I am trying to start my own line of protein bars/drinks/cereal etc. and I need some help!
What kind of bars do you buy (type - granola?, chocolate?, brand - supreme? oh yeah!?)?
Do you care if it's natural?
Does price matter?
Anything you wish was out there?
I think the market I am going after is general public who eat chocolate bars - My bars will taste similar, just less fat and more protein. So no reason they shouldn't eat them instead!
Possible things I don't see around here I might try to get (All high protein): Brownies, Muffins, Cereal, Pancakes, etc...
Appreciate all your feedback.
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10-28-2010, 12:06 PM #1
Starting my own line of high protein baked goods
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10-28-2010, 12:08 PM #2
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10-28-2010, 12:10 PM #3
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10-28-2010, 12:23 PM #4
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has to be natural. YESSSS. incorporate more whole food like peanuts whole, whole grains, healthy fats, and so on.
also a protein cupcake, or bread like protein.
flavor: i personally like pumkin anything, basic vanilla, chocolate, cinnamon roll, peanut butter, oatmeal raisin, banana, strawberry, and ive never seen a unflavored protein bar.
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10-28-2010, 12:31 PM #5
I love Parrillo brand.
They have tons of stuff, like pancake mix, muffin mix, cake mix.
If you came up with something like that it would be great.
They have so many different flavors of bars as well...Banana/PB is my fav.
Price matters, but it depends on what I am getting for my money.
The bars I try to buy are usually around 30 g Pro, 20g carb (complex, no sugar), 5 fatRammer Jammer, give em' hell Alabama
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10-28-2010, 12:32 PM #6
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10-28-2010, 12:39 PM #7
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10-28-2010, 01:41 PM #8
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Basically add protein to normally high-carb/high-sugar foods, such as baking mixes, cereals, granola, sweet treats/desserts, BREAD, basically all the stuff that has already been mentioned, while also lowering carbs and sugar by increasing fiber.
Natural/organic is always a plus too, no one wants to see chemicals and preservatives in the ingredient list.
Jello, jam, and energy drinks could work too.
BTW,this is a great idea and I hope the best for you!!
P.S. People are becoming obessessed with flax and omega-3, so if you stick some EFA's in your goods you should make a fortune $$
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10-28-2010, 01:47 PM #9
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10-28-2010, 02:23 PM #10
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Might want to rethink your idea. 10,000 bars on the market right now with millions of dollars backing marketing, formulating, packaging, ingredients. This doesn't cover the need to be gMP compliant, insurance costs ect...
It's cool that you are trying but if you are seriously coming on here asking for feedback you haven't planned enough out.
The brownies, muffins, cereal, pancakes ect... have all been done by large companies.Such much Placebo in here.
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10-28-2010, 02:48 PM #11
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This.......Oh well....guess I don't have to post now.....thanks for stealing my thunder. OP....have you even tried baking any concoctions of your own? I say experiment in your kitchen with things you like and if you make something brilliant then start at your local gym with samples and get some feedback and go from there. And if it never pans out as a business you can have some creative ways to get your own macros in.
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10-28-2010, 03:12 PM #12
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Personally I would never buy a "high protein baked good" simply because I can make better tasting stuff with macros tailored to my personal nutritional needs.
"Nutrition for powerlifting: If you are serious about it, you will eat f*cking everything and get strong as $hit." - HamburgerTrain
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=163165741
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10-28-2010, 03:32 PM #13
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10-28-2010, 04:14 PM #14
Ive always wanted to see a fat-free protein bar. Inb4fatdoesntmakeyoufat
Just for convenience sake in a rush needing some quick protein id ejoy going for a fat-free moderate-carb protein bar instead of having to sacrifice say 8-10 grams out of my macros for a protein bar...
Also, as everyone above said your best bet is to start local with a one-of-a-kind idea. If its good enough start advertising elsewhere.
Think about foods that youd never expect to be "high-protein". Something like a pre-packaged chocolate dipped banana with the protein being blended in the choc., just random things like that i believe would sell. Or you could think of pullin the 1up card on Bolthouse Farms and make great-tasting bottled protein smoothies, milks, lattes, juices, etc, without the 23597325385723 grams of sugar, fat, and carbs. If it were me, I would start by attempting to monoploize on a product already out there, only make it better. Ingredients, price, taste, all that. Small things count.--Misc Cut like Diamonds by June Crew--
'We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers.'
'Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.'
'We may forgive a child for being afraid of the dark, but the real tragedy is a man who is afraid of the light.' -Plato
One useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a Congress. -John Adams
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10-28-2010, 05:02 PM #15
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10-28-2010, 05:38 PM #16
Dude don't listen to the nah sayers. If no one ever took a risk in this country then where would we be? My first concern is preservatives. I haven't found a single good natrual protein bar that didn't contain high amounts of sugar. ALso think about meal replacements. Something that is ranked on % of protein, carbs, and fats like 50, 20, 30 or something like that. Doesn't have to be a drink, it could be a natural frozen dinner or something.
