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Florida Matters Re-Broadcast Preview: Nuturing Entrepreneurship In Tampa Bay

Todd Bates

This week on Florida Matters (Tuesday, Jan. 3 at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 8 at 7:30 a.m.), we are taking another listen to our discussion about how to grow -- and keep -- successful entrepreneurs here in the Tampa Bay area.

The show includes a conversation WUSF’s Lisa Peakes had with Tonya Donati, the creator of the Mother Kombucha Warehouse in St. Petersburg. 

The air inside Mother Kombucha is rich with a vinegary-yeasty scent. Long-neck brown bottles are being labeled, filled two at a time with Jasmine Flower kombucha tea, capped, and packed into crates where they’re priced and taped to be on their way to market. 

Credit Lisa Peakes
Kombucha is a living, probiotic tea. It is brewed by combining tea and sugar with a fermenting culture called a “mother” or SCOBY (Symbiotic Culture Of Bacteria and Yeast).

While kombucha has been used for centuries in Asian countries, it has only been flowing into mainstream American culture for about the last 10 years or so. 

Kombucha is now a hot commodity with sales in the hundreds of millions. Fans of the beverage say it helps with digestion and offers a myriad of other health benefits.

Mother Kombucha was launched in St. Petersburg in 2014. Its co-founder, Donati, said one of the best things the company did early on was to vend at local farmers markets and outdoor events. But the company’s growth was not without sacrifices.

There were many 80-hour work weeks and all night brewing sessions.

“Every single day there’s a different challenge,” said Donati.  “I think you have to be comfortable with being uncomfortable,” she said of creating a business.

“It’s a sacrifice but it’s also so much fun.”

One of the biggest challenges she says was going through the SBA (Small Business Administration) loan process.

“It was extremely long and trying.  When there’s a problem inside the brewery we know how to fix it. If it’s a mistake you dump it and you start over. If it’s not good enough-- you just get rid of it and keep moving. But when it’s something that you’re having to do that’s completely out of your control-- that’s the hardest part."

Even so, Donati believes anyone can be an entrepreneur-- as long as they are passionate about their product.

"Make sure that it’s something that you are inherently very excited about and it’s really something you want to dedicate yourself too,” she said. “It really is true that if you find something you love, you never work a day in your life.”

I cover health care for WUSF and the statewide journalism collaborative Health News Florida. I’m passionate about highlighting community efforts to improve the quality of care in our state and make it more accessible to all Floridians. I’m also committed to holding those in power accountable when they fail to prioritize the health needs of the people they serve.
After more than 40 years learning and helping others understand more about so many aspects of our world and living in it, I still love making connections between national news stories and our community. It's exciting when I can find a thread between a national program or greater premise and what is happening at the local or personal level. This has been true whether I’ve spun the novelty tunes of Raymond Scott or Wilmoth Houdini from a tiny outpost in a Vermont field, or shared the voices of incarcerated women about what it’s like to be behind bars on Mother’s Day with the entire state of New Hampshire.