Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 780: Delivering Health & Happiness with Dosist
Episode Date: May 28, 2018In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Jeremy Green, Chief Operations Officer of Dosist, an innovative cannabis company that is delivering the therapeutic value of cannabis to people using the...ir unique pen that electronically delivers the perfect dose every time. From electronics to cannabis. How Jeremy got into the industry and the origins of dosage control? (5:38) What was the “Ah-Ha” moment he experienced that he had something here? (12:20) He shares a personal account of why he got into cannabis and how it has benefited his life. (13:32) What fears did he have getting into the cannabis market? (16:35) How he used his engineering background to do the research on learning the best oil production process. (23:20) How does their pen provide an equal dose experience each time? (27:40) The science of the extraction process, their compliance practices and how they separate themselves from the crowd. (33:40) The bad stigma of going to a dispensary and their legitimacy. (38:44) The Need State Concept, quality control and the design of their product for the masses. How what Mind Pump did for fitness, Dosist is doing for cannabis. (46:30) How strains are influenced by the terpenes in them. (58:00) What has the feedback been like so far? (1:08:40) Why is there is lack of knowledge of cannabinoids, their focus on education and how did they get their funding? (1:11:15) Plans for expansion and growth? (1:17:50) The descriptions of their various pens they offer and their uses. (1:20:00) How it takes experimentation to find what works best for you. (1:25:50) Featured Guest dosist – delivering health and happiness™ - http://dosist.com/ Related Links/Products Mentioned Historical Timeline of Electronic Cigarettes - http://www.casaa.org/historical-timeline-of-electronic-cigarettes/ Opioid Use Lower In States That Eased Marijuana Laws - https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/04/02/598787768/opioid-use-lower-in-states-that-eased-marijuana-laws FDA's Deeming Regulations for E-Cigarettes, Cigars, and All Other Tobacco Products - https://www.fda.gov/TobaccoProducts/Labeling/RulesRegulationsGuidance/ucm394909.htm Does the Regulatory Environment for E-Cigarettes Influence the Effectiveness of E-Cigarettes for Smoking Cessation?: Longitudinal Findings From the ITC Four Country Survey - https://academic.oup.com/ntr/article/19/11/1268/3061874 FDA deeming rule: A step forward, especially if the FDA acts quickly on the advertising rules and educational campaign - https://tobacco.ucsf.edu/fda-deeming-rule-step-forward-especially-if-fda-acts-quickly-advertising-rules-and-educational-campaign Lab results - http://dosist.com/lab-results/ MedMen Cannabis Dispensaries - https://medmen.com/ Airfield Supply Co. - http://www.airfieldsupplyco.com/ The Bespoke High Is the Future of Marijuana - The Atlantic - https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2017/06/hmbldt-weed-pen/530832/ Anomaly - http://anomaly.com/ Formulas - http://dosist.com/formulas/ Cornerstone Research Collective - https://cornerstonecollective.com/ Winners of the 2017 SoCal Harvest Cup – dosist - https://dosist.com/winners-of-the-2017-socal-harvest-cup/ Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Dude, what a fun little weekend for us, or it was a week leading into the weekend with all these spots that we stopped at, man, from Viori to Dosis to Mir.
I thought it was a great turnout, great event, man.
Did you guys have more fun at any of them,
more than others, or is it equally the same?
I thought this one was the more relaxing,
kind of chill vibe, but I like it.
Yeah, yeah, it was great.
It was awesome.
Jeremy's a freaking awesome, awesome dude.
Dude, how's for, I was not expecting that.
Yeah, I have.
Well, he's a brilliant guy.
He's a really intelligent guy.
Yeah, but okay, so we all kind of knew that
because we knew that he invented the technology
that creates the dosing in this and e-sigurites before that.
But I wasn't expecting him to have the personality
that he had. That was what was a carrier conversation.
Right. Because you never know that sometimes when we get these interviews,
is like, you know, we our team is like courting their team and we're kind of finding out
all the different synergies in the companies. And it's like, okay, cool. The boys are going to
meet and, you know, and I'm always excited to meet somebody. But they're, you know, when
when you're talking to someone who's like got an engineer mine, I'm thinking in my head, like, this guy's not going to be very cool.
He's going to be very dry.
There's going to be a lot of responsibility for us to carry this podcast.
No, it's a super cool guy.
Way cool.
Way cool.
Very knowledgeable in the cannabis space.
Not just the business, but the actual, like, science behind cannabis.
And, you know, for, for me personally, when I talk to other, when I talk to other
cannabis experts or whatever, usually many times I talk to them like, oh, well, you're not telling
me anything I kind of don't know already because I dive so deep into that into the science of it.
But Jeremy did. He went in pretty deep and, you know, Dosis utilizes the terpenes that are in cannabis
and knows how to put those together.
And actually, we talk about in this episode,
he tells us how they figured out how to construct
their, each of their pens, like the one that's for bliss
or the one that's for aroused or the one that's for sleep
or relief or whatever, like why they work the way they do
and how they figured out the formulas,
which for me, because you guys know, I love that part of you know of cannabis.
I thought was absolutely fascinating.
Well, I think it's important to let our audience know too that this isn't like a this super plug because they're a sponsor.
This is not a sponsor of ours. It's a relationship that we feel we obviously we can't be sponsored by a medical marijuana plan pen, not yet at least, you know, but
it we were so interested in the company and what the product they were providing. That's where
why Taylor sought out the relationship and then after meeting them, I think we can all agree that
we love it even more than what we did going into it. Oh, dude, I was not a big
vape pen user of cannabis.
If I used cannabis, it would be through the volcano,
or it would be a joint, right, if we're out or whatever.
But these dose suspens are the cleanest hell,
and they're super inconspicuous.
Like, you can be out in public,
you're walking, going to hike or whatever.
You know, you don't want to necessarily pull out a joint,
you know, depending on where you're at, right?
But these dose suspens, you do it,
and it's like, it doesn't smell, it works for a while.
Good stuff.
Yeah, I appreciate it,
because it's like, they're trying to kind of take away
that whole stigma of what marijuana has had
for just decades, and you know, that's a big hill to climb.
And I just appreciate the effort that they put into
their products, and you see it it already like even with my wife
It's like she she looks at that because you know that's still there like that stigma still around
But it's like it's less. It's like oh no this this can be a medical
Experience yeah, this was a really interesting conversation
I'm excited to hear the feedback from others that listen to it because it surprised the hell out of me
I'm really excited to release it to everybody and then get feedback.
And then I've already started to get feedback from people that either one
already knew about the company, they're like, oh my god, they're awesome.
Or people that have ran out now and tried the product out
since they've seen us already posting about it.
So really interesting.
Now, because it's not a sponsor, we don't have any sponsors for this episode.
Who's going to sponsor us?
Like, should we our own shit?
Actually, I think we should sponsor our own episode.
When this show airs, you think you only have like three days left to take advantage of the...
Oh, there you go, Sal.
This month, we're giving away the Intuitive Nutrition Guide and the Fasting Guide
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nutrition guide and the fasting guide for free.
And you can find those at min and the fasting guide for free.
And you can find those at minepumpmedia.com.
And without any further ado,
here we are talking to Jeremy.
He's the COO of Dosis.
Jeremy, we wanted to turn the mics on right away
because I hate when we talk outside of them.
I've, we like the people to hear us
getting to know you at the same time.
So I think it's more authentic and real that way.
We wasted all the good stuff if we don't. So I was already asking the girls some questions I like the people to hear us getting to know you at the same time. I think it's more authentic and real that way.
We wasted all the good stuff if we don't.
So I was already asking the girls some questions
before you got here and I was just curious,
how long have you been in the cannabis space?
Yeah, so I've been in the cannabis space
for about five years.
I come from the electronics business,
so my entire background is making printed circuit boards
for all kind of different consumer
and industrial electronics, right?
So everything from the GPS controller that's on a caterpillar gen set to LED lighting
as it first started getting popular.
And a lot of that's done in Chenzhen, China, just a, you know, an area in China that's really
focused on manual electronics labor. So a lot of your lithium ion battery driven products come out of there, a lot of your printed
circuit board stuff comes out of there.
And in about, say, 2011, and it's 2011, but in 2012, electronic cigarettes started getting
popular.
We kind of, me and my business partners based out of Chicago, I've been out here for about
three years, but we started tinkering around with electronic cigarettes
because one of our engineers' cousins
was selling 40,000 of these really cheap,
like poorly made electronic cigarettes
every month into bodegas,
just in the Midwest around Chicago, right?
First started getting popular, super cool thing,
problem was about 40% of them failed
out of the box.
So we start taking this thing apart, you know, be an engineer and making inventing stuff,
looking at ways to make things better.
We start taking apart, looking at it and going, this is made basically as cheaply as you
could make something, right?
It was back in the day, if you remember how LED lights were, they used to be super expensive, really bright, no color
to them, right?
Those were all made in the same facilities.
And as Sony and Phillips and GE and all the big companies started making their own LED
lights, all of these LED lighting factories started switching over to E6, you know, whether
it was the regular kind of standard E6, you see they look like a cigarette or, you know,
as boxmods started to get popular, you know,
guys vaping and blowing big clouds on the corner
and stuff like that.
And we made one simple change to it, right?
