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Now That’s Rural: Ben Weber, Completely Nuts

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

Completely Nuts. Does that sound like an unusual name for business? Today we’ll learn about a young entrepreneur who is involved in several enterprises, but one is focused on a very specific line of products: In fact, the product line is nuts only.

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

Ben Weber is a young entrepreneur in southeast Kansas. His uncles farm and his father is a Pioneer Seed salesman and has been for 25 years. Maybe Ben got expertise in sales from his father.

First, though, Ben went to Washburn University to play football. Unfortunately, he blew out his shoulder and was unable to play. While in Topeka he met an older couple that had a business selling cinnamon-roasted nuts. During school he helped them sell their products part-time. In 2001, he had the opportunity to buy their equipment from them. Two years later, he purchased another nut company.

Ben put himself through school selling these delicious flavored nuts and then took the business on the road. When it came time to name the company, he came up with a tongue-in-cheek name, so to speak. He named the company Completely Nuts.

“I’m working for peanuts so I might as well have a fun name,” Ben said with a smile. He had a roasting machine, a recipe, weighing scale, and supplies. He mixed cinnamon, sugar, and a splash of vanilla, added the nuts, roasted and cooled them and then hand-weighed them into bags. There are three sizes: Small, medium and large. Eventually he got three different sets of equipment so he could serve three locations simultaneously.

When I say he took the business on the road, I mean that literally. Ben started traveling to malls, festivals, and events to sell the delicious roasted nuts. He sold nuts as far west as Las Vegas and up and down the eastern seaboard. Ben sold the nuts from the Orange Bowl parade down in Miami up to Niagara Falls on the Canadian border.

One year, Ben was selling nuts in a mall in St. Joseph, Mo. during the Christmas season. An attractive young woman bought nuts from him and they got acquainted. Her name was Lara. Sure enough, they fell in love.

“If this doesn’t work out financially, at least it worked out socially,” Ben said. Ben and Lara got married and eventually they moved back to Ben’s rural hometown of Yates Center, Kansas, population 1,586 people. Now, that’s rural.

Ben is now an associate in his father’s Pioneer Seed sales business while also selling Meridian seed tender wagons and independent crop insurance. He still sells cinnamon roasted nuts but doesn’t go on the road as much since he started a family. In fact, Ben and Lara have five children, seven years of age or younger: They have girls age seven and five, plus a three-year-old son and twin boys age seven months. Forgive me for saying so, but life in a household like that might be completely nuts.

Ben Weber takes it all in stride. He enjoyed traveling with the nut business, but he is really enjoying being home with his young children. In his traveling days, he had the opportunity to do a lot of sightseeing. Still, he said, the greatest highlight of the business were the nice people he had a chance to meet.

Ben started selling his cinnamon roasted nuts at Bass Pro Shop stores and even met the owner of the chain. He has encountered other celebrities along the way as well.

“One day, I was selling at a Bass Pro Shop in Dallas when Terry Bradshaw came along,” Ben said. “He bought some nuts and was so nice to pose for pictures with us. Not two days later, along came Deion Sanders and he was the same way.”

Completely Nuts. It seems like an unusual name for a business, but in this case it accurately describes the business’s products. We commend Ben and Lara Weber for making a difference with entrepreneurship and family life in a rural setting, and with a product line that consists completely of nuts. Oh, nuts.

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

FHSU junior will have kickoff party for new business

Marcella McCluskey, a junior at Fort Hays State University studying communications with an emphasis in advertising, has announced the launch of her new business with the Clever Container company.

She is hosting a kick-off party from 1 to 3 p.m. March 8 at Indigo Cafe in Hays, on Eighth Street across from the U.S. Post Office.

Clever Container is a company dedicated to helping simplify and organize everyday life with products that help do just that. The kick-off party will be a no-pressure opportunity to see the products.

Indigo will have bubble tea available for purchase, and there will be cookies available as refreshments.

Deadline looms for annual Hays chamber awards

Friday is the deadline for nominations for annual Hays Area Chamber of Commerce awards, which will be presented at the organization’s Feb. 6 annual banquet.

hays chamber

The awards include:

Hall of Fame. Sponsored by Golden Belt Bank, this award honors an individual for long-term community service.

• The Most Valuable Citizen Award recognizes the community involvement of someone who has “given themselves for the betterment of our community and it’s people over the past year.”

• The Business Woman of the Year Award, sponsored by Girl Scouts of Kansas Heartland, honors someone who has a history of business accomplishments, has participated in chamber activity and has helped others reach their leadership potential.

• The Rising Star Award, sponsored by Eagle Communications, honors someone between the ages of 21 and 40 who has demonstrated excellent leadership in business or the community and is active in community service and chamber activities.

• The Business Achievement Award, sponsored by James Motor Co., honors a small business that has demonstrated entrepreneurial success in the Hays area.

For more information on the awards or nominating process, contact the chamber at [email protected] or (785) 628-8201.

Eagle Communications acquires cable systems in Neb., Colo.

NEW YORK – December 20, 2013 – USA Communications announced today that it has sold cable television systems in Nebraska and Colorado to Eagle Communications headquartered in Hays, Kansas.  The cable television systems serve the communities of Central City and surrounding towns in Nebraska and Burlington, Colorado.

“We are thrilled to be passing the ownership of our systems on to Eagle Communications,” said Chris Hilliard, CEO of USA Communications. “They are a great homegrown Midwest operator just like us. We are confident that they will take good care of our communities and our employees.”

Eagle Communications is a Midwestern-based broadband services and media company with more than 270 employee-owners. The company currently operates cable television systems and radio stations in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri and Colorado. Eagle also offers e-business solutions, web hosting, high-speed Internet, telephone service, rural wireless Internet and digital services in most service areas. Eagle employee owners have been committed to delivering the most reliable services with better quality choices even in the smallest communities.

“The USA communities feel like home to us at Eagle and our Eagle Employee Owners look forward to becoming their neighbors and growing with their communities,” said Gary Shorman, President/CEO of Eagle Communications. “Our history of providing cutting-edge technology that is reliable and easy to use will build on the great services already available from USA Communications.  We will bring the ‘Eagle Experience’ to these areas with affordable and user-friendly Cable TV, Internet, and telephone service combined with customer focused support.

Waller Capital, a leading independent investment bank focused on the telecommunications, media and technology sectors, served as the exclusive financial adviser to USA Communications on the transaction. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Hays chamber schedules events

The Hays Area Chamber of Commerce  has scheduled events for the upcoming week.

At 4 p.m. Wednesday, the chamber will have a ribbon-cutting ceremony at Rose Garden Steak Haus & Catering, 230 HACC_LogoE. Eighth.

At 9 a.m. Friday, there will be a Chamber Chat at Arc of Central Plains Thrift Shop, 116 E. 11th Street.

The chamber office will be closed for the holidays Dec. 24 and 25. The office also will be closed at noon Dec. 31 and all day Jan. 1.

For more information, call (785) 628-8201.

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