invest into the company.

[00:25:51] And then we ended up following on and I think two more rounds after two rounds after that, um, I think PACS faced some challenges [00:26:00] just like everybody did after the VA hysteria. Um, but I do think it made them. Really examine how they did want to participate in the ecosystem. And that’s where the live ROSN, uh, products have come from.

[00:26:12] So they’re going to be getting more vertical in terms of how they’re doing their own brands, but they’ll continue to have partners. Um, so. I’m pretty excited about the new direction of the company. I’m glad they’re more explicitly leaning in as a full blown cannabis company. And I think that I, I, I don’t know if you’ve tried the new era, but I love it.

[00:26:32] And I think the new, the new pen, um, the new what’s it called? The new live Rossen product is really good too. Um, it’s all very smooth and, um, the profiles are great. And I think, um, it’s, to me, it’s really interesting cuz I look at the categories through my headset data that are growing and I’m very interested in gen Z and gen Z is very, um, there’s a lot of affinity [00:27:00] for vape products and also for, um, the ones with the pod systems.

[00:27:05] So that you can have different, so you have the hardware and then you have the different pods you can plug in depending on your different needs states or what your interests are at that time. And so I’m very interested in gen Z as a market, uh, as a market segment. And so, yeah, I think it’s really cool what they’re doing.

[00:27:21] I’m excited about it.

[00:27:22]Kellan FInney: I think it’s good too, for the industry from like, uh, just a stigma perspective, cuz they were like kind of like. Hands away. We’re not gonna touch it now that they’re actually like willing to take a, uh, a foot to take a step and put a foot into the actual industry. I think it kind of speaks volumes to where the industry is going and where it’s been.

[00:27:38]Emily Paxhia: You know what I mean? Yeah. I it’s, it’s interesting too. And I can’t say specifically, because obviously it’s like sensitive information cover course, but there are massive financial institutions in that company.

[00:27:50]Kellan FInney: Awesome. That’s good for the industry.

[00:27:53]Bryan Fields: It really is. It makes sense too. Like why they’re taking the steps into the space a little more, right.

[00:27:57] They’re getting some data sets from what is [00:28:00] selling and they’re like, wow, if we can kind of expand our offerings in different areas, we’re diversifying our, our interests in the space, but we’re also utilizing, you know, sales from our partners to understand maybe market trends and then leaning in those direct so that maybe we’re not kind of.

[00:28:13] Capturing other market share all of our partners, but we’re kind of splitting that difference and, and maybe capturing new market share. And gen Z is very interesting also, especially as they kind of come up through the ranks and they’re consuming more of that with booze. I think there’s a lot of categories that we can kind of talk about in a little bit that might lean more heavily towards them.

[00:28:29] So I wanna stay and I wanna talk more about challenges right now. What do you think is a common challenge? One that’s over overlooked by majority of the space.

[00:28:38]Emily Paxhia: Um, I think what is overlooked? That’s a good question. Recruiting talent is a definite challenge and it’s been made harder by this whole great resignation thing.

[00:28:50] And the fact that the workforce has been disrupted. So there’s, there’s a lot of pain points around that, but even just yesterday, I was I in park city and I was getting a ride [00:29:00] from an Uber and the. Fellow had owned a chain of, um, suit stores along. It’s a third generation chain of suit stores in the area.

[00:29:10] And he was saying, hi, his son just took it over from him. And now he’s in retirement, driving Uber for fun, uh, nicest guy. But he was saying like, even them, they’re having trouble sourcing people to work in the, in the stores, just a tough time to hire and attract talent. And, um, you know, some of the companies I work with are now these big.

[00:29:30] Billion dollar companies in cannabis, and they’re having a hard time recruiting talent into the C-suite. Um, cuz they are really trying to make efforts to attract people from consumer products, companies or other companies or wine and spirits companies. And um, And it’s just very competitive and you know, the cannabis stocks have been down and they’ve been down for a while.

[00:29:53] And when one of your biggest recruiting potentials, and, and this is, this is where psychology comes into [00:30:00] play on. All of this is if I were getting recruited into one of these companies and my Stripe price of my, of my, um, in, so in my compensation package at the stock at this price were at this price, I would be like, this is a steal.

[00:30:14] A steal, like you don’t wanna be getting the stock at $20 when you could have gotten it at four. Right? So, I mean, it’s just one of those things where, but I, but this is the psychology of buy high sell low because people panic and they can’t see what, you know, what’s happening next. Um, but anyone who’s a conviction person that would be really great to be hired into one of these companies, be able to get your stock packages at these levels.

[00:30:36] It’s really an, um, you could realize enormous potential upside on

[00:30:40]Bryan Fields: that, but. Yeah. And as we’ve seen, maybe even pretty quickly, right. We’ve seen the market move pretty fast. I mean, unfortunately in both directions, but yeah, you’re right. It is an enticing sum. So I’m, I’m wondering, why do you think the outside industry C-suite is hesitant to kind of dive into the space?

[00:30:54] Is it the regulations? Is it the unknown aspect? Is it the federal legalization? What, what areas do you think is the biggest [00:31:00] deter for them? um,

[00:31:02]Emily Paxhia: yes. I think that’s a good answer. Perfect. All of the things that you just said, um, it’s the unknown aspect of it. You know, when you recruit from corporations, you have to find someone who’s kind of like the entrepreneur in a corporation to come over to these companies.

[00:31:18] Cuz even if you look at the biggest ones in the industry, they’re still startups. They’re just startups doing. Over hundreds of millions of dollars a year, hundreds of millions of dollars of EBITDA a year. And so, but they’re startups. I mean, they really are. I mean, that’s, they are so young in the, in the arc of businesses.

[00:31:37] And so, you know, you do have to find them more entrepreneurial people from corporations, otherwise. A cor of truly corporate person is going to struggle in this industry because the infrastructure is not there. And, um, which I actually think is great because it’s like, if you can find somebody who’s helped to shape these businesses and is ready to dive in and do it again, that’s the kind [00:32:00] of person you want.

[00:32:00] You don’t want somebody that’s going to. Look to their left and look to their right and be like, well, where are the 400 people who are going to do my job for me? You know, and make me look smart. Like you want these people to be people who are rolling up their sleeves and diving in. So I think that’s, that’s one of the tough things is just getting the right profile of, of a human being.

[00:32:19] And then I do think that it’s incredibly intimidating and the let’s face it. It’s. It’s been, we went through a 25 month bear cycle on the stock market, and then we had a brief, a very brief run up of a bull cycle. And then we’ve been right back in this bear cycle since the end of last February. And, um, It’s tough.

[00:32:43] It’s tough to, it’s tough to tell somebody that emerging market cycles like this are condensed and they’re tight and they’re difficult and are exacerbated by the political theatrics that we’re watching, especially by the Democrats. But it’s, and [00:33:00] gosh, it’s so tough, but it’s like, so it’s tough to debunk the fear that these folks might have.

[00:33:04] So you just have to be high conviction on the fundamentals of the business.

[00:33:09]Bryan Fields: What is one idea, fact or statistic that most individuals who work in the cannabis industry wouldn’t know

[00:33:23]Emily Paxhia: that they wouldn’t know. I think one of the statistics that people wouldn’t realize is how that there’s like really one to two to three actual insurance center writers. That’ll touch the industry. And that out. Yeah, the hard . Yeah. And I, I think one of the biggest issues that was gonna be one of the, and I think what people don’t realize is how that affects the cost of doing business is when you can’t have ordinary business services, like a or normal insurance, I mean, we talk about banking all the time, but the insurance piece is, is one of the UN on fortunate side effects.

[00:33:55] So I would say that, and that like our insurance premiums are, I mean, what we [00:34:00] pay for insurance has gotta be at least like 300. X, what other people pay in other businesses in many instances more?

[00:34:08]Bryan Fields: Yeah, that one, that one hits a, a sore spot for us. Uh, pretty pretty recently. All right. Let’s, let’s do a quick, rapid fire, one guest from your high rise podcast that wowed you.

[00:34:21]Emily Paxhia: Andrea cabal from ascend. I mean, obviously I’m in, I’m on the board of ascend, but Andrea cabal was the sheriff in, in the Boston area. Um, and she came, I mean, to see a law enforcement person come over to the industry, I feel like I, I can never hear her story enough. It’s totally inspiring. And she. Really stepped up and, and made a difference in the community.

[00:34:45] And, and she also has illuminated, um, me a lot of things around, um, micro lending in ways we could think about providing more support to equity applicants, other than just handing out licenses or, [00:35:00] or talking about handing out licenses. Holding up the process, which is really what happens at each state level.

[00:35:06] But, um, yeah, she is somebody who really has always wowed me

[00:35:10]Bryan Fields: favorite under the radar cannabis company or brand that you think will explode over the next two years. Mm-hmm um,

[00:35:19]Emily Paxhia: Well, so I full disclosure, I’m an investor, but I think this company called wonder the way they do their beverages is my it’s my favorite beverage.

[00:35:27] I actually, um, not only am I investor I’m also a client. No, but I, you know, I keep, I keep ’em in the, in the cupboard. I, I keep ’em in the fridge. I think. The way they’ve approached their taste profile and everything. I think it’s, it’s about to have a moment. They’re seeing great growth in California, where they are.

[00:35:44] So

[00:35:45]Bryan Fields: would you trade no cannabis consumption for 10 years for the Buffalo bills to play in the super bowl?

[00:35:52]Emily Paxhia: sorry. Bills. I gotta keep my endo cannabinoid system cruising along here. I feel it what’s another 10 years. [00:36:00] right.

[00:36:03]Bryan Fields: your state that you have your eye on?

[00:36:07]Emily Paxhia: Alabama.

[00:36:09]Bryan Fields: Ooh, that is an interesting answer. I like it.

[00:36:11] Why?

[00:36:14]Emily Paxhia: Uh, Alabama has a deep culture of, uh, agriculture, a deep history of agriculture. And I think there are some amazing, uh, enthusiasts who are multi-generational humans who are there. And I think, um, they’re thinking about it in an interesting way. So, and I like, I like the idea of doing something in Jeff’s session’s backyard.

[00:36:39]Bryan Fields: take that, Jeff. Yeah, I was not anticipating Alabama. Were you killing? No, not at all. I thought she was gonna say New York. I thought she was gonna say Florida. Ooh. All right. That’s where I thought you were

[00:36:48]Emily Paxhia: gonna say. Uh, I mean, obviously I, I mean, New York, I cannot wait for, but I just thought I’d bring in a different one for

[00:36:56]Bryan Fields: yeah, no, no, for sure.

[00:36:57] I mean, New York, we can have another conversation about [00:37:00] that, but it’s been, it’s been, it’s very sensitive topic for that. It’s been, it’s been disappointing, it’s been disappointing. Um, and I think we can all agree that

[00:37:07]Emily Paxhia: not as disappointing as New Jersey so far.

[00:37:10]Bryan Fields: Good point. I assume they would be kind of hand in hand disappointing.

[00:37:13] If we’re gonna be honest, I’ve been on the record for a bunch of times saying that I think the two of them will, will come online, closer together. And as we get into it, I’m getting, it’s been so long that I just

[00:37:22]Kellan FInney: feel bad taking shots at you now

[00:37:24]Bryan Fields: that’s fine. So let’s talk about east coast. What can east coast operators learn from California?

[00:37:33]Emily Paxhia: Uh, that competition will come more quickly and more fiercely than you can ever imagine. And it will come from every angle. But, um, so I would say you gotta level up your, your game in terms of your retail experience, your quality of product, your offering of product and your quality of branding.

[00:37:52]Kellan FInney: That’s well, that’s well

[00:37:52]Bryan Fields: said.

[00:37:53] Thanks. Based on your experience with operators in the space, what is one concept or idea you think up [00:38:00] majority of the individuals who operate in cannabis are not thinking about that should be thinking about

[00:38:05]Emily Paxhia: cannabis is a commodity. cannabis is a commodity, just like coffee. Beans are a commodity, but we all pay a lot of money for coffee.

[00:38:13] Don’t we? And I think that that’s the thing that we have and, and the same way as like a grape is a commodity, but a wine is. Very special and unique product. So I think the faster people can figure out how to build legitimate. Okay. So everyone, I, this is, this is a personal gripe. I have, I have a background in consulting on, on brand building.

[00:38:35] And so when I hear people just say the following, it’s all about brands I cringe because. Building brands is harder and more expensive than anyone really realizes. And that’s why there are big conglomerate consumer products companies, because they have the time and the, and the resources to build brands or to buy them.

[00:38:54] And you saw this massive consolidation in beer. You’ve seen it in wine and spirits. You’ve seen it in even [00:39:00] cereal for God’s sakes. So. This is not something to ignore, but you, but I think every company is going to have to level up a more sophisticated and, um, segmented brand strategy, and then really stand behind the quality and what those brands represent.

[00:39:16] So if it’s a, supposed to be more of an affordable and accessible product, Then get really clear on that. If it’s supposed to be a more premium and unique product, then get behind that. If it’s targeting a certain gender, get behind that. So, um, I think that everyone’s gonna have to level it up because, um, you know, CA California absolutely inverted this year on the very fact that cannabis is a commodity and without, um, better brand and retail strategies around it.

[00:39:44] I mean, California, to be fair though. We have less than a thousand legal retail locations in a state that is the fifth largest economy of the world. So that is a joke and that’s a regulatory challenge. [00:40:00] Um, so the things that happen in California, you can’t blame. I, I, I can’t blame on the operators. All I can blame it on is the fact that we have a very, um, complex and sophisticated illicit market.

[00:40:11] That’s very competitive. And not enough, uh, ways to get the product to the consumer. But all that being said, cannabis is a commodity. Whether we like it or not. And the way that you get around commoditization is to create unique experiences in brands.

[00:40:26]Bryan Fields: What’s your feeling on the cannabis consumption lounges.

[00:40:31]Emily Paxhia: you know, from an investment standpoint or from an, a person who would attend , um, from an investment standpoint, if it’s an, if it’s a part of existing infrastructure and you’re kind of funneling it as a additional sales channel and additional way to, it’s almost like marketing that generates revenue, then I’m very for it as an investor.