We took what is a flexible circuit
and something that is inside, you know, Apple watches
and Nike Flex bands and things like that,
a lot of really
higher-end consumer electronics.
And it was something that we made on contract for a company that was the, we made it as
the up and down volume button in Boeing airplanes.
So underneath your armrest, a little up down, aircraft, aircraft quality stuff, rather
than it being, rather than being a bunch of wires that are soldered together, they use
a flex circuit, right? We do this failure point. So we decided to say, okay,
let's take all the wires out of this e-sig. Let's put a flex circuit on it. And that was kind of
the first step. And for a few years, we made electronic cigarettes. Got, you know, I don't want to say
we got lucky around 2013, but had a little bit of foresight to say, why wouldn't you take
this electronic cigarette and actually dose the same exact amount every time.
So we put our patents in for dosage control.
Now, were you at that time, are you thinking about tobacco or is cancer?
All tobacco, right?
Because at that time, really nobody was even making cannabis vapes, right?
You had a lot of people making their own oil.
Some of them putting them to bigger box mods,
but you mostly had people's,
you know, at that time doing wax and shatter
and things like that and in wax pens or nails
or torches and things like that.
The technology really is rapidly advanced
when it comes to making oil.
So at that time, it was really all
around electronic cigarettes,
but, you know, our thought was, why wouldn't you want to dose that? to making oil. So at that time it was really all around electronic cigarettes, but our
thought was, why wouldn't you want to dose that? So we started making dosage control products
and created a couple of really unique dosage control products, but figured out that the
stuff we're making is a little bit too high end to meet the margins and the amount of money
that you actually need to produce this thing for to sell it at the 7-11 or a sit-go or something like that, right?
That people are buying for $456.
So, it's pretty sophisticated for what it is, right?
Yeah, yeah, I mean, it's the e-cigarette was invented a long time ago, you know.
And there's one guy that's really attributed to having invented it at this at this time, Big Tobacco's bought most of their patents,
by most of this guy's patents up.
But it was a very, very simple platform
that we kinda just tried to make a little bit better.
We did an e-cigarette business,
started working with Big Tobacco companies,
thinking, okay, we'll offer dosage control,
try to license the product into
that, and me and my business partner, both relatively young guys, and we're really looking to just
license our technology out. And then in around 2014, one of my buddies was in town from Colorado,
stayed at my loft for La La Paloza, had this big kitchen that I never used.
Right, and said, hey, I want to make some edibles so that I can go to La La Paloza and sell them.
And, you know, ended up taking some of the oil that he had putting in one of our basic e-sick designs that we made and said,
hey, this thing works great compared to everything else that's on the market right now.
Oh, shit, like right out the gates.
Even had a design for it.
Not even design for it, right?
And really, that's what most early vapes are,
if you guys, I know a couple of you guys
from the cannabis industry, right?
I seen the very first three models
that ever existed.
And it was that standard product, single-siphon,
WIC coming up, made a plastic.
It was, it made a mess.
It worked a few times.
Yeah, it was leak all over the place.
And it, you know, it would start clogging and the oil starts coming into your mouth.
I mean, not an ideal experience, but because it was such a more,
it was such a more discreet way to consume cannabis.
People took to it, right?
I mean, even then, people are like, hey, I'm at the restaurant.
In the middle, I'm hitting my vape pen at the restaurant.
It doesn't make these huge clouds of smoke like an e-sigger it does.
And it doesn't have the smell that, you know, smoking a joint does, right?
So it became, you know, really a discretion play.
And that's kind of, I think, what initially led to the rise and the popularity of it.
Because anything that you buy, if 25 or 30% of them break, that product's
probably not going to make it for too long.
It's a huge opportunity too for someone to enter the market and just create something
that doesn't break.
Yeah.
Now, are you seeing that when your buddy's getting, he's making all the edibles, you've
thrown in the vape pin.
Now right away, are you like, aha, like we've got to do this for cannabis or something like
this.
He's like, can I take 5,000 of them?
And we were like, okay, cool.
Because in the eSIG business, it's like we're pumping out
hundreds of thousands of these things every week, right?
And we're like, sure, take whatever out of the warehouse.
They're not branded.
They don't have stickers on them or anything yet.
And the aha moment was when he called back a week later,
and he's like, shake the fuck up.
And he would give me like, can me like 25,000 of these things.
And we're all like, shit.
He went through 5,000 that fast.
Yeah, yeah.
That's the same.
Because they worked, right?
I mean, they didn't leak.
They weren't purpose-built.
It's not the way we build products now for cannabis,
but it was already a better eSIG than what was on the market.
So as soon as he said that, we kind of take a step back and go 25,000.
And we were like, yeah, we don't even know what do people charge for these things.
And then we hear the price that people are charging for this for a cannabis product,
you know, 10 times more margin for us.
And we're like, okay, well, maybe there's something to this.
To this thing, right?
So. margin for us. And we're like, okay, well, maybe there's something to this. To this. Right. So now, what are your thoughts at this time in your life about cannabis in
general? Are you already somebody who uses or you somebody who's not really
interested? Yeah. So I was more of a CBD consumer, right?
Plade sports my whole life. A couple of bad accidents and injuries. One on a
motorcycle, you know, and went through what a lot of people go through when they do that, right?
L4L5 fusion, herniated discs in my neck,
doctors prescribing opiates and opiates, right? So started actually using more CBD and
ratioed products, right? One-to-ones, higher CBD products to kind of wean myself off of that, right? Because that was
CBD products to kind of wean myself off of that, right? Because that was, you know, if you don't know, right, and you have that kind of injury and you go to the doctor and,
you know, then I'm working 18 hours a day, running electronics business, trying to grow
my business. And I'm like, it's an SD. Yeah. Yeah. I hope it's an SD. I mean, at the beginning,
they're necessary, right? You've got a traumatic injury or some serious severe pain,
but what ends up happening is over time,
either the doctors have you keep coming to take them,
and it becomes a cycle, right?
And over time, your body gets used to it.
You need more and more, and there's just at some point,
it's an untenable situation, right?
Over time, you either have to find a way to stop
or you're going to be on them for the rest of your life
and the downsides and the side effects
and the way that it affects your life
are extremely negative.
So there's definitely a place for them.
It's just not in long-term,
holistic care for your body.
No, they're already showing in states that where the cannabis laws are looser, or it's either
medicinal illegal or recreationally legal, opiate use drops every single time in all of these
states, people are finding that it's a great replacement for opiates and it's obviously
the addictive properties aren't the same, it doesn't cause the same withdrawal and all
that of the stuff, which may be why there's
a lot of pushback.
I can only imagine.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, I mean, getting into one of the hardest parts around the lack of federal legalization
and the lack of federal funding that we have here is you can't go to bat against the
FDA and big pharma, you know, in these things.
There's too much business, there's too much business,
it's too much revenue.
And frankly, the doctors, while many of the doctors
who understand cannabis would love to be able to prescribe it,
if not as a replacement, at least there's something
that helps supplement it, right?
Because there are a lot of studies, like you're mentioning,
that show the decrease, a lot of that decrease is because, if you do need, look, there are people that have a need
for opiates, right?
Cannabis, in some circumstances, with very, very acute pain, cannot completely replace it.
But they've shown that if you combine the use of cannabis with an opiate, you can decrease
by 50 to 75% that consumption, right?
And then you're decreasing the side effects, you're decreasing the long term detriment to
the body.
Now, were you worried when you entered into the cannabis market of the, because I know
the tobacco market's definitely got its own hurdles and red tape and all that stuff,
but it's got a pale in comparison to the cannabis market, right?
Because it's still federally illegal, or at least it's still a pale in comparison to the cannabis market, right? Because it's still federally illegal,
or at least it's still a scheduled drug
according to the federal government,
were you a little apprehensive going into that market?
Yeah, you know, personally, we weren't, right?
So it wasn't something that scared us off.
One of the interesting things,
and I think that people don't realize this
because they think, you know, tobacco is so regulated and the FDA gets involved
in advertising and the testing of tobacco and everything like that.
Those same types of regulations have not crossed over to the eSigarette space.
There's literally no regulation about what the product is made of, what components are inside of it.
Even for e-cigarettes.
Even for e-cigarettes.
No shit, I didn't know that.
I've seen some independent reports on some of those e-cigs
and they're seeing all kinds of shit.
Narlie.
Yeah, like Narlie.
More for you than a cigarette.
So even when, you know, we were used to,
you know, we were really custom designers,
or custom electronics designers. but when we looked at making
something to quality, I was even starting to ask, okay, well, in an e-sig, they used to
just put stickers around the outside.
And I was like, okay, well, what ink is being used on that sticker?
And none of its food grade.
And then I'm asking about the plastic.
What plastic are you guys using for these mouthpieces?
None of them are food grade.
What's the coating that's on, you know,
the very common that you see now, the nickel plated,
they let you like to call them stainless steel,
but it's really just a nickel plated silver tip
that's on a lot of the cannabis.
Like that's not safe.
None of that is food grade, right?
It's not safe to be in your mouth, but whether it's for the bacteria and everything that
could potentially...
Yeah, I mean, it's just what it's made of, right?
The process, what the plastic's actually made of, what can stay on there, you know,
anodizing, very cool-looking, you see, climbing gears, anodized, a lot of pens are anodized,
but anodizing isn't technically food grade, you know.
