Hello and welcome to How I Built This. I'm Guy Raz. So I love going to grocery stores, whether in the US or overseas. It's my happy place. I just walk around the aisles and look at all the cool things and the shelves and it's often how I discover new ideas for the show. Because there's so much innovation in food, but if you listen to the show regularly, you know that it is incredibly difficult to go from a tasty idea to an actual spot on
the shelves of a grocery store. And maybe you have a great idea for a food business too, but how do you turn that idea into reality? Well, why don't we find out? This week and next week in a special episode series brought to you by Clayview, I'm going to talk with three founders about what it took to get their brands on those shelves and what it still takes today to keep
their brands going. My guests are Becca Milstein from FishWife, which went viral for its beautiful, tinned fish, Brian Rudolph from Bonza, which makes pasta, pizza, and more from chickpeas, and Kawi Suplisi from Barnana, which up cycles imperfect bananas and plantains into healthy snacks and treats. So let's start with Becca from FishWife. She graduated from Brown University in 2016, but back then, she didn't really think of herself as an entrepreneur. I was always starting clubs
in school, which I think is the exact same thing, but you don't think of it as a business. So really enjoyed building communities and building brands for those clubs, but I didn't know that many people growing up that were entrepreneurs. So I didn't think about it as a possibility for me until I had worked at a startup, which was my third job out of college in the one that I was in right as I started FishWife. What was the startup? It was a British music startup and it was
essentially we work for musicians. And it had some bones, but it didn't totally work out. It also was extremely community, IRL-centric, and the week we launched COVID-19 came to our shores. So it has not stood the test of time. So you did not necessarily have any intention of starting something until just a few years ago when you were working for the startup and you started to get the bug. Yeah, tell me about when you started to get an idea for a tinned fish company. I mean,
I guess it started during COVID, right during the lockdowns in COVID. Yeah, there was honestly no started. There was just one day that was a life of moment and the next day I started working on it. So the seed of FishWife was planted when I was living abroad in Spain and college. I was living in Southern Spain in Grenada and was traveling around mostly in Andalusia, traveled to Portugal. And that was where I had my exposure to high quality tinned fish or conserve us. Right, and this is
like NDE with a pickled peppers and it's so delicious. I think when people go to Spain and Portugal they're like, wait, why don't I know about this? Yeah, it's just a really beautiful way of eating with topus where you are really focusing on high quality ingredients in their barest form. So anyway, that's where I was exposed to the product form growing up in New Hampshire. The only thing that I knew about can fish was commodity water packed. Tinned fish. Tinned fish. Exactly.
That was the only exposure I had. So when I went to Spain and went to Portugal and saw this entirely new interpretation of the category, I was blown away. Didn't think anything of it at the time. Didn't think a one day that's going to be a business, but it turns out it's May of 2020 and you're in lockdown working remotely for a startup at the time. Exactly. Working remotely for this
British music startup. Got it. And you're starting to think, I don't know, your mind wondering, has land on going back to the fish that you experienced as a student six years earlier? So basically during lockdown, I was eating a lot of tinned fish because we were trying to limit grocery store trips looking for high quality protein that we could leave on shelf that didn't, you know, was not contingent on our day of week of meal planning. And this is you living at home
with your parents at the time. This is me living with my brother and his then girlfriend. And it was like sardines and tuna, like that's kind of the kind of fish you're eating. Sardines, tuna, muscles, that was the bulk of it. On bread or just like in pasta or both or pasta, rice, sandwiches, salads, you know, just between Zoom meetings when you're trying to make a good lunch in like five minutes, it was the most easy solution. Got it. So that was going on. And then really the
three of us were on a hike one day and were brainstorming business ideas for no reason. I mean, we were living together for four months on our own. So we had a lot of time to talk and really stumbled upon this idea of revitalizing the canned fish category because it had not at all been reinvigorated in any meaningful way. And when we had that lipo moment, I was completely convinced that I was going to spend the rest of my life working on this. I think it just happens like that
sometimes. It just happened like that. You're thinking, wait a minute, there's an opportunity here. There's no culture of eating preserved fish, you know, conserve a, you know, tend fish like there is in parts of Europe. Yeah, it was clear to me that there were a lot of people that were really excited about it, like a nice base of early adopters that weren't hyper-passionate about tinfish and could serve us. But the only place you could get it would be, you know, a small
specialty shop and they were few and far between. So I had a sense there was a founding customer base there. A lot of excitement, a lot of passion. And there just hadn't been a brand that coalesced that energy into a movement. All right, we're going to come back to your story in a moment. So hold that thought. I want to turn to you, Brian and talk about bonza. I know that you, I know that you went to business school. You study that at Emory. Undergrad business. Undergrad. Yeah. And at a business
school, you worked for like a digital marketing platform for a couple of years. So you were clearly, I think, I'm assuming, already oriented towards maybe starting your own thing. Was that on your mind after you finished college? I don't think I knew what I wanted to do. I, um, out of college, I did an entrepreneurship program, but still even then didn't know I would start a company. It was only once, I was the first employee at a small company that then I was like, oh, this is really fun.