[00:40:52] When I. See an individual, uh, consumption lounge. I get nervous cuz it feels to me like hospitality or restaurants, which [00:41:00] have an enormous rate of failure. Yeah, yeah.

[00:41:02]Kellan FInney: Like a bar, you know what I mean? It’s hard to franchise, something like that,

[00:41:07]Emily Paxhia: you know? Yeah. But I mean, again, getting back to the coffee thing, if you can figure out how to use yeah, exactly.

[00:41:16]Bryan Fields: Favorite product, favorite product category over the next two to five years.

[00:41:22]Emily Paxhia: I am into beverage. I’m watching beverage I’m into it. Um, I think vape I’m very into vape and I think there’s ways we can continue to grow and evolve around vape and technology that can be invented that can or improved upon.

[00:41:36] And I think it’s, it’s, it’s a great category. And I, I hated when we threw the baby out with the bath water on that, um, because of the hysteria around it, which. Misguided and the media blew it out of proportion and it was really too bad. Uh, I mean, I even hated on the e-cigarette side because I know people went back to smoking cigarettes more than ever, and that’s a terrible outcome.

[00:41:56] Um, if you just look at the health data, so I’m very pro for [00:42:00] vape, and I think you can do a lot getting back to the point about building kind of a moat around pricing and, and avoiding commoditization. I think that that’s one way you can do it.

[00:42:09]Bryan Fields: Speaking of vape. So REPI, is that how you say

[00:42:12]Kellan FInney: that company?

[00:42:13] Yes. They’re aerosol, right? It’s like, uh, the same technology that you would use for an inhaler, right? Mm-hmm . I understand that right now they’re targeting it as a medicine, which they should, but is that something that’s ever gonna be released as like a commercially viable way for a consumer to inhale cannabinoids?

[00:42:31] Uh, I mean, for right, you wouldn’t even have to worry about any of these negative side effects and like it’s gonna take a special machine to make the, the, the aerosol version of it. So like, there’s gonna be like, at least kind of like a paywall there from bad actors,

[00:42:44]Emily Paxhia: right. Yeah. So it’s funny you say that because when I was giving that answer, REPI was in my mind a hundred percent.

[00:42:51] I’m very excited for that company. , I’m very excited about that company. So for tho for those at home who do not know, um, REPI has a [00:43:00] technology platform where it’s a. Really a no heat, uh, product. And yes, there are multiple ways that this technology can be applied from everything from vitamin, um, intake to certain medications.

[00:43:14] Um, and of course cannabinoids. And so, um, it’s a very cool platform and you’re absolutely right. It’s not just the device, but it’s also the technology that goes into the form factor that would go into, like, for example, if it was like, Just for easy analog. If it was like a PAC era type device, you’d have a, a device with a pod system and the what’s in the pod.

[00:43:37] So there’s technology in the pod, there’s technology in the formulation for the pod and there’s technology in the product, the actual hardware. So it’s all really interest. Thing. And I think, um, you know, as somebody who does like consuming by vape, but would prefer it to be even healthier, then I think that that’s a really great thing.

[00:43:55] And you know, I am a vegan, so I get B12 shots. But [00:44:00] from what I understand an absorption through a device like that, a B12 could be. You know more by, because you, a lot of people can’t absorb, this is a total tangent, but you can’t absorb B 12 by like vitamin form, um, by like sublinguals or even capsules.

[00:44:15] But, um, through obviously injections, you can, but maybe they’re thinking through inhalation, things like that would be more available and I hate needles. So if you know, I could have available through that, it would be a real game changer. Um, so. I’m really excited about rara, great team. Um, the COO the founder is a really inspiring, um, C he’s just an inspiring innovator and love working with him.

[00:44:40] And then the COO actually came from S. Smokeless tobacco division from, for like 20 years. And so he’s a really incredible human I’ve known him for years. And, um, actually he was part of our diligence process to invest into that company. And, and it’s so great to see them working together as a pair. So that is cool.[00:45:00]

[00:45:00] Great team. Yeah. Sounds like they nice

[00:45:02]Bryan Fields: up. They have a nice IP stack. Also. It sounds like, yeah. I mean like their technology

[00:45:06]Kellan FInney: and I’ve always like, you know what I mean? I heard about that maybe at a conference, like three or four years ago, they were talking about it, this pharmaceutical, uh, Monica, Val, I always messed up her last name, but she was talking about it and I was like, that is

[00:45:19]Bryan Fields: definitely the future for sure.

[00:45:21] So

[00:45:21]Emily Paxhia: yeah, it’s, they’ve been in stealth mode for a little bit, you know, while they continue, which is smart, right? Yeah. Like. Yeah, but I, I love that one. I’m really excited about it. Can’t wait for that to be in the market. So

[00:45:35]Bryan Fields: since you’ve been in the Canna industry, what has been the biggest misconception?

[00:45:41]Emily Paxhia: um, that the people who work at cannabis companies are quote unquote stoners.

[00:45:45] Um, and so first of all, I’ll start by saying, I, I love stoners. And I think that the word in a pejorative sense is misused terribly. And I think all of us should honor and respect the people who built this long before we felt safe [00:46:00] enough to get involved. And so I have a lot of respect for the people who came before me.

[00:46:04] Um, and I think that. The people I know in the cannabis industry are some of the most dedicated, highest achievers and like, seriously, I mean, Rosie mad and I are texting from like 5:00 AM my time on the Pacific coast till like, God, I feel like almost midnight her time on the east coast. And it’s like who’s up and working and working out out and doing, I mean, everybody I know is just like push, push, push, push, push, and you know, I’m based in San Francisco.

[00:46:33] And if anybody thinks. That, uh, there’s not a ton of cannabis consumption going on in these technology companies, then they’re out of their minds. I mean, one of our shops was right around the corner from Twitter and Uber and every day at lunchtime and after work, it was just like mine’s out the door. And it was all people who worked in technology.

[00:46:53] So I think that’s one of the big misconceptions. And I think yes, in our industry, people consume cannabis, but I [00:47:00] think that we all have to shift the way we think about what that means.

[00:47:03]Bryan Fields: Yeah, just really well said before we do predictions, we ask all of our guests, if you could sum up your experience in a main takeaway or lesson learned to pass onto the next generation, what would it be?

[00:47:16]Emily Paxhia: Uh, It’s going to be harder for longer than you could ever imagine. And you just have to really stay focused in order to get through it because, and you, you kind of have to love what you’re doing in order to get through it or else you’re not going to make it. I know there’s been a, quite a few fund managers who have come in and out of the industry.

[00:47:35] And if you’re in something that’s early and emerging for a quick. Turn, you’re not going to enjoy it and you’re not going to last. So you’ve gotta, you’ve gotta guard your lines and, and just be able to hang in there.

[00:47:50]Bryan Fields: Prediction time. Emily it’s 2027. What outside industry? Titan is the power player in the cannabis space.[00:48:00]

[00:48:08]Emily Paxhia: This is a good question. And I should have thought about this in advance. Um, I think it will be outside. Can, okay. Could we, could I give two answers? Yeah. Okay. Want. I just wanna give context. I do view the cannabis industry as it’s going to bifurcate where part of it is going to go very pharma. And I think that’s, I’m thinking 20, 27, is that far enough out?

[00:48:32] But I would say let’s go ahead and say it’s Pfizer because of some of the research we’re seeing on the positive benefits of cannabis with COVID. So I say on the pharma side and their

[00:48:42]Bryan Fields: acquisition, right? Yeah. And all their patents, which I don’t know why people don’t see there are thousands of them that they own.

[00:48:49]Emily Paxhia: so I’m gonna say Pfizer on the pharma side, and then outside player, I’m gonna say Diagio. Because I think that [00:49:00] beverage, and I think with gen GenZ, they’re going have to pay a lot more a gen tube. And I know they already are. We already know this, but I’m gonna say they’re going to get involved in a, in a big, big way.

[00:49:15] And they’re based out here in California. So they’re watching it. Definitely.

[00:49:21]Kellan FInney: I take care. I just think that by 2027, I think that it’s just a no brainer. I mean, they’re already heavily involved with the industry from shipping packaging and equipment and everything else. I mean, I, when I was an operator, like we would have an Amazon order. Every single day show up at our door. Right.

[00:49:38] It’s just cheaper to buy things there. And I think that like, so they’re already technically involved as like a supporting player in the industry from like logistics. Right. And I think that it’s just gonna be so easy for them to, to just turn the, it’s just a switch right. Where they can now put cannabis in a box and ship it instead.

[00:49:55] Right now they can’t put cannabis in box and ship it knowingly at least. Right. So that’s [00:50:00] my guess. I think that they’ll like 20, 27 be shipping weed across at least. In in states for sure. Personally,

[00:50:08]Bryan Fields: Brian, see, those are good. This is gonna kind of put me in like a little, I like that. That was good. One.

[00:50:13] Amazon is a, is, is obviously good one, especially with their announcements. And they’ve been pretty vocal about their backing of cannabis, I guess for me, I’ll have to take Altria. Right. And I’m. Trying to take like a similar route where we’re close enough to the space where you can kind of see them moving in, obviously with their technology and their relationship with tobacco.

[00:50:30] And maybe if they make some more moves into the pharmaceutical space, they can kind of blend the two different spaces we talked about and they could be a big player given their infrastructure in the space,

[00:50:39]Kellan FInney: pouring a bunch of money into their aerosol vape, the development in Israel. So

[00:50:44]Bryan Fields: something to watch for sure, for sure.

[00:50:46] For sure. So Emily, for, for those who are interested in getting in touch or wanting to learn more, where can they reach you?

[00:50:53]Emily Paxhia: Uh, dot partners is our website. So you can send in inquiries through that. And then, uh, [00:51:00] you can follow us on Twitter at. Passid and invest, wait, ,

[00:51:05]Bryan Fields: I’ll link them all up in the show notes.

[00:51:06] It also on Twitter spaces too.

[00:51:09]Emily Paxhia: Yeah. Twitter spaces, Morgan and Tyler are doing the closing bell with Passid CC WP, uh, twice a week. So tune in it’s obviously at one o’clock Pacific four, o’clock Eastern. And, um, you, you can follow me on the high rise with SI Scott. That’s always a fun thing. And I’m PACS one at.

[00:51:29] Twitter. I’m pretty active on there, so. Awesome.

[00:51:31]Bryan Fields: Yeah, we’ll link all up in the notes. Thanks so much for your time. Thank you.

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Editors’ Note: This is the transcript version of the podcast. Please note that due to time and audio constraints, transcription may not be perfect. We encourage you to listen to the podcast, embedded below if you need any clarification. We hope you enjoy!

This week we are joined by Matt Melander President of Levia to discuss

  • Levia Story from Origin to exit to Ayr Wellness
  • How they navigated challenges in a new product category 
  • Alcohol vs Infused Beverages
  • And so much more
https://www.instagram.com/leviabrands/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-melander-320b6250/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-melander-320b6250/

Levia uses a proprietary technology which provides for rapid onset of the effects of THC, typically 15-20 minutes with lasting effects up to 3 hours, allowing for a more consistent consumption experience compared to many edible products.

Ayr Wellness Inc. (CSE: AYR.A, OTCQX: AYRWF) (“Ayr” or the “Company”), a leading vertically integrated U.S. multi-state cannabis operator (“MSO”), today announced that it has closed the acquisition of Cultivauna, LLC, the owner of Levia branded cannabis infused seltzers and water-soluble tinctures.

“Bringing Levia into the Ayr family represents a key addition to our portfolio of high-quality, branded offerings,” said Jonathan Sandelman, Founder, Chairman and CEO of Ayr. “We look forward to expanding the presence of Levia’s seltzers and water-soluble tinctures across our multi-state footprint, while bringing new, innovative form factors to life, like beverage enhancers. With a fast-acting formula and great taste, we believe Levia will be a crucial component in expanding our reach to new and existing consumers who seek a predictable and familiar cannabis experience.”

This show is presented to by 8th Revolution:

At Eighth Revolution (8th Rev) we provide services from capital to cannabinoid and everything in between in regard to the hemp & cannabis industry. Our forward-thinking team can diagnose, analyze & optimize every detailed nuance of your company to keep your business safe, smart, and profitable. Our flexibility and experience combined with ongoing research create unique insights into how to best grow your market share. Contact us directly at [email protected]


[00:00:00]BryanFields: What’s up guys. Welcome back to the episode of the dime I’m Brian Fields. And with me as always is Kellen Finney. And this week we’ve got a very special guest, Matt Malenda from Livia. Matt. Thanks for taking the time. How are you doing today?

[00:00:14]Matt: I’m doing well, boys. Nice to meet you. Both.

[00:00:16]BryanFields: Yeah. Looking forward to diving in county.

[00:00:18] How are you doing?

[00:00:19]Kellan: I’m doing well. I’m looking to look forward to holding down the west coast with some east coast boys

[00:00:23]BryanFields: here today. And just for the record, Matt, your location.

[00:00:28]Matt: I am in Marblehead, Massachusetts. So just north of Boston, another east coast or

[00:00:34]BryanFields: in the building and the war continues calendar, I think we’re starting to push it.

[00:00:37] So Matt, so for our listeners that are unfamiliar with you, can you give a little background about you and how you got into the cannabis space?

[00:00:45]Matt: Absolutely. Um, classic example of right place, right time. Uh, I spent the majority of my career in the financial services business.

[00:00:57] Hey, I got a buddy who needs to raise capital. You [00:01:00] seem like someone who could help him, um, started asking some questions and completely got the Heisman. He’s like, you got to take this one and talk to him direct. And, uh, that was February of 2018. And I do, uh, the original founding team of, of what is now.

[00:01:17] Levia. And they had this, I actually a co-packer for cannabis products and manufactured goods with a focus on beverage, uh, and, and kind of. Business plan a and now we went to 2021 on business plan, quadruple Z and really focus more on our product. So, uh, it was a very long windy road of regulatory challenges and capital constraints and the global pandemic and you name it.

[00:01:46] We dealt with it and we just kept plugging away.

[00:01:49]BryanFields: Love it. So I guess before you kind of got into cannabis with your background, was there any hesitation to kind of move into the cannabis?

[00:01:57]Matt: For me personally, no. Um, kind of [00:02:00] grew up always weed was around people smoking cannabis and Simos in high school. So I wasn’t really like new to it.