So just because it's got so many pits in it, there's, you know, when you get, don't want
to get too technical on the electronic side of stuff, right?
But, yeah, but that's really interesting.
I had no idea that the e-cigarette market was different than just a cigarette market.
Like, they could, they would actually have different laws and regulation.
I think it would be the same.
I just assumed that.
Yeah, it's a gray market.
It was kind of a gray market, right?
Because nobody, they didn't regulate it
because it didn't exist.
And then when they got invented,
then regulations seemed to follow.
Yeah, it's been around for a long time now.
It has been around for a long time,
but big tobacco didn't really enter until about 2016.
So a lot of times regulation comes from companies
wanting to push out their competition.
Of course.
So there was a thing on the table in 2016,
and technically in August of 2016,
there's this thing called the PMTA,
which is a pre-market tobacco application,
which says any product that wasn't in market by 2016
for e-cigarettes technically would need to meet
this PMTA requirement.
All that is is.
No competition for us.
A million dollars of testing for every skew.
Now who can afford to do that?
That's right.
Big tobacco can afford to do that.
But all the guys that are making all of this vape liquid
and guys that are making smaller players.
I'm so glad you're saying this.
We can afford to do that.
Yeah, a lot of people don't know that.
That's how most of the regulations in the market exist
is from big players trying to eliminate competition
or raise the barrier to entry so high
that there is no competition.
Yeah, so if I'm Philip Morris or RJ Reynolds
and I want to put out 50 skews,
different individual skews,
so five different products,
10 different flavors.
What's 50 million to me?
Nothing, right?
If I'm an eloquent manufacturer
and I've got 50 flavors, I can afford,
you know, you can't afford to do that.
You know, so yeah, you're right.
It's a barrier, it becomes a barrier to entry.
And a lot of times, the regulations get pushed
as a barrier to entry. And I'd times the regulations get pushed as a barrier to entry
And I'd say that you know when he asked earlier about
Being scared off about going into the cannabis industry was actually more attractive, right because
We saw it coming we were working with big tobacco as we saw them developing dosage control
And we're talking about our dosage control technology with them and you saw them buying patents, buying patents, buying patents, right?
And so they're writing their bets on the wall and at the same time, you know, we're one of the very few people in the cannabis industry that actually has our factory controls our factory.
We have people that work their full time in shins and and we started to see a consolidation in the factories, right?
So whereas in 2015, there was, you know, 1200 or so E-SIG factories
out there pumping out a wide variety of products, right?
I mean, there's box mods, there's vapes, there's, you know,
the small ones, there's different types of cartridges.
Across the board, there's a lot of different styles of electronic cigarettes.
But what happened is they started to, big tobacco, different types of cartridges across the board. There's a lot of different styles of electronic cigarettes.
But what happened is they started to, big tobacco bought the good ones, started buying the
small ones and shutting them down.
You know, two years later, you had 400.
And now, 2018, there's, you know, maybe 50, 55 real factories over there now, and most
of them are controlled by Big Tobacco. So it's become a really interesting landscape
and what a lot of people don't see is how,
you know, it's the cannabis vaporization technologies
come a long way since we first saw it, right?
It was just, hey, I'm gonna buy this e-cigarette tank
off of Alibaba.
I'm gonna put my, you know my natural CO2 oil in it.
It used to be brown amber basically
and everything, not the gold distillate you see today.
And I'm gonna sell that, right?
And they failed a lot too,
but just like e-cigarettes that were failing,
it was cool, it was something different,
it was discrete, it was easy to use, especially for somebody who doesn't
want to smoke cannabis or smoke a joint or a blunt
or whatever.
So the technology has gotten better,
but for the most part, the brands today
are just buying a standard white labeled product
that they buy from one of about 15 different companies
that make
e-cigarette vapes for cannabis, and they can get their name printed on it differently or get a
different color tip put on it, but you pretty much see the same style across the board. Now, how do you
guys handle quality control on the back end, like with the flower and stuff, because like when I was in
the space, you know, it's, it was, you had to go to five
different farmers just to keep stuff on your shelf.
So I can't imagine the amount of pins that you guys have
to fill, like, and getting it into the space as late as you did.
How do you deal with that?
How do you, yeah.
So, you know, luckily, because I'd been making private
label vapes for a lot of the big companies over this time,
you know, I started to understand the relationship.
So after we get this second big order
and go, wait a minute, there's something to this,
I started spending all of my time
going from Chicago to Denver to Seattle to Portland
to San Francisco and to LA
and kind of just making this loop around the places that we're actually doing some volume
in oil manufacturing and learning.
You need to look into that.
I need to learn from an engineering perspective.
I'm looking for process.
I'm like, okay, how does this happen so that how are people making oil so that I can make a device that works better?
Right?
Because even then, as we started making products specifically for cannabis, changing the wick,
changing the coil, changing the materials a little bit,
we were seeing different failure rates
from different people, and we know that,
we are a GMP certified ISO certified manufacturing facility.
So we know that if we quality control it coming out there,
if I make 100,000 of something, it's pretty much exactly the same thing every
time, right? So if we start getting, hey, one person says this one's leaking, then some
of them are clogging. What's really going on? You know, it's just started learning the
oil production process. How exactly are people making oil and how wide is the variability
of what people are putting inside of this?
Yeah, and we've really just, I mean, it's only been maybe the last year or two, have we
evolved it to where it's this pure, clear, clear stuff? Just like you were saying before,
it was just amber and yellow and it was, you know, maybe 90% at best pure, some of the best stuff
if you're lucky. Yeah, yeah, if you were lucky. And one of the biggest things was the particulate
matter that was left in there, right? So that amber color is just plant material.
It's floating around in this liquid, you know? So if you're looking to try to vaporize something
that's got to go through a saturation screen is going into a wick, right? It starts clogging up.
You know, so learning about the oil process allowed us to start making better pence.
learning about the oil process allowed us to start making better pens. The oil inside that we were trying to deliver, we got to customize the hardware
specifically for that material.
Did you guys contract that work?
The reason why I'm fascinated by this and I'm asking these questions, I feel like we're
going to end up running into people that we know because I mean the machinery that it takes to
produce a high enough volume to fill thousands and thousands of pins
There's only a handful of people that own that machinery and some of them are related to me
And so it's it's like how did you guys?
Build that all out yourself or did you guys go find people that were already mass producing and then you guys contract the work?
Yeah, so we yeah definitely we, we started building custom filling machines for cannabis and we
were working, we've worked with a number of different companies, people from the aerospace
industry that handle thick liquids like, you know, epoxies that are coding linings on airplane
parts and stuff like that to try to find a really high
quality because believe it or not until probably 2017, even the people that were putting out
a hundred thousand pens, they were doing it by hand.
Oh shit.
Yes, I mean, you literally had guys with syringes filling these things by hand.
So you can't measure exactly how much going in there,
kind of eyeball in it.
And most filling machines are used to dealing with products
that are like pharmaceutical grain, right?
This thing's filling essential oils into a bottle.
That essential oil is exactly the same every time.
Cannabis oils are really, really interesting thing to work with
and it's very hard to work with because it's very thick and just because of the nature of the oil,
very small temperature ranges, effective viscosity greatly.
So I have a question because one of the big issues that the medical community has had
with the inhalation of cannabis, or at least what they say, their
big issue is, is the difficulty in measuring the active ingredient with a hit. Obviously,
different flowers, different types of flower, going to have different percentages of cannabinoids
and terpenes and all the other active ingredients, but in particular, they can have anoids. Then of course, how hard you hit the joint
or how hard you breathe it in, how the person,
if they're used to doing it, if they've done it before,
if they've never done it before.
So like you could have somebody take a hit of a joint
and get half of a milligram of THC
and another guy can get five milligrams of THC.
So that was a big problem.
How did you guys,
how does this pin work where every hit
is the exact same amount every single time?
It's a reservoir, right?
Isn't that what happened?
So, I mean, it really starts from the entire process.
The finished form is what is the simplest way that we can provide a consistent repeatable
experience to a consumer, whether they're a consumer that's been in the industry for a long
time, but especially people who are curious about cannabis and want to use it, or have
had this past prior bad experience, either with an edible product
or a joint that was way stronger the second time than the first time they had it, you know,
those kind of things.
So, and with flour, it's incredibly hard to get specificity, right?
There's tens of thousands and probably hundreds of thousands of different strains right now,
and every one of those strains has different phenotypes within it
and the way that the amount of cannabinoids
and very importantly the type of terpenes and the terpene profile
are going to be significantly different based on where it's grown.
So even if I have the same exact clone, right?
A lot of some people grow from seed,
most large growers grow from clones,
which are basically cuts off of the same exact plant,
so they can get some consistency.
Well, if I take that clone and I grow it indoor here in LA,
where there's a lot of big indoor grow,
and then I take it up to Carpenteria,
where there's a ton of greenhouse grow, right?
Or I go up to Humboldt County and grow it outdoors.
The in-product is completely different, right?
And not to mention that, you know,
we've put strain names on things like OG Kush.
If there's probably no less than 50,000
different types of OG cushions. Right?
The original plan. It doesn't mean a lot anymore, right?
Because people are taking different parts.
Pastor Dyson hell out of it. Yeah, they have.
