The Startup CPG Podcast

Startup CPG

The top CPG podcast in the world, highlighting stories from founders, buyer spotlights, highly practical industry insights - all to give you a better chance at success.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Investor Spotlight: Luba Safran, Mondelēz International SnackFutures Ventures

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Hannah Dittman sits down with Luba Safran, Venture Capital Lead at Mondelēz International's SnackFutures Ventures — the corporate venture capital arm of one of the world's largest snack companies. Luba brings nearly a decade of experience at AB InBev, where she helped build their Disruptive Growth Organization and spent seven years doing corporate venture capital, before joining Mondelēz two years ago to lead all deal-related activity for SnackFutures Ventures. She invests at the intersection of snack innovation, enabling technology, and the evolving consumer behaviors shaping how people discover and eat snacks. SnackFutures Ventures operates with a two-sided thesis: investing in enabling technologies that make Mondelēz better, faster, and stronger, and investing in snack brands that are either aligned with Mondelēz's current core categories — cookies, crackers, bars, and baked snacks — or represent where the category is headed. Luba has a preference for companies with solidly two-digit revenues and a credible path to profitability, and she is flexible on check size, focused on meaningful equity stakes, and deeply attuned to the strategic fit between a brand and Mondelēz's long-term direction. Hannah and Luba get into everything founders need to understand about corporate venture capital — how it is fundamentally different from traditional VC, why every CVC is its own special snowflake, and what the internal stakeholder management process at a company like Mondelēz actually looks like. They also dig into how Luba thinks about trends versus fads, why she loves a better mousetrap as much as a disruptive idea, and what the most dangerous thing a founder can do in an investor meeting actually is. Listen in as they cover: How corporate venture capital works and why every CVC is different — and what founders need to ask to understand who they are actually talking toThe difference between a strategic and a financial CVC — and why it matters for how you pitch and what you expectWhy CVC deals can take longer than traditional VC and what is actually happening internally during that timeHow Luba thinks about trend versus fad — and why supply matching demand is the real questionWhy she loves a better mousetrap just as much as a disruptive idea — and what that means for founders who are not building something novelThe diligence process at SnackFutures Ventures from first meeting to investment committeeWhy the ideal company profile does not actually exist — and what that means for how investors make betsWhy Luba asks founders how they respond to her doubts — and what she actually learns from that responseWhat to bring to a first investor meeting — and why the answer is simpler than most founders thinkWhere Mondelēz is leaning in right now: interesting crackers, premium indulgence, functionality, and net new snacking formatsAdvice for founders who want to get into CPG investing — and why you should ask yourself why before you start the search Whether you are fundraising, want to understand how corporate venture capital actually works from the inside, or are just trying to figure out how investors evaluate opportunities in today's market, this episode is packed with practical and refreshingly honest insight. Episode Links:🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lsafran//  🔗 Company  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/mondelezinternational/ 🌐 Mondelēz: https://www.mondelezinternational.com 🌐 SnackFutures: https://www.snackfutures.com Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Hannah's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    41 min
  2. 2 DAYS AGO