[00:02:07] I wasn’t something, I was a huge participant in, it doesn’t mean I wasn’t pretty well versed in it. It wasn’t like it wasn’t like now where I called myself a daily communicative back, that was kind of like, all right, it’s Sunday. And I don’t really want to have trouble sleeping tonight. So maybe I’ll just smoke a bowl and go to bed.

[00:02:23] But. No, it wasn’t so much the industry that, that concerned me more than working for a, a bulge bracket, investment bank, their compliance and regulatory rules, which are still the same today, given the banking law. Um, they were definitely when they found out what I was doing, it was, um, let’s just say that was the last day of.

[00:02:46]BryanFields: Yeah. A little, little stigma there. So let’s talk like early days. I know you, you shared with us kind of the, the pivots throughout the years, obviously with the global pandemic, that’s never the best time to kind of start up a business and a federal legal industry. So take us through those early days, [00:03:00] you know, getting started, what was it like?

[00:03:02] What was the experience like and what was your day-to-day like?

[00:03:06]Matt: Um, yeah, absolutely. So those very first days, so I said it’s kind of February of 18. I found out about this. Started kicking the tires a little bit, looking at the models and Hey, you know what, doing my own research. Um, by June it was really more alright, is this, does this have legs?

[00:03:25] And if so, what is it what’s going to take? And actually the first investor myself. So I, uh, I put my money where my mouth was said, I’ve always wanted to be involved with somebody from the beginning. Um, Cut a sensitive check of my percentage of my personal net worth. And instead of set a couple hail Mary’s and said, let’s go, um, at those early days it was, it was two parts.

[00:03:47] It was, it was trying to raise capital in a, in an industry that has no banking access to like credit or anything. So, um, that’s obviously challenge Then the other part, which I actually still believe to be the hardest part [00:04:00] of the industry is where do you find zoned real estate to be able to operate a business?

[00:04:04] It’s finding a needle in a stack of needles. Um, so most of my days were spent driving around aimlessly through the Podunk town to Massachusetts because they all had said yes, uh, Massachusetts is unique. We have this thing called town meeting where, when the regular, when the regulations opened up the adult use market cities.

[00:04:26] Mandated to have X amount of recreational licenses. And from if I’m not mistaken, it was some math equation that was full-time population versus the amount of like packaged stores, equal X amount of rec licenses. Right. So those were, those were available. But then in the town setting, it went to town meeting and had the path public vote.

[00:04:47] Uh, not surprisingly, most of the more affluent Boston bedroom communities said no. So you start kind of, you’re either going out towards the Western part. Humans or you’re getting lucky and [00:05:00] you’re finding stuff and the quote unquote greater Boston area. Um, we ended up looking at 13 different towns and having like substantive conversations with, with town officials and administrators and whatnot.

[00:05:11] Uh, when I’m saying needle in the stack of needles, found a perfect location. Barefoot former paper mill and Rockland, Massachusetts. We ended up in the town planners office. He laid out the map or the overlaid district and he said, oh, you guys might’ve found that building’s on the right side of the street, only the left it’s cannabis friendly.

[00:05:34] So that’s kind of what those early days were like. It was just hitting your head against the wall, going come on, someone, give us a chance to succeed. Um, so it was actually. December of 18 that we finally got a lease negotiated and signed and found a piece of property. Um, and then from there, we, we started the next phase, which is zoning and regulatory approval site plan, approvals, environmental conditions, all of the nitty gritty of property [00:06:00] development.

[00:06:00] Um, all the while it’s still kind of iterating, trying to build a product, understand the beverage segments growing it. It was very much. Um, a spider web of continuous improvement on a daily basis. And I have to say looking back on it now, it was probably the scariest time of my life professionally, because there was no, no certainty of a future paycheck.

[00:06:21] Um, but it was also what hands down the most liberating. And now I look at myself, I’m like, man, I would go back and do that again.

[00:06:29]BryanFields: I love it. And I appreciate you sharing that ensure the capital raises gotta be extremely challenging and then finding a location extremely challenging. And then while, so at the same aspect, are you doing the R and D is beverages kind of the origin of the business plan?

[00:06:41] Because you know, you, you talk about how those are the two hardest parts, but once you get the location, it’s time to hit the ground running and then I’m guess there’s gotta be some thought process. Is, is anyone going to buy this product?

[00:06:52]Matt: Well, you never know that one until day one. When you hit the market.

[00:06:56] Um, let’s plan as a set. It was very iterative. [00:07:00] When I first looked at it, it was super critical CO2 extraction on site. We’re going to be able to oil be whether it be vape cards, tinctures, et cetera, we can white label and we can find a way to make ancillary rep great check the box. The other side of the facility is we’ll.

[00:07:20] We’ll just, we’ll build. We’ll pack or similar to any of these contract brewing organizations that are out there. And I mean, look, the, the rise of craft beer is there’s a lot of equipment out there. There’s a lot of qualified, talented people, and you just need to kind of say, Hey, look, it’s a new active ingredients, same old concept.

[00:07:38] Um, by saying R and D in those early days, we were learning about what everyone else was doing. It was a lot of nano emulsions. It was a lot of using these big, bulky things called. And needing your protection. And it was, you know, products would come out of solution. Things would stick [00:08:00] to the sides of cans.

[00:08:01] You never knew what the potency was going to be. And we were doing all of this with a soda stream and above a garage. And like, you know, you’re, you’re doing very little. Product development also given regulatory environment. It’s like you can’t send this stuff out for testing really. You’re, you’re stuck in a little bit of a circular reference.

[00:08:18] Um, with that said, I mean, we, we kept focused on those three pillars of co-packing with oil-based products just as, as one revenue source and then this idea of our own brand. The third wheel would have been like co-packing other beverage companies that were out on the Western part of the stand. I mean, those early days we got introduced to the folks from Keef Cola.

[00:08:42] We got introduced to the folks from Hi-Fi hops, which is a lot of Anita us. I mean, those were the OGE if you will, of the space. Yeah. I still remember one meeting with one of those groups where they told me stop. Now you’re never going to succeed. So, uh, um, all along, you know, but nobody’s doing this east to [00:09:00] Denver in this market, Massachusetts is just growing, we’re going to, we’re going to keep fighting.

[00:09:06] Um, and it was, it was just very, very iterative. And over time things change, we met different partners. We found different, a different suit. But need to work with product change. Got a lot simpler, got a lot cleaner. Um, governor baker banned vaporizers. We took that as kind of the word of the wise, Hey, you know what hard to call yourself a wellness brand.

[00:09:28] If you’re, if you’re outlawing all vaporizers. So, you know, again, things happen and you just have to be willing to Bob and weave and some days you’re the punching bag and some days you’re the guy hitting the speed bag. You just got to know when to duck and on.

[00:09:44]BryanFields: Yeah, that’s really well said. So kind of continuing on that.

[00:09:46] Did, did anyone on your team have cannabis experience and if they did or did not, did you have outside partners to kind of help you navigate the landmines, which is cannabis?

[00:09:55]Matt: So my primary partner, Troy Brosnan is a, he’s a cannabis savant is [00:10:00] what I like to say. Um, he’s been interfacing with the plant for about, better part of three decades.

[00:10:07] Now, maybe a little more, uh, he was the. The cannabis wisdom of everything we did. And we’re kind of like a yin and a yang in terms of if you had, if you needed to go into a boardroom and, and try to raise capital Troy, wasn’t your guy. But if you needed to sell to the local mom and pop dispensary’s, who actually believe in, in cannabis culture and.

[00:10:30] The sanctity of the plant and the health benefits. He had a story that was, would resume. And I think that’s part of our success is that we, we got the best out of each other and, and, um, circumstantially it’s, it’s still kind of how we do new product development and how we, we did everything. We’d love you.

[00:10:47] And until frankly, we, we ended up actually selling the business about, um, early February of this past of this year. So, um, now he and I are, frankly, like that’s what we do is we play. [00:11:00] Besides to, to create the viable structure. Um, as I said, personally, person at the beginning learned a lot of it from him and on the fly.

[00:11:12]BryanFields: Yeah. And that’s the way you got to do it. So I want to talk about the three different products achieve dream and celebrate, kind of get the origin of why you have three. And if there were others early on, or if it was kind of started with one and then added the two more.

[00:11:28]Matt: Uh, honestly, my kind of story on that is, is the strain name game is as confusing as the person.

[00:11:39] They mean anything to you is the person who actually came up with said, oh gee, this is somebody else’s purple that it’s like, they mean nothing. And what that does for the novice consumer is it is a deer in that. Even the veteran consumer, they kind of look at comfortable what they know and, and there’s a lot, I mean, there’s [00:12:00] constantly new genetics coming to market.

[00:12:01] Our goal is, look, let’s simplify, simplify, simplify, and let’s create brand archetypes that kind of speak to the feeling of what someone is going to experience when they drink. One of these products achieve as our sativa. We do our best to kind of keep the genetics consistent, but you know, there are supply and demand constraints that you can, you got to play with.

[00:12:23] So that one it’s get stuff done, work or play. Um, the original flavor for that is, is raspberry lime. Um, celebrate that’s our hardware line it’s in my opinion, it’s the perfect alcohol replacement kind of go to a backyard, barbecue, hanging out with friends, be a little chatty uplifted, but. Also like naturally relaxed that one is, uh, originally lemon-lime.

[00:12:46] And then we also do some seasonal flavors that we run in the hybrid vein. Uh, simply highlight, say no reason to leave the middle of the fairway right now. This is still the early, early days of, of the segment. So for those flavors, we’ve done a cranberry lime, [00:13:00] a pomegranate punch, uh, just a couple of weeks ago, we released our spring seasonal, which is an orange blossom.

[00:13:07] Um, next one, which is going to be announced in the next couple of days, but I’ll, I’ll, I’ll leak it. Here is, uh, a mellow mule, which is a ginger lime flavor. Um, so that’s been really fun is to continue to kind of work with local with our flavor house, continued to develop and innovate really cool flavors because when you’re working with water, uh, ostensibly, a water.

[00:13:28] You can make it taste however you want. So you, we just want to keep making it fun and, and, and continue to convert new consumers. And then thirdly is dream. Uh, that’s our indicator says all kind of wind up the corners of your day. If you want to watch a movie, relax on the couch, get a good nights. Or, um, that one comes in jam Berry, which is just our, our mixed Berry flavor.

[00:13:50] So, um, kind of long story short on why we did it. It was purely simple stated. So that the can of curious as if, as we like to call them, [00:14:00] wouldn’t be staring at the iPad or the TV screen and the dispensary and be like, oh my God, what am I looking at? What am I doing? It keeps it consistent. We continue to expand in new markets.

[00:14:13] We’re going to hold those archetypes together. Similar that when you go from California to Boston, bud light, bud light, we kind of want to create that same understanding. So. Um, consumers know what they’re getting every time they, they crack open a camp. Uh, quick

[00:14:26]Kellan: question. Uh, how did you guys settle on the flavors for sativa hybrid and in the car?

[00:14:32] Did you try to pair those with kind of your staple strains that you use for the sativa? Uh, beverages or is it kind of just, uh, you want to walk us through that thought process,

[00:14:44]Matt: you know, actually killing this is going to be another place where you’re going to have to put a feather in your cap to the east coast poise, because we have this thing in Boston called polar beverage company, which is the O G emoji seltzer companies.

[00:14:56] Uh, they’ve got every flavor under the sun. [00:15:00] Their cranberry lime flavor is like legit. Flatwater the only thing I drank during the day. Um, we just tried what was right in our backyard. So polar has been around, I think since the 18 hundreds in Western mass, they’ve got everything from. I mean, you pick a normal flavor from LA to, I think they have one that they do during the summer.

[00:15:23] That’s called unicorn kisses. I have no idea what goes into unicorn kits, but you can’t find it in the supermarket. So it sells really. Um, so we just actually went off of that. We tried to just reverse engineer. What was right in our backyard for the exact same reason that initially we were only going to be sold to Massachusetts.

[00:15:37] Everyone here knows polar. You can’t really go this without finding it. So, uh, nothing, nothing to do with the strains. It was entirely based on the consumer. Seltzer coupled with the kind of legacy Selter can know of from growing up in new England.

[00:15:55]BryanFields: I want to talk more about the form there’s, I’m so intrigued by that process.

[00:15:58] So like when you’re doing the [00:16:00] kind of the mix and match is trying to understand, like, I mean, that has to be kinda daunting. Right? You’re you’re trying one and there’s gotta be a thought process where it’s like, can I drink three or four of these? Or like, are you, you kind of experienced it for like one and then kind of moving on to the other, how does that work?

[00:16:17]Matt: I think some of that just comes down to the regulatory framework of what we were operating under. So in Massachusetts for a consumable product, a single serve maximum dose is five milligrams. Uh, so Charlton Lee light and it creates a sessionable experience. So for us in product testing, as I said, we did it out of a soda stream.

[00:16:36] So for me to pour myself an ounce or two. 15 different flavors and kind of Trium swirl them sometimes spit it out, sometimes swallow it, didn’t it, you know, you knew what you were getting into. Um, and, and so that was really where we came from the potency, just, we went with what the market allowed. So I know some of our competitors have gone lower [00:17:00] than two and a half milligram products.

[00:17:01] Others do tens others. Um, I personally. I think somewhere in that two and a half to 10 lion share of the market needs to be, you give somebody a a hundred milligram product who’s who’s in novice and you can give me a hundred milligram PO product. I’m going to see the boogeyman and it’s not going to be, um, you try to keep it super consistent and can at milligrams, like people will feel it.

[00:17:28] Some folks we say right on the can, like, if you’re new to this drink half, wait a few minutes. Don’t be, you know, we, we, as consumers, culture, that’s built around single substance. Psychoactives primarily in beverage form from caffeine and coffee to booze and the right. Like we understand dosing ourselves against that.

[00:17:50] If you give somebody at six arches shots of espresso, they’re going to be shaky and they’re not going to be happy. Well, guess what? Next time they’re never going to have sex. He gives [00:18:00] somebody a shot, a one-fifth of a couple of shots at one 50. There throat’s going to burn too. They’re going to not be in a great way either.