But I guess for you, the turning point was in 2013, when you cut gluten out of your diet, tell me about about that decision. Yeah. I mean, everyone has their own journey with this. Yep. But I did a large sort of elimination diet to see if anything was causing these recurring sinus infections that I had at the time. And it turned out that when I cut out gluten, those sinus infections basically
went away. And then when I reintroduced it, they started coming back. Coming back. Yeah. A lot of people have these experiences when they change their diets or their routines, you know, when I gave up most grains and sugar, you feel it, there are things that people experience in different ways. And, you know, oftentimes when people change their diet, they start to experiment even in the kitchen. And I guess you kind of started doing that. Because when people who cut out gluten will often turn
to rice or corn, which are gluten free, right? And you did that for a while, but I guess you felt like you wanted a different experience, especially with pasta. Yeah. So I was making a bunch of things in my kitchen. Yeah. And one of the things that I was making for myself was pasta made from chickpeas. I wasn't super happy with a lot of the available pasta options for people who have food allergies. And I grew up eating pasta three, four nights a week. It's one of my favorite foods. So
delicious. What I started to recognize though is rice and corn pasta. They have often even less nutrient density than traditional pasta. And I mean, chickpeas are kind of the whole package. They're packed with protein, fiber. They have at least some less carbs. They are gluten free, grain free, they're vegan, they're affordable, they're great for the environment. There are so many things about chickpeas that are great. And unfortunately here in the US, we just, we don't eat enough of them.
Cut me off at any time. I can talk about beans for a long time. I can tell. I love that. I mean, I am and chickpeas delicious. And so you're starting, you're messing around with chickpea flower, making pasta in your kitchen. And what you got like a little pasta maker and you started just testing it out. Yeah. The very first version of bonza was made with a wine bottle and a knife. This is before bonza was even a glimmer in your eye. This is just for you, right? This is just
seeing what would happen. Okay. And it was quite bad. But went from that to then buying a hand crank pasta machine to then buying actually got a little pasta machine from a pawn shop at one point, really just experimenting. And then maybe a few months in started to realize this might be a thing that I could actually turn into a career. Okay. How did that happen? Because you're not, I mean, it came from business school. You're working for a digital marketing firm. I don't think you
were thinking about starting a consumer brand, let alone a food brand. What was the tipping point where you were like, you know, this is fun. I like this. I'm eating this. I'm going to leave my job and start a chickpea pasta business. It's just kind of crazy. It is. So I may be six months into my first job realized that I wanted to start a business. And I thought it would be a technology business because that's what I was working in. That's really what I understood and knew. And I was
validating new ideas every month. I had a whole process for trying to understand what the right business would be for me to start. And as I was sort of banging my head against a wall, someone asked me a really great question on one of the ideas that I was thinking of starting, which was, if you were going to work on this for 10 years, do you actually think that this is something you're going to want to keep doing? And it was such a good question because so many the ideas I just
didn't care about. The ideas that you had before it was you were like, this is I could do it, this could be boring. Yeah. Or it just doesn't, I'm not like uniquely capable of working on this. But food, especially for someone like me who has food restrictions is deeply personal. And the way that you can impact someone's life through food is very special. So 2014, you decide to do this and you recruited your older brother, Scott, I think he's eight years older than you
to join you. Was that, I mean, he must have believed in it because he left his job to join you doing this. Yeah. I feel very fortunate that I was able to to rope scot away from his actual career. I was, you know, just at a college basically. So it was a big win. But I had done a crowdfunding campaign and he had helped me out and just sort of reaching out to his network. And in that process, you know, at some point he asked me if he wanted to, or if he could be an advisor to bonza. And I was