    Founder Feature: Margo Harrison of Wave Bye

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Caitlin Bricker sits down with Margo Harrison, founder and CEO of Wave Bye — a menstrual health company developing a proactive, OB/GYN-formulated treatment for period pain and bleeding. Margo is a board-certified OB/GYN, former NIH-funded academic researcher at the University of Colorado, Planned Parenthood provider, and founder of a femtech consulting firm that served over twenty venture-backed women's health companies. She brings a rare combination of clinical expertise, research credentials, and startup experience to one of the most underserved categories in consumer health. Wave Bye is not a supplement and it is not a conventional OTC pain reliever. It is a pharmaceutical-grade product designed to be taken premenstrually — before the pain and bleeding start — shifting women from a reactive approach to their period to a proactive one. With an FDA meeting on the horizon and a pipeline that could reach market as early as 2027, Margo is building something that has never existed before in the over-the-counter space. Caitlin and Margo get deeply personal in this one — from Caitlin's own experience with PCOS and the impact of Wave Bye's Bioregularity supplement on her cycle, to what it means to grow up never having been taught to track your period, to why TikTok has done more for women's health than medical school curriculums ever did. Margo also walks through the science behind her formulation, what it actually means to seek FDA approval for a drug versus selling a supplement, and why she views the FDA meeting not as something to fear but as the next move in the game. Listen in as they cover: Why bodily autonomy begins with understanding your menstrual cycle — and why that matters for human potentialHow Inositol works for PCOS and why it outperforms Metformin in Canadian clinical guidelinesWhat makes Wave Bye different from everything else on the market: timing, formulation, and packagingThe difference between a reactive approach to period pain and a proactive one — and why it changes everythingWhat FDA approval actually means for a consumer health product and why it matters for trustHow to prepare for an FDA meeting — and why Margo's approach is less war room, more game theoryWhy TikTok is pushing women's health forward faster than the medical establishmentThe moment Margo put a cardboard sign on a lemonade stand table at a Greek festival and the dads were the ones who stoppedWhy tracking your cycle is one of the most empowering things a woman can do — and how our daughters will have it better than we didWave Bye's timeline to market: late 2027 to early 2029 depending on the FDA outcome Whether you're a founder building in femtech, a consumer navigating your own menstrual health, or someone who has simply never been taught to track their cycle, this episode will leave you informed, empowered, and ready to wave bye to period pain. Episode Links: Wave Bye Website: https://www.waveby.co  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wavebyeinc/  Margo Harrison on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/margoharrisonmd/  Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3lEvr8doFjx89HW382Hy55 Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Caitlin's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    38 min
  3. 5 DAYS AGO

    #249 - Expo Pitch Slam Recap with ChiChi Foods

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Daniel Scharff sits down with Chiara Munzi, co-founder of ChiChi Foods — the winner of Startup CPG's first-ever Expo West Pitch Slam, powered by Advantage FDM Sales. ChiChi makes the world's first chickpea hot cereal: a shelf-stable, high-protein, high-fiber breakfast that cooks just like instant oatmeal but delivers everything oatmeal doesn't — more protein, more fiber, and none of the sugar crash. Chiara shares the full story: how she and co-founder Izzy started mushing chickpeas in their college dorm room after realizing their morning oatmeal was leaving them hungry and crashing an hour later, how they applied to every pitch competition at Expo West instead of paying for a booth, and what it felt like to walk into a room of 200 people and a panel of top retail and distribution judges expecting eight. Daniel and Chiara walk through the entire Pitch Slam experience — from the application strategy to the five-minute pitch, the surprise questions from the judges, the tight deliberations, and the moment ChiChi was named the winner. A huge thank you to Advantage FDM Sales for making this possible by awarding ChiChi Foods their FDM Brand Accelerator Program — a $150,000 prize package designed to help emerging brands build velocity in retail through demos, field support, and brand-building services. They also get into exactly how ChiChi plans to use the prize — primarily for in-store demos as they head into new regional retail launches this summer and fall — and why demos are the single best marketing tool for a product people need to taste to believe. Listen in as they cover: How ChiChi Foods started in a college dorm room and why chickpeas beat oatmeal on every nutritional metricThe strategy of applying to every Expo West competition instead of buying a booth — and why it paid offWhat the judging panel looked like: Sprouts, Whole Foods, Hannaford, UNFI Up Next, and Advantage FDM SalesWhat it felt like to pitch in front of 200 people when you were expecting eight judgesThe honest answer Chiara gave Sprouts about organic and non-GMO certifications — and why it didn't hurt themWhy ChiChi won: product differentiation, a genuine origin story, and grit that came through in every momentHow the FDM Brand Accelerator Program could translate to thousands of in-store sampling events across new retail doorsWhy founder-led demos create a different kind of consumer connection — and why it matters for early-stage brandsThe long game of building relationships at shows: why the people you meet now might change your business three years later Whether you're an early-stage brand wondering whether to spend money on a booth, a founder about to pitch to retail buyers for the first time, or someone who just needs a reminder that applying for everything is always worth it, this episode is for you. Episode Links: ChiChi Foods Website: https://chickpeaoats.com Chiara Munzi on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chiaramunzi/ ChiChi Foods on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/chichifoods/ Advantage FDM Sales: https://www.advantagefdm.com ⁠Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Daniel's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    25 min
  4. 16 MAY