And I mean, it's not, you know, I don't think nobody's done
an on purpose and it's not a negative thing, but we're not
in the Monsanto era where this is a genetically engineered seed,
and everybody is using that exact same thing to grow their corn.
I mean, these are things that have been passed around, that have been protected, that guys
haven't seed banks and stuff.
So it's a, you know, the variability at the plant side and then growing that plant and
what conditions you grow it in, I mean that the cannabinoid level, the terpene level,
is always going to be different.
So yeah, because this is exact,
I mean, when you look at the box of one of these,
like I'm holding the bliss,
I look on the back here and it'll tell me,
how much per dose of THC CBD of the different types of terpines,
it actually breaks down the terpines,
which by the way, I think you guys,
these are the first people I've ever seen
to list that.
I don't think anybody else talks about terpenes
or tells you what kind of terpenes are in their product.
So I mean, that's fascinating.
And especially when as cannabis starts to go mainstream,
or if, you know, as we move forward towards, you know,
legalization nationwide, you know, a, you know,
a joint with bud called, you know, Girl Scout cookies
or, you know, purple, crush, crunch or whatever, it's going to be much more difficult, but
something like this, I could see this being, you know, way in, right?
Yeah, yeah, look, the product was built to provide permissions for people to feel comfortable
trying cannabis, right?
So, so how do you, how do you stay as true to the
plant as possible, but deliver an experience that people are used to, right? Like, you know,
the goal of the company is if I'm in Los Angeles or in San Francisco or Chicago, New York,
Miami, Toronto, London, over time, right? How do I know that I'm going to get the same exact experience?
When I was in college, people were passing a joint around, yeah, no problem.
I'm just gonna hit it and see what happens, right now because cannabis is so strong and there's so many different traits
I'm not gonna just like just grab an adjoint from someone. I have a hundred questions
like just grabbing a joint from someone, I have a hundred questions, you know,
but...
It's a big, you know, I might be super paranoid
and energetic or I may have to lay down
on the couch this party, right?
And, you know, and people will say,
oh yeah, this is, you know, this is blue dream.
Maybe.
Maybe it is, you know, maybe it is, maybe it isn't, right?
So how do you go from this variability in the plant to delivering a specific experience?
So.
Do you guys have machinery that tests it where it hits each pan and tells you the amounts
of cannabinoids in each hit or anything like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I can kind of walk, kind of walking through the process from start to finish, right?
You take the flour.
You take, we use THC and CBD in all of our products.
We take that through a primary extraction process, which is CO2 is what we use.
There's a number of different things you can use.
You can use ethanol, you can use CO2, you can use a hydrocarbon.
Now CO2 is supposed to be the best one to use.
Why is that?
Yeah, a lot of definitions of best.
CO2 is not as volatile as like a hydrocarbon extraction is.
Hydrocarbon extraction's gotten a really bad rap
for a few reasons.
Number one, people just used to open flame blasts.
Oh, but we were blunt butane in it.
Yeah, 10 years ago.
Yeah, and so that was a problem.
People, you know, there was safety issues around that.
The machinery now has gotten so much better
and the rooms are built to tremendous fire codes, right?
What about for the user?
Is it safer to use an extract
that's using like CO2 versus?
Well, now they're getting,
we're there to the point now where they can process it
all the way down to where it's 99.9% pure.
I mean, you're, yeah.
So what you all have in is,
what it used to happen is the guys would blast that, right?
And then they wouldn't do the necessary post processing to actually get all of that
butane and propane and hexane out of the product.
So not only are you, is it super dangerous as they're making it, you've also got, like,
you might be inhaling...
No, you're taking the high...
I would imagine some of your competitors are still doing that to this day.
There's no regulation around that, is there?
It's getting better.
Until December of 2017, there was no required pesticide testing or residual solvent testing
in the state of California other than in Palm Springs, the city of Palm
Springs and the city of Berkeley. One of the commitments that we made with the company very
early was to say we are going to test our products to the most comprehensive regulations that
are out there at the time. So we used the Oregon Health Standards. And we are not going
to ever put a product that has pesticides in it, and we will test for residual
solvents, mold and microbiological materials, and every product that we put out will pass.
These are dummies, so they don't have the analysis sticker on them, but if you buy a
DOSIS product at the store and you look at the actual lab sticker, there's a batch number on there.
You can go right onto our website, punch that batch number in,
and it will pull up the lab report.
That's dope.
And that's from now, all the way going back
to the first pen that we put out, right?
So even in a time where there wasn't a set regulation
within the state, we complied with the strictest standards
that we could based on what the labs were able to do.
Now starting now in 2018 with adult use legalization,
now there are lab testing requirements.
You are allowed to put on your boxes
that you're not testing to compliance at this time,
but it looks like July 1st will be the compliance date
where there's gonna be a full 58 panel pesticide test
and you can't have residual solvents.
And so when you say residual solvents,
that's the butane.
Is there butane, hexane, or propane in there?
Also, is there ethanol, isopropyl alcohol,
a lot of the stuff that we use in post-processing
to clean up the material?
OK.
And then when it comes to the plant,
so if you're a joint, is there mold
and microbiological's in there?
What's your estimation on how a bunch
is that gonna affect the market?
Like how many people do you think is gonna get carved off
because of that?
It's gonna be significant.
Right.
Like, what do you think?
Come on.
Well, I know, I know he's gonna check on him.
That's the thing, like, just to be legalized.
It doesn't mean they don't have people going around
or do that.
No, they do now.
So, as of July 1st, you have to,
if you're a distributor, right? Basically, they've now. So, as of July 1st, if you're a distributor, basically they've used the distribution piece
of the business as the lever for regulation.
So, if you're a distributor, which doses we distribute our own product, so we have a distribution
license, we're responsible to take that product into a compliance cage.
One of the compliant labs comes in and sends someone in.
They pull a percentage of product based on the batch size, take it back and finish
good, totally in the pen filled everything.
They will have to cut the top off the pen, pull the oil out of it, and they'll do the testing.
If it passes, now that can be distributed to the store.
So that's not to say that there's still not a lot of non-compliant business going on, right?
You've got hundreds of illegal dispensaries in LA alone.
What you have even more of is illegal delivery services, and those are still out there.
But, you know, for the bigger brands and the people that are building strong core businesses
trying to serve the consumer, you know, compliance is getting a lot better.
Look, the state has a lot to do, right?
I mean, you're basically trying to build regulation
for a 20 billion, what's gonna be a $20 billion
industry just in California over the next couple of years.
They're gonna over-regulate.
In a year.
I think they'll over-regulate.
To be honest with you, I think we're-
When do we never not over-regulate? Yeah, I know. When do we ever not over-regulate? They're gonna over-regulate I think the overregulate, to be honest with you, I think. When do we never not overregulate?
I know.
When do we ever not overregulate?
They're gonna overregulate and overtax.
The reason why it's taking this long is because the government
wants their fucking money anyway.
They've been monitoring all this shit so they can go in
and grab their shit down.
That's what I mean, they're gonna work.
This is what I want to know.
So part of why I left was because I just got tired of waiting.
I got tired of waiting.
I was part of the front wave of people
that were trying to do, when we first opened, right?
So we were two of the first four cannabis clubs
in San Jose in the Bay Area.
So before us, there wasn't really anybody else.
And LA was doing it first.
And at that time, they only had like 10, 15 clubs.
And my partners and I, when we came down,
we looked at, we walked in and right away,
because there's, there's,
we partnered up with guys that were in the, the gray black market side of the business
because back then that's all there was, right?
And we're coming in on the front end, medical marijuana is coming.
We go down south and we start checking these dispensaries out and my, my two partners, I'm
going like, oh my God, like, this is going to go in a space where you know some seven-year-old woman with arthritis needs it
Or someone that's got gut issues wants it and they're a lawyer a doctor a wife a mother like normal people and
Everywhere you walk in it's shady as fuck. There's a huge three hundred pound muscleed-out steroid guy with a gun in his back pocket
You I mean just you can smell the weed like, I mean,
it was just so unprofessional that we looked at and go, Oh, man, this is going to be so easy.
Like, we're going to come in and do this right.
And we did, but it was so frustrating for us trying to build this business legitimately
way back then was all the other way undercutting all that there was no regulation.
There was nothing that stopped you from back door selling or doing selling other drugs or whatever it took
to through, because at that time it was all these hustlers
and drug dealers, there was very few guys like yourself
that were in the space and guys like me got tired of waiting.
So did you go through this frustrating
or are you still going through this?
Look, it's definitely not as bad as it used to be.
There's a lot more infrastructure,
there's still not near enough infrastructure to support it.
But there's still a lot of that same hesitance
from 90% of the people to go to a dispensary.
Like even the nice dispensary still have a dude
in a bulletproof vest with a block,
standing out front and you're going through a security.
Now I get it, right?
It's dispensaries especially back in the day when there wasn't, you know, there wasn't
more focus on how much you were all robbing it through all robbing each other.
Yeah, I mean, people are getting robbed all the time, right?
So it was actually dangerous, but still one of the, you know, one of the things that we try
to push and I, you, and I support very heavily
and work with the Bureau of cannabis control here is, why are we legitimizing a business
but still not allowing it to bank?
Why should I have to when it's time to pay ex-ice taxes, have to have five armored guards and an entire truck to bring two million dollars in cash
to the Department of Finance. Right. And why is we get, you know, the most from the most
legitimate company to the most illegitimate company bank accounts shut down all the time.
