Today’s leading dispensaries are moving beyond the sales counter to become community spaces, educational hubs, and cultural destinations. Missouri’s SWADE Cannabis offers a working example.
For most of the legal era, the dispensary has been built around a single moment: the sale. A customer walked in knowing roughly what they wanted, talked to a budtender, paid, and left. Regulation reinforced that rhythm. Operators focused on compliance and efficiency while introducing a brand-new product to a brand-new market.
That model is loosening its grip.
Dispensaries around the country are testing what happens after the sale, and before it. Classes, dinners, festivals, watch parties, loyalty programs built around discovery, partnerships with neighborhood institutions. Consumers who once needed help navigating the dispensary now choose from hundreds of products and walk in with opinions. They expect more from the room they are standing in. For an operator, that raises a sharper question than inventory: what does the store mean to the people who live nearby?
Missouri’s SWADE Cannabis, run by BeLeaf Medical Co., has spent the last few years answering it.

From Store to Gathering Place
The “third place,” somewhere that is not home and not work, usually means a coffee shop, a bar, a bookstore, the corner where regulars know your name. SWADE has been building cannabis versions of that idea on purpose.
In St. Louis, the company runs The Church on Delmar, a cannabis-friendly venue in the Delmar Loop that hosts gatherings for consumers, artists, and local organizations. In Kansas City, SWADE is bringing that idea to The Tree Room, a consumption-friendly event space in the Crossroads, where it will host a free World Cup quarterfinal watch party on July 11.

With the FIFA World Cup in town, the July 11 event offers designated consumption areas and a limited match-day lineup built around the tournament: the Golden Goal Live Resin Bar, plus special releases of Lemon Royale, Jungle Cookies, and Permanent Marker.
The logic borrows from an older playbook as well.
Beverage brands have anchored sports culture for generations, and SWADE is testing whether cannabis can take the same seat. Plus, the venue is alcohol-free, which has a lot of potential to be a calmer alternative to the standard sports bar.

Education as the Draw
Cannabis retail has gotten complicated. Flower, concentrates, beverages, vapes, edibles, tinctures, topicals, and a growing list of minor cannabinoids can overwhelm a newcomer and stump a veteran. The dispensary that can explain the difference, rather than just ring it up, has an edge.
SWADE treats teaching as part of the job. In-store specialists walk guests through their options and field questions rather than pushing a house pick. New consumers get plain answers about formats and effects; longtime ones get a sounding board for products they have not tried yet. The goal is a customer who understands what they are buying and why, not one who simply leaves with a bag.
The company’s Aging & Wellness Program takes that further. It is built for older adults, many of whom arrive with real questions about dosing, formats, and what responsible use looks like for them, and it answers through presentations, workshops, and dispensary tours rather than a hard sell.
“Whether you’re brand new to cannabis or a longtime enthusiast, we’re here to help you discover what works for you and build confidence in your own journey,” says Cierra Sally, Senior Director of Retail Operations. “Our goal is for every customer to leave feeling more informed, more comfortable, and more connected to themselves.”
That instinct tracks with where the wider industry is heading. Colleges and universities now offer cannabis-focused degree programs. A marker of how fast the field is professionalizing. A field that once ran in the margins is building curricula, credentials, and a professional class of its own. For a dispensary, meeting that moment means treating customers as people who want to learn, not just buy.




Loyalty Through Discovery
Most loyalty programs reward buying the same thing twice. SWADE rewards curiosity. Its Passport Program, an annual membership across the company’s Missouri stores, borrows the language of travel and nudges guests toward strains and formats they would not have tried on their own. The point is not the next purchase. It is helping people figure out what they actually like.
The same instinct runs through SWADE’s events. The Best Buds dinner series is chef-driven, pairing cannabis with a table full of strangers in Kansas City and St. Louis. The brand turns up at the Flyover Comedy Festival, the Mound City Film Festival, Open Space STL, River City Outdoors, Mattie Rhodes in Kansas City, and hosts the annual Voodoo Christmas Markets, joining the culture already in those spots instead of asking them to rearrange themselves around cannabis.
It reaches what people wear, too. Cannabis apparel like STÄSH Smokewear treats the culture as something you can put on, not just consume.
Hospitality and Convenience
Community does not cancel out convenience, and SWADE chases both. With 12 dispensaries across Missouri, it has matched that statewide reach to the access customers now expect: a 24-hour preorder drive-thru pickup window at its Overland location, and same-day, discreet delivery throughout its service areas.
That hospitality extends to SWADE’s deli-style flower program, where guests can see, smell, and select flower before purchase rather than choosing from prepackaged options.

The wider operation rests on BeLeaf’s model.
“We are a vertically integrated cannabis company, which is super beneficial in the industry, as we have the ability to do all functions necessary to operate,” said Kevin Riggs, CEO of BeLeaf Medical Co.
The structure lets SWADE grow, sell, and move products anywhere in the state, and stock its exclusive Sinse brand beside a curated lineup from other makers.
A Model Still Taking Shape
The modern dispensary is a work in progress. Some operators are betting on automation and faster fulfillment. Others are betting on the dinner, the watch party, the workshop, the room. SWADE Cannabis is betting that you can have it all.
None of it replaces the basics. People still walk in for product, price, and a budtender who knows the menu. But the watch party, the Passport Program, the Aging & Wellness tours, and the deli case full of flower are all aimed at the same thing: a reason to come back that a competitor cannot copy by cutting prices. That kind of loyalty is harder to win and harder to lose.
“As Missouri’s cannabis market continues to mature, our focus is on creating a more modern, convenient experience for our customers,” Riggs said.
Where all of it nets out will not be clear for a while. But the dispensary that lasts may turn out to be the one measured by more than what sits on its shelves.
Sponsored Content Disclaimer: This article was published as part of a paid commercial arrangement with SWADE Cannabis. It is not independent editorial content. References to products, services, cannabinoids, formulations, consumer use cases, or company claims reflect the company’s perspective unless otherwise noted and have not been independently verified by High Times.
Photos courtesy of SWADE Cannabis