[00:18:06] So it’s that, it’s that product understanding and consistency and repetition, that kind of built it for us. Um, now, like anything, everybody has different tolerance to cannabis. There’s somebody who, five milligram product they’ll turn their nose up at it and say, not for me. I’d have to drink two liters of this before I feel anything.

[00:18:27] Okay. Frankly, you weren’t ever my target country. My target consumers, that person who’s new to this or that consumer. Who’s like, you know what? Five milligrams is great. I can have a few of these in a social setting. It’s a healthier alternative, and I start making better life choices and oh, by the way, what’s the best.

[00:18:46] No hangover. So, um, yeah, it was, again, like so much of this story is fluid. I mean, I mean that pun intended because it’s a water based product, but like, it really was, we, we knew the restrictions were so [00:19:00] astronomical that we needed to be comfortable with what we could get to participate and just being in the market was good enough.

[00:19:08] So has there been a constant dialogue of potency and changing formula and, and going stronger weaker? Yeah. And Budweiser bud light equivalency. Um, yeah, it hasn’t gone anywhere. Absolutely not. We’re we’re comfortable where we are. We think it gives us the best market position to, to attract the most new country.

[00:19:29] I have a quick

[00:19:29]Kellan: question was, uh, so like red bull and monster, right? They like have like a single flavor beverage line. How much influence did, like some of those other beverages have on how you guys kind of settled on three different flavors? Was it just a sativa hybrid Endeca model? And you were like, we’re going to just stick with these.

[00:19:47] How much did like the outside beverage industry influence your guys’s decisions

[00:19:54]Matt: outside influence what we were doing? None of us came in. [00:20:00] Perfect cannabis background, frankly, none of us came to the side. He believed in the concept and the brand and the strategy. Then it was, Hey, guess what? There’s three kind of core cannabis bras.

[00:20:15] If you will, let’s make one for each. And that they know doing limited release was always version one a. So that’s why we do the seasonals. Um, I have. Uh, I’d be hard pressed to believe that some updates and new flavors and the next her’s, it’s just, you know, it’s only about 13 months in market, so you there’s only, you’re drinking from a fire hose trying to just keep up with consumer demand.

[00:20:43] You go you’re in a pod meshes upon

[00:20:49] California’s six times the size of that selling more units. Four months into market. Then the, then the biggest producers in the California market are [00:21:00] selling that still holds true that’s testimony to the sanctity of the product, the consumers, like it might as well give them flavor differentiation and over time, continue to work through that.

[00:21:10] Where, I mean, there’s a very real chance that someday we have an achieved variety pack, right. Where it’s all sativa based, but it’s for four different flavors or a celebrate variety pack, or there’s a mix and match, right. Two of each and you get all the different effects and you can go home. And depending on what you’re looking to do that day, time of day, what you’re up to, if you’re going for a hike or if you’re mowing the lawn or you’re sitting, watching a movie, you know, you can pick and mix and match to kind of map to, to get the best experience for whatever you’re doing in your own life.

[00:21:45] Oh, that’s going to be

[00:21:45]Kellan: so much fun for you guys to develop all those flavors down the line.

[00:21:49]Matt: It’s very fun. As I said, we do it with a soda stream. So we do hyper prototyping all the time. We’re constantly evolving flavors. Um, we’ve got a great flavor house. I’ll give a nod to the west coast, [00:22:00] uh, sovereign flavor house out of Santa Ana, California.

[00:22:02] They’re excellent partner. Um, and we do it. That’s actually probably my favorite thing we get to do is we tell everyone everyone gets to be a part of the creative process here. There’s no monopoly on good ideas.

[00:22:18] It might taste like your wax and it might be a home run. You just don’t know until you try it. Um,

[00:22:24]BryanFields: so when the products go to the dispensary’s, I guess, early on in the development phase, how did you know it was going to be successful? I may say you want to see those numbers move, but there’s gotta be some traction that takes place from some of the marketing challenges on a new product to the space.

[00:22:38] When did you get the feeling that you were on the right track and how, how quickly.

[00:22:44]Matt: I don’t know if I still have, I don’t know, even if I believe that yet today. Um, but some of that’s just like the fear that comes with being an or that you, you have trouble kind of separating yourself and looking at it from a distance and being able to appreciate the success that’s been had.[00:23:00]

[00:23:00] Um, we were very fortunate. Our delays were also in some ways, our benefit, we, when I got involved. The market and in summer of 2019, and we didn’t hit market until February of 2021. Um, with that said, we, we were out there talking with dispensary partners. As new ones came online, we were getting our names out there.

[00:23:23] So by the time we made it officially to market, we had our first two turns of our beverage seller pre-sold. So we knew we had 35 homes, as soon as we hit. A couple of weeks after that, we crossed 50. Uh, pretty soon after that it was a hundred and I think we’re in 152 as we sit here today, 13 months later.

[00:23:46] Um, so, you know, sometimes you gotta just be comfortable taking a flyer. This whole industry is a fire. Nobody has a case study. There is no best practice. It’s trust your intuition. Trust [00:24:00] your heart. Trust yourself. No, one’s going to do it for. And they go get the work. How

[00:24:06]Kellan: important is kind of that, uh, was the, the initial consumer interaction I know, like in Washington and like other states, uh, they do like vendor days, right?

[00:24:15] So like they set up a booth and you can come try the products or talk to like the, the experts on that specific brand. Is that something that’s actively practiced in Massachusetts? And how important was that? If it is during the early

[00:24:28]Matt: stages, we cannot do. Um, so if we were to go that route, like in some of it’s we have not, they’ve done uninfused sampling.

[00:24:39] I don’t think it really does much, you know, you kind of, yeah. The flavor is great, but I’ve tried some uninfused gummy Sam wants because you’re adding something, that’s got a pretty pool cannabis itself. Um, so it was again, [00:25:00] And I think it’s primary. Um, almost industry are the budtenders. They, and they see all the different companies coming and going and they, they start to, um, so we, we leaned in and relied heavily on them.

[00:25:18] We do do our sales people get out there and table at these places on a weekly basis. You better believe it. Um, But for the most part. Yeah, it was a, I think it was a product whose time had come because it makes all the sense in the world as a universal consumption method. And we were the power first mover here in Massachusetts that we were the first one launched.

[00:25:40] So, um, people were looking for it. I mean, I tell this story often, the very first delivery we made in February of last year was to a small dispensary find federal and Raleigh, Massachusetts. Just so happened that, that as we were offloading the truck, there [00:26:00] was a woman in there purchasing something for her recreational consumption.

[00:26:06] And she was like, oh, what’s that? I said, oh, this is a new beverage. As soon as the market, they say, give us a few hours, let’s get it on the inventory and get it ready for sale. She came back that, uh, that was a Tuesday and came back on that Friday. Came back the following Friday about 12. And since then has been basically buying a case a week and doesn’t drink alcohol anymore.

[00:26:31] And swears by it has to be the consumer trying for themselves and make, to say, you know what, I’m going to change out my lifestyle, or I’m going to make a conscious decision to do this. So no marketing campaigns ever going to do that for you. Absolutely. And that’ll continue, continue to create new door swings, but something as substantive as that, where someone really makes a full wholesale lifestyle change that’s on [00:27:00] you.

[00:27:00] Um, and I think that’s such a great representation of the product because it is it’s zero calorie. It’s zero sugar. I call it guilt-free fun. Um, and people start to use it for whatever their reasons are. I’ve heard folks from. Superstar world renowned musicians who have battled alcohol for 50 years who have found this, and now they don’t battle off their alcohol problems anymore to local folks who again, have struggled with substance abuse in the past or whatever the case may be coming to us out of the blue and being like, you’re not going to.

[00:27:40] Five 10, whatever, the amount of years they’ve been in recovery, I feel normal at a, at a party in a social setting because I like the can is kind of like that social crutch. Um, we never entered, we never set out to do that. That’s just the glory of this project that it’s taken on a life of its own. And I mean, where it was a conference [00:28:00] in Massachusetts ni Cannes a couple of days.

[00:28:03] Um, more people than not came up to us to just say, thank you. And it’s like never again, never in a million years. Was that anticipated? Honestly, I’m thankful that I we’ve been fortunate enough to create something that, that has this kind of have for it. And truly that’s just beginning. I mean, we’re still just in massive.

[00:28:24]BryanFields: It’s so exciting. And when you talk about that social crutch, I think that dynamic is so interesting because there’s so many people who lean on alcohol for that social setting, because they don’t know that there’s another alternative out there. And when you layer on top of it, then no hangover marketing, it’s hard not to consider your options and go, Hey, if I never have to be hung over again, but I can also feel.

[00:28:44] And I have something in my hand, in those backyard settings, because, you know, when you take an edible or you’re smoking, some people don’t want to smoke, but if you take an edible, you still don’t have that social crutch, like you were saying. And I think that’s so perfectly well described. And I think specifically here in the east coast, mainly for me in New York, I think people are [00:29:00] going to be blown away when they first try those products, because it is a game changer for them is replacement for alcohol.

[00:29:05] And I think it’s going to change a lot of people’s lives.

[00:29:08]Matt: Agreed. I think it kind of hit a. Again, we’ve, we’ve realized as we’ve gotten more involved in this smoking is obtrusive hard stop. I don’t care whether it’s a pre-roll or for packable or a ball grip, or it’s a vape present, whatever it is, that area is some sort of thing that you’re exhaling into other people’s vicinity.

[00:29:33] Great. We also have, I mean, I’ll use Massachusetts as the example, sometime in the early nineties, we outlawed smoking at public. That is never coming back. I don’t, you can be the biggest supporter of cannabis and you, if you try to disagree me with me on this one, we can have a very heated debate because it’s just simply not happening.

[00:29:55] You’re not going to be able to spark a joint in a restaurant and get away with it. [00:30:00] Transfer that to the consumable side. I mean, look, I, I, I love gummies. I think there’s, they’re great. But in a social setting, when I end up throwing it in my mouth, I’m going to chew it for 20, 30 seconds. I’m going to swallow it.

[00:30:12] And then I’ve got this really delayed onset sweet party, man. What am I supposed to do for the next hour as I wait for the. Again, you’re going to eventually what you’re going to do. You’re probably going to go find some like a beer or something to hold something in your hand,

[00:30:29] magically, we kind of paired those two things together. You put it in a canned format. So one, you actually get to pace your own dosage. So like not everyone is going to crack this thing and chug it down. Like some people will just sip on it and it’s got it’ll work with them over time. They’re holding it.

[00:30:45] That creates the crutch and oh, by the way, it’s fast acting. So in the same, in the same, call it 10 to 15 minutes. So when you’re taking a drink of alcohol, you start to feel it wash over you. That’s the onset of the effect with this. So you get that benefit. The feeling comes in quicker. It’s [00:31:00] not like inedible where you’re sitting way to 90 minutes before you feel anything.

[00:31:05] Oh, by the way, that’s where everyone gets to the, ah, it’s not working. I got to have a second one. Oh no. I had too many. Um, we get to pace It It gives everyone that kind of equal playing field in a very well understood dynamic, which is sipping on a drink.

[00:31:22]BryanFields: Can you kind of pair the dosing? For example, for me, I like to do, let’s say 10 to 15 milligrams, but what I assume three beverages, is that kind of how you would do calculation or is there more variables in play?

[00:31:35]Matt: Uh,

[00:31:39]’cause it’s, uh, it’s not like you’re taking that, that 15 milligrams in one fell swoop. And then it’s just going to absorb in your system, like anything it’s uh, it’s self-education, you know, start drink one, obviously you’re like, all right. I know I’m comfortable at 15 milligrams. When it, when it hits, I feel free.

[00:31:57] You probably drink three of them feel [00:32:00] where you’re at. The beauty is, is that, you know, if you, if you want to have another one go for it. If you go, yeah, I’m in a perfect. Paul Dyer, maybe I switched over and drink like a regular water. Like you just it’s your, the world is your oyster and you need to create your own consumption methodology that fits for you and your own potency standards.

[00:32:20]Kellan: I have a question randomly. I have no idea the answer to this, by the way. Um, it’s just a thought.

[00:32:28] Is cannabinoids or canines more bio bio, bio li available in liquid than they are in a solid. So like if I eat a gummy that has 10 milligrams and say, I only absorb 80% of that because it was in a solid, is that, do you know the answer to that? Is that something that you guys have explored?

[00:32:45]Matt: Um, I, I don’t know the true scientific answer.

[00:32:49] So again, I will cage my answer and say our understanding of it is more predicated on the science than it is the, um, delivery [00:33:00] device, whether that be in a solid or in a, in an aqueous form, we work with a pharmacist who has, is a special specialist in drug delivery systems, uh, which creates that advanced bioavailability.

[00:33:16] Frankly, we have done some R and D with other form factors and that aunts that stays consistent. So, um, there’s, I think more, more studies need to be conducted by that young lady and her team to be able to prove out the efficacy of, of that science. But, um, Given federal illegality, getting those studies, greenlit and university settings or programs is a big, a lot more challenging than it needs to be.

[00:33:47] Um, but short answer is down to two, the, the science and the technology that, that a manufacturer is working with, um, rather than [00:34:00] anything that has to do with whether it’s. Uh, a hard, good, or chocolate bar water base or whatever. Yeah.

[00:34:07]Kellan: That is one thing though that the east coast did have a huge advantage from a timing perspective, because like initially all the beverages that came out in Colorado.

[00:34:15] Uh, we’re not very good at all. Like they, and they were literally commercializing brands had products that it stuck on the side and all these things and it just destroyed brands left and right. And so the beverage industry was really challenging in Colorado in the early days. So I’ll give the east coast a feather for doing it the right way, at

[00:34:31]Matt: least.

[00:34:32] Yeah. You know, and I think frankly, we looked at all of the, what I call version 1.0 products that were in Colorado, Washington, Oregon, California, wherever they meet. The trick is in those early days, the best way to mask the cannabis flavor was to make really high sugar content beverages. So I personally, and I think, again, speaking back polar beverage company, like that’s a zero calorie product [00:35:00] backed, like you can drink a 12 pack of the seltzer water.

[00:35:02] It’s just the same as drinking a bunch of tap water. So it just tastes better. And it’s got some bubbles. I don’t necessarily drink a lot of soda in my personal life. I don’t think I would be someone as a consumer who would lean in on a very high caloric sugar content, so to base product, because that was a masking agent.