Right. I mean, it's just if it's not an illegal business, let's figure out a way to structure it
so that you don't, so you take cash out of the equation,
the most dangerous part of the business is not like,
what do you, how much pot flour can you possibly go steal
to make it worth it?
Right, I mean, if you go steal extract,
maybe it's worth it, but what do you do with it
at that point, right?
But everybody knows that cannabis people have money.
They have cash sitting around because you can't bank it.
The irony is all those regulations make it more dangerous, create black markets.
If they overtax the hell out of it, the black market's gonna be...
That's what happened to us.
We watched when we were before even the taxing really started to happen.
And then it was like, all here this comes.
So we're getting hit sales tax, store tax, the city tax, the state tax. Before you knew it, like, I was like, I got
to sell an eighth at like $80 just so I could pay the staff and we can keep keep keep things
on the shelf. Yeah, but a dude across the street can sell it for 40. That's right. Because
he's not paying any of those. Exactly. He's cash. And that's still a very real circumstance
for the dispensaries in LA.
That's what I thought.
I would like to point out though,
that you guys quality control,
you guys have put together a product
that all before regulations,
it just highlights how markets work.
You guys wanna be the best
and you guys are out competing everybody as a result.
And there's before any regulations.
Well, people want quality. That's right. And it's in your best interest. You want quality. And it's before any regulations. Well, because people want quality. That's right.
And it's in your best interest.
Sure, you want quality.
And it's in your best interest.
We still feel that even though we've grown to be a significant market share in the business,
it wasn't really a great environment for us to grow during that time.
But I think what it proved was that people were looking for a product like this. And even today where we've got amazing dispensary partners like Medmen and Caliva and Airfield
and the Apothecarium groups up north to just to name a few of our great accounts that really
run great businesses.
Shout out to Airfield, that's our dispensary.
Shout out to Pat, What's up, man?
All of those guys still, it's really hard to get our core consumer into that store, right?
We feel that there's still 90% of the people
even in a market like California that's relatively hip
to the cannabis business.
So, when it comes down to it, your man
hadn't beat your mom, it's not gonna go to a dispenser, even if it's a to it, your man hat and beach mom, it's not going to go to a dispenser
even if it's a nice one.
And there's things around e-commerce that are going to start to change that, right?
And is that develops more and more and different styles of dispensaries and more welcoming environments?
Look, when a lot of people started rushing into the cannabis business, I hate to use the word green rush because it's such a played out term, right?
But when people started rushing in, they were like, oh man, this cannabis business is so much different than every business.
Margians are awesome. Regulations are relatively light. You can make a bunch of money.
And they overpaid for their leases. They thought that cannabis was always gonna be
this huge margin business that it wasn't going
to market correct, like, you know, business is business
over time.
Everything market corrects, right?
So you have to put out a good consistent quality product.
Thank you.
At a price that is reflective of the quality, right?
There's great vapes that are $30. There's great vapes that are $30.
There's great vapes that are $100.
You know, they may be two completely different things,
but they serve different markets.
But regardless, over time, you got to run your business
like a business.
Absolutely.
And I think that's where I'll lie.
So I think that's why you're gonna continue
to see this shift towards more retail markets
and retail locations that start to reflect like an Apple store, a Sage Natural Wellness
store, a Warby Parker store, those kind of things.
It's so funny too because the more they get out of the way, the faster the market for
any product, but for cannabis progresses, I remember
going up to, where did I go up to Oregon when it was legalized there, what it would have
still just medicinal illegal in California. So in Oregon, it had been legalized for a
lot longer, fully, right, recreationally. And I went into the store and I could, the quality
of the cannabis, the packaging, the labeling was already better because they opened the gates a little bit and people competed.
And when people compete, you're going to get more efficiency, you're going to get better
products because consumers are going to demand it.
And I remember seeing the difference.
I'm like, oh, shit, California used to be the leader.
Now I'm seeing stuff over here, but now of course, California's catching up.
And it's, I mean, and now you have products like yours,
which looks like, I mean.
Yeah, they look awesome.
I was going to ask you about the decision-making process
in the design of it, because I know that you're trying
to make it more sense.
Just to say the thing at Tampa, I'm when he first passed it.
I said, I'm going to tell him you fucking said that, dude.
I said, I'm sure he did it on purpose.
Like, I think Tampa, I think, I think medical.
I think like, and I say, I think medical, I think.
And I say, if I can sell as many dose pens as tampons or salts,
you wouldn't even have a great day.
One of my favorite ones is in the Atlantic,
they wrote an article in the woman that
wrote it used the term space tampon.
That's pretty good.
I guess my favorite one so far. Yeah, I can't take any credit for the beauty of the packaging and the way that it was
presented. It was an idea that we partnered with. There's original co-founders of the company.
There's a company called Anomaly, who is our partner in the business.
Anomaly was named last year's 2017 at age, is agency of the year.
So everybody from Budweiser, Beats by Dre,
Dick Sporting Goods, incredibly long list.
They have offices here on Abbott, Kenny,
but offices in six countries.
The two founders, two of the co-founders of that company
are on our board of directors, and one is the chairman.
So we were fortunate to have a firm that
has created some of the best marketing campaigns in the world.
If you remember, the Budweiser commercial,
with the horses and the little puppy chasing them,
that's such a significant difference.
You can tell right away to the thought process
that went into the cleanliness of the design.
And it looks like something that could live on the shelf
at any sort of retail.
Yeah, and that was the point.
And when you're looking in the cannabis industry,
say I think a lot of people,
it gets echo chamberly when you're just talking
to people in the cannabis industry
because we know THC and CBD and Indica and Sativa
like we just know these things because you're in the industry, right?
But even being in the industry, I walk into a lot of dispensaries
and it's just wildly overwhelming, right?
There's like hundreds of products on the shelves
and merchandising is crazy
and you can't really even tell what they are.
So when the need states,
the need state concept was actually the core of the business, right?
How do you go back 5,000 years, right?
And breed all of the literature and look at everything that people
have consumed cannabis for over this time.
It's not, and it's very well documented.
People consuming, people using the leaves, the seeds from the cannabis plants, and putting
them on hot coals as women are giving them labor to, or going into labor to relax them, right?
I mean, people using it for anxiety.
This is thousands of years ago, by the way.
Thousands of years ago.
Yeah, yeah.
So we looked at what are all of these,
what, going back 5,000 years,
what are the things that people utilize cannabis for?
And let's try to deliver that, right?
Let's deliver not, you know, not the,
the cannabis culture, while it's been an amazing culture,
and it's given people, it's given a great rise
to the medical access side, which has been super important,
right, even in most medical states,
like you wouldn't call California the last 20 years
a medical state, even though
it's been amazing for the access for people that really needed cannabis as a medicine.
But the problem is it's the other, it's the 10% that you really see, that is the
ripened bongs, huge giant blunts, you know, that entire subculture of the cannabis industry is what was more visible to the rest of the world, right?
Not the kid with seizures that needed it, not the person with cancer that needed it for pain relief.
So when we looked at it, we said, okay, let's take away the 10,000 strain names.
Let's take away that super edgy stigma and let's go, what do people actually use it for
over time?
You guys did, for cannabis, what we did for fitness.
Fitness has gotten ridiculous with all these different exercises and movements and there's
some shit that's been, we've been doing for a very long time.
That's very functional and works and that's really how we've been doing for a very long time. That's very functional and works.
And that's really how we built all of our program.
And because there's something in that,
and I think that people overcomplicate it.
You look on Instagram now,
and you go through all the exercises,
you see someone doing some weird shit.
It's some weird-ass movement.
And exercise, I think, we've been doing movements
for hundreds of years.
And people are thinking that this is gonna be the next great thing
that's gonna make my triceps look a certain way.
I feel the same way in cannabis.
Well, even besides that, it's, I must have said this five, ten years ago.
I know I said this on our podcast many times.
If you want your industry to be legitimized,
don't name your shit, you know,
Crunchberry, whatever, and don't make gummy bears
with 50 milligrams of THC.
Like for sure, some kid is gonna get that
and get their hands on it,
or at least it looks like it, right?
Like they had to, in order to be legitimized,
and it's psychoactive, you know what I mean?
Take all the kids stuff out, the candy stuff,
and the weird names, make it look like it's a legitimate,
product because it is.
It's a plant that does some incredible things
for a lot of people.
Sure, you could use it recreationally,
and that's fine too.
But I mean, treat it like adults are gonna use it,
not like kids in maniacs are gonna use it.
Yeah, and look, you're absolutely right.
The gummy candy, all of that thing, And you're absolutely right.
The gummy candy, all of that thing, when you talk about dosage in cannabis, like, you
know, my business partner talks about this time where when we were talking about dosage
control in cannabis, somebody gave him a chunk, chunk of a, like, a little tiny chunk
of a chocolate chip cookie. And it was immobile for eight hours, right?
And afterwards, a guy who was a guy who knows,
like, oh man, I accidentally put four times,
messed up the calculation,
and I put four times more THC in there than I thought.
You know, and they made a cookie.
There was a cookie in San Jose,
a thousand milligrams of THC.
Yeah.
A thousand, for people who are listening
who have no idea what that means,
a dose that most people will feel
is between two to five milligrams.
