My great product!
” My wife makes the best cookies! She could sell them in stores. ” Let’s start from scratch. Getting your great product in to a store like Whole Foods can be challenging, but not impossible. For anyone considering a run at Whole Foods Market you must first check out their list of unapproved ingredients . Make sure your product has none of that stuff, or it will be flat out rejected. And be careful to check sub-ingredients. Aunt Erma’s original recipe mandel bread was made with Nestle mini morsels, but we discovered that Netsle’s mini chips had ‘vanillin’ and not ‘vanilla.’ Vanillin is on Whole Foods unapproved list, so we found a chocolatier (Wilbur Chocolate in Lititz, PA) that made an all natural chip virtually identical in size to Nestle’s. If you are trying to figure out where to print your package, get a nutritional panel,..stuff like that, refer to this blog post for all you ever wanted to know about getting your product ready for the shelves. By the way, when thinking about packaging, think about the way your package will sit on the shelf. If it lies flat, is the logo and item name visible?
Team Mandel Blog How to get in to Whole Foods Chocolate Chips, Food, Sales, Whole Foods Market
Forward:
I don’t know anything about the food business. Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread began at my work computer. Bored from staring at the computer screen all day, I started goofing around in photoshop. I made a fake mandel bread box and a fake web site. Before I knew it I was invited to pitch my package design on CNBC on a show called “The Big Idea With Donny Deutsch.” I had no real package, it was all a fake, just clever photoshop work to make it look real. The mandel bread box Donny held up on TV was printed on my inkjet printer, complete with fake bar code and fake nutritional panel. The mandel bread he tasted was baked by my wife in our kitchen at home. Donny had no idea, but he loved it! By the beginning of 2009 I convinced myself that I should make real boxes, maybe even form a real company. By September of 2009 Aunt Erma’s World Famous Mandel Bread landed its’ first Whole Foods Market, in Beverly Hills. We sold out our first day on the shelves. Today, we are not ‘big time’ not by any stretch. Comfortably holding at four Whole Foods Markets in Los Angeles (for reasons which will be explained later), we are now working with a large cookie manufacturer to try and scale up Aunt Erma’s production to handle not just a few stores, but an entire region. And all of this on a product that most people have never heard of. ’Man dell bread?’ No, it’s ‘mondel bread.’ But say the word mandel bread to a Jewish person and you will stir up nostalgic memories of grandma baking in the kitchen. I heard a great quote from an entrepreneur who said “Your business is a story wrapped around you.” Aunt Erma’s Mandel Bread is a story of a long lost recipe, nostalgia, family and home. Never heard of mandel bread? That’s ok, there was a time in American history when no one ever heard of a bagel either. And there was a time in history when no one ever heard of a photocopier. But it was the genius of Xerox to instill their brand so deeply in the American subconscience that today you’re just as likely to say “I need a xerox of this” than “I need a photocopy of this.” If we ever make that leap, if mandel bread ever becomes ubiquitous for ‘a better tasting biscotti,’ I hope that people won’t think ‘mandel bread’, but will think Aunt Erma’s.
No doubt if you’re reading this blog you may have dreamed of bringing your favorite family recipe to market. Is it a cookie? A great BBQ sauce, or the most incredible cakes ever? Well here it is, here’s how I got in. As this story goes so does my little mandel bread company. You will see links in this online guide, mostly too earlier posts from the last two years I have kept this blog. So get your recipe ready, it’s time to hit the shelves!
Phil Weinstein
Founder Aunt Erma’s mandel Bread
Team Mandel Blog How to get in to Whole Foods Chocolate, CNBC, Donny Deutsch, Mandel Bread, Sales, Whole Foods Market