    Investor Spotlight: Bill Schultz, Beliade Consumer Partners

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Hannah Dittman sits down with Bill Schultz, Partner at Beliade Consumer Partners — a venture fund focused exclusively on founder-led consumer brands across food and beverage, personal care, beauty, and lifestyle. Bill brings a rare combination of Wall Street pattern recognition and early-stage brand investing experience to the table, having spent the first decade of his career at Goldman Sachs covering publicly traded consumer and retail companies before joining Beliade, where he's now in his seventh year backing breakout challenger brands. Beliade invests at seed to Series A, writing first checks into companies approaching $1M in revenue and supporting them through the $1–10M growth phase. What sets them apart is a laser focus on disruptor brands in large, established categories — think Little Sesame in hummus or Coterie in diapers — and a deep conviction that the rise of the modern American family is the most powerful structural consumer shift happening right now. Bill and Hannah dig into everything founders need to know about the fundraising process: how investors actually think about unit economics and contribution margins, why financial savviness is one of the strongest predictors of founder success, and how to come into a raise with a clear, specific ask that builds conviction fast. They also get into the mindset questions every founder should ask themselves before raising a single venture dollar — and why honest self-reflection about what kind of business you want to build matters more than most people realize. They also walk through Beliade's full diligence process, from first conversation to term sheet, with clear, practical insight founders can use to prepare. Listen in as they cover: Bill's path from Goldman Sachs covering public consumer companies to backing early-stage challenger brands at BeliadeBeliade's investment thesis: categories, stage, check size, and what makes a disruptor brand worth backingThe rise of the modern American family — and why it's the structural shift driving the best consumer opportunities right nowWhy founders should think less about trends and more about enduring long-term changesThe honest question every founder should ask themselves before raising venture capitalWhy financial savviness is one of the strongest predictors of long-term founder successUnit economics and contribution margin — what they mean, why they matter, and what Beliade uses as a north starThe diligence process from first conversation to funded — what happens at each step and how long it takesWhy building investor relationships before you have a capital need is the smartest fundraising strategyWhat Beliade looks for in a founder: the ability to operate at 50,000 feet and zoom into the details Whether you're a founder preparing to fundraise, an operator trying to understand how investors underwrite opportunities, or just someone who wants a clearer picture of how early-stage CPG capital actually works, this episode is packed with practical, hard-won insight. Episode Links:Beliade Consumer Partners: https://www.beliade.com Bill Schultz on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/billcschultz/ Beliade on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/beliade/ Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Hannah's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    39 min
  5. 15 MAY

    Founder Feature: Marc Brown of ONOIN

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Caitlin Bricker sits down with Marc Brown, founder of ONOIN — a line of shelf-stable, pre-chopped and flavored onions in 100% olive oil designed to save you time and tears in the kitchen. ONOIN comes in four flavors — original, garlic and herb, jalapeño lime, and ginger and lemongrass — and is designed to go on or in anything, from eggs to meatballs to savory oatmeal bowls. Marc is a food scientist with a master's degree from Drexel University and a seriously stacked background: R&D and industrialization at Danone, Head of R&D as employee #8 at Clio Snacks, and R&D and contract manufacturing work at Hain Celestial. He came to founding ONOIN with a rare 360-degree view of the food industry — from bench science to co-manufacturer negotiations to retailer conversations — and shares hard-won lessons throughout this conversation. Together, Caitlin and Marc dig into why chopped onions in a jar hadn't been done before (and why it should have been), the origin story of the ONOIN name (credit goes to his brother-in-law at a backyard grill), and what makes a co-manufacturer relationship truly work. Marc breaks down the three-part pricing transparency framework every brand should demand from their co-man — raw, pack, and toll — and explains why trust and belief in your vision are just as important as the contract. They also get into the realities of early-stage distribution, how to build a velocity story with the right retail partners, and why knowing your product well enough to tell a buyer exactly why they need it on the shelf is non-negotiable. Listen in as they cover: How a graduate school innovation exercise sparked the idea for ONOINWhy shelf-stable pre-chopped onions solve a problem that fresh never fully couldThe naming journey from "Yun" to ONOIN — and why the name works on shelfThe three things every brand must demand from their co-manufacturer: raw, pack, and tollRed flags when vetting a co-man and why trust is the ultimate filterHow Marc's background at Danone, Clio Snacks, and Hain Celestial shaped his approach to foundingBuilding a velocity story with retailers who actually believe in your productWhy knowing your product's ideal placement in store can change your whole sales conversationReducing food waste — one of ONOIN's often-overlooked benefits Whether you're a founder navigating co-manufacturer relationships, a food scientist thinking about making the jump to your own brand, or a buyer looking for the next smart pantry staple, this episode is for you. Episode Links:ONOIN Website: https://eatonoin.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eat.onoin/ Marc Brown on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marc-brown-41500546/ Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Caitlin's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    32 min
  6. 12 MAY

