RI’s Star Company Teespring is moving its Operations to San Francisco and Kentucky

GoLocalProv Business Team

RI’s Star Company Teespring is moving its Operations to San Francisco and Kentucky

What may have been the perfect RI start-up who raised over $50 million in venture funding is moving its operations to San Francisco and Kentucky.  Teespring is considered by some in the venture world to have the elements to be one of those great companies - an Amazon, Google or Uber. The company is eliminating 70 jobs in Providence and announced 300 new jobs in Kentucky.

The now, San Francisco-based Teespring manufactures and sells T-shirts designed by people around the world.

Brown University grads Walker Williams and Evan Stites-Clayton founded the company and Betaspring helped to nurture it.  In early 2014, GoLocal tagged them as one of the sites 14 to Watch in 2014.

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It was suppose to be the perfect RI story - young Brown grads, developed in RI, a company model that combined tech with manufacturing and tens of millions of venture funding.

As GoLocal Reported in January, 2014, "Teespring is going big time. BIG TIME," says Betaspring's Melissa Withers. "It's amazing to have a top tier company in our midst." Betaspring, which has been incubating start-up companies in Rhode Island for a decade now, is not only bullish on its tees, but on its culture.

RI Loss

The move out of Providence has been ongoing since they received the two rounds of Venture funding over the past 18 months. Leadership has been emigrating to San Francisco and a big blow for Providence was in May when Teespring Inc. hired EBay Inc. exec Robert Chatwani as chief revenue and marketing officer.  He is San Francisco based and it was reaffirmation of the bigger play for the company to take their strategy and competency and expand it to other vertical lines and be an  e-commerce service.

“We’d like to express our thanks and appreciation to the talented team members in Rhode Island who helped Teespring get to where it is today. Restructuring our Providence office was a difficult decision. However, we believe that our new team structure – reflecting expansion in our San Francisco and Kentucky locations – enables us to better serve our customers and organize Teespring for our next phase of growth,” a company spokesperson told TechCrunch.

Kentucky Win

On Wednesday, Kentucky officials were celebrating the nearly 300 new jobs that are moving to northern Kentucky. Gov. Steve Beshear announced Teespring's plans to open a new facility in Hebron.

The move to Kentucky includes an investment of nearly $22 million into the project.

“The Commonwealth is excited to welcome Teespring and its plans for nearly 300 new jobs with the location of its production facility in northern Kentucky,” said Beshear. “Kentucky continues to prove it is an ideal location for national companies, and this project is yet another great illustration of our success.”

“Teespring is very excited to launch our first production and fulfillment facility in northern Kentucky,” said Walker Williams, CEO of Teespring. “We believe the talent in this area in the fields of technology, maintenance, production and fulfillment, combined with the cultural alignment of Teespring and the community, lends itself to the perfect opportunity of creating a world-class facility.”


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