| Australian Teen Leads Successful Tea Biz |
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| Tuesday, 13 January 2009 | |
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Jason's grandfather, Frank Loft, created the Dutch Teapot Strainer in his garage in 1970. The small, umbrella-like strainer fits down the spout of a teapot, straining the liquor through the leaves. The elder Loft founded TPS Manufacturing, a home-based family business, to make and distribute the strainers, and the company sold several thousand of them over the years. Business waned following Frank Loft 's death and amidst the rise in popularity of bagged tea. By the late 1990s, Loft’s father – an accountant by trade – filled orders only occasionally. Jason Loft came into the picture in 2006, following an accident that took him out of his part-time fast-food job. Eager to continue making money, he approached his father, who pointed him – in family tradition – to the shed, where the small factory for making Dutch Teapot Strainers sat, neglected. Since then, Loft has not only revived TPS Manufacturing, but also launched his own, adjunct business, Pop-In Teas. His mission is no less than to introduce his region to the rewards of drinking full-leaf teas. WTN Editor Heidi Kyser caught up with Loft, who will be 18 in a month, to see how that plan is unfolding.
World Tea News: So, you didn’t drink tea as a child?
WTN: When was that?
WTN: And before that you were just doing the teapot strainer?
WTN: Tell me about the process for making it.
WTN: At 14, were you dreading getting dragged into the family business?
WTN: How did you go about it?
WTN: How long until business picked up and you were thinking about expanding?
WTN: Before that, how did you balance work with school?
WTN: Early on, about how many sales were you making?
WTN: What kind of margin do you get on them?
WTN: So, when did you get into tea?
WTN: Where do you get your tea?
WTN: Do you have a focus or specialty?
WTN: Do you do blends?
WTN: What’s your competitive advantage?
WTN: Do you do tastings?
WTN: Do they ever balk at dealing with a 17-year-old?
WTN: You recently graduated and began doing this full-time. How do you feel about it now?
WTN: What are your favorite teas? Loft: I’m going to continue this, hopefully make it a good success in my town, then look to franchise in various places around
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