[00:35:24] So the sugar is the masking agent. Um, that’s my that’s me personally.

[00:35:29]Kellan: It also does help with wellness, right? Like the high sugar is terrible for wellness, so,

[00:35:34]Matt: correct. So it’s kind, kinda like, you know, it’s all those pieces kind of play together. Yeah. If you can create something that is in our case, zero calories, zero sugar, um, people can pick it up with confidence and say, you know what?

[00:35:48] This isn’t going to impact my health goals, weight loss goals, exercise goals, you name it. If again, it fits for everybody. It’s the universal, in my opinion, it’s a [00:36:00] universal stigma breaker. It fits everything we understand. And we freaking do it in a way that is. Naturally healthier than alcohol. Now look, we all know alcohol is bad for us.

[00:36:14] The differences you can’t take, no matter what, you can’t take the calories out of alcohol. First person, you can figure that one out. Give me a call. I’d love to do business with you, but I think it’s relatively impossible. And here’s a case where it’s a plant-based so that you actually can make it naturally calorie.

[00:36:31]BryanFields: A lot of people are going to see this podcast episode and realize your team’s incredible success in a very, very short amount of time. Can you share a story of fact or another concept that would shock someone about the journey and the process that your team.

[00:36:46]Matt: We went to market. We had $38,000 left in the bank and I was in a lockdown hospital ward.

[00:36:51] My wife had just had twins. Uh, so don’t give up on yourself ever. I think that’s probably the truth is I called my business partner from, during a [00:37:00] women’s in Boston. Hey, have we heard from the state yet? The answer at that moment was no, I was like, well, we better because they’re gonna run out of money next week.

[00:37:08] So you know that just, again, it all comes down to the entrepreneurial journey is very much, you have to believe in yourself. No one else is to do it for you. Once we hit. It’s been a rollercoaster. I mean, you’re not supposed to tell me a, uh, a hard, good story where you launch in your cell and 364 days. It doesn’t happen.

[00:37:32] Um, when you go from zero to number one in the category in the country in a matter of six months. So like, I mean, we’re currently number two. It’s, you know, like that, that sort of truth is, is very much the holy moly. Let’s I always joke. There’s no case study for this industry. Well, I’m pretty sure somebody is going to write this case study for business school at some point, because it doesn’t add up to what you’re normally taught.

[00:37:57] Um, yeah, I it’s [00:38:00] it’s exactly that it’s sometimes I think it’s a Steve jobs line, something to the effect of like the people who are going to change the world are the ones who are crazy enough to try. I mean, you just got to be crazy enough to.

[00:38:12]BryanFields: And it’s great hearing you, you know, you share that story, that personal one also with like the limitations of the finance and then to go because of scale, because once it’s popping off, now you have to go back internal.

[00:38:21] You’ve got to kind of scale your operations probably pretty quickly, which is one of those where you’re, you’re operating. You let’s say first or second year now you got to really drop it down to fourth pretty quickly. So there has to be like an internal look where it’s like, all right, like, how are we going to get from zero to actually 100?

[00:38:36]Matt: So. Again, they’re lucky than good. I have to be very honest and say, we, we shot for the moon. From the very beginning, we, we built the facility to the point where our number one competitor nationally, and I dunno the fall or the summer or the fall of 2020 before we made it to market and their comment when they saw the size of our [00:39:00] facility and the amount of tank space and cellar space we had that you’re trying to make beverages for the whole country.

[00:39:06] Well, no, it’s just, we figured why not big possible the worst case scenario again was not that we couldn’t find somebody whose home, they, they obviously would have come and worked with us. They were looking for a place to get their product in Massachusetts. So I said, probably business plan, quadruple zero, and we made it to market.

[00:39:27] You do the best of what you got in our case. How do we throttle up? Frankly, we already had the team and the staff. Most of our operations team, our career brewers, they all kind of saw the writing on the wall. They’re like, holy moly, this is a growth industry. So think of the call it 10 people in our operations beverage staff, six of them come from careers in the brewing industry.

[00:39:54] So they understand the systems and the mechanics and what’s going on. They understand warehousing and logistics [00:40:00] and. It was more a turn to our sales team and said, Hey, can you guys keep up? You know, we know what we can produce on a weekly basis. We know what the testing delays are. We can turn, I think we turned somewhere around 1.5 million units last year, February 16th of December 31st.

[00:40:18] So you go as fast as you possibly can. You believe in each other and you build a team where it’s, that you go to that building. It’s more family than it’s a company. Everyone supports each other. Everyone has each other’s back. That’s what cannabis needs to be. The industry, the industry needs to be built for something.

[00:40:36] It can’t be this money grab it. Can’t be sole. Like you need to actually realize that we all your aim from a different place. I used to do something different. I wasn’t, this hasn’t been my career forever. We all looked at it as this kind of bright shining beak successes. [00:41:00] Yes. There’s commercial success, but there’s also a personal success, which is like, it’s a better quality of life.

[00:41:05] You’re a better version of yourself. It’s that kind of buy-in that we all made. And I wish that was the universal standard of the industry. I I’m afraid it’s not. That’s really to art. That’s the story of why Levia succeeds and why it has the following. Well, especially locally that it does is the team cares about each other in a way that, that, that love goes to the consumer buys that product, they experience it.

[00:41:32] There’s something to be said about some of the, the kind of less tangible parts of what we do.

[00:41:38]BryanFields: So let’s talk about the successful exit to air wellness. When did they reach out? How did that conversation start? I can’t imagine. They were like, Hey. We’re looking to partner up, you know, take us through, you know, that early reach out conversation then how long the process takes to let’s say finalize an actual deal.

[00:41:54]Matt: Yeah. Um, thankfully that’s what I used to do in my past life. So I was at least conversationally [00:42:00] competence in what to expect. Um, as I said, we hit market February 16th. I started fielding buyout offers by April. Wow. Um, And again, when you have newborn twins at home, you’re at a startup you’re running on fumes and running on empty.

[00:42:16] And I probably, frankly, my synopsis weren’t connecting. So I was a lot more open with sharing than I otherwise would have been. Um, but we had five public MSO’s reach out and those call it that six to 10 weeks of our life cycle period. And you start having all those conversations and they’re very high level and you start to just kind of think.

[00:42:41] Who do we believe in as much as they have to believe in us and what we’re doing. And in the case of error, Mr. Sandeman, is this the chairman? He and I had one of those phone calls that I’ll never forget it. I can tell you exactly where I was sitting and, you know, we [00:43:00] all that we, we got along on all the right philosophical levels.

[00:43:04] Again, it’s about the product. It’s about family. It’s a pallet in the future of this industry. And, you know, John’s son was actually the one who introduced us. He, he had a call with my business partner nice. Sooner than, than, than when John called. So, you know, you start to realize like, all right, there’s some depth there.

[00:43:20] And, um, in the mean meantime, we were fielding other, um, written offers. Glad we didn’t follow some of them because there’s no, it’s like, there were some, some of those probably wouldn’t have ended well for us. Um, so from there, so yeah, probably. Early may we started negotiating a true deal, put a letter of intent together from there, it becomes the real nitty gritty of diligence due diligence on their part, some due diligence on our part, trying to better understand the, the operating business and what they’re doing.

[00:43:55] Um, and the acquisitions they’ve made. The markets are going to what our [00:44:00] opportunity is, how we’re going to leverage those markets. And it becomes a massive back and forth of let’s make a deal. Really? What, what, what, where are non-starters over there? Non-starters making sure that we did this in the right vein, which was very much collegial and understanding that this beverage segments and it’s first inning and someone is going to create a PepsiCo or Coca-Cola or Budweiser.

[00:44:22] No, one’s done it yet. Do we think we can? Yeah. I, I. Bang my fist on the table until now, until the cows come home and say exactly that. Um, so fast forward, obviously levies is continuing to grow and succeed and kind new customer build, build, build in the background. I’m working on their team. We get to mid August.

[00:44:46] We’re kind of got that goal line of like, all right, we know we, uh, we have. Ancillary things that needed to get solved. So we signed at that point, a binding letter of intent. That was basically the, if you asked me, that was like, when they got down on [00:45:00] one knee, marry them. And then, uh, we actually signed the purchase agreement, signed it from my bed at about 10 30, the night of September 3rd, which was Friday going into labor day weekend.

[00:45:12] So I was actually able to take the last three days of summer and say, all right, I can take a breath. And you show up on Tuesday and you get back to work and the kind of integration components started.

[00:45:27]BryanFields: It’s gotta be a really interesting conversation to have. Let’s say the five MSLs is all kind of flirting with you and you internally kind of battling that internal belief is now the time should we continue to accelerate, but again, you’re in the driver’s seat.

[00:45:39] So it’s gotta be kind of flattering for you when they’re kind of giving, are they pitching you on the positioning within their brands? Are they giving you the future? What is those conversations? Kind of like

[00:45:49]Matt: it’s all of the above. Um, You do have to sit there and go, Hey, let’s make this strategic determination of what the path forward is.

[00:45:58] It’s best [00:46:00] for us. And, and I, my management style is not frankly management style, as much as it’s an altruistic style, which is you do for the good of all concerned, always there, and the product can do no harm. Those were the two binding principles and love you. So, um, you said that in a room and everybody kind of has their opinions of what we should do.

[00:46:20] I think. in Any other market, um, without the federal challenges and banking challenges, we would have had a lot more optionality and, and things that we could have done strategically in those early days to kind of say, Hey, look, the concept works. Now let’s go build this ourselves. Well, I said, I threw my hand up first and I say, guys is Austin building one facility and getting one license.

[00:46:46] We don’t have the. cash or the time to try to, to replicate this across the country. The best thing to do is find a partner who’s willing to move as fast as we want to go. Well, my partner, [00:47:00] Troy and I went down to New York. We sat down with John at his home and he sold us on three things, culture, speed, and belief in what we were doing.

[00:47:10] Um, he certainly as the speed, they have the capacity and speed to go. And culture matters because for me, as I said, it’s a family first. It’s not a more, you need to, um, again, management 1 0 1, you put yourself last and you support the people around you who can give you the opportunity to succeed. And you’re going to in, so doing, you’re going to create a culture that creates winners and supports itself, and everybody picks up for each other.

[00:47:38] That’s the kind of business that I always wanted to be a part of. And we said to John from the very early days, Levia is a representation of who we want to be in the world. Um, and, and again, and that was what we did and that’s where we’re going. And that’s where we aspire to continue to, to bring that to fruition every single back,

[00:47:58]BryanFields: without naming any [00:48:00] names.

[00:48:00] Were you feeling any offers from outside industry?

[00:48:05]Matt: Uh, no. No. It was all industry players. Um, I subsequently once we had kind of figured out where we were going. Yes, that happened. But not in those, not when it was still like an open-ended dialogue. Um, look, yeah, there, there a who’s who of big beverage family operators that have been around forever.

[00:48:29] They, they did find their way to get in touch with us that went to come one way or another. Um, again, that’s awesome, but they don’t understand. Then they did something else. And that, that was where their success stemmed from, uh, stick with what, you know, don’t, don’t just follow that shiny object or you’re probably going to over-invest in something you don’t truly understand.

[00:48:50] And you know, another, another class you can’t sell something you don’t understand perfectly. So you can [00:49:00] try that. You can try your best to build a business, but if you don’t actually interact with the product yourself, it’s going to become, it’s going to come across disingenuous. You know that that’s, that’s human nature.

[00:49:14]BryanFields: Since you’ve been in the cabinet and industry, what has been your biggest misconception?

[00:49:21]Matt: The lazy stoner mindset that we were all taught in elementary school is not real. Some of the most successful decorated business people I’ve ever had. The privilege of knowing they, they use cannabis on a daily. I mean, we’re talking fortune 50 CEOs, running global conglomerates who literally we’ve gotten introduced to and been like, oh yeah, no, I actually prefer this, but it’s been so stigmatized forever.

[00:49:50] It’s like, that’s, that’s the part that needs to go. We gotta, we all collectively, as an industry, need to break the stigma and, and let the truth come out. It’s, uh, it’s nothing [00:50:00] more than a smear campaign. That’s 120 years old. So over time it becomes. And people will take it as the truth. And frankly, I think the statistics show otherwise in every recreational market, this does not create additional youth appeal.

[00:50:14] This doesn’t create a bunch of people living in their parents’ basement, playing video games, eating Doritos. No, there’s really, really, really high functioning people out there who this plant actually helps them. And we need to honor that the fact that, you know, these, these traditional cultures who have been practicing plant-based medicine for thousands of.

[00:50:34] They were probably onto something and it behooves all of us to just bring that to the forefront.

[00:50:39]BryanFields: Amen. Amen. Before we do predictions, we ask all of our guests, if you could sum up your experience in a main takeaway or lesson learned to pass onto the next generation, what would it be?

[00:50:50]Matt: I believe in yourself,

[00:50:54] take the take, take the jump. You’re never going to know if you can do it until you try it [00:51:00] and you’ll be amazed at how much more you can accomplish that. Uh, if you’re just willing to take the risk and if you fail, you learned.

[00:51:12]BryanFields: Absolutely. All right. Prediction time. Matt, do you think the beverage category were overtake the flower market?

[00:51:22] And if so, what year?

[00:51:27]Matt: Oh, um, I want to say yes naturally. Um, I think it’s a tremendous lift from where we are. We’re roughly like 2% of universal sales. There’s got to look at that question. Can I reframe the question to you? When does federal deregulation happened? Because it’s my story that a cannabis beverage should be on every draft line in America.

[00:51:48] Same way that what used to be all, all beer is now have hard seltzer options at that point. Do I believe that we can overtake the flower segment? Yes. So once a year, would that be [00:52:00] 26? Good. Kellyn I’m going

[00:52:06]Kellan: to go later out. I do think eventually it does overtake flower. I mean, you just look at like tobacco, right?

[00:52:11] Like everyone right now is going to turns out when you smoke something for 50 years and hailing hot, they probably isn’t the healthiest thing for you. So I think after we have like generational use cases and those things you’ll see more. Education focusing on different or alternative ways to consume THC or CBD or whatever cannabinoid you prefer.