I'm cool with five milligrams.
More than five milligrams for me, and I'm too high.
Now heavy users that I know,
may do as high as 15, 20 milligrams,
definitely don't recommend that if you're a beginner at all.
You'll probably have a bad time.
A thousand milligrams in a cookie.
It's with the house.
Yeah, you're trying to see a cookie.
You're trying to do it yourself.
And one of the getting back to the quality control side of it, right?
Right.
There was not, you know, most of the products weren't tested.
And it's not like these things are being made in the same factory
that's making the Nordic natural gummy vitamin.
Right.
Right.
These are being made in like a dude's kitchen.
And now they're getting better, right?
But for a long time, because of the legalization,
even if you were really trying to run a business,
how are you going to capitalize and capex
into a million dollars in equipment?
If you don't even know if you're going to have a license
next year, you know?
And there's no capital because the risk is too high.
Yeah, it's a super high risk.
So you don't have, like, you don't even have the equipment.
It's definitely getting there now.
I mean, look, there's some beautiful facilities here.
And as you go into the other states,
where the people's licenseean's a lot more structured,
you're starting to get some very nice GMP quality facilities.
So it's definitely moving rapidly towards higher quality, but still, the thought that
more is better doesn't necessarily apply to cannabis either.
We've tried to move out of this price per milligram conversation.
I don't buy alcohol based on price per proof.
Let me go for moonshine.
Yeah, or everybody would buy ever clear.
That's not a great experience. So when we looked at it, we said, let's, or everybody would buy ever clear, right? And that's not a great experience.
So, so when we looked at it, we said, let's take,
let's take the milligrams out of it.
We're putting, we're very well-documented
exactly how many milligrams are in there,
but even more than that, how many doses you're getting.
So, you know, we have our dose pen 200,
which was our original pen.
The price of all of the things that we do,
which is test our material four
times, ensure that it's the cleanest possible thing there, build a pen that has a full microprocessor
inside of it, that controls the temperature of vaporization, controls the timing, is built
of all medical grade plastic and all medical grade components inside in a real GMP environment, right?
And is packaged in a way that actually gives you instructions and makes sense, right?
And tries to lead you down the path of, here's what you should choose, you know?
And so going from that, going from that need state concept that is, here's an idea, not all of these are strictly medicinal,
right? We call them need states, but when we really have it broken up into experienced states
and need states, because that glass of wine after work for someone that needs to relax, that's a
need. That's a body need a lot of times, right? Sometimes you need to unwind. So the bliss pen, even though it is,
you know, it's a strong, right?
It's got a high amount of THC in it,
gives you a good amount of energy.
It will intoxicate you if you continue to consume it,
but it's there to give you that exact right amount, right?
And that blissful experience is a need state that your body needs sometimes, right?
Sleep, calm, and relief are much more in that medically focused, specific area, and
then passion and aroused, which are a product that we launched or sexual health is a definite
need state, right?
That's something that people need.
And when we look at those pens, we talk about,
you know, there's a lot of interesting,
I like to say it's getting the mood,
staying the mood.
You know, we have one of our repsoos as pre-game and game.
You know, for it as we're explaining it around,
but you know, the Aral's pen, especially in a place
like we're sitting now Venice,
that's an incredibly, incredibly creative community.
You know, the Aral's pen is one of the most popular products now Venice, that's an incredibly, incredibly creative community.
The Aral's pen is one of the most popular products here because it's inhibition lowering,
it's still energetic, and it enhances creativity.
We see people using the products a lot, but the core of it is you can control the experience
to the point where, hey, if this is something where I like to use one dose of bliss
before I go out or two doses of bliss,
I know how I'm going to feel when I'm doing it.
And there's no smell when you use them.
I mean, you guys have definitely,
I don't know anybody that comes close to what you guys are doing.
There's no competition in this particular sense.
And the, what I really appreciate is the information that you guys provide. These booklets back here, I don't know what they're
called, the field guides. Oh yeah. That's the first time I've seen anybody put together
something as comprehensive that talks about presented that talks about the different cannabinoids
or the two major ones that you know have the most studies THC and CBD. But then also
talk about terpenes in their effects.
It's been very hard for me to find information
that I wanted to ask you,
because I've had, I know quite a bit,
and I've had my own personal experience with cannabis,
I had a family member who had cancer years ago,
and so I went super deep into research.
And so I've learned quite a bit on the cannabinoids,
but there wasn't much on the terpenes.
And I know for myself,
because I also use cannabis,
when I could use one strain that's got,
you know, 18% THC and 2% CBD,
and I can use another strain with the same exact CBD THC,
but one makes me anxious,
and I get anxiety or paranoid.
The other one feels really good and calm or whatever.
And it's not always the CBD THC. There's other things in the plant that are obviously making me feel different
and I think it's part of it. It's the terpenes. So let's talk about that for a second. Let's
talk about some of the terpenes because you guys actually list the terpenes in your
vape pans, which is awesome.
Yes, the terpenes are the least talked about, least understood portion of the plant. The term strain is the most influence.
Now there are other things we get into minor cannabinoids later, but strains are primarily
influenced by the terpenes that are in them.
So, basically terpenes are the components of essential oils.
They're found in basically every plant every fruit
Who gives them a smile right?
You're ever going to see yeah, they're flavor and fragrance, but more than anything they're effect driven right so
Why does why does why is lavender used for?
relaxation and sleeping right why are citrus sense and
relaxation and sleeping, right? Why are citrus scents and minty scents,
things like peppermint use for uplifting?
It's got to do with the terpenes
that are inside of those plants as well.
So cannabis is one of the plants
that has the heaviest terpened profiles
of almost any plant that's out there
and it's got an incredibly complex terpened profile.
So most cannabis plants,
you'll, if you take them to a real hardcore GMP lab that has the best
equipment, they'll see between 45 and 95 different turpines.
A lot of them can't even really be identified.
So what we did was rather than saying, okay, we're gonna make a strain.
You know, I'm gonna, Jack Herrera is a super popular product
for energy, right?
I have a funny relationship with Herrera.
That's the strain I smoked when I came up
with our first program.
Yeah, that's one of the most creative strains I remember.
Yeah, it's great, super energetic, right?
So instead of saying Jack Herrera, you know, we say bliss, but we didn't
we didn't take Jack Herrera in profile it. So we took a database of about 6000 strains
from labs and looked at the terpene profiles of all of them and then grouped them into the
which I don't like to use the word anecdotal when talking about the the evidence behind
cannabis, but because it's not scientific or consumer clinical trial,
I'll use the word anecdotal.
Yeah, but if we also consider when you have enough anecdote,
when you have thousands and thousands or tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of anecdotes,
I mean, that's evidence.
Yes.
And that drives research nowadays.
In fact, a lot of the medicine, like the medicinal use of CBD for epilepsy
was driven by anecdote, thankfully the internet existed and lots of people got together
and said, hey, this is stopping my pet seizures, my kids seizures. So yeah.
Yeah. So we took, so I'll just use bliss as one example, right? So bliss, we wanted
an uplifting, energetic product.
So we took the strains that people generally consume
for those.
Jack Carrera is probably the best example.
There's a lot of, there's a lot in that family though.
Jack Carrera, lemon, jack, all of those,
that entire family of strains.
People love as an energetic non-paranoia inducing sativa, right?
So then we took six or seven of those strains people love as an energetic non-paranoia-inducing sativa.
Then we took six or seven of those strains
and layered out the terpene profiles.
And said, what are the terpene profiles
of all of these strains?
And then built custom terpene profiles
based off of the primary components in these strains.
And we built four different ones for each need state and then
did consumer tests and said, okay, so here is our Bliss A, B, C, and D. And we had a second set
where we varied the THC and CBD ratio, right, of each one of those because all of our products
are CBD attenuated. We don't have anything that's just THC or just CBD.
Excellent. Which, which, I know, we can get a lot bigger conversation around why and then what can
have annoyed system.
Oh, I read a, I read an interesting study where they took people who did heavy THC and
then people who did heavy THC with CBD, the potential to side effects and negatives that
are associated with cannabis way lower when they combine it with CBD.
We're living in Liyah.
So, so we took that and we built our own
terpene profiles, our own formulas,
our own strains effectively,
based on the consumer feedback that we got from
these different terpene profiles.
And the primary consistency around the product is
that terpene profile is exactly the same every time.
So your flavor and your effect is going to be the same every single time with
the product. All of our products are 88% cannabinoid oils. That ratio is going to vary between
THC and CBD oil and 12% terpenes. And that terpened profile is exactly the same every
time we list on the the box the top five.
Most of our profiles have between 12 and 20,
where all of them are between 12
and 20 different terpines in them.
And just like grabbing a can of Coca-Cola
or going to a Starbucks, right?
You want to have consistency in the product,
but the terpines are really what drive the efficacy.
It's that big of a deal.
It's the whole deal.
That's so crazy.
So take the oil, for example, right?
We make THC distillate and we make CBD distillate.
Now, we do grow specific strains because of how they grow, how fast they grow, how they yield,
and what minor cannabinoids are in them.
But when it comes down to it, the distillation process, which is what you see as clear or
gold, now, you have removed the strain from the product.
It's just CBDATFC.
Right, I mean, there's a little bit of extra particulate matter in there, but let's say for
our product, for this specific product, we distill our THC to 87%.
