Entrepreneur Archive:
Hot Box Cookies
Enterprising College Students Find Themselves in the Dough
at Their Columbia Cookie Shop
Hot Box CookiesColumbia, MO
Corey Rimmel turned 21 a few weeks ago.
But instead of visiting a local watering hole with his buddies for a celebratory first legal drink, Corey enjoyed milk and cookies at his newly opened business, Hot Box Cookies in downtown Columbia.
Corey and co-owners Adam Hendin and David Melnick have barely had a moment to celebrate anything recently. Hot Box Cookies has kept them and their 26 employees hopping from the moment the first batch of homemade customized delicacies came out of the oven.
"We haven't even really advertised," Corey says. "This is all word of mouth, a little bit of door mail, helping out with a couple of tailgating events and having a prime location on Broadway. We haven't had time to work our way through our marketing plan...we've just been too busy."
MU students (left to right) David Melnick, Corey Rimmel and Adam Hendin opened the doors to their downtown Columbia shop Hot Box Cookies in October.
No doubt. Corey, Adam and David are all juniors at the University of Missouri. While Corey and David major in accounting, Adam is considering atmospheric science.
The three best friends grew up together in the St. Louis suburb of Chesterfield, Mo. They attended Parkway Central High School and came to MU expecting the typical college experience. Several months ago, Corey visited the University of Indiana and saw a cookie bakery and delivery business near the campus. He thought the concept was rather novel, and in conversation with his friends a few days later, mentioned the idea.
"At first we were just joking, kicking the idea around," Corey says. "Before long, we were holed up in the library every night doing research. Then, one day, we said, 'Well, let's just see if we can do it.'"
Armed with their research, they sought out every resource they could, including the local Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) chapter, where they were assisted by Gary Duncan, owner of Frameworks, a local gift and framing store. Then they found Virginia Wilson, business specialist with the Missouri Small Business & Technology Development Center in MU's College of Engineering.
Slowly, the trio finalized the plan. The next step: financing.
Armed with $30,000 of their own investment, the partners approached Keith McLaughlin, senior vice president of the SBA Lending Division at The Bank of Missouri in Columbia.
Six visiting students from Kalamazoo, Mich., enjoy a well-deserved milk & cookie break on a Saturday afternoon. The scholars were in Columbia to attend a weekend English conference at Stephens College. They hope Hot Box Cookies opens a shop in their town soon.

"I think when I talked to Keith on the phone the first time, he was just a little bit skeptical," Corey says, with a healthy dose of understatement. "But then we went to see him, and I just never quit talking. I thought the meeting went really well. Keith looked at our plan, our numbers and our research, and a few days later he called me and told me they would do the loan."
Hot Box Cookies is one of a kind—as is every cookie they bake.
Starting with homemade dough in four flavors, bakers add whatever you like to make your cookies specifically to your taste. You order in increments of six, and you can pick them up or have them delivered within minutes of their emergence from the oven. Packaged up in a small pizza box, the cookies arrive at your doorstep while they are still warm.
An order of six, customized cookies is $5.95 plus $1 delivery fee. Or you can walk into the store and select them fresh from the case. Sit at one of the tables, play a board game, use the free wi-fi and enjoy a cold glass of milk or one of Corey's signature smoothies or shakes. What else could you possibly need after a hard day of work or school?
Hot Box Cookies opens on weekdays at 4 p.m. (noon on Saturdays and Sundays), just about the time when kids traditionally come home to milk and cookies after school. It's also the time that currently works best for these school-bound cookie entrepreneurs.
"It's after we get out of class," Corey says. "We'd be open earlier if we didn't have class."
Corey says the biggest surprise he's had is how incredibly busy Hot Box Cookies is after such a short time in business. His biggest challenge is sometimes dealing with suppliers who run late or bring the wrong order. Employees are not a challenge, because the three entrepreneurs hired only their good friends and fraternity brothers.
| |
Hot Box Cookies slideshow |
|
| |
 |
|
| |
The homemade dough is worked... |
|
| |
|
|
| |
photo 1 of 10  |
|
| |
|
|
| |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |10 |
|
|
"We don't have to worry about trusting any of these people," Corey says. "We all know them really, really well. And they all want us to be successful."
Bakers arrive at the store about 15 minutes before opening and put the first batches in the oven. Things really get "crazy," Corey says, late in the evening when everyone is studying or wanting a late-night snack. Two delivery drivers hustle to take the hot boxes throughout the delivery area. If more help is needed, it's just a phone call away. One of the owners is onsite at all times. Things typically quiet down about 2 a.m., and the owners grab a few hours of sleep before heading off to class the next day.
"Fortunately for us, we're all pretty smart," Corey says. "So keeping up—at least so far—has not been a problem."
What's next for these "accidental" entrepreneurs?
"I really want to franchise this," Corey says. "I've always had it in my mind that I would work for myself. And I've always cooked and studied the culinary arts. I didn't know I was a baker, but it seems to have turned out that way. I think this would be really popular in other communities, particularly college towns."
Landlord Arnie Fagan calls the early success "phenomenal." He adds, "I live upstairs, and the smells—it's wonderful!"
Must be. After all, it's the sweet smell of success!
Client contact information:
Hot Box Cookies
808 E. Broadway
Columbia, MO 65201
Phone: 573-777-8BOX
Web: www.hotboxcookies.com
E-mail: crimmel@hotboxcookies.com
This story was featured in the November 2008 newsletter
Featured Entrepreneurs and Client Showcase Archive
Manufacturer
- Billy Goat Industries of Lee's
Summit - manufacturer of outdoor power equipment
- Eyes of the World of Rolla - manufacturer of high-quality intraocular lenses for humans and animals
- ISW Group, Inc., of St. Louis - manufacturer of a skin-care product for
African Americans suffering with dermatological problems