[00:52:32] But I think it’s going to take time. Right? I think that, I mean our generation, um, and even the older generation, they didn’t know any, anything else from a cannabis perspective besides just flour. So I think that it’s going to take time. Like 2050, but I do think eventually it will overtake it. There’s just more people consume liquids and alcohol than smoke.

[00:52:52] You know what I mean? So I really think that it will be, uh, the number one product market.

[00:52:58]BryanFields: Yeah. To continue on that. [00:53:00] I’m going to have to agree. Also, I think with the millennials choosing cannabis over booze, I think that’s going to be a massively growing segment. Whenever you can mark it as no hangovers.

[00:53:09] It’s really hard to compete with that. And I think as let’s say, the alcohol drinkers kind of adopt into let’s re appraisal a replacement beverage. I can’t imagine that those numbers are currently built into some of the statistics that you see out there from a category standpoint, because it’s almost impossible to forecast someone giving up their daily consumption of booze for the cannabis beverage.

[00:53:29] And when that does, I think people are just going to be blown away and shocked by those caddies. I had recent conversations. I was at a wedding and I explained to someone the importance of like, Hey, I don’t want to drink this anymore. I wish I could have it in a cannabis form. And the guy was like, that exists.

[00:53:43] And I was like, yeah. And he’s like, how come I don’t have that? And I was like, well, where do you live? And when he told me, I was like, well, that’s exactly why you’re in a state like New York, unfortunately, that is so behind that once these ideas come, I think the mass messaging and the products that you’ve produced, Matt, I think are just going to blow people’s minds for what the possibilities [00:54:00] can really.

[00:54:03] So Matt for our listeners, they want to get in touch. They want to learn more about your brand, where can they find you?

[00:54:09]Matt: Uh, yep. Best way to find the levy of products is, is levy a website, which is www.levia.buzz bzz. Um, there is a store locator feature built in there where dump in your zip code and boom there’s there’s the closest retailer, uh, on all social feeds.

[00:54:27] It’s levy of. Uh, and then also, um, just the air wellness, corporate website. So air wellness.com. We’ll link them

[00:54:34]BryanFields: all up in the show notes. Thanks so much for your time,

[00:54:36]Matt: Matt. Thank you. Thank you very much.

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Editors’ Note: This is the transcript version of the podcast. Please note that due to time and audio constraints, transcription may not be perfect. We encourage you to listen to the podcast, embedded below if you need any clarification. We hope you enjoy!

This week we are breaking down franchising opportunities in the cannabinoid industry with an educational focus.  

We discuss:

– Transitioning from Pharma to Cannabinoid industry  

– Franchising opportunity in the cannabinoid industry  

– Industrial vs horticulture Hemp  

Franny’s Farmacy provides safe access to high-quality hemp straight from Franny’s Farm and its growers located in the Asheville NC area to customers in all 50 states. Because of Franny’s Farmacy’s transparent, vertically integrated seed-to-sale product line, the company has grown to be one of the most distinguished hemp and CBD brands in the U.S. with dispensaries along the east coast.

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This show is presented to by 8th Revolution:

At Eighth Revolution (8th Rev) we provide services from capital to cannabinoid and everything in between in regard to the hemp & cannabis industry. Our forward-thinking team can diagnose, analyze & optimize every detailed nuance of your company to keep your business safe, smart, and profitable. Our flexibility and experience combined with ongoing research create unique insights into how to best grow your market share. Contact us directly at [email protected]

Bryan Fields: @bryanfields24

Kellan Finney: @Kellan_Finney 


[00:00:00]Bryan Fields: What’s up guys. Welcome back to the episode of the dime I’m Brian Fields. And with me as always is Kellen Finney. And this week we’ve got a very special. Frannie Chasey, founder of Franny’s pharmacy. Frannie. Thanks for taking the time. How are you doing today?

[00:00:16]Franny Tracy: I am fantastic. And what a pleasure to be here with you, Brian and Carolyn,

[00:00:20]Bryan Fields: we’re really excited to dive in.

[00:00:21]Kellan Finney: Tell him how are you doing? I’m doing really good. I’m excited to talk to frame. You’re chatting for the show and are both share the same all mater at NAU. So a little shout out to my Alma mater and let’s go,

[00:00:33]Bryan Fields: but before we dive in for any it’s really important before we get started just your current location as it stands right now, what state are you?

[00:00:41]Franny Tracy: I am in North Carolina, Asheville, north, Carolyn,

[00:00:44]Bryan Fields: the other east coast. That’s exactly what I was going on the record, another east coast. So you guys may share an all mater, but the east coast, it is. Yes, sir. Frannie. Before we dive in, it’d be great for our listeners to get a little background about you and how you got into.

[00:00:59]Franny Tracy:[00:01:00] Yeah. It’s really a lifetime of a story, but I was in pharmaceuticals. I went to forestry school at NAU, but way back, about 30 years ago. And ended up in pharmaceutical career though, from there, I always said farm at a farm unhealth care industry. I bought my farm 10 years ago, way before hemp was even on the radar.

[00:01:22] And then in 2017, We went, we had gone through years of trying to get an industrial hemp pilot program. I ended up being the first female farmer to plant him, even though I was still in pharmaceutical career. So it took a few years and that’s pretty much how I transitioned and now have vertically integrated operations.

[00:01:43] From farming to manufacturing, distribution, and franchise.

[00:01:47]Bryan Fields: So before we expand that, some of those, I love the concept of farmer to farm. Can you share a little bit about, more about specifically what that.

[00:01:56]Franny Tracy: Sure. So on this 15 years in pharmaceuticals and [00:02:00] the nickname that has stuck with me as the hippie and high heels, or they called me the anti-drug route.

[00:02:06] So I’m always been very involved in the health and nutrition side of everything. I just kept it at first. It was farm at a farm and there’s a whole blog and story about it. And that’s when my Ted talk came out. I was trying to get out of pharmaceuticals and really get in the real health care industry.

[00:02:23] And that’s where my heart and passion has always been. And in the first year I grew was actually for food and fiber until I figured out there is not a market for that. And there’s not one coming soon and really dug in. Started learning about CBD for the, on the medical side and that’s, what’s legal here.

[00:02:43] And so that’s where we got started.

[00:02:45]Bryan Fields: Was there any hesitation to go from pharmaceutical to ham, obviously, given your location and then the industry moving from pharma to the hemp industry. Was there any kind of hesitation or backlash when you made that?

[00:02:54]Franny Tracy: There’s not any hesitation on my part. I had just been waiting, but there was a little bit of [00:03:00] backlash, but in a way, so much support.

[00:03:02] That’s still part of the reason we were successful is all the physicians send them. Then their patients to us to be able to have a trusted, reliable, high quality. But by all means there’s, we had DEA flying over our farm and we had people, we had to put up surveillance.

[00:03:20] Nobody knew what was going on. Because I was the first in North Carolina, but North Carolina was only the fifth state to grow. So I was on the news all the time. We even had vice TV here. People were like, what are you doing? And why are you so out there? Even my family, we’re from the south.

[00:03:37] I have a family that fiscal ministers and engineers, so they are so sweet and kind and supportive. Even though they were like, am I going to get high? Isn’t this what’s going on? I’m like, it’s a topical, my, my first degree I have a master’s in education and a PhD coursework with Smithsonian Institute.

[00:03:58] So putting that [00:04:00] education behind all of this was super, super important to me. And, Yeah. That’s still under scrutiny. I, if I cared, what other people thought we wouldn’t be talking today?

[00:04:10]Bryan Fields: I’m glad that you shared that, especially given your location. So have you seen a shift, like from when you got started to now where people have opened up to the concept has been more acceptable to the potential opportunities that hemp brings and some of the benefits that.

[00:04:23]Franny Tracy: Yes, absolutely. We’re really blessed because our market and a lot of people that come to us are people that are being referred. So by doctors and physicians and people that they trust, it’s a little bit different from, say a smoke shop or something, or somebody would go in, we are very focused on health and wellness in all aspects.

[00:04:44] And the interesting enough, our market population is about 50 50 women to men and also like ages 35 to 65. So there’s been a huge awareness and [00:05:00] we’re just a place where people can trust that it’s okay to go into and learn about. Yeah,

[00:05:07]Kellan Finney: I have a question has, was at the dialects and that whole movement in the mid 2015 to 2018.

[00:05:13] Did that have a, did that play a role in kind of your transition from pharma into the hemp industry? Yeah.

[00:05:20]Franny Tracy: Good question. I actually knew about all of that. When it went into research trials, when I was buying my farm. So seventies, anybody ever knew about it, I was informed and I was like, oh finally, they’re starting to do research on.

[00:05:35] And I had a young son then. He was in his early teens and so very impressionable and so forth, and an athlete he’s actually a world-class athlete or half iron mans. And so he’s never really been huge in the cannabis and it’s part of the propaganda. And I was always trying to teach him the reality of this.

[00:05:56] I marked, then I said, watch in seven [00:06:00] years, we’re going to have our first pharmaceutical drug with cannabis in it. And yeah, that’s what makes me sound good in business. I see the future.

[00:06:10]Bryan Fields: Oh, then I’m going to have to ask them what’s going to happen in seven years.

[00:06:12]Franny Tracy: In seven years from now, we will absolutely cannabis will be deregulated legal.

[00:06:19] And it’s going to be just like 10 years ago when I was talking about GMOs and nobody knew it. It’s going to just be everywhere in our normal society and it will have it. It’s just, that’s where we’re going to be in 70.

[00:06:34]Bryan Fields: Completely great. I know. I want to go back. I apologize for jumping and I got excited when you made that up.

[00:06:39] I really liked that you had a focus on education. I think that’s so important just given all the challenges geographically and sometime of the information that’s hard to know. And I was on your website and I saw the focus on education. One of the areas that I really enjoyed was the quiz aspect, where it allowed you to not necessarily get your hand held through the process, but go through the steps that you would have to walk through that.[00:07:00]

[00:07:00] Is that a big opportunity for you where users come into your website and they feel comfortable doing that and sharing information, you can make the recommendation. Can you shed more light on that?

[00:07:09]Franny Tracy: Yeah, absolutely. And also, let me say an Asheville. We were the first city in all of the United States to deregulate and remove CBD from our restricted medications list.

[00:07:22] And this is all because I’m a researcher and scientist, when it really comes down to. Yeah, let me say, I just got distracted from the question. Education is huge. We’re very limited in what we can actually say. So the quiz allows the person to engage and help them understand what are they looking for?

[00:07:41] What are they. Hugely successful. And at the end, we give the first customer a 20% off coupon to try the products that they have gone through discovery to learn, but really more important than the education. Two of our franchise owners are pharmacists. And trust me, a pharmacist is [00:08:00] only going to the best and highest quality place.

[00:08:03] This next weekend, like in our grand opening, we have a new corporate office trainings that are for franchisees in Asheville. And with that grand opening we have doctors, pharmacists, nurses. We are constantly doing panels to connect people, especially when it comes to children. It’s, with experts that they can, could talk to, to help find what is right.

[00:08:27] It’s customized, it’s a healthcare product. Anything else it’s going to react different in everybody’s bodies and actually pharmaceuticals do too we’re individuals. So we have to help the individuals. And that’s what it’s really all about. The only way I make money is to help other people.

[00:08:47]Bryan Fields: So important.

[00:08:48] So let’s talk about the franchises. How does that work? That’s new to me. I’ve never heard anyone in the space doing that. Kellen. I’m curious if you have any, can you share a little bit about the fringe?

[00:08:58]Franny Tracy: Absolutely. So it [00:09:00] took me forever. Not forever. It took so long, so many challenges to figure this out.

[00:09:04] And there was nobody to help me along the way I was the first nobody. And in all of this, again, the only way I succeed as a human and as a business person is to help other people. So as I discovered this, and as I build relationships, it’s all about collaboration to make this available to other people.

[00:09:26] This is so new in the industry. The more is more. It’s all better. So it’s not business as usual. You can’t bank get insurance. You can’t use PayPal or square. It’s not like being able to set up a business. In one, I had 11 businesses before this. I was like, I got it. And nobody better than me. And beyond that and education, you have to have training and systems.

[00:09:51] This is. So to set people up for success. This is why we ended up franchising the model. We have [00:10:00] training when they come in to sign up with us, we show everything. They actually stay in lodge on the farm. They eat food that we grow on. The farm that we have in our pharmacy, they visit manufacturing, distribution.

[00:10:12] They learn the. Because that is the best way to deliver anything to people. And so when it’s so new and all over the internet, because it’s unregulated, you could see and read anything you want. Why not learn where we back it up? It’s not, this is seeing, is believing here. And, we’ve all made it through COVID it was willing.

[00:10:36] And now we’re set to explode. Again, we have an amazing franchise design model that incorporates hemp wood and sustainable building materials. The farmers that are growing that were part of the farm research that I helped start years ago. It’s amazing. It’s so integrated. There is not one step. It is so big, so huge.

[00:10:59][00:11:00] Nobody can do that. Alone that we have the executives, the support team, franchise support and everything figured out so that we bring people in and they’re still overwhelmed. And we’re telling them what to do. It’s a lot. It is super a lot, but we got to set people up for success. We look over 95% of every dispensary that open has closed.

[00:11:23] They don’t realize that their spanking issues or that PayPal is going to keep $16,000 that they took from us and never returned. It’s it’s a lot, success helping again, helping others. That’s really what it comes down

[00:11:38]Bryan Fields: to so important. And as you perfectly said, it’s humbling, right?

[00:11:42] The ability to say, I’ve done this before, I can figure this out. And then you dive into the space and you’re like, what is happening here?

[00:11:49]Franny Tracy: Oh, yeah. I tell everybody, listen, I fail forward all the time, because in all my franchise knows, we run all the pilots for new products and [00:12:00] orangy and everything at corporate, before we roll it out to them.

[00:12:04] And I was like, oh, if there’s a mistake to be made. Okay. The risky one to do it, all, that’s what I do. And that’s what makes me, I speak all over the country too. I’m like, Hey, I’m going to tell you I know exactly what to do and what not to do. And I’ll tell you both and you can choose whatever you want.