like, I want you to be my co-founder. And we had a sort of heated discussion at first. And then it was from then on, you know, true partnership. Yeah. Let's come back to you in a moment. Turn to you, Kauai and talk about banana because you are originally from Brazil. He grew up in Brazil and were a triathlete. You're not just a good triathlete. You were really great. And I guess you moved to the United States in 2001 to San Diego in particular because that's sort of the birthplace of
triathlons. And you wanted to really pursue this dream of becoming a professional triathlete. Tell me a little bit about that time in your life and what you, what you were sort of pursuing. Since I was very little, my parents always were very focused in telling us that we should do what makes us happy and have a balanced lifestyle. So in high school, I started to race for atlons that became a really big part of our lives. That was at the early stage of triathlete
in the 90s. So there was one magazine that we could buy and that was out of San Diego. So there was a lot of stories about San Diego. We knew that the triathlete started there. So I at one point said that's where I want to be. So decided to kind of make a move and drop out of college. At that point, my parents were saying, okay, we told you to pursue your dream, but your dream of become an architect like your father, not like a job out of college and going to race triathlons. But that's what I
did. I moved to San Diego and I didn't really know anyone there. But in one of my first races, I met kind of my idol who was Triathlon World Champion. And he finished first of the race in a finished second. So that to me was already kind of, okay, I made it because I made it with my idols. It was really cool. All right. So you really, you moved to San Diego to pursue this incredible athletic career. Not thinking, oh, I'm going to start a business and this is going to be what
I'm going to do. But meantime, while everybody around you is sucking down those gels and goo and different energy bars, you're eating what you ate in Brazil, which I guess most athletes or a lot of athletes eat dried bananas because it's got all the right balance of sugar and potassium and energy and carbohydrates that you need to fuel your, you know, your fire for whatever, whatever sport you're playing. Yeah. So in the nine is that's when the sports nutrition started
to evolve. But it was still very little. Those not a lot of options. You had basically power bar and you had one gel at that time. And we had a lot of this dehydrated bananas in Brazil. So like you said, they were the perfect package. They had all the nutrition you needed. They tasted really good. They were easy to digest. So every time that I would travel back to Brazil to visit my family, I used to smuggle a lot of bananas back to the US. Dry bananas. And that's what, yeah,
dry bananas, the hydrated bananas. And that's what I was eating. And when you are athlete eating something that is unusual, all their athletes, they want to know what you eat. Yeah. Because they always want to know like what is the edge that the other guy has. Yeah, because I imagine at the time like you could get maybe dried bananas and some like, you know, co-ops or a few natural grocery stores, but it wasn't really easy to find.
In meantime, you're finding that because you need a lot of calories for a triathlon. So you have to consume high-dense, like sort of, carb-dense foods, right? And you want something that's going to really get to you quickly. And I guess I imagine like just the banana goes right to you. It's absorbed very quickly. It does. And I think a healthier ace to get calories are kind of from like natural foods that your body is used to. I always felt that that was
better than the process, like at simple sugars that you find in gels. But looking back, I was eating that product as a kid as well. Because my parents were following this microbiotic diet. And there was no refined sugar allowed at the house. So as a kid, I ate the hydrated bananas as a form of candy. So it was very unique because it's a product that I've been eating my whole life.
So I guess from what I read, how I, at a certain point, you noticed that other Brazilian products that were just a kind of a, you know, a throw that it was around all the time, like coconut water. Like the kind of thing that you would see some dude in like a BW Beetle selling it on the beach, you know, from the back of his car. All of a sudden you see Ziko and Vitacoke. We did Vitacoke on the show many years ago. It's an amazing story. The coconut water wars of the 2000s.