    #248 - How to Work with a Formulator with Rebecca Urciuolo from BevSource (FB Solutions Group)

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Daniel Scharff sits down with Rebecca Urciuolo, a formulator with over 23 years of food and beverage experience at BevSource (FB Solutions Group), to dig into one of the most exciting and most misunderstood parts of building a CPG brand: working with a formulator to bring your product to life. From how to write a great project brief to what happens when things go sideways at the co-manufacturer, Rebecca shares hard-won lessons and insider knowledge that every founder — at any stage — needs to hear. Rebecca opens with a clear message: the best founders are partners, not passengers. They come with a firm goal in mind, stay present through the iteration process, and actively want to learn — because understanding what you don't know will inevitably make your product better. Daniel reflects on his own experience formulating a beverage during the early pandemic days, calling it one of the most joyful parts of his CPG career. The conversation covers the most common early-stage mistakes founders make when approaching a formulator: coming in too vague, being too rigid, or not understanding the regulatory and packaging constraints that shape what's actually possible. Rebecca explains how to write a strong project brief, why reference products are half the job, and how the tasting and feedback process works — including the vocabulary founders need to give useful, actionable notes. They also get into the nuances that make beverage formulation uniquely complex: the chicken-and-egg relationship between formulation and co-manufacturer selection, how packaging constraints shape your formula, what to do when an ingredient gets discontinued, and how your product will continue to evolve on shelf over its entire life. Rebecca walks through the gold standard process at first production, what to watch for at the co-man, and how to think about COGS and ingredient exposure from the very beginning. Whether you're developing your first SKU, scaling to a co-manufacturer, or trying to understand why your formula tastes different six months in, this episode gives you the practical framework you didn't know you needed. Listen in as they discuss: Why your project brief is the single most important thing you can bring to a formulator — and what it needs to includeHow reference products and flavor inspiration cut feedback cycles and unlock a formulator's creativityThe vocabulary of tasting: body, brix, mouthfeel, and why learning to give articulate feedback changes everythingWhy packaging and co-manufacturer selection can't be decoupled from formulation — and how to think about the chicken-and-egg problemWhat happens at the first production run: the gold standard process, what to watch for, and when to bring your formulator on-siteHow your product changes over time on shelf — and how shelf life studies help you understand what you're actually selling at month nine or twelveCOGS 101: novel ingredients, ingredient exposure, and why "welcome to capitalism" is the honest answer Episode Links: Rebecca Urciuolo – Formulator, BevSource (FB Solutions Group) LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccaurciuolo/ BevSource LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/bevsource/  Website: https://www.bevsource.comFB Solutions Group (FBSG) is the strategic partner for food & beverage entrepreneurs, providing end-to-end development, production, and sourcing solutions. Through our specialized divisions—BevSource, AlcSource and iTi Tropicals—we offer the operational expertise and infrastructure needed to optimize supply chains and accelerate growth for emerging brands. Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Daniel's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    50 min
  7. 11 MAY

