Minnesota

Black Business Spotlight: Junita’s Jar


Submitted photo Junita Flowers

A sweet tooth for change

Junita Flowers has been in the cookie business for the past
10 years. She first launched her successful Favorable Treats in 2009, but an
abusive marriage and divorce left her picking up the pieces. Instead of giving
up, she relaunched with a purpose.

Her new cookie imprint, Junita’s Jar, not only offers up
sweet treats but also provides healing for women affected by relationship
violence and prevention for others. Since launching last summer, she’s focused
on expanding her reach and using the power of food to connect communities.

The MSR caught up
with the cookie entrepreneur to talk about her mission-driven company and her plans
to change the world, one cookie at a time.

MSR:
So can you tell me a little bit about Junita’s Jar?

– ADVERTISEMENT –

Junita Flowers: Our mission is to bake hope into every cookie purchased. We
have three different flavors — triple chocolate chip, oatmeal peanut butter
chocolate chip, and oatmeal raisin.

We are specifically focused on college students, because the
18 to 24 demographic is the largest impacted by relationship violence. And
college students can impact change in our culture — sometimes faster than any
other generation — because they’re willing to go against the odds and try
things and support each other on a different level.

Ultimately, our goal is to reduce victim-shaming, create
allies amongst peers, and then inspire students to take action beyond what we
call our “Cookies and Conversation” event.

MSR:
What does a Cookies & Conversation event look like?

JF: [Hosts] bring their friends together, they book the space. I bring in a panel of experts, I host the conversation, I bring in the cookies. I have someone that represents mental health talking about trauma, the impact of trauma on the brain, managing stress, and self-care. I have a medical professional [who] talks about what you can expect if you ever find yourself in a situation and what you can expect from the medical community.

– ADVERTISEMENT –

And then I have a survivor who is no longer in trauma. If
you go volunteer at a shelter, you’re meeting women in trauma and you sometimes
don’t relate to them. But if you see a woman that’s now on the other side, you
can kind of relate to her, like, “You had a regular relationship like I thought
I had.”

We’re really trying to normalize, not so you can be okay with
it but to let women know it can happen to any of us. One in four women [are
victims of relationship violence]; that’s not just a stat, that’s real.

MSR:
What inspired you?

JF: I am a survivor of domestic
violence. It’s not a topic that I was necessarily passionate about, but I knew
I was passionate about changing women’s lives and I didn’t want anyone to feel
the way that I did. I knew that I wanted to create something different,
something hope-filled. I didn’t want women to feel the way I did.

Submitted photo

MSR:
How does all this tie into cookies?

JF: Cooking was my emotional escape. During the craziness of the
abusive relationship, I went back to what I knew and what brought me joy as a
child — being in the kitchen. I am one of eight [children], and my grandmother
used to come over every Wednesday to help my mom prepare meals, so we spent a
lot of time in the kitchen making everything from scratch.

– ADVERTISEMENT –

It was just the bonding that happened in the kitchen. And
cookies are the thing that I decided to do. What fed me in the craziness is
what now is going to feed my family and others — literally and figuratively.

Even though we sell cookies, I like to think that we’re a
story-sharing platform. We use the cookies as an opportunity to spark
conversation.

MSR:
What’s next?

JF: I have my next C&C scheduled for August with a student
nurses association, and then I have some conversations that I’m super excited
about that are coming up that I’m hoping will lead me to my ultimate goal. I
want every student-athlete that enters a college campus to go through our
conversation series as a part of their orientation — sort of an education and
prevention mechanism around sexual and domestic violence. So I’d like to
partner with the NCAA.

MSR:
Any other goals?

– ADVERTISEMENT –

JF: Our tagline is “hope munches on,” so I would like to go
around the world speaking and inspiring women — not just about relationship
violence, but inspiring women to push beyond boundaries and pursue their
purpose, because that’s an area where women tend to struggle the most. You
could be 30 or 60 and still struggle with that whole thing around purpose.

MSR:
Do you have any plans for retail?

JF: That’s sort of the next step as
we build awareness and build our customer base. We’re at the University of
Minnesota, in about five stores and the four bookstores on campus, and we’re in
a store on Grand Avenue in Saint Paul. Once people are more aware of who
Junita’s Jar is, we can have better success once we get on the retail shelves.

MSR:
What advice would you give to someone who was looking to start a commercial
business combining the social enterprise aspect?

JF: I think it all boils down to your why — why are you in
business? How do you know if this is for you, if this is what you want to do?
Think if you are really tapping into your “why.” You should dream about your
why, research your why, plan your why, execute that why, celebrate that why,
and then repeat it.

For more info, visit Junita’s Jar at junitasjar.com.

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