You're seeing Asai bowls and things like that, right? And you're thinking, wait a minute, these Brazilian products that were just like, you know, street carts in Brazil are now becoming really popular in the US. Maybe there's something to these dry bananas, these dehydrated bananas. Yeah. And it's funny because in my mind, I never had, it sounded ridiculous. I'm going to start a banana company. But after seeing coconut water and Asai become very popular, what I noticed is
they were Brazilian commodities. Then now we're so, that's premium products because like you mentioned it in Brazil, if I went to a run at the park, I went to the beach, there was a old VW van, someone with a massive machete, they would chop the top off the coconut water, put a straw and it was delicious. It was really great. But that's not very convenient. So I saw the Zico and Vitacoke had that product
in a more convenient format. And then same thing with Asai, Asai, you had San Boson selling Asai in several different formats with a great branding and also with a great story of sustainability. So that really caught my eye. And I said, hey, people love this bananas. I'm going to put a brand behind this commodity, but also kind of make it better. I want to introduce different flavors, different formats. So that's kind of where the idea for the company started. I miss out on the
coconut water and the Asai. If someone else does the bananas before, they're going to really be pissed off. I got a jump on that really quickly. When we come back in just a moment, how Becca, Brian, and Kauai turn their ideas into real food businesses. Stay with us. I'm Guy Ross and you're listening to a special episode of How I Built This brought to you by Clayview. You know that feeling when your favorite brand really gets you? Deliver that feeling to your
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they saw 15.6 times ROI. I'd say she's onto something, but results like this don't happen instantly. They take time and a deep understanding of your customers, building real connections and treating every interaction like it counts. Because it does. To do it well, you need tools that turn customer data into powerful insights and deliver spot-on, personalized experiences wherever your customers are. That's where Clayview comes in. Today, over 150,000 brands grow more personalized customer
relationships with Clayview. Because at Clayview, making every moment count matters. Not only during Black Friday to Cyber Monday, but every day of the year. With time-saving AI-powered email, SMS, and more, Clayview helps you build smarter digital relationships with your customers. This Black Friday to Cyber Monday make every moment count with Clayview. Learn more at klavi.com-bfcm. Hey, welcome back to How I Built This. I'm Guy Ross. And today, I'm talking to three founders
who've built food businesses. Becca Milstein, a fishwife, Brian Rudolph of Bonza, and Kawaii Shuplishi of Barnana. And at this point, we've heard out each of them came up with the idea for their business. For Becca, that happened in the heart of the pandemic, which presented some obvious challenges. You're in the pandemic. There's a supply chain crisis. You want to start a European style, conserve a brand. Where do you go? Where did you start? How did
you even begin to get this off the ground? The only word to properly describe the process is janky. And I think that's, it's really important for aspiring founders to understand that, you know, the process to get off the ground is very, very messy. So, for me, you know, I had worked in marketing and brand partnerships in the music industry, and that's kind of immediately where my mind went was, you know, I want to find the partner who will help me create this brand. And I
knew I wanted that person to be an illustrator. So, so found through a, you know, a big research process. Really looking at Instagram for many, many hours and talking to some friends and getting referrals landed on our illustrator, Danny Miller. So, I want to talk about this for a moment, because if anybody knows your products, they pop off the shelves. I mean, you figured out that if you could package this in a way that was arresting and interesting, maybe people would try
it, which is what happened. And really people should just go and, you know, website and see this, if they're not familiar with your packaging, because it's like kind of psychedelic, but very colorful. And it seems like this was like a clear sort of strategy from the beginning that even before you had something, you knew that you wanted to look different. Yeah, the canned fish category, it was lacking basically everything. It was lacking, you know,
diversity in the species. It was lacking flavors, but the most clear thing that it was lacking was any brand that was interesting, beautiful, compelling to customers. So, I knew that we had to start there. And in order to, you know, I think fight against certain stigmas about canned fish and also to basically create an entirely new identity entirely new positioning, we were going to need to start with the visuals, the tone of voice, everything that goes into creating a brand.
And in terms of just finding a way to get the fish, I'm assuming you started by looking in Portugal, right? Because it's COVID. It's May of 2020. And how are you going to source the fish? I started doing everything at once. So, I was asking everyone I knew who might know a fisherman. So, you know, people that lived in coastal California, people that lived in Oregon, people that were from Alaska that I knew, I was really texting them and saying, hey, I know you're from
Cambria. Do you know any fisherman, any commercial fisherman? I didn't even know the word commercial fisherman at the time. But, and actually that was the way that we found our first cannery in Oregon. I was connected to someone who knew he was actually a weed farmer in Northern California, but was sports fisherman on the side. And we first sourced albacore tuna from him and worked with a cannery
in Oregon. So, that was going on on one side. And then on the other side, I was diving into the internet to try to find a cannery partner in either Portugal or Spain and googling in Spanish to see what we could come up with. And we actually, through that process, did find a cannery partner that we still work with today for our sardines. Well, and one of the things that really differentiates you, Becca from Bonsa and Barnana is, you decided I'm not mistaken from the very beginning to start
this as a direct consumer business. You didn't even want to deal with retailers at the start, eventually you would, but you wanted to figure out a way to get this in front of people online. So, they would order it at home. Yeah, I think intuitively it was the heart of COVID. So, I knew that everyone was glued to their phones and was really looking for something super exciting on them. So, it was very natural to me to a start building the business and building the brand
