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YouTube Woodworker Lands VC Funding For Multi-Million Tool Brand

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Jonathan Katz-Moses’s journey to building a multi-million-dollar woodworking brand didn’t start with a business plan, it started with a near-death experience.

In 2010, while walking his golden retriever through his Santa Barbara neighborhood, he saw a young couple being surrounded by gang members armed with bats and knives. ā€œSomething in me just snapped,ā€ he recalls in his YouTube video. ā€œSuddenly, I was in a fight for my life.ā€

He survived with broken bones, 80 stitches and staples in his face and lasting trauma. ā€œI realized life is short… I was done surviving. And I wanted to chase my dreams.ā€

Those dreams? Making things. He walked away from his construction business, kept just $15,000 and began building in a powerless 120-square-foot shed.

ā€œI ran extension cords from the garage, powered up some tools, and said to myself, I’m going to make things and I’m never going back to that old life.ā€

From First Video to First Product

That shed became the birthplace of the Katz Moses Magnetic Dovetail Jig, a product born out of frustration and shared on YouTube.

ā€œI posted a YouTube video about it,ā€ Katz-Moses told me. ā€œThat day, I sold 27 jigs… it was like I’d climbed Mount Everest.ā€

From there, he built a cycle that fuels the business today: create tools, share them on YouTube, listen to the feedback and refine until they sell themselves.

ā€œThe feedback of being a creator is so much better than any company could ever get,ā€ he says. ā€œI answer the same questions day in and day out. That’s where I find the gaps in the market.ā€

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Owning the Niche

The Katz Moses Jigsquare, now his best-seller, came directly from audience questions. ā€œThe number one question was, ā€˜What was that countersink you used?’ I hated it… so we designed a new one. We filed a patent. That’s coming out now.ā€

It’s this responsiveness and deep understanding of the woodworking audience, that caught the attention of Billy Parks, a partner at Slow Ventures.

ā€œHe had built an amazing audience that really trusted him and loved him,ā€ Parks told me. ā€œOn woodworking forums and Reddit, his name comes up again and again: ā€˜Check out this guy’s tools. He won’t lead you in the wrong direction.ā€™ā€

Infrastructure as a Moat

Today, Katz-Moses Tools manufactures more than 100 products in a 33,000-square-foot facility, employs more than 15 people and generates most of its revenue from in-house tools.

But for Parks, it wasn’t just the sales figures that mattered, it was the infrastructure behind them.

ā€œWhen you have someone who’s built a supply chain, has a warehouse, has achieved velocity with product sales, that’s not easy,ā€ Parks says. ā€œThat’s a moat.ā€

Katz-Moses uses that infrastructure to help other creators launch products without the headache of fulfillment. ā€œDon’t ship from your house,ā€ he tells them. ā€œGive it to me, we’ll do it… for less than it would cost you to build your own.ā€

One of those collaborations, a folding pocket chisel knife, sold over 13,000 units in its first 14 months.

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Growing Without Losing Control

After a decade of bootstrapped growth Katz-Moses brought in outside capital to accelerate product launches, expand his team and scale his educational content.

Parks says Slow Ventures’ role is intentionally light-touch. ā€œOur job is to pick great creators that are building their own businesses… and then stay out of their way,ā€ he says. ā€œWe’re not investing in just the company; we’re investing in the creator.ā€

For Katz-Moses, that trust matters. ā€œI’ve bet on myself too many times to give up the reins now,ā€ he says. ā€œThey answer the phone whenever I call, but they don’t try to run the business for me.ā€

Lessons for Creators in Any Niche

1. Know Your Niche and Own It
ā€œYouTube is where you get to know somebody,ā€ Katz-Moses says. ā€œI don’t focus on virality. I focus on the people who will click anything I put out and trust me.ā€

2. Let Content Drive Product Development
His best-selling products came straight from recurring questions in the comments section.

3. Build More Than a Channel
Manufacturing and logistics capabilities can be as important as audience size.

4. Collaborate to Expand Reach
Partnerships with other creators have produced seven-figure product lines.

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What’s Next

Katz-Moses has greenlit 30 new products, partnered with other makers and is expanding into live events. At the Texas Woodworking Festival, where he’s the platinum sponsor, attendance is expected to ā€œ5Xā€ this year.

The goal remains the same: to grow without losing sight of why he started. ā€œWe’ve built a company that empowers makers all over the world… without sacrificing any of the values that got us here,ā€ he says.

Or, as he puts it more bluntly: ā€œDon’t wait for life to kill you to start chasing your dreams.ā€

This article is based on an interview with Jonathan Katz-Moses and Billy Parks from my podcast, The Business of Creators.

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