Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Dixie Elixirs Wants to Become the First National Marijuana Brand

Rob Reuteman

Entrepreneur

Wednesday 21 May 2014

Marijuana
Tracking the marijuana marketplace

A glossy full-page ad in a recent issue of Culture, a "cannabis lifestyle magazine," reads: "Our munchies give you the munchies." The advertiser is Dixie Elixirs & Edibles, Tripp Keber's 4-year-old startup that manufactures more than 100 cannabis-infused products for Colorado's adult retail marijuana market.

Targeted to users who are worried about the health effects of smoking, Dixie uses an array of "innovative delivery systems" for THC (the active ingredient in cannabis) that range from its flagship carbonated beverages to mints, fudge bars, capsules, chocolate truffles and oil cartridges for vaporizer pens. Dixie Dew Drops? Squeeze a bit under the tongue for "sublingual THC delivery in six refreshing flavors." In addition to edibles, the company makes massage oils, lotions and bath soaks for transdermal delivery.

For trailblazers like Keber, the years since Colorado began allowing the sale of medical marijuana and the months since its recreational legalization have been "like the wild, wild west," he says. "In addition to building innovative delivery systems, we're building a brand. When the market evolves, and it's possible to grow beyond state lines, that's when I put on my intellectual-property hat and align myself with the best of the breed."

Aaron Smith, executive director of the National Cannabis Industry Association, represents some 500 companies working in the legal marijuana business in 27 states. "What we hear from dispensaries is that retail sales of edibles are surging," he says. "As the biggest infused-product company in Colorado, Dixie is very well-positioned for the future, as the industry matures."

Chris Walsh, editor of the digital newsletter Marijuana Business Daily, adds, "We have yet to see a truly national marijuana brand materialize because of the many legal hurdles involved. Dixie is trying to become one of the first. Given its expansion strategy, there's a good chance it will eventually be a household name in multiple cannabis states."

Based on data from the Colorado Governor's Office, statewide marijuana sales are expected to exceed $725 million over the next 13 months. Dixie products are sold in an estimated 90 percent of the state's dispensaries.
Tripp Keber of Dixie Elixirs & Edibles.
Tripp Keber of Dixie Elixirs & Edibles.
Photo (C) Julia Vandenoever

"Dixie has been around a long time," says Cameron Mitchell, a "budtender" at the Medicinal Oasis dispensary in Denver. "It's made a name for itself in terms of the consistency of its consumable products." Mitchell estimates that 20 percent of his customers buy weed to smoke; another 20 percent buy only edibles; and about 60 percent buy both.

For eventual expansion, Keber hopes to license the Dixie brand, recipes and methods for sale to companies in other states. He expects Dixie products to be sold in a handful of states by the end of the year. "Right now, the marijuana must be cultivated and consumed in the state it's licensed," he says. "No interstate transport is allowed. I believe that will change. But in the meantime, there is no law against exporting the brand."

He's not the only one who thinks things will change--and quickly. In April, one U.S. congressman predicted that the prohibition on pot will be lifted entirely by the end of the decade. Until then, Dixie has a "very well-thought-out structure to avoid breaking state or federal laws," Keber says. "But this has never been done before. There is no Marijuana Business for Dummies book."

http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/233885

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!