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baby

September 13, 2017

Baby Food Delivery Startup Raised Real Gets $5 Million Injection

When Santiago Merea spoke at last year’s Smart Kitchen Summit, he was Chief Revenue Officer of Yummly. Less than a year later, he’s heading up his own baby food startup called Raised Real and just raised $5 million from frozen food and food delivery giant Schwan’s Company.

The Spoon was the first to cover Merea’s transition to his new startup, which delivers flash frozen raw ingredients for baby food. Before Raised Real, Merea was an early entrant into the smart kitchen market with Orange Chef, a company that created a connected scale and app called the Prep Pad. The company eventually got acquired by Yummly, but Merea retained the rights to the Prep Pad, which he eventually sold to Perfect Company.

When parents sign up for a Raised Real subscription, they get a mixing machine that steams and blends the ingredients into fresh baby food. A subscription, which Raised Real calls a ‘Membership,’ costs $95 and ships every two weeks. Each box includes ingredients for 20 meals, translating to $4.75 per meal.

Raised Real ingredients and food mixer

The interest from Schwan’s came after Raised Real’s early success. According to Merea, the retention rate for customers is 80% after the initial box is shipped, and 90% after the second box is shipped, which translates to about a 72% retention rate after the first month. That is an impressively low churn compared with meal kit services such as Blue Apron, which retain only about half of their customers after the first month. That number drops to about a third of customers by month three.

Merea told The Spoon the company plans on using the $5 million to expand nationally. Today the company ships in five states in the western United States: California, Arizona, Oregon, Washington, and Nevada.

Schwan’s is an interesting investor. The company, founded in 1952, is the $3 billion frozen food and delivery conglomerate behind such brands as Red Baron pizza and Mrs. Smith’s frozen pies. The company has its own food delivery business, which dates back to the company’s beginning when founder Marvin Schwan started delivering ice cream to homes in rural Minnesota. Schwan’s eventually expanded into other food types like frozen fish and pizza, launching their own brands like Red Baron along the way.

According to Merea, Raised Real has two days to get its food packs into a customer’s hands once it packs the flash frozen ingredients with dry ice. While this gives them access to most of the continental United States, access to Schwan’s vast delivery infrastructure could still be critical in a national rollout. Access to Schwan’s cold chain delivery expertise could be important as well, since cold food delivery is, generally, one the trickiest and most expensive types of food distribution.

There’s no doubt that going from Yummly to starting his own baby food company with a partner like Schwan’s is a big shift in just a year, but Merea explains that the idea for Raised Real came to him not long after his twins were born almost three years ago.

“I couldn’t wait for them to start eating,” said Merea, “but when I went to the grocery store all of the food was processed. I realized that all of these companies are speaking to the previous generations of parents. The current generation of parents doesn’t want processed food. They want fresh and organic.”

Merea soon started experimenting with raw ingredients, mixing his own baby food at home. He wasn’t satisfied.

“The whole supply chain behind these ingredients still needed to be solved,” he explained.

He eventually started talking about the idea for a fresh baby food startup with his eventual cofounders, Michelle Davenport (a PhD in Nutrition and registered dietician), and Steve Kontz (whom Merea worked with at Orange Chef and Yummly) and, before long, Raised Real was born.

You can listen to an adapted version of this article below, or add the Daily Spoon Alexa Skill to get Spoon articles on your Echo device. 

April 24, 2017

Newcomers Try to Innovate and Deliver on the Lucrative Baby-Food Market

Baby food is big business. While it might not be an industry ripe for innovation, several startups feel they have the magic formula to grab marketshare and mindshare.

One of the latest to enter the fray is Little Spoon, a San Francisco baby food manufacturer and delivery company in its early “invite” stage.  The company believes it can provide our little ones with healthier meals offered with great convenience. According to Statista, the baby food market in the United States has more than seven billion in annual sales. To date, a few newcomers such as Caer (now Yumi) and Gather have tried and failed, or been forced to rebrand.

The biggest challenge to break into the baby food market is competing with giants, such as Gerber, as well as a growing number of organic brands. Many new baby food meal kit ventures, even with offering delivery, have yet to successfully crack the baby food market.

Little Spoon co-founder Michelle Muller does have a new angle which she believes will give her company a real shot at success. Little Spoon uses a technology known as HPP (High Pressure Processing) which is a cold pasteurization process that improves shelf life, while allowing the food to retain its natural nutritional value.

“Modern parents have been forced to choose between two options when it came to feeding their children: Either they can spend hours a day cooking fresh baby food themselves or they can buy highly processed, in-store options that are filled with sugar, low in nutrition, and in many cases are older than the baby eating it,” Muller told tech publication Snapmunk.

She continued, “It is crazy to us that parents have to make the tradeoff between their baby’s nutrition and their own time and sanity. Using the latest in HPP technology, we change all this by making fresh and homemade baby food available anywhere in the nation, direct to your door, and at an affordable cost.”

Little Spoon - Organic baby food, delivered.

In most ways, the Little Spoon service is similar to other subscription meal delivery providers. Choices range from one meal per day at $4.99 per meal through a three-a-day plan at $3.99 per. Customization includes selecting a child’s preferences such as flavor and texture. The company currently is accepting customer invites, with no start date set for delivery.

Even though the landscape is riddled with failures, Little Spoon is not alone in sensing opportunity in the baby food space. Thistle already is in market with traditional meal kits but has expanded to include Thistle Baby--prepackaged baby food meal kits. The difference for this San Francisco Company is that the meals are plant based and come flash frozen to customers in California and Nevada. Also a subscription service, the meals currently cost $2.15/each or $45 per box, including free local or overnight delivery. Each box includes enough food for 21 meals or one week’s worth of food.

Similar to Little Spoon, Chicago’s Nurture Life uses a process called MAP (modified atmospheric packaging) which allows food to stay cold and fresh without freezing.  The company says it sources locally whenever possible and also emphasizes organic ingredients. Nurture Life states that it uses a team of chefs skilled in appealing and customizing meals to meet a wide variety of young diets. The subscription plans offer food for babies up through 18-year-olds. An eight-meal-a-week plan for a baby is $45, while a 14-week plan clocks in at $75.

Then there is Raised Real, a startup by Orange Chef cofounder Santiago Merea (see our interview with Merea here). Raised Real, which offers subscription meal kits with raw ingredients, has its own baby food machine called the Meal Maker that steams, blends and purees the raw ingredients into finished baby food. The Meal Maker comes complimentary with a biweekly or monthly subscription plan or can be purchased for $99. A monthly plan runs $180, or $4.50 per meal.

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