    R&D Radio: Monte Ammons from Liquid Sherpas

    In this episode of R&D Radio, hosted by food scientist Adam Yee, Adam sits down with Monte Ammons, founder of Liquid Sherpas. With more than 30 years spanning food service, Coca-Cola, Community Coffee, and natural ingredient sales at Dohler, Monte brings a uniquely operational lens to product development — one built not in a lab, but on the floor of real businesses learning hard lessons the hard way. Monte makes the case that most founders jump straight into formulation when they should be doing the opposite: starting with a product brief, understanding the business, and doing the competitive homework before a single ingredient is sourced. He walks through how one client nearly launched into a saturated market — then pivoted his entire proposition 35 degrees by doing the upfront work first. Listen in as they discuss: Why formulation should be one of the last steps in product development, not the firstWhat a technical product brief is and how it prevents costly downstream surprisesHow a client shifted consumer target, functional benefit, format, and channel — before spending real moneyThe realities of natural ingredient supply chains: seasonality, tariffs, sedimentation, and moreWhy founders should start small, stay flexible, and invest as little as possible early onHow to research your category by talking to founders, breweries, and operators who've done itThe role of AI as a research accelerator — and why you still shouldn't ask it to develop your formulaWhy the beverage industry's failure rate is so high, and what separates founders who make it Episode Links:Monte Ammons — Founder, Liquid Sherpas 🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ammons/ 🔗 Website: www.liquidsherpas.com Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com. Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Adam's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    29 min
  8. 9 MAY

    Founder + Funder: Anabel González, Founder of Good Bacteria and Hayden Williams, Partner of BrandProject

    In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Hannah Dittman sits down with Anabel González, founder of Good Bacteria, and Hayden Williams, Partner at BrandProject, for the podcast's first-ever founder and funder episode—a behind-the-curtain look at what the investment process actually looks like from both sides of the table. Good Bacteria is the first rotating probiotic system delivering a new blend of prebiotics, probiotics, and a postbiotic each week. Dr. formulated with clinically studied ingredients, it's designed to expose your body to different microbes over time to build up gut resilience—a smarter, science-backed approach to gut health that actually fits into your daily routine. BrandProject is an early-stage consumer fund partnering with founders building standout consumer-first brands, investing pre-seed and seed with check sizes of $500K–$3M and a hands-on, operator-minded approach. Anabel shares how a postpartum healing journey led her to a Johns Hopkins doctor via cold LinkedIn outreach, over 200 investor cold emails, and ultimately a pre-launch investment from BrandProject—a fund she had specifically targeted because of their portfolio. Hayden walks through what drew him to Good Bacteria before there was even a product in hand, how he validated the science, and why Anabel's personalized cold outreach stood out in a sea of generic pitches. Together, they cover: How a postpartum healing journey became the founding story of Good BacteriaWhy Good Bacteria was originally a beverage—and how it pivoted to a rotating probiotic systemWhat 200+ investor cold outreaches actually looks like, and how the BrandProject introduction happenedWhat BrandProject looks for in pre-launch founders when there's nothing but a deck and a storyWhy Anabel invested in brand and story before product—and why that was the right callThe diligence process: validating the science, the market, and the founder's operating instinctsThe "sense of inevitability" principle—and why the best founders make investors feel the train is leaving the stationWhat a healthy founder-investor relationship actually looks like day to dayHow many people from a company should be involved in fundraising—and whoGood Bacteria's product roadmap: four products coming, a master brand in the making Whether you're a founder preparing to raise, trying to build the right cap table, or just want to understand what investors are really evaluating before they write a check, this episode is essential listening. Episode Links: Anabel Gonzálezon LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/anabelg  Good Bacteria: https://www.itsgoodbacteria.com  Good Bacteria on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/goodbacteria/  Hayden Williams on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/howillia/  BrandProject: https://www.brandproject.com  BrandProject on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/brandproject-lp/ Don't forget to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify if you enjoyed this episode. For potential sponsorship opportunities or to join the Startup CPG community, visit http://www.startupcpg.com Show Links: Transcripts of each episode are available on the Transistor platform that hosts our podcast here (click on the episode and toggle to “Transcript” at the top)Join the Startup CPG Slack community (35K+ members and growing!)Follow @startupcpgVisit host Hannah's Linkedin Questions or comments about the episode? Email Daniel at podcast@startupcpg.comEpisode music by Super Fantastics

    45 min

Ratings & Reviews

4
out of 5
5 Ratings

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The top CPG podcast in the world, highlighting stories from founders, buyer spotlights, highly practical industry insights - all to give you a better chance at success.

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