Cohort 1 — 30 spots

We build it.
You run the neighborhood.

Kitchen Table Co. helps women build small businesses that strengthen their lives, their neighborhoods, and their future.

We believe meaningful businesses don't have to start with venture capital, complicated business plans, or endless hustle.

They start with a skill, an opportunity, a community, and someone willing to take the first step.

That's where we come in.

We help you discover the right business for your season of life, build it alongside you, and launch it with confidence.

Whether your goal is extra income, greater flexibility, new friendships, a growing savings account, or simply something that's yours, Kitchen Table Co. is your partner from idea to opening day.

Because building a business isn't just about making money.

It's about creating a life with more freedom, more connection, and more possibility.

Pull up a chair. There's room for you here.

Start here

Which one is yours?

Four tested concepts. Answer a few honest questions and we'll show you the one your week actually has room for.

How it works

Five steps. No mystery. No catch you'll find on step four.

  1. 01

    You apply.

    Tell us about your neighborhood, your week, and what you're hoping for. Takes about ten minutes. No résumé. No pitch deck.

  2. 02

    We find your concept.

    Using the fit finder above, we match you with one of our four tested neighborhood businesses — the one that fits your time, your block, and the way you actually like to spend a Tuesday.

  3. 03

    We build it for you.

    Website, booking, payments, supplier list, the playbook, the welcome scripts. Done. You don't have to figure any of it out from scratch.

  4. 04

    You open the doors.

    We hand you the keys with a soft-launch plan for the first ten neighbors. You run it. We're a text away.

  5. 05

    You grow it your way.

    Some women keep it small and steady. Some scale into something bigger. Both are wins. You decide what enough looks like.

Questions

The ones I'd ask too.

No. You own your business outright — the name, the customers, the income. We're more like a co-founder who builds the hard parts and then steps back.