Once a week for less than an hour, Lara Olson's first-grader son got to tap into the creative part of his brain with watercolors, markers and clay at school. "He loved art class but he wanted more," she said. "So I sprung into action." She looked for after-school art classes to give her son more exposure to art but didn't find the kids-creating-and-playing mojo she was hoping for, so in 2008 she founded Kidcreate Studio. Her tech-free studios eschew phones and video screens in favor of polymer clay, oil paint and watercolors for kids ages 18 months to 12 years. "It's about making a mess and getting kids away from digital devices so they can learn in a social space," she said. Olson, 50, started with a location in Eden Prairie and soon expanded to Woodbury and Savage. Now she's franchising the brand across country so that parents can supplement their kids' art training in school.
Q: Why did you decide to franchise?
A: My goal from the beginning was to take a business that does good for kids and get more of them involved. When it came time to make that choice we opened Eden Prairie and that went well and then Woodbury too. Once we were happy with the profitability and the running of the business, we decided to franchise.
Q: How else have you expanded on your original idea?
A: We've added birthday parties and summer camps but we have to go where the kids are so we've added partnerships with preschools, community-education programs, elementary schools, parks and recreation programs, care programs before and after school, health clubs and golf courses. That's part of our On-the-Go side.
Q: Elementary schools too?
A: Yes. Some reduced their art programs but we work with districts that may offer it as an after-school program too. We work with a lot of districts like Edina, Eastern Carver County, St. Louis Park, Eden Prairie and south Washington County.
Q: What's the revenue breakdown?