So it's 87% THC.
There's going to be some small portions of other minor cannabinoids in there, CBD, CBG,
CBN.
And then the rest of it is just some plant matter that's still remaining, giving it that gold color, right?
We can continue to distill it farther if we want to,
but the way we've created our formulations
and the ratios that we try to hit
between THC and CBD,
that just happens to be the number
that works well for us, right?
And then we combine that exact terpene formula.
So if you took all of our blends
and you took, if you took the, our blends and you took,
if you took the, so the bliss and the sleep,
bliss is a nine to one THC to CBD,
sleeps an eight to one THC to CBD.
By themselves as distillate,
very little difference.
It's a percentage point on each side
with THC and CBD.
However, that 12% turpine blend is what makes this one,
give you your Jack Carrera inspiration,
and this one, give you your,
we don't like to call it drowsy
because we try to avoid a drowsy experience,
but give you that restfulness, right?
And if we flip-flop them and we put the bliss turpines
in that sleep formula and put the sleep terpins in that bliss formula,
this would just be a stronger sleep formula. And this would be a little bit lower THC bliss formula.
Right. So it's that exact, it's that exact exacting terpian profile.
Oh, really?
Brilliant. Nobody's doing that.
Well, so a lot of people are doing it, but they're usually just so most of the pens, most of the
vape cartridges that you see that say Jack Herrera on them, right? If you go and you buy a standard 510
threaded vape cartridge, it's pretty much built the same way as this, they're just making their terpene profile based off of a Jack Herrera flower.
It's growing it in there.
Right, right.
I mean, nobody's doing this in the sense that I think what
they're doing is they're taking strains that traditionally have
particular effects.
You guys have identified terpene specific terpene profiles
and are putting them in products that are named things like
sleep, calm, relief.
What are some of the other popular strains
that you guys have worked with?
I know you said Jack Herrera for Bliss.
Are there some others you can name with the?
Yeah, so well, I can give you what the family.
Yeah, the kind of family.
I imagine a sleep is like GDP or something.
It's in your GDP type family, right?
Arous is in your Skittles family, right?
Passion is in your super hashie,
Kush families, right?
You're very hashie type products,
but rather than just mimicking an exact strain,
we took the range of,
what are the six or seven most popular strains?
I guess not even most popular. What are the six or seven most popular strains?
No, I guess not even most popular. What are the six or seven evidence base
that, hey, people love this for sleep.
People love this for pain relief, right?
And taking that and going, okay,
let's look at those and analyze the terpenes
and let's overlay them and see what are the terpenes
that are consistent between all
of these that are actually making these work.
And then, and then building, you know, using that as the building plus for a formula.
That's awesome.
Now, what was the feedback that you were getting when you were testing this?
Is it very consistent?
Or is it like, we like 80% of the people felt this way?
Or was it all over the world?
Yeah, so I mean, when we built it,
we had a requirement that if we didn't have 80%
positive feedback, that it couldn't make it
to the next level of testing, right?
And we were very fortunate to have a really good number
of groups and some great groups work with us
to do this testing.
So we had a group from Sonoma County
that was primarily serves elderly medical patients.
So we had hundreds of elderly medical patients that have been consuming cannabis for a number of medical reasons that
that gave us amazing feedback on our products. And then we used, you know, we have a very medicinal focus shop that really pushes the pen to
their customers because, you know, they're really focusing on medical patients called
Cornerstone Collective, out here in LA.
And now we have, you know, when we do these consumer studies, which we continue to do with
products and new products that we're looking to bring to market. So our existing consumer base actually
gets to try new products as they're coming out. New blends, new formulations, and really,
after the terpene blend was locked, it was a matter of what is the THC and CBD ratio that works
the best for each one of these because that's because it's very
impactful, right? A a nine to one THC to CBD like the bliss. So if you have a product that
has 66% THC and 7% CBD in it, you're not going to see that in the plant. Very few plants
are going to express that naturally. It's going to feel very different than a THC oil formula that is just 66% THC and 0.2% CBD.
Like you see in most, right?
And that it's an entourage effect that has to do with your CB1 and CB2 receptors
in your endocannabinoid system. So when you talked about the difference in the side effects,
adding that CBD not only decreases the side effects
that you're gonna feel, but we feel it also,
I feel it number one, smooths out the experience
so that you're not engaging one of those two receptors too much,
but it also elongates the experience, right?
So you're getting a little smoother,
what I consider to be a smoother experience.
Now you accumulated all this knowledge just after switching
from the e-cigarettes, you weren't already reading about all this
and learning about this prior to that?
Well, I mean, I grew up in agriculture.
So I knew a little bit about it, but yeah, mostly it was just
you know, mostly it was just
as we were making devices
actually
getting down to what
How is this stuff actually made and what are people what components of this are people actually getting benefit from and I think that's the most confusing part in cannabis, right?
It's like, some people like Indica strains for sleep.
Some people just like them because they like to get a body high and hang on to the couch
and eat and play video games or whatever, right?
But what are the actual components that are making you feel that way?
So I guess my, you know, the way I approached it was a little more from that engineering
mind, right? Should be in total. Here's how you build an electronic circuit board. So I guess my you know the way I approach it was a little more from that engineering mind right being totally here
So here's how you build an electronic circuit board. Here's what each one of those components done
And here's why it works when it comes out the other yeah well plus plus
Most of the research on cannabis or the good research on cannabinoids and terpen is like the last 15 years 10 15 years
So you know if you start this is the time to to learn. This is when all the information's coming out.
Have they identified, because I know CBD doesn't attach
to either the CB1 or CB2 receptor?
Have they figured out how it creates its effects?
I know it, I guess it improves the way
you're into cannabinoid system works.
Yeah, so it's like a booster function.
And this is something that I think is the most,
one of the most interesting things
about the medical community in cannabis is that
now, as we sit here now,
it's widely accepted that you have an endocannabinoid system
in your body and that it engages
with the other important systems in your body,
neurological, lymphatic, circulatory, right?
I mean, the endocannabinoid system is there and it exists.
15 years ago, there wasn't a single medical school that talked about the endocannabinoid
system.
So how do you have an entire, how do you have an entire important function, body functional
system that engages with every other part of your body that's not even being, that's not even mentioned in a medical textbook.
So, you know, that's one major reason that there's such a lack of knowledge
about how exactly it works.
It's because doctors don't even know about it.
And then, if you layer on the fact that there is the federal
illegality issue,
there's no funding for research.
Not only that, but it's-
How did you guys-
Let's get into the business side.
Like, did you guys get funding, or how many partners are there?
How did you do that?
Yeah, so I mean, originally it was self-funded among the partners.
From the device side, we gave our technology and dosage control patents and the construction
of the device and anomaly donated services
to build the marketing and build the packaging
and do those things.
We had a great group of very early investors,
but since then we've raised additional capital.
Most of it's been from a very small group,
but we have a nice core group of investors
that have allowed us to get to the point that we are right now.
Moving forward, we're at the point now
where we've gone beyond the proof of concept for this device.
People really enjoy it,
and we could have taken this product and gone
from state to
state to state already. But I think the most important thing to us as a business was to
know exactly what the perfect way to present this product to the consumer was and make sure
that enough people had the chance to engage with it, that we knew, is there changes that need to be made?
Are there adjustments to our business model that are going to allow us to reach more people?
Was there anything you guys had to recalibrate?
Was there anything that you guys after doing all the testing and kind of getting it out there
and seeing a great response?
Did you get rid of a strain or did you do anything like that?
Yeah, we've had one, as far as the actual product goes,
we're continually innovating on the pen side,
trying to make everything work better,
function better, reduce any failure rates
that there are, improve the experience,
but there hasn't been anything significant on that side.
We did change the calm formulation
from a one to 15 THC to CBD to a one to 10.
So we increase the THC a little bit,
not a significant amount.
If a conversation with people all the time
that are scared to try any amount of THC,
but our column formula has 6% THC in it,
it's not going to intoxicate you,
but it's going to give you a significantly better experience
than a 99% pure CBD isolate will, right?
Because of that entourage and being able to engage with both receptors.
I think that the, I think the most adjustments and changes that we've made have been around
education.
From the beginning, we were very, very focused on things like the field guide, things like
our six-fold brochures that fold out and try to tell you everything we possibly can about the product because there's a lot of education that comes along with something like this. It's different.
It's new. Most people don't understand the cannabis industry anyway. And putting something that's completely different than everything else on the market out there, it takes time to educate. Like you said, nobody else lists the exact terpenes on there.
That could be confusing, right?
So we try to educate in a way that makes it incredibly simple.
We've focused a lot on building our own experience inside of retail stores.
So I believe now in L.A. we have four shopping shops.
So basically a little Nespresso boutique inside a dispensary
that we staff full time.
So you walk into a store and there's actually
a dosis representative there and little trays
of plant material that represent the different
terpenes, mercine, linole, pharnocene,
things like that.
So, you can smell it.
You can actually understand the experience that you're getting from this piece of technology,
right?
So, most of our learnings and most of our change has come around understanding how we can
connect with our core consumer and get them into a dispensary in a way that feels comfortable.
What states are you guys in?
We're just in California.
Just in California.
And how would you be able to move in other states?
It's very different from state to state, right?