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10-29-2010, 06:56 AM #17
I think unflavoured would taste like ****...
The line would def be natural. Probably not organic because it's more expensive.
Thanks brah...I just saw the site. I like there idea, but not in powder form.
The manufacturer I found is a baker, and doesn't really get into powders.
Me personally, I like artifical sweeteners...so sugars alcohol. Do any of you care if this replaces actual sugars?
Yeah, the fats would be poly and mono, not too much saturated. I will see if we can get flax and omega-3 in there.
Natural is possible but organic I think would raise the price too high.
I am trying to go after the general public and not the health industry.
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10-29-2010, 07:06 AM #18
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10-29-2010, 07:12 AM #19
Well, I was thinking a couple things, which is why I'm asking you guys for help.
1 - I can compete against chocolate bars to the general public, but add protein, less fat and less carb while tasting like a chocolate bar and I would advertise the **** out of it.
2 - I can compete against a myoplex, supreme, oh yeah - meal replacement/protein bars
3 - I can go up against clif, lara - natural, healthy bars
The manufacturer does all kinds of baked goods and can mix any kind of protein, fats, oils, grains, berries, pretty much whatever I want.
They deliver to me.
I understand 10,000 million companies do it and I know the competition is tough, BUT I have a starting edge. I already have 40 grocery stores to put these bars into that are very busy.
It would be private label so most of the insurance cost, etc. are through the manfacturer.
I agree they have all been done, but you only find these things at places like GNC or what not, where majority of people that aren't into it don't go.
So by using the grocery stores as my outlet for my first line, it is something I want to promote to general public and not healthy/fitness people.
If the manufcaturer isn't cheap enough then I am going to scrap the idea. I am getting pricing today.
I wouldn't go and do my own concotions but he said he can do any I want.
I have a f/t job so that would be tough in my spare time.
Thanks brah!
High protein shakes/smoothies are a good idea but those come with the natural sugars from fruit, etc.
If it's possible, I will def look into it!
My options with this manufacturer are:
Brownies, Muffins, granola bars, protein bars, cookies, etc.
any of these can be either protein/meal replacement/high fat/high carb - pretty much whatever I want.
I would like to start with one category, build it up, then come out with the rest.
So I'm thinking the bars to start...
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10-29-2010, 07:42 AM #20
If it is half palatable and with at least 30 grams of protein, the only other thing I'm going to look at is price.
If it's $3.00 + per bar, forget it...there are a ton of cheaper options on the market, regardless of what their quality is like.
If it's closer to $2.00 a bar then we're starting to get serial.
If a package of 12 comes out to $12.00 a bar then I'll tell you right now I'll buy it with no hesitation. Considering a package of CLIF bars from Costco costs about 20 bucks (with 18 bars in a package) then the only way I'd take your bars over them is if yours were similar with natural ingredients, but had another 10-15 more grams of protein.
So in closing, here's what it'd take to make these a slam dunk
-Mediocre taste at LEAST (This has to do more with texture than anything. A crunchy, chewy protein bar can taste like poop but it's still easy to eat).
-Make them have at LEAST 30g's of protein (Whether they're cookies with 15 grams each and come in packages of 2, or just bars)
-Last but not LEAST, have them be affordable. We'd all be eating protein bars left and right if they were cheap.
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10-29-2010, 07:55 AM #21
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10-29-2010, 07:57 AM #22
The BROBar, now with 31gm of protein, knocking through the mythical 30gm limit. I personally would be interested in a decent tasting brownie, with whey isolate as the sole protein source, and no sugar alcohols, maybe just stevia. I tried the colossal protein brownies before, but that warning on the label about them having a laxative effect was correct.
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10-29-2010, 08:14 AM #23
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These are the only ones that caught my attention and that I'd eat if I wanted protein bars. Take heed. Finally a bar that's not a candy bar with protein added. We want quality protein as the main ingredient, and sweetener as the last. Though I wouldn't mind if it had some more carbs (hint: oatmeal) and was sweetened with fruit instead of sucralose.
Ingredients: Whey Protein Isolate, Milk Protein Isolate, Chicory Root Fiber, Natural Peanut and Almond Butters, Peanuts and Almonds, Sea Salt and Natural Flavors, Lo Han Guo, Sucralose
http://questproteinbar.com/
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10-29-2010, 08:20 AM #24
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10-29-2010, 08:26 AM #25
Oh and I also REALLY like the Lenny & Larry protein brownies. A little high in cals but DELICIOUS.
Check out http://pro-oats.com to see the product I've developed.
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10-29-2010, 09:53 AM #26
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10-29-2010, 10:18 AM #27
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10-29-2010, 10:34 AM #28
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10-29-2010, 11:01 AM #29
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10-29-2010, 11:05 AM #30
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