[00:12:26]Bryan Fields: That’s a fair way of describing Kelowna. I want you to come in here from a franchising standpoint, how valuable that must be to have a partner like Frannie kind of walking. Some of these operators, especially getting started. We’ve had conversations with people who are wide-eyed and think, Hey, I’ve done X, Y, and Z.

[00:12:39] Before, this transition will be seamless. And what it’s found out is it’s been a little harder than they anticipate. So expand on that.

[00:12:45]Kellan Finney: Yeah, no completely. There’s so many mistakes we made in this space and a lot of people Who have successfully run other businesses, coming to the space with their spreadsheets.

[00:12:54] And they’re like, look, how much money I’m gonna make? Like this cell over here, it’s going to do this. And then they get in [00:13:00] get involved. And it’s just a completely different world. It’s like the wild west, right? Like it’s not regulated. Like you’re trying to do the right thing. And you’re almost shooting yourself in the foot from a business perspective.

[00:13:10] And so having a partner. From a franchise perspective to lean on is a first that hasn’t, at least from my knowledge, hasn’t been available to anyone else trying to get into this space. And it sounds like this isn’t your guys’ first rodeo. There’s multiple iterations of learning. And so for any kind of talk, talk us through the process of your, the first time you guys started educating people to where you are now and like how.

[00:13:36] How big of a hill was that to climb from changing the iterations of teaching people and how everything kind of changes on the fly in the industry right now.

[00:13:47]Franny Tracy: Yeah. I like to refer to it as dynamic every damn day, you’re going to wake up and something’s different from growing to, every single step along the [00:14:00] way, it has been amazing and interesting even from when we took our first crops to make our first distillates and isolates and products.

[00:14:11] To where we are now and how even this, we have an alchemist’s that’s been working with us and our products, but in order to take my crop that I grew to market, I was like, oh goodness, I had to bring in a chemist and I call him an Alchemist because he’s so high vibe and evolved to be working through all this stuff.

[00:14:32] And now what does that look like? I helped start a non-profit women in hemp. The executive director of that came from the bottled water industry. Everybody thought she was crazy. We knew that these nanos solubles water solubles at the beginning were a joke. We’re the ones testing that stuff, all that stuff.

[00:14:54] If it’s not emulsified, it cleans to the outside. There’s no testing. It’s unregulated. [00:15:00] 80% of the drinks out there with CBD or any effective. And my franchisees want to have those drinks. Trying to explain to them like the research doesn’t back it up, when D eight became hot, I’m like, We were out there and we test everything and I was like, y’all have pesticides in this.

[00:15:19] So let me tell you this. We tested 131 D eight products. You are not how many passed the test. I’m not having pesticides heavy or heavy metals. Can we guess, or mold? Yes. Yes. 2 0 3, 3, where they were associated and, or grower. Because when we set up our three-year trial at the beginning, which I’m not having to deal with the, the farming aspect of it anymore, we grow a hemp too.

[00:15:51] We have a hemp history tour and a garden here on our farm, but it was the liability of being a public space and grow. [00:16:00] We had to move, grow elsewhere. And that was part of the women in hip. The researchers, it’s all under another program, that’s monitored under NC state. Now I don’t even have to worry about that, but because of that, that led to we didn’t, we weren’t the first release da we want the first, but we are the best because we’re one of the few that can say, guess what?

[00:16:23] You want to smoke that and have that variety from our bud bar. You’re not smoking pesticides. Or heavy metals. So those are just a few examples of what’s coming to light right now. We’re in research, I have researchers and we have chemists and we have testing and that’s what we do. So we don’t need to be first everywhere.

[00:16:41] We always need the best trusted, highest quality. And if it’s not one thing, it’s another, that’s a rabbit hole. We could go down before.

[00:16:50]Kellan Finney: Yeah, I was going to say, it’s gotta be, it’s gotta be shocking to you coming from pharma to be like, and not seeing this as like [00:17:00] standard in the industry, because the amount of tests that pharma does is even more obnoxious.

[00:17:05] Right.

[00:17:06]Franny Tracy: And so my rotation, I did rotations every year and my favorite was manufacturing. Again, like in forestry school, they didn’t have a sustainable agriculture back then. So it’s pretty much, I had a bachelor of science with forestry and ecology. I’m used to having microscopes and nerdy, magnifying glasses on and looking at it.

[00:17:28] I love that stuff and I’ve got to be able to back it up. I’m one of the few brands out there that has a. My name is on every product, every company, everything I do. And so it is, there’s nothing to hide behind. There’s no anything else. I take responsibility for everything. And so when my name is on.

[00:17:54] We’re just going to be as OCD about everything

[00:17:56]Bryan Fields: as you should. There’s a trust and expectation when it [00:18:00] comes with brands and positioning, where, when someone sees your logo and your name, there’s an expectation behind that of quality and safety that you have to stand behind as the face of the brand, which is like another layer of challenge.

[00:18:15] From a franchising standpoint, can you expand on how that would work? Do they get an opportunity to license for any brand or is it more of the operational expertise? Where, how does the franchising actually work?

[00:18:26]Franny Tracy: So I’m glad you asked that at the beginning of this year. It hit the press everywhere when I had it’s actually, I’m celebrating now one year of taking over as CEO because of some of the values that were in conflict, I bought my partner.

[00:18:41] And the first thing I did was release the revival of retail and the franchise model and went through all software development and program to give our franchisees that all have brick and mortar locations. And we’ve just been through two years of COVID and [00:19:00] retail is top 10% of online sales. We created unique URLs and QR codes that they begin to function more as an independent.

[00:19:11] But yet they have the entire franchise support. So the more they send to e-comm, the more money they can make there, we diversified their income streams, which is. So I had cords only telling me they would do live interviews that would not send me questions or do anything in advance. So I declined that based on my attorneys and publicists.

[00:19:32] Sure. But spoke everywhere. I got picked up everywhere because that is what we’re doing in this company. We are creating we’re coming out of a new area. Super progressive. I live in one of the most liberal towns. Nobody’s idea of work is the same. How do we empower people this year? We’re restructuring the company internally.

[00:19:56] So that next year we eventually become an employee owned company who better to [00:20:00] run the business. I picked the. I choose the leaders and eventually it becomes employee owned and that extends even to our franchise. So it is progressive. It is future. I love earlier. You were saying, do people love you? Or are you under scrutiny?

[00:20:16] Both. And some people have both, they’re like, what are you doing? And this is genius and you are crazy. Yes. All of it, and the franchisees are right now, we’re in our core group and they know this is how we build our business. Like a plant growing it with roots.

[00:20:37]Kellan Finney: I have a question. Can your franchisees carry other brands?

[00:20:42] You encourage that? How, or if they have a new product idea, do they come to you? How does that whole dynamic.

[00:20:48]Franny Tracy: Yeah we do not at any means carry a competitive brand because I do not believe there is any brand out there that could compete with us. And we are a brand [00:21:00] on that note. There are certain things that we do carry that are we have amazing collaborating partners.

[00:21:07] We don’t get all. We buy all our flour from farmers, no brokers, again, part of our values and mission. Drinks. It doesn’t make sense for us to distribute drinks. They’re heavy, they’re breakable and LA. So franchisees have independent relationships with their drink vendors. Although there’s often the same Arcana cafe has brought in some things and we do have different collaborators that have products that we do not, and I’m not going out there to white label a product and say, Hey, I did.

[00:21:39] We collaborate with them. So there’s some co-branding opportunities and our franchisees are definitely the ones. Listen, they’re hot on it. They want the next new shiny object to every day, all the time. And I’m like, we’re working on it. Y’all know it’s got to go through R and D. So that’s, what’s exciting about the launch of our Canik cafe.

[00:21:59][00:22:00] It’s been an R and D for six months, all the different foods, all the different trials we have are, 22 person group here in Asheville that does all the analysis. Then we have other ones that’s just the taste retail side of it. So there’s really fun. Collaboration’s the, that are happening with different people.

[00:22:17] Supplying our ingredients. We have victory hemp that we work with. So it’s more about collaboration’s and instead of competitive products, there’s just not, no reason. And it’s just as super excited. We’ve got 24 new products that we’re launching this year. We just trademarked our new molds for our gummies, which are super branded to Franny’s pharmacy.

[00:22:42] Really high end and vegan, all natural. Gummies out there, people love gummies and they’re so full of crap by putting that in their body, it has red food coloring in it for God’s sakes. We’re still supposed to be health and [00:23:00] wellness, no matter what. So we use spirulina and peach juice and tumeric, and these great things to, to produce a great product that can actually be healthy.

[00:23:13] I answer to your question.

[00:23:15]Bryan Fields: Can we just expand on cafe, you know what that is so that our listeners have some context?

[00:23:21]Franny Tracy: Yes. It’s super exciting because the first time I grew up, it was for food. So Arcana cafe, when we launch our first phase, one is the baked goods with teas. We have a whole chakra tea blend, so that goes.

[00:23:37] That we have coffee and a great baked goods. So some of them have CBD in it and some of them do not. They are using hemp flour, hemp seeds, hemp milk, and one of the favorite inciting things that will roll out at the end of Q1 is pasta and Prada. One of the divisions of Franny’s farm [00:24:00] foods, that’s creating hemp.

[00:24:02] So we have a gluten-free hemp gnocchi with a dinner theater. That’s an educational dinner theater with all these New York actors that are in it. It’s so genius. We’re going to have one on coming up then to launch a bunch of the new food stuff to put the education in it, but make it fun. Fun fun.

[00:24:23] Kiana cafe is cheese, coffee, baked goods, scones, cookies. We have hemp nugs that are super nutrient dense. So these are actually helping wellness food that tastes good. It’s exciting and pasta and sauces are all coming soon. We have a Franny’s better Cheney partner. Oh, it’s so delicious. And it’s vegetarian too.

[00:24:52] No eggs in it for the binding because hemp protein is so nutrient dense that has so much protein, [00:25:00] that it is the binder and you don’t need eggs, so you can make amazing things. Gluten-free and.

[00:25:06]Kellan Finney: You’re making me so hungry right now.

[00:25:08]Bryan Fields: I get a bag. I have some questions. How does this work? Kellen. I asked you first, right?

[00:25:13] Like how, what’s going on here? I have an understanding of Pampa. Like how do we incorporate into food? Like for any Saint, can you give some more context? I’ll

[00:25:20]Kellan Finney: let Frannie take over from here. Cause like I cook with HelloFresh. If we’re going to be honest, eligible bachelor chef shout out.

[00:25:30] So I’ll let Franny explain the actual process of incorporating the hemp into it. But it’s the hemp hearts, right? For any, is that the.

[00:25:39]Franny Tracy: Yeah, that is actually it. And there’s so much amazing education that we’re putting around this because people don’t understand that the female plant is the one that creates all the beautiful medicinal buds and throughout ancient history.

[00:25:55] Actually the men would grow it, but as soon as they harvested, they were no longer [00:26:00] allowed to touch this beautiful female plant. As it got transitioned into the medicine So the female plants are short and bushy and they produce these Brene buds and that’s what we’re using for all the medicinal stuff. We press it, use it for oils, make distillate and everything for all our products, the male plant is tall and straight and has a big Cola on the end of it.

[00:26:23] That starts with a bunch of little white balls that turn into sync. Does not have CBD in it, but it has a ton of Omega’s. It is super rich, nutrient dense protein food, like many other seeds. So they harvest that top Cola with all the seeds in it, take the seeds and you seeds, and then send it through a processing and each stage it gets finer.

[00:26:50] So you end up with a arena, a frame, a week texture, and then you end up with a flower F L O U. So that’s what all the food is made out of [00:27:00] no CBD, but super nutrient rich and dense health food. So there’s so much that, that’s the biggest thing. People are like, I’m confused. Hemp oil for cooking and hemp oil too, for medicine.

[00:27:13] There so much. And so very exciting as we’re building all our assets in Q2, there will be a huge brand, these farm foods launch, and we expect a lot more education to come into this because food is love this.

[00:27:29]Bryan Fields: And I’m glad that you broke that down. Cause I think it’s so important to separate that information and to explain for others because I’m hearing that and I believe I understand, but hearing you separate, it makes a ton more sense and it’s really.

[00:27:40] But the benefits of the differences in the plant. So continuing on that path and de-stress hemp thoughts on that becoming more of a mainstream style.

[00:27:50]Franny Tracy: Yeah, absolutely. It’s the same thing that I was talking about before and the contracts, which everybody should understand since we live in the most extreme contrast ever.

[00:27:59][00:28:00] So industrial hemp is very different from horticultural hemp. I say it’s a difference between a horticulture, which is small managing a. And that’s what we do with the female plant and on the medicinal side of it, and then mass agriculture is the industrial. So how do we bridge those?

[00:28:18] There is so many trials that we’ve been involved in that are allowing us to bridge the medicinal into industrial right now, very difficult to get the quality and industrial is field grown. It’s outside. So think too about these large farmers that are interested in that they have no grant money, no government money, no state funding.

[00:28:40] It’s all on their own dime. You figure out or transition. So they’re not, and you can’t grow a food product. You cannot grow a medicinal product. There is no way you can ever grow the hemp on contaminated soil. It, we have grown it on organic soil where it has still [00:29:00] come back with pesticides or heavy molds from our rain, from the water system that is not able to ever go into an adjustable product.

[00:29:10] So industrial hemp, we will see will end up being fiber. It’s the next model that’s growing is. In him and in cannabis. So this is why we have a Franny’s fashion too, and a Franny’s foods, but all food and all medicinal stuff to get to industrial capabilities has to be grown on good soil because it’s a bio remediate or in hemp is going to pick it all up.

[00:29:38] So we’ll see fiber and textiles and rope and building materials. That’s what’s going to emerge the industries out of industrial hemp. This is why some of the first people that have been involved with it, we were buddies growing together with nobody else did our partners and we are a dealer for him.

[00:29:58] Would an amazing [00:30:00] example of an industrial hemp for the entire community. Within 95 miles is growing a product to be produced in the same.

[00:30:10]Bryan Fields: Kaelyn. I know you’re a big industrial hemp fan. You want to kinda take

[00:30:14]Kellan Finney: that? I’m a huge fan of it. I think that there’s just so many.

[00:30:18]Bryan Fields: The benefits

[00:30:18]Kellan Finney: to the human society pivoting away from more from crops that require more resources and don’t yield as many applications, right?

