A perfect mix

Pancake mix startup Birch Benders finds a perfect partner in co-packer Bell-Carter Packaging, with the combination of each company’s expertise resulting in remarkable success for both.

Birch Benders Original Pancake Mix
Birch Benders Original Pancake Mix

Birch Benders Micro-Pancakery of Denver is highly successful at what it does: developing and marketing healthy, tasty pancake mixes with clean ingredients that are a snap to make. Since husband and wife team Matt LaCasse and Lizzi Ackerman co-founded the company in mid-2011, their line of just-add-water pancake mixes made from 100% natural and non-GMO ingredients has grown to 15 varieties and is sold in more than 6,000 grocery stores nationwide.

What LaCasse and Ackerman have never aspired to, however, is becoming experts at manufacturing and packaging their products. “We think we’re very good at making recipes, branding, and marketing and sales,” says LaCasse, “The Pancake Man” and CEO. “We never even considered manufacturing the product ourselves. That was off the table from the very beginning. We wanted a co-packer.’”

But when the pair started out, finding a co-packer willing to take on a fledgling business with very short runs was a challenge. Birch Benders’ mixes were also originally sold in glass jars, which made their packaging needs a bit more complex. “Most co-packers don’t want to work with teeny tiny companies that want to make a thousand units,” says Ackerman, whose title is Dr. Pancake, a.k.a. Chief Marketing Officer. “Most people literally laughed at us.”

One co-packer that didn’t laugh at them, though, was Bell-Carter Packaging. The Modesto, CA-based company welcomed Birch Benders’ business, partnering with them and adapting over the years to accommodate the micro-pancakery’s growing business to the point where Bell-Carter is now producing millions of units per year for them.

“It took a couple of years for our business to get to the point where it really started to take off,” says Ackerman. “But Bell-Carter was very patient with us. They were able to go from very little to a lot and to scale with us. We appreciate and value them as partners for their willingness to believe in us and grow with us.”

Learning to grow

Birch Benders came about from the desire of Ackerman and LaCasse to give consumers an easy way to prepare pancakes that were also healthy and delicious.

“There really hadn’t been any innovation in the pancake category since the seventies,” says LaCasse. “If you look at the big players, many of them have, for lack of a better word, crumbly ingredients. They also use partially hydrogenated oils in their products. But then if you look at the natural pancake mixes, there were a couple back then, but none of them had the just-add-water convenience or the really fun flavor profiles we wanted to offer.” (Birch Benders’ unique and delectable varieties include such flavors as Sweet Potato, Gingerbread Spice, and Double Chocolate Peppermint, among others.)

Ackerman and LaCasse started out small, doing demos and selling their products at local stores. As LaCasse notes, while they were there to move product, the real benefit that came from their year-and-a-half experience selling in these stores was the knowledge they gained from consumers about the product, the brand, and the industry. Birch Benders then used these insights to improve upon their packaging.

“We always had a really good product,” says Ackerman. “But packaging is so very important to any brand, and if you are a small brand, your packaging is going to be a big part of your marketing budget. So, we knew we needed to spend a lot of time on it.”

It was during this startup phase that Birch Benders also began working with Bell-Carter. Initially, they had used a local co-packer for a very small run, but this option was far too expensive to be a long-term solution. Birch Benders connected with Bell-Carter when Mike Repp, the co-packer’s Vice President – General Manager, responded to their inquiry on the Contract Packaging Association’s online Request for Quote Tool. “Mike was willing to listen and to give us a shot, and that’s really amazing, considering how tiny we were,” Ackerman says.

Bell-Carter worked with Birch Benders “back in the jar days,” says Ackerman, and then helped them transition to a stand-up pouch format. From trialing their product, Ackerman and LaCasse realized there was a reason companies didn’t sell pancake mixes in jars: the cost—and not just for the packaging components, but also for shipping. The pouch offered a less expensive option and would also stand out on shelf amidst the mostly bag-in-box formats used in the pancake mix category. They also liked the idea of having a package that was resealable, which would allow consumers the option of using some of the product, and storing the rest for later.

When Birch Benders set out to design the new packaging, Bell-Carter gave them the parameters of what they were able to work with. Birch Benders then developed the pouch in cooperation with film converter Innovative Packaging Solutions, Inc. It is made of a multilayer film construction of PET and linear low-density polyethylene, and features a rounded edge on top. For pouch graphics, Birch Benders worked with global design agency Moxie Sozo, which produced colorful, detailed, Mary Engelbreit-like illustrations for each mix variety.

Birch Benders launched the new pouch packaging and a new pricing strategy at an industry trade show in 2014. “Before the show, we were in around 20 to 40 stores locally in Colorado, and after that, it just exploded. We got a ton of consumer traction,” recalls LaCasse. “The price point was right, the packaging was right, the products were right. And it’s just been expanding like crazy ever since.”

A perfect fit

In the pancake mix category, one area where Birch Benders differentiates itself is by its use of 100% natural, organic, and non-GMO ingredients. The company also offers gluten-free and paleo options. When looking for a contract packager, another challenge was finding one that had the required certifications to handle their products. “That certainly narrowed the search down quite a bit,” says LaCasse.

Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Discover the latest breakthrough packaging technologies shaping the pharmaceutical sector. This report dives into cutting-edge innovations, from smart containers that enhance patient safety to eco-friendly materials poised to transform the industry’s sustainability practices. All from PACK EXPO. Learn how forward-thinking strategies are driving efficiency and redefining what’s possible in pharma packaging.
Learn More
Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Annual Outlook Report: Automation & Robotics
What's in store for CPGs in 2025 and beyond? <i>Packaging World</i> editors explore the survey responses from 118 brand owners, CPG, and FMCG <i>Packaging World</i> readers for its new Annual Outlook Report.
Download
Annual Outlook Report: Automation & Robotics