on social media. So, Instagram was the platform of choice and knew that the best way we could, you know, generate conversion and sales from Instagram, from that platform would be direction them to a D to C business. It also is just the easiest to get going. Yeah. Candidly, retailers extremely complex. And at that point, even if you wanted to get a retailer,
you couldn't do it. They're not taking meetings, they're not taking your products, right? So, it was like extremely difficult to try to go to anything, even if you had the relationships. So, the constraints forced you to make those choices? Yeah, it was a very fortunate limitation and I think it was absolutely the right strategy. Okay. Brian, I want to find out about bonds. Okay. So, you're making pasta. You decide we're going to make this
commercially, right? And I know one of the first things you did was you did a crowdfunding campaign. You raised a little under $18,000 to try and I'm assuming find a partner who could help you make this. I mean, there are a lot of probably co-packers, co-manufacturers that make white label pasta for different grocery stores and, you know, other brands around the United States. But I imagine none of them were making chickpea pasta and I imagine that it's a different kind of
process, right? Like the extrusion, I don't know if that's right word, the chickpea pasta is going to be very different than wheat pasta. So, how did you find somebody who was willing to work with you? So, you're 100% right? Chickpea pasta did not exist, so there was no precedent for manufacturing it and we were pretty naive to think that we could bridge that gap very easily. But the $18,000 that we raised in the crowdfunding campaign was meant to go towards some form of a first
production run. Within a few days of that crowdfunding campaign ending, we also heard from a reality TV show that was called Restaurant Startup and that show greatfully ended up going well and we received another $75,000 in the form of an investment and we quickly leveraged that to get interest from our first retail partner all before launching. And it was Meyer, right? The Midwestern
or the Michigan kind of based grocery store chain. Correct. And Meyer, I think, saw that we were at Detroit based business and was excited to work with a local business and they wanted to carry our products and all of their stores which accelerated our entire timeline. Yeah, and that's like
what, like 80, 90 stores? I think it was right around 200 at the time. Oh. And we were so grateful, but also very nervous to take a product in that meeting that was made in my kitchen and having no packaging in the meeting, basically just telling the story of how we want to do in Pasta, what Shabani did in yogurt and make a higher protein version, the new standard. They were willing to take a chance on us, but that also meant that we had to figure out how to make it at
a larger scale. And were you going to start with one shape, like Rotee or Elbows? What was the shape you're going to start with? Penny and Rotee were our first two shapes. Penny and Rotee, okay. Yeah. And how did you, so you've got Meyer, but at the same time, it's like threading the needle, right? You got to find the manufacturer and you're probably panicking thinking, how are we going to, how are we going to fulfill this order? It felt like a race. Yeah. I'm glad we did it,
but it was very scary. And we had a ton of issues scaling up. We ended up partnering with what was then the largest gluten free Pasta manufacturer in the country and it just went horribly wrong. What was wrong? Making chickpea pasta is really hard. You have to be very precise in a way that you don't need to be with corn or rice. And it's really hard to make whatever it was at the time, I think, maybe 2,000 pounds an hour or by the time we knew if the product was successfully
produced, we had already produced I think 10,000 pounds. And then what was the problem with it? I mean, you would boil it and it would fall apart within 30 seconds. Oh wow. It was not being produced correctly. And it was very scary, very, very stressful. I honestly did not think that we would make it because we had this happen, right? 10,000 pounds try again, another 10,000 pounds. And you just keep going and going. You're like, some point we're going to run out of money.
Yeah, you're paying for all these runs and they're just not working. Yeah. And we ended up figuring it out at the very last minute. We evaluated new methods for cooking our pasta, including instead of using boiling water, just using hot water and steeping it like tea. So literally just hot water, drop it in, pull it out after five minutes. And clearly that's not how you cook pasta. This is not a long-term solution. But we ended up stickering 20,000 boxes,
shipping them out the next two days later. What? Stickering the boxes with what? The cooking instructions when we printed the packaging said boil it for five to seven minutes. Yeah. But we realized that boiling was not going to work. So we ended up having to apply a sticker to the packaging that said, just drop in hot water. Cook it this way. Yeah. Wow. Okay. Which is tricky because not everybody reads the cooking instructions for pasta. They just
start like the boil water. He put it in there. Yeah. I mean, we hoped that people would see the sticker. We also recognized that this was not a long-term solution. But when we spoke with the retailer and particularly the distributor, they basically said, if we didn't fulfill the order, we may never have a chance to work with Meyer again. Of course, they presented it in very dramatic
terms, which I think wasn't very nice to us. But we fulfilled the order and we very quickly raced to find a better long-term solution, which ended up being a very small manufacturer in our backyard in Michigan, which we worked with for a period of time until eventually we opened a nerd plant. And so it was a matter of really reformulating how it was made and how it was dried and all, I guess, the whole process. Yeah. Finding the precise steps that are required to
make sure that this is a good product and doing it at a smaller scale. And then when we were ready investing in a larger process. I mean, it's so risky because even with those new labels, if people didn't follow the instructions and just like had mushy, broken apart pasta, that kind of really, I mean, you get one chance. People give you one chance with food. But you survived that. We did. It felt horrible. If I tell you every time we got in order,
I cringed. It was like the first few weeks. I was both so excited that we were finally bringing our product into the world and also feeling horrible every time we got in order online. It was so confusing and that definitely created a sense of urgency that we need to make the product better. And I think that culture of continuous improvement is so core to our DNA because of that disaster. You know, we're not going to sit on our hands. We need to always be better.