[00:30:28] Like cotton, it takes up a ton of land and we just make clothes out of it. Versus if you replaced that same. Amount of land with industrial hemp, you would not only be able to generate fiber for those clothes, but you’d also get what’s called herd. So it’s like the center of the hemp stock, right?

[00:30:45] The fibers like the outside of it. If you’ve ever seen a weed stem and you’ve been picking off little fibers, the fiber that makes clothes sits on the outside of the stem of a large hemp plant. And then the inside is like Paulo would, but there’s a. Specific [00:31:00] ratio of like air inside of that wood that creates a high R value, which is your, the way that we measure installation.

[00:31:07] And I’m getting there, but like when you take that and make, say hemp wood, or even like hemp Crete now is another popular building. Yeah, medium for it. It creates this product that has such a high R value. So then you don’t need to then go and use fiberglass and generate all these other toxic chemicals to insulate the house, to make it energy efficient.

[00:31:29] So there’s a ton of just nuance benefits associated with the plant that people have even having even started to scratch the surface of from helping humanity.

[00:31:41]Franny Tracy: It is so astounding. And so listen, we release our design article coming up soon, and it’s going to have videos about exactly what you were talking.

[00:31:52] How do we get to a hemp wood product that you’re using and building materials? And another thing you’re going to love this too, is [00:32:00] carbon sequestering. We have major issues. We can reverse this stuff, talking about ResearchGate. I love this. I love it. That’s part of the heart and soul of farming and what, how our farmers are going to save our world, because it’s not just here.

[00:32:18] We’re going to return one day to the value of everybody recognizing and honoring farmers, which right now they are the poorest in this country. They are the unhealthiest in this country. They worked so much, and it is a labor of love. And I can assure you as much as I have on my farm and everything I’ve ever done as a passion.

[00:32:41] When I worked through pharmaceuticals and was feeding chickens every morning and goats, and it is truly a labor of love. And for everybody, it is also a labor of service for the. Because we are saving environments and [00:33:00] soils and continuing to do something. It’s going to be very interesting.

[00:33:03] This is the first year we’ve had a farm census in five years. And what we’ve seen in the last 15 years is that now we’ve went from 50% of farms being owned by individual people and families to now six, 6%. We have lost our farms. ‘

[00:33:25]Bryan Fields: cause, it’s not, it’s hard. What is one hemp statistic or fact that would shock an everyday person?

[00:33:33]Franny Tracy: I think knowing that there’s 450,000 plants. Cannabis is the only one that has, that provides cannabis when consumed by human with 300 cannabinoid receptors that fit together 450,000 other plants out there. [00:34:00] And cannabis is the only one that has what was made and designed in how ever we were creating.

[00:34:09] For plants and animals and our community and everybody, everything to live together that fits in the human body that shows we were born to be together, humans and cannabis,

[00:34:21]Kellan Finney: the walking key.

[00:34:25]Bryan Fields: What research that you have said re or read about or anticipate reading about in the next, let’s say three to five years gets you most.

[00:34:38]Franny Tracy: Oh, most excited. I love all the research. So along the way, what we’re already finding out is there was only CBD. And now, already in these past few years, we have, are identifying all these individual cannabinoids. So I love the entire fact of the research [00:35:00] is isolating each cannabinoid, finding out what it means as an isolate on its own, and then putting it back together to see how it reacts better with its, other parts to create.

[00:35:13] We are creating an entirely new healthcare system. So I can’t even pick one. It’s just the cannabinoid research as we continue to isolate.

[00:35:26]Bryan Fields: Since you’ve been in the cannabinoid industry, what has been the biggest misconception?

[00:35:30]Franny Tracy: That, oh gosh, it’s because I’m involved in so many. I think one of the biggest misconceptions is everybody figures that, I’m rich being in this industry and that’s why everybody’s getting into it.

[00:35:44] And that’s why 95% of the businesses have failed because they don’t realize any business is gross. Like a plant. You got to have roots. You just there’s no. Get rich quick scenes here. And. [00:36:00]

[00:36:00]Kellan Finney: Unfortunately, if only if

[00:36:04]Bryan Fields: I know before we do predictions, we ask all of our guests, if you could sum up your experience into a main takeaway or lesson learned to pass onto the next generation, what would it be?

[00:36:16]Franny Tracy: Plants and plant medicine are true healthcare, and that is our future to open your mind. Research heart pockets to support real health care and real wellness. We’ve got a long way to go.

[00:36:40]Bryan Fields: All right. Prediction time, Franny, five to seven years from now. What will CBD and hemp franchising.

[00:36:53]Franny Tracy: It’s going to be very normal. I expect that Brandy’s pharmacy is going to be a [00:37:00] internationally recognized brand. Right now we have international connections, but it’s not necessarily legal there yet. And that this will be a global opportunity that we have led. And it is not, everybody’s going to want to get in.

[00:37:15] It’s not going to be as affordable as it is right now to take the risk it’s going to be standard. And what you’ll see with Randy’s pharmacy is that we are an enterprise or. As we integrate food and fiber and everything into our dispensary models. It’s not just going to be medicinal. All of the industry that we are creating will catch up, to bring a lot more products into the market.

[00:37:46] We will see every major brand and retailer bringing him in some way to be a part of their product line, because it will be. It will be the norm in about seven years, five years. I think that [00:38:00] in between five to seven is going to be that next shift and franchise are going to be normal.

[00:38:07] It’ll be normal. And you won’t see as many of the mom and pop, not as, CBD is everywhere now that it will be regulated and they’re going to take it out of the gas stations so that people can’t go in and find stuff that’s cheap. That’s filled with shit, literally. You can get theses in any of this stuff.

[00:38:26] Birds fly over these crops. So just, we still got a long way to go, but in five years we’ve already seen 38 states have legalized marijuana. So that’s going to be part of this as well.

[00:38:43]Bryan Fields: Five to seven years from now.

[00:38:45]Kellan Finney: I agree. I think that it’s going to be standard and I think that unfortunately for a lot of modern. Shops that are just trying to stand on their own and there to whether their little storm I don’t think they’re going to make it. I think that it is going to be [00:39:00] adopted by the CVS is, and the Walgreens, even right now, Walmart, right?

[00:39:05] If you’re in a certain state, you can go to Walmart and you can buy hemp herd. That is Tatler right. So there’s hemp, cat litter out there that Walmart is selling currently. So there’s. The product skew at these large established companies are only going to increase. And so I believe that it’s going to be interesting to see the dynamic between companies that got involved early.

[00:39:31] Versus the companies that are going to come and get involved post normalization, if you will, which I think Fanny Frannie is right on the, hit the nail on the head in terms of that timeline of being like five to seven years. And so that is going to be a really interesting. Consolidation event, if you will, where say CVS doesn’t want to build out an entire product line.

[00:39:52] They’re going to come in and purchase an existing company would be my guests. That’s my prediction. What do you think, Brian?

[00:39:58]Bryan Fields: I think with franchises, [00:40:00] you have write the pros and the cons. And I think when you’re evaluating a business and you’re maybe a little more reluctant to a franchise, you have to think about the massive benefits that.

[00:40:08] The educational aspect, the fact that Franny’s likely failed the bazillion and a half times, which has led her database of information to be extremely helpful so that the new franchisee doesn’t have to make those same mistakes. And I think that some of the operators we’ve spoken with that maybe taking those wrong turns, if they would’ve taken the franchise path and worked with.

[00:40:27] They likely would have saved themselves, tons of headaches and financial burdens in those mistakes. Because like you were saying for fanning, it’s so costly for the farmers and to make those decisions, you don’t sometimes get a second chance. And, understanding that is a really big challenge, especially as everyone gets that wide-eyed approach as they, they want to rush into the space.

[00:40:46] And at the end of the day, you have to make sure that you’ve got the right capital investment, but you also understand the path forward is going to be changing. Yeah,

[00:40:53]Kellan Finney: I think you hit on a really important thing there that we haven’t really discussed, which is the community, if you’re just out there on your own and you’ve run [00:41:00] into an issue, like you could make the right decision, but it’s always helpful to be able to turn back to someone who’s going through or experiencing the same thing and be like, what do you think?

[00:41:08] Even if it isn’t an issue that Franny has dealt with, I imagine her background and being in the same business model is super helpful. Just to talk to someone about those.

[00:41:18]Franny Tracy: Yeah. It sets people up for success and saves them. They each have their own rep that they have access to all the time that is going to help them communicate.

[00:41:29] And we have weekly calls, where our executive team is always meeting with them. One other really cool thing. And this is great cause it’s so business focused, but I’m going to reiterate what I did in my Ted talk in 2018. The first time I publicly spoke and. It was illegal then. And I was getting threats that the DEA was going to come burn my farm, my frog.

[00:41:52] And I said, at the end of this, that I believe that this crop is going to save our agro economies. [00:42:00] So it’s more than just franchising and went back to what we were talking about earlier. Kellen, carbon sequestering. We’re going to see a revitalization across the entire country for agro communities and growers and farmers that we’ve never seen before.

[00:42:15] It is never going to be a profit driven. It’s never going to be as profitable as tobacco. There never will be again, but it revitalizes business and industry that connects us to the. And that is a new opportunity for businesses. As I have converted and seeing so many farms, we have helped convert them into him that too is a business.

[00:42:39] And it’s so beautiful. How it all. All is one, but so many different parts, just like our human body. We’re all in this one, meat, Zack, but it takes a whole lot of moving parts and Oregon’s inside to make it happen.

[00:42:53]Bryan Fields: Amazing. So Frannie for our listeners that want to learn more, they want to get touch.

[00:42:57] Where can they get.

[00:42:59]Franny Tracy:[00:43:00] So I’m everywhere. You can even ask, somebody asked Alexa the other day who is bringing Tacy. Oh, Alexa, pause. Sorry. She’s but Brandy’s pharmacy.com and we spell Farmacy, F a R M a C Y in the barman pharmacy. Brandy’s pharmacy.com. Is really the host and home for where everything is.

[00:43:21] But if you want to stay on the farm, you can go to Franny’s farm.com. You can look me up as a female entrepreneur. I have my whole perspective on just business and not spray any tasty. And we are Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, everywhere. And also in March, you can send me all over the country. I speak all over the country.

[00:43:43] Keynote speaking, and at alternative products expo in Fort Lauderdale at the beginning of March. And NOCO at the end of March. And I think that’s when we’re all going to be listening to this. So come see

[00:43:54]Bryan Fields: me. Yeah. We’ll link it up in the show notes. Thanks so much for taking the time. Thank you for.[00:44:00]

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As an entrepreneur building and running a business you are always seeking greater market share, cost reductions, or new niche offerings. Acquiring or merging with another company is a popular route to achieving these, pushing your company’s mission to the next level. If your company is acquired it’s also a chance to get a nice exit for yourself and your investors.

In 2021 there was a record number of mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in the US cannabis industry, with 209 deals worth a total value of $10.1 billion in the US alone, according to Viridian Capital Advisors. The total value and number of deals outpaced 2019 and 2020 combined. M&A took place in every part of the cannabis supply chain with publicly traded Multi-State Operators (MSO) leading the charge, buying up other MSOs, brands and software companies.

The primary drivers for cannabis sector M&A are different from traditional companies in the tech or financial spaces. Federal prohibition of cannabis remains intact for the foreseeable future, therefore interstate commerce is off the table. Additionally, each state has its own complex system of licenses and regulations to navigate. For example, obtaining and developing property and getting licensed in a heavily regulated state like California can take years. If you are a well-capitalized or public company and want to expand into more states, it’s often easier to acquire existing licensed operations in those states, rather than start from scratch. Acquiring or merging with a company can cut that waiting time down drastically, even if you are paying a premium to do so.

Large publicly traded cannabis companies often have M&A as a core part of their long-term strategy. Canadian LP Canopy Growth has made 12 acquisitions and 3 investments totaling $4.6 billion in the past five years alone. In addition to the large deals, multiple smaller deals happen all the time. This year we’ve seen Harborside, a publicly traded California retailer lead a merger with cannabis brand and producer Loudpack, and UrbnLeaf a San Diego-based dispensary with eight locations to form Statehouse.

This deal perfectly illustrates cannabis M&A, as Harborside and the other companies are partnering together to gain as much market share in the world’s largest legal cannabis state. They combined forces to create a dominant brand, give access to the public markets, and increase their geographical reach with locations throughout the state.

The first quarter of 2022 has started out with a bang with the $2 billion acquisition of Columbia Care by Cresco Labs; a record M&A deal for the US cannabis industry. However, the number of deals compared to Q1 2021 is down. This is in part due to rough waters for many public cannabis companies, the rise and affordability of debt financing, concerns about the macroeconomic environment going forward and the perceived lack of any real prospects for substantive federal reform this year. These are all legitimate headwinds in 2022 but M&A will continue to play an important role in shaping the industry going forward. New markets are opening up, most notably New Jersey, New York and Connecticut. While more states continue to pass adult recreational laws, which will open up new markets, existing multibillion-dollar states like California, Illinois and Michigan are still growing rapidly every year. Companies are betting that expanding into as many markets as possible now through M&A will pay off handsomely. When banking is normalized, and federal legalization and interstate commerce arrive the industry will see massive expansion and national mainstream adoption.

Cannabis brands face their own set of challenges that M&A can help conquer. The Holy Grail of cannabis brands is building a recognizable national brand with a product line consumers recognize and demand when they order online or walk into a retail location. In addition to federal prohibition, severe restrictions on advertising on Google and social media platforms are additional obstacles. Merging with or acquiring a cannabis brand can greatly accelerate state expansion, economies of scale, diversification, greater market share and a larger marketing and sales budget and staff.

If you are a company looking to enter the M&A marketplace on either the buy or sell side and don’t know where to start? Connect with our Director of Business Development Sarah Falvo [email protected] – we have deep connections through the North American cannabis ecosystem and would love to assist you and your company through this process.

Editors’ Note: This is an excerpt from our Monthly Playbook. If you would like to read the full monthly playbook and join the thousands of others you can sign up below.

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Editors’ Note: This is an excerpt from our Monthly Playbook. If you would like to read the full monthly playbook and join the thousands of others you can sign up below.

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