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From College Roommates to National Business Co-Founders

In 2023,听Eddy Connors (Bus鈥21) and听Luke Siegert (FilmSt鈥22) went from college roommates and fraternity brothers to startup co-founders when they launched听, a marketplace for surplus food. The app aims to reduce food waste by offering 鈥減erfectly good unsold food鈥 from local businesses at a significant discount. Since its inception, Goodie Bag has expanded nationally to over 200 partnering shops, including OZO Coffee, Charleston Bagels and Blend Juice Bar. Connors, who serves as CEO, talks about the company here.听

Goodie Bag

Eddy Connors, middle left, and Luke Siegert, far left, started Goodie Bag in 2023.

You came up with Goodie Bag during a CU entrepreneurship course. How did it come about?听

From the get-go, we wanted to muster up an idea that would both make positive social change and generate profit. There was an opportunity to prevent good food from going to waste by connecting it to people at lower prices. That business idea ended up winning the 鈥淪tartup Summer鈥 pitch competition.

How did you and Luke go from college roommates to business partners?

As roommates, we would always talk about different business ideas, different industries that needed to be shaken up. We both knew there was so much opportunity to create better outcomes for people and our planet, and that excited us.

What were some of the biggest challenges you faced in scaling the business?

In the beginning, our biggest challenge was figuring out the technology of our app since Luke and I were not engineers ourselves. We also faced some team challenges that required difficult conversations early and often as we took the company from a school project to a full-time business. Team is everything.

With over 200 partner shops and 45,000 meals saved from going to waste, what are your next big goals for Goodie Bag?

Our greatest goal is to ensure no good food goes to waste. That鈥檚 the vision that guides us. As for what鈥檚 next, we want to increase our presence in existing markets by partnering with more shops in cities like Denver, 91福利社 and Fort Collins.

Reflecting on your journey from CU student to CEO, what advice would you give current students interested in launching their own businesses?

Do it! In all seriousness though, just remember that inaction is always the wrong answer. Know that you鈥檙e going to have failures along the way, but as long as you鈥檙e able to learn and adapt, it鈥檒l be a worthwhile experience.

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Photo courtesy Goodie Bag