It is.
It's a complex situation.
In most states, you need to partner with a licensee
or you need to go get your own license.
But most of the states aren't like California.
So California has a lot of licenses, right?
There's thousands and thousands of licenses
that are granted to companies.
You take a state like Illinois,
there's only 20 growers and 60 dispensaries.
In a state like New York, there's seven groups
that are fully vertically integrated. Florida, seven groups that are fully vertically integrated,
Florida, 13 groups that are fully vertically integrated.
So the newer states, you know,
not the non-Washington, Colorado, California,
they're all much more consolidated.
So, you know, you just have to choose the right partner.
For us as a business,
this isn't a brand that's gonna go get licensed.
We're not just gonna go like, hey, here's Dosis, you know, here's the pen, here's the package, you fill it up, go do your thing.
No, you guys are gonna dominate California and then when it goes national, that'll be the next step.
Yeah, I mean, we will move, we will be in more states by the end of this year,
and then we have a strong focus on Canada.
So we've just started our,
oh wow.
Even though vaporization isn't legal in Canada yet,
full legalization of cannabis is gonna happen,
probably supposed to be July,
probably gonna be around September.
We've been very engaged in the process there,
both in getting vaporization legal first,
which just happened with the S5 bill.
So there wasn't even E6 legal in Canada until, you know, until a couple of weeks ago.
But then getting what's called the S45 there, which is getting the actual
allowance of cannabis vaporization legal there.
But we've already started our full marketing campaign there to let people know that Dosis is coming.
And we think those kind of markets where you haven't had this really long history and
thousands and thousands of brands on the shelves, those are the kind of markets that the product
is even more attractive in.
Let's talk a little bit about the types of pens that you guys offer or the different because they're all named
Different names depending on their effects. We talked about passion for a second that one's supposed to be for
libido sex
Yeah, so um and you guys are saying kush was in there, which I didn't know that the kush strains were known for that
So yeah, so I wouldn't call uh
So if we talk about if we talk about both of them in combination as sexual health products
The arous is to use more standard cannabis language a sativa dominant hybrid
Okay, so it is a
Inhibition lowering but not drowsy something like you're gonna feel from a Jack career that energy
But a little a little less energetic and a little more inhibition lowering.
For me, that's what I used before I go out at night.
If I'm gonna go to a party.
Are you not gusted?
I did not before I passed it.
Maybe I should have.
A little bit later for the party.
But yeah, so that's an inhibition lowering product.
It's about kind of interpersonal connectivity.
Okay.
The passion is more of a body engagement, right?
So that's why we say kind of the getting the mood,
stay in the mood.
You're heavy, cushes and things like that.
And because they are really about your body feeling, right?
Connecting with yourself.
And whether that's personal,
just feeling that body high, feeling really engaged with
yourself, or that's with your partner, right?
Feeling engaged with your partner.
So one is much more mental, and one is much more physical.
Got it, got it.
And then relief, calm, sleep, blesses, do those real quick.
What is relief for?
And that's obviously a pain relief.
And is that the highest CBD?
Yeah, so that's our pain relief product.
It's a two to one THC to CBD.
Okay, so that's the closest to being
an almost an even spread.
Yeah, that's the closest to a one to one.
I will say that it was a little dream type of strain
or something like that in there.
Yeah, it's actually the most inert of the strain profiles, right?
Because when it comes to pain relief, just like sleep, I would say, to incredibly complex
conditions, right?
There's a lot of reasons that people are in pain.
Is it muscle soreness?
Is it muscle spasticity?
Is it inflammation?
Is it actually some kind of dysfunction,
you know, within your, you know,
the discs in your back or something like that,
or is it just headaches, right?
I mean, there's so many reasons for pain.
So the THC and the CBD in combination,
even though it's a, still a 48% THC content in that product because of the 24% CBD,
you're going to get a modulation, right? So it's not an intoxicating product.
Personally, that's my favorite of the products. It's not incapacitating if you're not really tolerant to THC.
To someone like myself, I use cannabis semi-regulatory, but I do have
a tendency towards anxiety and paranoia if I use the wrong strain or too much, which strain
would be the one that I would use, or which one would I use, which pan would it be the
relief? To stay away from the anxiety. Yeah, not that I have anxiety, but if I go too strong
on the sativa, it can give me anxiety. Yeah, so I mean, really we've, I think part of the CBD being in there and part of the
way the terpene profiles are built is to decrease those side effects, right?
Yeah, something like Durban Poison is like a, can give people incredible anxiety, right?
I mean, it's the super strong Sativa product.
First anxiety I ever got in my life was white widow.
White widow got put me in a bad state.
It's not cool.
It can happen, right?
And so Bliss is actually the most Sativa
of the products we have.
But we don't get, you know,
we don't get a lot of feedback around the paranoia.
And there's a couple of things around that.
First, the doses aren't incredibly high.
But so you're not to, you know, after
a couple of doses, which is why we recommend, especially if you're a new consumer or if
you're just consuming a different type of product than you normally do, take a dose, wait
15 minutes, take another one. Right. Within that time frame, you're going to know within
an inhalable cannabis product, how you're really feeling about it. Sleep's obviously an indica product.
The calm is a hybrid profile, very inert profile, right?
Same with the relief.
We're really letting the THC and CBD ratios do their work
in those products, not that the terpenes.
So in the relief pen, beta carophilines is a great example,
right?
Old, throughout history,
you got a toothache, chew on a clove.
Right?
Put it in your mouth, chew on a clove.
That's the beta carophiline in that clove,
actually activating and having anti-inflammatory properties.
So you're gonna see a lot of beta carophiline
in the relief pen on the terpene side.
And then aroused the Sativa dominant hybrid
and passion is our heaviest endica product.
What's your best seller?
Bliss.
Oh, bliss, yeah.
So, you know, an interesting thing about bliss,
even though everybody looks at his medical product
and new consumer products,
this product is actually one high times harvest cup
for best vaporizer.
Oh, wow.
So, and that's a panel of, you know, 27 people that have been in the cannabis industry for
a really long time.
So, that was in November of last year.
So, you know, it's not just for the soccer mom or the new consumer.
That leads me to the next question I wanted to ask you, which is, do you think that you
guys are going to just kind of have a piece of the pie and
there's still going to be a lot of other players in the space that market to like a
The more a recreational use do you think that's going to happen? Yeah, I mean that that's absolutely going to happen
Right, I mean, there's there's very few markets and consumer packaged goods that are dominated by single brands
You know save energy drinks with Red Bull and five hour energy and some other examples.
Yeah, it's just, you know, and cannabis is a, it's not, not everybody reacts exactly the same
to cannabis products, right? It's one of those things that, you know, two people can have two
different experiences with the exact same thing and everybody's body chemistry is a lot different.
We especially see that on the edible side.
One, you can have a 120-pound female that can take 25 milligrams of edible, and I'm a 210-pound guy,
and if I take 5 milligrams, I'm wiped out. That just has to do with body chemistry.
There's a little bit of experimentation that goes on to figure out exactly what's right for you.
You know, it's very similar to nutraceuticals and supplements, right? It takes experimentation to know exactly what's right for you.
And that only underpens the reason that dose is so important, right? If you're going to experiment,
experiment in a way that you know exactly what you're getting.
It's controlled. So you can figure out what works for you. Well, excellent.
You guys have set the bar very high.
I mean, very, very much ahead of the curve.
Yeah, I'm pretty into the industry just as a consumer and also as an observer.
And I don't know anybody that's giving them close to what you guys are doing.
And you guys have answered a lot of the problems that I saw with the legalization of cannabis where
the industry was going to make it very difficult to go legal and something like this.
I don't know how a regulator and honest regulators are going to look at that and say, no, we
can't have this legal.
Yeah, and that's our hope, right?
As the new states come on, we've been very active in Canada and actually are Canadian
President just spoke in front of Senate, the Canadian Senate last week in support of,
in support of the S-45 bill to get vaporization legal faster there.
You know, you've got a large country, 35 plus million people that's about to go completely
adult use.
And the only things that people are going to be able to buy are flour and edible oils,
like olive oil, infused olive oil.
So getting products like this out there so that more people can consume and you can do
it in a more doseable way is really important.
And we think that the platform is really great for that.
And if that, we don't expect every person,
every new consumer that comes and buys a doses pen.
Yes, I'd love for them to consume doses forever.
But it may not be the exact right thing
for them long term.
But if it's the reason that somebody takes that leap of faith
to get off of Xanax, to not take an ambient at night,
to try to cut down on the opioid use, right?
If our product is a reason that they do that
and then they move on to something else,
that's amazing, right?
We've done our job.
That's cool.
But what we found is that people love the product
and they know it's consistent and it works regularly for them.
So we have a lot of, most of our customers
are lifetime customers.
But the real benefit, the real, the real
benefit to the entire industry is that the more people that we can get, or the more people
that we can give permission to to try cannabis are only going to continue and enhance their
life and try to pull back off of pharmaceuticals and utilize cannabis, you know, clean, consistent,
quality, well-made cannabis to make their lives better.
And that's what we're looking for, delivering health and happiness is our timeline.
Well, hey, Tim.
I'm glad you guys are doing it and you're doing a great job.
Yep.
Appreciate you coming on the show, brother.
No, I appreciate the times.
Thank you for your great.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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