Coway 2009, you decide to hit the go button on this. And I know for a brief period of time, you thought about maybe starting a bicycle company, which would, you know, make sense. You are triathlete. But now you are going to jump into food. How did you find somebody to work with to actually drive the bananas to your specifications and to create a brand?
It took a while because we only launched in 2012. It took three years. Yeah. I was retiring as a triathlet, but it still had a lot of drive and like it was a very type A, one of the race, everything that or everyone that could find. So I start talking about this idea that I had to everyone that I knew. So looking my family, I was asking my mom to go to places in Brazil that were growing bananas,
had friends calling other countries. So it was just kind of getting a lot of samples as well as calling a lot of people here in the US that could kind of help me create a product that I had envisioned. So what I did, I actually called the largest chocolate cover raising's manufacture in the country brand. And somehow they end up connecting me with the CEO of the company. It was a very large company. So he ended up introducing me to the owner of a very large
co-packing business that I somehow convinced to make some samples for me. And that's how we end up launching there. We just kind of 20 pound box of samples. How did you finance it originally? I mean, did you have winnings from your races? Like how were you able to even do a first product run? I mean, we launched the product with very little money. So basically, bootstrapping the business, getting people to help for free. And then right after we launched, there was interest and we got kind
of somehow some industry folks to invest in the business. And it was kind of friends and family. And but we had zero sales. When we ended up launching, we went to this big food expo. This is the natural product expo west in NNI. Correct. Yes, we went to expo west. Basically, the only money we had was to buy the space. I ended up going to at the time of still called kinkos printed our design of the package in a sticker and bought a little standard pouch and
a sticker this standard pouch with our branding or logo. And that's what we showed at expo west. And you got orders from that? We did. We didn't expect because at the beginning, our go-to market idea was let's start small learn about the product and the marketplace and then expand and then all the sudden retailers in the east coast want to have the product. And we were definitely
not set up for that and brokers from across the country wanted to sell. Wow. And you were just a little, I think it was you and two other co-founders at that point where that you would met in San Diego. Yeah, I had met them in San Diego. They were still in school about to graduate, math, Clifford and Nicking and so on. So if it wasn't for them, like the business was not going to be here because they were just fresh out of school and had a lot of this business ideas and they
brought a lot of structure to the business. I think you got an order from Wegmans at that first expo west, which is a mid-Atlantic grocery store chain. I actually said no to Wegmans three times. Because you didn't think you guys could fulfill the order? First, I didn't even know who Wegmans was. So after like asking like a one of like our advisors at the time, they knew a lot about industry. He said, oh my god, it's very difficult to get to Wegmans. So if Wegmans was your
brother, you shouldn't make happen. And I was like, oh, okay, the guy from Wegmans already came here three times and I said, no, luckily he came a four-time and I said, okay, I think we can do this. That's Coway Suplicy Founder and CEO of Barnana. You also heard from Becca Milstein, co-founder and CEO of FishWife and Brian Rudolph, co-founder and CEO of Bonza. This is only the first
half of our conversation about building food businesses. Check back next week for part two of this special series presented by Klavio to find out how these three founders grew their companies into category defining brands. And thanks so much for listening to the show this week. Please make sure to click the follow button on your podcast app so you never miss a new episode of the show. And as always, it's free. This episode was produced by Alex Chung with music composed by
Routine Arableui. It was edited by John Isabella. Our audio engineer was James Willetz. Our production staff also includes Carla Estevez, Chris Messini, David Schwartz, Elaine Coates, J.C. Howard, Catherine Cipher, Carrie Thompson and Niva Grant. I'm Guy Ross and you've been listening to a special episode of how I built this brought to you like Klavio.