Categories

« Bread | Main | Bachelor for a week »

Pancake Mix

I was cleaning out my study and found a copy of a report I worked on while doing my MBA: the dry pancake mix market. I had a lot of fun doing the market research, scanning through IRI data, and the user surveying. It's be a shame not to share with you, what I learned about the industry:
  • The industry can be traced back to 1889 in St. Joseph, MO, when Chris Rutt and Charles Underwood bought the Pearl Milling Company with the idea of developing ready-mixed, self-rising pancake flour. While attending a vaudeville show, they heard the catchy tune "Aunt Jemima," and decided that would be the image of their product. They ran out of capital and sold it to Davis Milling Company the following year. Davis Milling sold to Quaker Oats in 1925. (Quaker is now owned by Pepsi.)
  • Other notable companies:
    Company*HeadquartersDateBrand
    Little Crow Foods Warsaw, IN 1919Fast Shake
    General MillsMinneapolis, MN1931Bisquick
    Continental MillsTukwila1932Krusteaz
    PilsburyMinneapolis, MN1935Hungry Jack
    General MillsMinneapolis, MN1947Betty Crocker
    Aurora FoodsSt. Louis, MO1961Mrs. Butterworth's
    This gets really tricky to track because of all the multiple brands, company consolidating and divestiture going on. Examples:
    1. Pillsbury was acquired by Grand Met in 1988. Grand Met then merged with Guinness to form Diageo. Diageo had trying to spin out its non-beverage units and, in November 2001, received approval for General Mills to acquire Pillsbury.
    2. Follow that? Well, then I should tell you that Aurora Foods, whose business model was acquiring orphaned brands, acquired the Mrs. Butterworth's brand from Unilever in 1996. (They also owned Log Cabin syrup, Duncan Hines bread mixes, and Lender's Bagels.) As part of Aurora Foods' subsequent bankruptcy reorganization, they agreed to merge with Pinnacle Foods in NJ.
    3. Still with me? Did I mention that Aurora Foods produces the frozen Aunt Jemima breakfast products?
  • To avoid getting sucked down the brand tracking rathole, I stuck to dry pancake mix. Not cakes. Not frozen. Not moist. (La la la la.) Companies own multiple brands. For example, General Mills owns heavyweights Betty Crocker, Hungry Jack and Bisquick. That, I could track.
  • The total retail breakfast food market, whihc includes frozen foods, breakfast bars, cereals and pancakes, is about $11 billion. The dry pancake mix market accounts for about $160 million of this. For comparison, the annual sales of plain Cheerios is $160 million.
  • There are over 150 manufacturers of dry pancake mix. Four of them, Pepsi, General Mills, Continental Mills, and Aurora Foods, do 90% of the sales. Pepsi's Aunt Jemima comprises the largest chunk of the market (35%), though it accounts for less than 0.25% of Pepsi's annual revenue.
  • Most of the "lower 130" are small, boutique brands that are very localized and capitalize on the experience of visiting a place, often a B&B or resort. Think fancy packaging, premium price. In a couple of cases where they've exceeded $1m of revenue, they'll get sucked up by one of the big three.
  • Pancake mix sells better than average in families and where annual income is at least $40k. Not surprisingly, it does not fare very strongly among SINKs and DINKs
  • Bisquick is generally the cheapest of the "big" brands. Aunt Jemima and Krusteaz are the most expensive.
  • Buttermilk is the most popular flavor. Chicken Gummy Bear Mint is the least popular flavor. (Okay, I made that last one up, but it's very disgusting.)
I prefer the sourdough hotcakes, and when I don't have the time, I'll make this recipe:
Pancakes -- www.jimcarson.com
1 C whole wheat flour
2 t baking powder
1/r t salt
2 eggs
1 T sugar
1 C milk
1 T vegetable oil
Butter
  1. Mix the dry ingredients separately.
  2. Mix the moist ingredients separately.
  3. Combine them, stirring with a fork until the major lumps are out.
  4. Pour dollops onto a medium-hot, buttered pan. Cook until bubbles start percolating toward the top, then flip. Cook a few more minutes then serve.
I do occasionally buy mix when my kids want to help out and I don't want them destroying my kitchen.
13 Comments:
Director Mitch wrote on (May 13, 2004 4:48 PM)

> does not fare very strongly among SINKs and DINKs

Isn't there a LAW that fathers have to make their kids pancakes for breakfast on either Saturday or Sunday? My dad did it, everyone's father I know did it, I mean EVERYONE. I'll be starting it soon...

tedder wrote on (May 15, 2004 11:05 PM)

As card-carrying DINK members, we like Krusteaz.

carson wrote on (May 16, 2004 11:46 PM)

What flavor? Buttermilk was the most popular followed by blueberry.

