For Brian Smith and Jackie Cuscuna, co-founders of Ample Hills Creamery, building an ice cream business has been a rocky road.
The husband-and-wife duo started with an ice cream push cart before opening their first Ample Hills shop in Brooklyn, New York, in 2011. At its height, Ample Hills was valued at $40 million, with 13 scoop shops and an online store that shipped ice cream nationwide.
Eight years in, the success melted away. In March 2020, Smith and Cuscuna filed for business bankruptcy. Six months later, they filed for personal bankruptcy. In June 2020, Ample Hills Creamery was bought by Schmitt Industries, a machine parts manufacturer keen on entering the food business, for $1 million.
Costly business decisions and strategic missteps led Ample Hills to hemorrhage money, even as its sales and popularity grew. The couple “lost everything,” Smith, 53, tells CNBC Make It.
But a year later, they opened a new Brooklyn ice cream shop called The Social. And in June, they partnered with some investors to reacquire the Ample Hills brand for just $150,000.
Here’s how Smith and Cuscuna built a $40 million ice cream company, slowly lost it all and quickly started rebuilding again.
‘The real impetus was just that joy’
Not ‘enough money to get through the winter’
‘We can focus on the brand building again’
They’ve also relinquished the CEO role to Lisa Teach, a company board member with a background in business coaching and entrepreneurship teaching, according to her LinkedIn profile. Smith and Cuscuna oversee the marketing and creative processes.
Brian Smith and Jackie Cuscuna, co-founders of Ample Hills Creamery.
Zachary Green
In December 2022, Schmitt Industries reversed course, shutting down shops and furloughing employees to cut costs. Ample Hills went back on the auction block. Smith, Cuscuna and their investors won the bid with $150,000 five months later, taking back the brand and leases of four shop locations.
“It was like such a full circle, crazy moment,” Cuscuna said. “It was surreal.”
Now, their goal is to nurture both The Social and Ample Hills into flourishing businesses. Collectively, Smith says, the shops brought in roughly $350,000 in revenue in July, which was national ice cream month. Each shop is profitable, Cuscuna adds.
“In terms of growth, I mean, we’re going to approach it very slowly,” Smith says. “The focus is really getting those systems down [and those] operations tight so that we can focus on the brand building again.”
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