In early 2018, Ko Hana Hawaiian Agricole Rum, a small distiller in Kunia, joined with Mana Up in the business accelerator鈥檚 first cohort of 10 young Hawaii-based companies seeking help scaling up their businesses.
Less than four years later, Ko Hana and Mana Up are teaming up again in the accelerator鈥檚 newest major project, Mana Up Capital: a $6.3 million venture fund aimed at Hawaii-based companies seeking money to help them grow.
Mana Up Capital鈥檚 investment, in the range of $100,000 to $600,000, will allow the rum company to produce 70,000 to 80,000 cases a year in 2022, up from 10,000 this year, said Ko Hana鈥檚 co-founder Jason Brand.
But to Brand, working with Mana Up is about more than the cash. It鈥檚 also about being part of something bigger — an organization working to grow and diversify Hawaii鈥檚 economy by building businesses that share Hawaii鈥檚 culture.
鈥淲e like Mana Up鈥檚 message in the community,鈥 Brand says. 鈥淲e want to be part of that.鈥
Although Mana Up has built its reputation as a business accelerator and showcase for Hawaii companies, it has always envisioned providing funding for companies as well, co-founders Meli James and Brittany Heyd said in an interview. In fact, James, who launched a successful wine app in San Francisco before returning home to Hawaii, is also president of the Hawaii Venture Capital Association. Heyd, a lawyer and accountant, had worked with 1776, a business incubator in Washington, D.C., that also operates a fund, .
But they both knew that starting a fund would take time, so they got started first with the business accelerator, which helps the companies find ways to grow and deal with the challenges that come with growth, like sourcing, manufacturing and shipping.
In the short time since Mana Up started, it has helped 63 companies. According to a report Mana Up released in September, these companies generated $43.4 million in 2020, compared with $36 million in 2019. In addition, $18.5 million of that revenue came from outside of Hawaii, thanks in part to the companies鈥 ability to quickly shift to e-commerce during the pandemic. In addition to value-added food products, Mana Up supports companies making apparel, home furnishings and health and beauty products.
Mana Up鈥檚 quick success doesn鈥檛 surprise people who know its founders.
鈥淜eep in mind that Meli has lots of experience,鈥 said Carl Bonham, executive director of the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization. 鈥淭his is not her first time around the block.鈥
For their part, James and Heyd say their research and experience showed Hawaii brands have a competitive advantage simply because people around the world have an affinity for the islands. With that in mind, Mana Up chooses to work with companies deeply connected to Hawaii: 100% are headquartered here, 88% manufacture in Hawaii and 48% are Native Hawaiian-owned. In addition, 60% source local raw ingredients, in line with Mana Up鈥檚 mission to support Hawaii agriculture.
鈥淭he unfair advantage is a global awareness and love of Hawaii,鈥 she said.
At the same time, James says, it was hardly a sure thing that merely providing some training and mentoring could make young Hawaii brands suddenly thrive.
鈥淲e had no idea if this was going to work,鈥 she said.
Some Hawaii Brands Cannot Simply Leave
With the accelerator working, the venture fund was the next step. The fund鈥檚 first two investments are KoHana and Big Island Coffee Roasters, both of which are based on historic Hawaii cash crops.
James and Heyd declined to say what companies Mana Up Capital might invest in next, but a press release accompanying the announcement of the fund said it will 鈥減rimarily invest in companies who have gone through the Mana Up accelerator.鈥
Mana Up Capital has raised money from public and private institutional investors as well as individuals. It’s looking to do 15 investments over the next three years.
For Ko Hana, the investment means it can buy a slew of equipment, including presses used to extract the juice from sugar cane stalks. Ko Hana now has more than 300 acres of land in Kunia and Waialua where it grows heirloom varieties of sugar cane descended from canoe plants brought by the Polynesian voyagers who settled Hawaii, Brand said. Ko Hana also has 40 acres where it is growing cacao used for something it calls , a rum flavored with raw honey and cacao.
All of this means Ko Hana is in Hawaii to stay, Brand says. Some Hawaii brands, like found that it made more economic sense to make beer on the mainland for distribution there, rather than shipping empty bottles to Hawaii, making beer here, then shipping full bottles back to the mainland. It simply would make no sense to distill KoHana on the mainland, Brand said.
鈥淥ne hundred percent of our ingredients are grown in Hawaii,鈥 Brand said. 鈥淪o we truly are a locally grown company.鈥
What鈥檚 next for Mana Up will likely depend on what new needs arise for the accelerator and its companies. A showcase event for Mana Up companies once planned as an in-person event on November 4 to kick off the holiday shopping season will now be held virtually from the Hawaii Theatre, broadcast in Hawaii and San Diego on television and live-streamed globally. Last year’s showcase had an audience of 198,000.
And James and Heyd say they are working through some challenges. Setting up shop in Japan has proven harder than expected, for instance. And as Mana Up鈥檚 companies have grown, some are finding it hard to recruit new workers — a problem Mana Up hopes to help them solve.
In the meantime, people like UH鈥檚 Bonham commend Mana Up for focusing on businesses that are uniquely Hawaiian 鈥 that really can鈥檛 be done anywhere else 鈥 then putting in place the pieces, including capital, needed to help the companies grow. But, he said, building a major consumer goods industry in Hawaii won鈥檛 happen in just a few years.
鈥淚t does sort of demonstrate what we鈥檝e been talking about for a while,鈥 he said, 鈥渨hich is that it takes time.鈥
鈥Hawaii鈥檚 Changing Economy鈥 is supported by a grant from the as part of its CHANGE Framework project.
“Hawaii Grown” is funded in part by grants from the Ulupono Fund at the Hawaii Community Foundation, the Marisla Fund at the Hawaii Community Foundation, and the Frost Family Foundation.
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About the Author
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Stewart Yerton is the senior business writer for 天美视频. You can reach him at syerton@civilbeat.org.