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As The Woobles preps for 'Shark Tank' debut, what happened to other NC startups on the show


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Justine Tiu and Adrian Zhang founded The Woobles to help people learn how to crochet.
AMAIYA SAMDERS

Adrian Zhang and Justine Tiu, the founders of Durham-based crochet startup The Woobles, have already turned a $200 investment into a $5 million enterprise by helping people learn to crochet.

On Friday, thanks to an unexpected email from a casting director, their 2-year-old company gets its “Shark Tank” debut.

The pair are contractually prohibited from saying what happens on the show – at least until it airs. But Zhang said diving into the tank in front of investors such as Lori Greiner and Mark Cuban was a surreal experience the couple won’t soon forget.

“You go in there and it’s like you’re on a different planet,” Zhang.

“That planet looks exactly what it looks like on TV,” said Tiu.

For the couple, who met in a Duke University chemistry classroom, it’s an amazing milestone.

The pair didn’t initially set out to be entrepreneurs. Tiu was a designer at Google (Nasdaq: NYSE), Zhang a Wall Street trader. Tiu didn’t even pick up a crochet needle until 2016, and Zhang learned from one of her kits. Yet they both took a chance, quitting their jobs to go all in on The Woobles, moving from New York to Durham in the midst of the global pandemic to make their idea into a full-fledged company.

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Woobles offers crochet kits intended to allow anyone to make crocheted creatures.
AMAIYA SAMDERS

Making it to “Shark Tank” amid those odds is a milestone that could be life-changing. The pair refer to their startup as an edtech company, teaching the physical skill of crocheting through technology. It’s about learning and getting out of one’s comfort zone – which is exactly how the pair described the TV experience.

“We just never thought this would happen,” Tiu said. “I’m a pretty private person. … So it was just a very out-of-your-comfort-zone, mind-blowing experience. … But we tell our customers to be open to learning something new and trying something new, see where it gets you.”

Where it could get them – at least according to alumni of the show – is a lot of exposure.

Entrepreneur Dinesh Tadepalli said his advice is to brace for impact. When his Morrisville company, IncrEDIBLE Eats, made its “Shark Tank” debut last October, he scored four shark offers – including a winning deal with Home Shopping Network maven Greiner for an investment in his firm, which develops edible utensils.

Ultimately, the deal failed to close. But the appearance on ABC (NYSE: DIS) alone prompted a $50,000 revenue bump in just two days, according to Tadepalli.

He has advice for the Woobles – be prepared for the eyeballs they’re going to get Friday when the episode airs at 8 p.m.  

“They need to make sure their website takes care of the additional traffic,” he said Monday, adding that they also need to have plenty of product on hand, and to be sure to collect email addresses from potential customers “for future products.”

Dinesh Tadepalli. Founder of IncrEDIBLE Eats
Dinesh Tadepalli
IncrEDIBLE Eats

Tiu said the firm is stocking up – not just for “Shark Tank,” but for the holidays, traditionally its busiest season.

Justin Miller, whose Raleigh-based dog treat startup, Zookie's Cookies, appeared on the show, said to make sure to be prepared for the shipping nightmare that could ensue.

"We enlisted our family and friends and had a shipping pizza party to help us move the 1000s of orders we received in that first 48 hours," he said in an email.

His company is still pushing out products long after it scored a $50,000 investment from investor and Drybar co-founder Alli Webb for a 30 percent equity.

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Zookies Cookies on "Shark Tank."
ABC/Eric McCandless

Tadepalli said the marketing boost keeps companies like IncrEDIBLE and Zookie's going long after the show airs.

In the months since Tadepalli’s “Shark Tank” appearance, online sales have been “very good.” He said the traction from just his “Shark Tank” pitch on Youtube (Nasdaq: GOOG) has been incredible. Sony Pictures Television (NYSE: SONY) put his pitch on the platform two months ago and it’s already snagged nearly 4 million views.

Initially, Tadepalli had planned to partner with retailers – perhaps even a name-brand ice cream chain – to get his spoons in the hands of more consumers. That part of the business has slowed, he said, a result of “the current inflation and worker shortage.”

But the company plans to launch edible straws next month.

A number of local companies that appeared on "Shark Tank" in recent years are still operating – and thriving. But not everyone survived after debuting in the tank.

How NC entrepreneurs have fared after 'Shark Tank"


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