
Gunning for Success in Gum
If you've ever dreamed of starting your own business, you can probably relate to Kevin Gass and Laurence Molloy, co-founders of GumRunners LLC, marketer of Jolt Gum and the soon-to-be-introduced NutraTrim Weight Management Gum.
Experienced packaged goods marketers who met on the
job at Colgate-Palmolive in the early 1990s, each man had harbored his own
entrepreneurial inclinations. Finally, says Gass, “We decided it was
now or never.” In 2001, they took the leap, founding GumRunners.
Molloy had an extra incentive to succeed at his new
venture; a week after quitting his job, he learned that his wife was
pregnant with twins.
As veteran marketers, Gass, 38, and Molloy, 39, did
their homework before homing in on the caffeinated gum market opportunity.
They devoted two years to product development before arriving at a
formulation they deemed worthy of the Jolt name, rights to which they had
secured from Jolt Cola marketer, Wet Planet Beverages. With the product
concept in place, they began making presentations to retailers. After some
initial challenges, the gum began to establish a foothold, and today
it’s sold in more than 35,000 stores nationwide, they report.
Recently, Gass and Molloy hired 25-year-old Texan Matt
Gearhart, whom they met while working with their Texas-based
convenience-store broker, TNT marketing.
Next up for Gum Runners is the launch of Nutra-Trim
weight management gum, fortified with metabolism-boosting, appetite-curbing
ingredients including green tea, l-carnitine and chromium picolinate. The
gum has been well received by retailers. So far, “only one has said
no,” reports Molloy. The new gum is shipping now, with an official
launch date set for Dec. 26, just in time for diet season. n
Seattle Chocolate's Koppelman
Battles M.S. One Stroke at a Time
In March 2001, just six
months after his wedding, Seattle Chocolate regional vice president, Eric
Koppelman, now 32, was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. His health slowly
deteriorated to the point where walking even 100 yards was a struggle.
Medication, diet and various forms of exercise failed to have a lasting,
positive impact.
Then early this year, at the suggestion of his wife,
Laurel, an accomplished tri-athlete, Koppelman started swimming three or
four times a week. Within a few weeks, his strength and coordination
improved, and Koppelman, a life-long competitive athlete, entered a .5 mile
race. He finished respectably in the middle of the pack of non-disabled
swimmers, and an idea was born. Koppelman decided to continue competing,
and beyond that, to use the races as a way to raise money for M.S.
research. He established the Swim for a Cure Foundation, had a Web site
created and mapped out a race schedule. He’s accomplished all this
while working and being dad to a new daughter, who was born in April.
If you’d like to help support the cause,
donations payable to Swim for a Cure Foundation may be mailed to 70 Battery
Place, Suite 115, New York, N.Y., 10280. Or check out the 2006 race
schedule on the Web at www.swimforacure.org.