YouTube Woodworker Lands VC Funding For Multi-Million Tool Brand

đ usncan Note: YouTube Woodworker Lands VC Funding For Multi-Million Tool Brand
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Jonathan Katz-Moses
Meadow Rose Photography
Jonathan Katz-Mosesâs journey to building a multi-million-dollar woodworking brand didnât 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. âSomething in me just snapped,â he recalls in his YouTube video. âSuddenly, I was in a fight for my life.â
He survived with broken bones, 80 stitches and staples in his face and lasting trauma. âI realized life is short⌠I was done surviving. And I wanted to chase my dreams.â
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.
âI ran extension cords from the garage, powered up some tools, and said to myself, Iâm going to make things and Iâm never going back to that old life.â
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.
âI posted a YouTube video about it,â Katz-Moses told me. âThat day, I sold 27 jigs⌠it was like Iâd climbed Mount Everest.â
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.
âThe feedback of being a creator is so much better than any company could ever get,â he says. âI answer the same questions day in and day out. Thatâs where I find the gaps in the market.â
Owning the Niche
The Katz Moses Jigsquare, now his best-seller, came directly from audience questions. âThe number one question was, âWhat was that countersink you used?â I hated it⌠so we designed a new one. We filed a patent. Thatâs coming out now.â
Itâs this responsiveness and deep understanding of the woodworking audience, that caught the attention of Billy Parks, a partner at Slow Ventures.
âHe had built an amazing audience that really trusted him and loved him,â Parks told me. âOn woodworking forums and Reddit, his name comes up again and again: âCheck out this guyâs tools. He wonât lead you in the wrong direction.ââ
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 wasnât just the sales figures that mattered, it was the infrastructure behind them.
âWhen you have someone whoâs built a supply chain, has a warehouse, has achieved velocity with product sales, thatâs not easy,â Parks says. âThatâs a moat.â
Katz-Moses uses that infrastructure to help other creators launch products without the headache of fulfillment. âDonât ship from your house,â he tells them. âGive it to me, weâll do it⌠for less than it would cost you to build your own.â
One of those collaborations, a folding pocket chisel knife, sold over 13,000 units in its first 14 months.
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 Venturesâ role is intentionally light-touch. âOur job is to pick great creators that are building their own businesses⌠and then stay out of their way,â he says. âWeâre not investing in just the company; weâre investing in the creator.â
For Katz-Moses, that trust matters. âIâve bet on myself too many times to give up the reins now,â he says. âThey answer the phone whenever I call, but they donât try to run the business for me.â
Lessons for Creators in Any Niche
1. Know Your Niche and Own It
âYouTube is where you get to know somebody,â Katz-Moses says. âI donât focus on virality. I focus on the people who will click anything I put out and trust me.â
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.
Whatâs Next
Katz-Moses has greenlit 30 new products, partnered with other makers and is expanding into live events. At the Texas Woodworking Festival, where heâs the platinum sponsor, attendance is expected to â5Xâ this year.
The goal remains the same: to grow without losing sight of why he started. âWeâve built a company that empowers makers all over the world⌠without sacrificing any of the values that got us here,â he says.
Or, as he puts it more bluntly: âDonât wait for life to kill you to start chasing your dreams.â
This article is based on an interview with Jonathan Katz-Moses and Billy Parks from my podcast, The Business of Creators.