IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Bacon Bouquets? Women-Owned Small Business Makes It Happen

Bacon Boxes co-founder Logan Rae reveals what it took to get her company off the ground and how she juggles classes at Florida Atlantic University and business.
Image: A bacon bouquet by the company Bacon Boxes
A bacon bouquet by the company Bacon Boxes.Logan Rae / Bacon Boxes

The CEO: Logan Rae, 22, co-founder (with Kim Hruda) of Bacon Boxes

School: Class of 2017 at Florida Atlantic University

From: Miami, Florida

Based in: Boca Raton, Florida

Number of employees: 2-3 part time; with seasonal delivery drivers it goes up to 5.

Sleep: 4-7 hours a night

Our a-ha moment

The idea came in early 2015. I had made a bacon bouquet for a friend that I delivered to a busy office. All the women went crazy over it. I had a final right after, but I took on the project on my own. It was insane. So when Kim and I decided that we had to do this, she and I sat on the kitchen floor with a bottle of wine and a laptop and started planning and mapping it out.

Logan Rae, co-founder of Bacon Boxes. Her advice to other entrepreneurs: "Don't doubt yourself."
Logan Rae, co-founder of Bacon Boxes. Her advice to other entrepreneurs: "Don't doubt yourself."

I had seen something similar from Edible Arrangements, but I was making a gift for a man, and I wanted it to be budget-controlled. You can go on Pinterest and see how people do these things, but it’s hard to recreate.

The biggest issue we have with Bacon Boxes is having a big enough facility to distribute for the demand. We had a 357 percent sales increase from our first Valentine's Day to our second. Over the holiday, we still do ridiculous shifts. We cure, smoke and slice the bacon ourselves. It’s a premium bacon. In order to get this quality you’re going to have to sit down at a five-star restaurant.

We haven’t gotten any type of capital infusion. We’re still completely woman-owned. We’re at a point right now where we’re considering some agreements that could take the business to the next level.

How I juggle school and business

Here’s a little curveball for you: I have a four-year-old. He’s so cute. We’ll hire gorgeous girls to come out and do events and my son gets better tips than the girls. It’s good that he’s getting it early on, what it means to work for yourself. I wake up really early, and then part of being balanced is making sure I have time to meditate and work out and get myself feeling good. That’s when my day starts. I try to eat. Sometimes it doesn’t happen. What’s most important to us is making sure the quality stays the same, that there are no corners cut. The minute we start talking to investors, they say ‘outsource outsource outsource,’ and to create this type of product, we can’t.

Definition of success

Success came when Kim and I reached a level where we could support ourselves, have fun, and still maintain our standards, like sourcing from family-owned farms.

My advice to other entrepreneurs

The most important thing they can do is research and call. School, and even your bank, can give you advice. Find free tax services to answer questions. Make sure you’re doing everything right. Don’t doubt yourself. A lot of the time we look at what we started with, and back then we said, there’s no way we’ll be able to blow it up and be able to work for ourselves full-time. And then a year later, there we were.