Our "angle" on this was something a little different like chocolate chip.

tedder wrote on (May 17, 2004 2:41 PM)

flavor=buttermilk. The others sound gross.

carson wrote on (May 18, 2004 1:28 AM)

> The others sound gross

I thought the chocolate chip variety was disgusting, though my kids claimed to love it and picked out all the dark bits.

Tommy wrote on (October 7, 2004 6:50 PM)

where did you find all your pancake info at? I am doing a project for my marketing class at Ball State and I am not finding any statistics on the industry of pancake mixes.
thanks

jim wrote on (October 8, 2004 12:37 AM)

Where did you find all your pancake info at?

I got the names of some of the pancake mixes by trolling grocery stores. Next, I contacted companies, looked at corporate financial statements, and reviewed IRI (grocery store scanner) data. Demographics data was inferred from IRI data applied to census tracts.

I'd start with the big four since they comprise over 90% of the market share. The other 100+ are small or regional players, often associated with a bed and breakfast or resort.

Becky wrote on (July 18, 2005 2:51 PM)

I'm doing a group marketing project in which we have to reposition a grocery item and prepare a marketing plan, and we chose Aunt Jemima pancake mix... i found the info you have here to be useful but i was wondering if you know where i can find stats on market share and company sales figures for this industry. Any info would be greatly appreciated! Thanks!

jim wrote on (July 19, 2005 4:14 PM)

Becky:

I used IRI scanner data for market share. It's easiest if you pick a couple of target regions -- as this industry is very regional in nature. Company sales figures required a lot of poring through financial statements and D&B info, though I tried to back-check it with the IRI information. There are also analysts who track these things in regular reports; For academic use, are willing to sell a subset at a modest (for research) cost. (I didn't pursue this option because I had a lot of information already and was close to finishing.)

Leah wrote on (November 26, 2005 10:41 PM)

I'm doing a research/term paper on pancakes, crepes, and other goodies of that kind, so !thank!!you! for this gem of stats!

Sandy wrote on (April 23, 2006 11:16 PM)

Hi Jim,

I don't know if recieved my previous e-mail. But here is the story. I am a marketing student at College of the Desert in Palm Desert California. I was assigned to do a marketing analysis on the dry pancake mix industry. I surfed the net over and over and was not able to find current information specifically market size and brand market size of leading pancake brands. The main brand that I am researching is Aunt Jemima. I read your article and hoped that you could help me or direct me to some resources that may help me with this project. Thank you so much.

Kim wrote on (April 28, 2006 9:02 AM)

I found your information to be very interesting. At the present time I'm taking a business course and we had to do a project on a company of your choice. Because everyone else did their projects on Walmart, BJ's, Sony, IBM, Macy's and the list goes on. I was bored so I decided to do my research on Aunt Jemima. My project is due on Monday I'm more than sure I will get an A. Thank you for the extra information.

By the way if your ever in New York and you need limousine service, just give my company a call or you e-mail me with your reservation.

Thanks,

Kim

Kim Boyd, President
MKB Limousine
(718) 345-0858 (Business)
(718) 566-2810 (Fax)
info@bestnewyorklimo.net

Alex Gerieux wrote on (October 31, 2006 10:21 PM)

Interesting that the big 3 will swallow up an "up and comer" that might threaten sales. There is one mix that I'm partial to down South called Aretha Frankensteins, a boutique brand. I can see them getting swallowed up (no pun). But seriously, do these little guys really threaten the big guys? When they buy them out, do they kill the product or keep selling it under their label? This kind of "Market Darwinism" intrigues me.

AG

Seattle Area Weather

Mostly Cloudy: 50° F, wind 180°@ 24 mph, visibility 10 mi, 87% humidity

Recent Comments

jim on Hello Kitty bag: My wardrobe is specially designed to emit a stealth field le

susan dennis on Hello Kitty bag: PLEASE tell me you have a matching outfit. Or at least a sn

jim on 22 seconds longer: John: I might be up for a New Year's Eve ride, ideally short

Stacy on 22 seconds longer: I'd like my mocha back, please. hee. Congratulations, Jim.

John on 22 seconds longer: Gee, I was hopin' you would need to join me for the new year

Tag cloud

December 2007

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          
[ the archives (1.0) ]
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Technorati

Technorati search

» Blogs that link here


Got a comment? Is something broken? Email me at .
I appreciate and read every email, but I'm so deluged, that I can no longer respond personally. Please don't be offended.


deformity-laggardly