SkinnyDipped: Breezy and Val Griffith. The Flourishing Snack Company That Almost Failed Podcast Por Guy Raz | Wondery arte de portada

SkinnyDipped: Breezy and Val Griffith. The Flourishing Snack Company That Almost Failed

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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: 00:05:00 - How Breezy’s early forays into the food business failed — and why they mattered.00:09:00 - How a family loss brought Breezy and her mom together — and changed the direction of their lives 00:18:42 - Reinventing a stale bulk-bin snack: The road-trip conversations that sparked a new recipe: 00:28:55 - The Home Depot paint sprayer experiment: A brilliant idea that failed spectacularly.00:34:16 - SkinnyDipped’s first “facility:” one oven, no heat, no hot water 00:44:48 - How a chance meeting in a bar changed the company’s trajectory00:51:01 - Target takes the plunge and SkinnyDipped nearly drowns: how a chain-wide launch almost breaks the business01:01:37 - Growth without profit: How the founders recover after hitting rock bottom01:15:34 - The mother-daughter equation: wisdom + jet fuel01:20:08 - Small Business Spotlight —----------------------- Hey—want to be a guest on HIBT? If you’re building a business, why not get advice from some of the greatest entrepreneurs on Earth? Every Thursday on the HIBT Advice Line, a previous HIBT guest helps new entrepreneurs work through the challenges they’re facing right now. Advice that’s smart, actionable, and absolutely free. Just call 1-800-433-1298, leave a message, and you may soon get guidance from someone who started where you did, and went on to build something massive. So—give us a call. We can’t wait to hear what you’re working on. —----------- 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.©2026 Guy Raz | Wondery (P)2026 Guy Raz | Wondery Economía
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