How I Built This with Guy Raz
Description
For decades, snack companies believed Americans wanted everything sweeter.
More sugar. More chocolate. More indulgence.
But what if that assumption was wrong?
In this episode, a mother-daughter team set out to make a sleeker version of a chocolate almond— and nearly lose everything in the process.
Val Griffith was a longtime TV producer in Seattle. Her daughter Breezy was bouncing between failing business ideas in Miami and New York. When a family tragedy brought Breezy back home, the two began talking about food, snacking, and why chocolate-covered almonds were always so… overdone.
Their insight was deceptively simple: what if you used less sugar, not fake sugar — and a thin coating of chocolate instead of a fat one?
Turning that idea into SkinnyDipped meant years of failed experiments, dipping almonds by hand, manufacturing out of a converted chicken coop, and demoing almonds one by one.
When they finally got a breakthrough order from Target, they faced a near-disaster: 40,000 pounds of rancid almonds.
What followed was a frantic race to save the deal — and later, a far more dangerous question: is this business ever going to make it?
WHAT YOU’LL LEARN: How failing at micro-businesses quietly builds founder skillWhy manufacturing is often the biggest obstacle in food startupsThe nail-biting risk of saying yes to Target too earlyHow growth can mask deeply broken economicsWhat it takes to fix a business when funding disappears
TIMESTAMPS: 00:07:25 - How Breezy’s early forays into the food business failed — and why they mattered.00:11:00 - How a family loss brought Breezy and her mom together — and changed the direction of their lives 00:21:07 - Reinventing a stale bulk-bin snack: The road-trip conversations that sparked a new recipe: 00:31:20 - The Home Depot paint sprayer experiment: A brilliant idea that failed spectacularly.00:38:56 - SkinnyDipped’s first “facility:” one oven, no heat, no hot water 00:49:28 - How a chance meeting in a bar changed the company’s trajectory00:55:41 - Target takes the plunge and SkinnyDipped nearly drowns: how a chain-wide launch almost breaks the business01:7:47 - Growth without profit: How the founders recover after hitting rock bottom01:21:44 - The mother-daughter equation: wisdom + jet fuel01:26:13 - Small Business Spotlight
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This episode was produced by Kerry Thompson with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant with research help from Chris Maccini. Our engineers were Robert Rodriguez and Kwesi Lee.
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