- The Newberry Group of St. Louis - developer of computer security systems

- Patric Chocolate of Columbia - gourmet chocolate maker

- Pogue Label and Screen of St. Louis - a specialist in printing labels on plastic containers

- Renewable Alternatives of Columbia - specializing in the engineering of phase change materials
to ensure consistent temperatures

- Sigma Aldrich of St. Louis -
chemical manufacturer

- TechGuard Security of Chesterfield - provider of information network security products

- X-Com, Inc. of Warrensburg, - produces digital communications hardware and software for the Navy and other commercial applications and products
Professional, Scientific and Technical Service
- Aegis Business Solutions LLC of Kansas City -
offers solutions to business problems in information technology 
- Brick City Custom Works of Mexico - custom motorcycle repair and service shop
- Gaskin, Hill, Norcross of
Springfield - developer of a text messaging system

- Global Solutions Group of Fenton - network solutions, IT telephone and
systems management firm

- H2O Technical Services, Inc., of Springfield, a provider of integrated water treatment services and applications

- Hammer Collections of Springfield - employs computer software and information technology to resolve and prevent payment delinquencies

- Language Solutions, Inc. of St. Louis - specializing in translation technology and multi-lingual communications services to assist other businesses reach a global market

- Logistical Resource Solutions of St. Louis - storage and inventory control
- Lytmos Group LLC of Lee's Summit - provides peer review and grants management support to organizations that sponsor high technology R&D

- Mobile Media Technologies, LLC of Kansas Ciy - wireless communications
- Nanova, Inc. of Columbia - researching biomaterials, materials, composites and medical devices to develop more reliable medical devices

- NEMS/MEMS Works LLC of Columbia - engineering researchers developing early-stage prototypes of nanotechnology delivery devices to target drug
applications in patients with life-threatening conditions
- OsteoGeneX of Kansas City - drug research and biotech commercialization
- Paternity Testing Corporation of Columbia - forensic investigations, DNA profiling
and parental identification

- P/Strada, LLC, of Kansas City - a
consultant in bio-terrorism and homeland security

- Sign Designs of Joplin - designs and manufactures custom signs for large corporations and small businesses

- Technology and Networking of Cape Girardeau - computer technology and telecommunications sales and services

- The Vacation Channel of
Branson - independent TV station providing tourism info

- Westinn Kennels of St. Charles
- canine boarding and training facility
- Wren Associates, Ltd. of Jefferson
City - provider of retail fraud detection systems

|
|
|
Visit the current Featured Entrepreneur
|