Failures – and what you can learn from them

Failures – and what you can learn from them

Failure is back! As economic challenges bite deeper over the next three-to-five years, a willingness to understand and learn from failures will become a super-power for food industry executives.

Even in economic good times, success with a new food product is very rare. In fact, failure is far more common than success, and most products sell on a niche basis with very few ever graduating into the mass market.

The smartest people already know that if you study the reasons why food and beverage products fail, then you will learn how to succeed. Unsurprisingly, our failures reports, with their practical guidance on how to avoid the most common mistakes, are massively popular.

They are also unique. We are the only organisation that has spent 25 years studying which brands fail, and why, and presenting the lessons in a report so they can be applied by anyone trying to develop an effective strategy for their business.

This is the 4th edition of the Failures report. The 42-page report:

presents a fully-updated analysis
spells out the 10 most common causes of failure in the business of food and health
is backed up with 12 case studies.


Learning from failure is a superpower
The 10 most common causes of failure
Case Study 1: Novartis Aviva, a family of functional foods
Case Study 2: Sirco heart health beverage
Case Study 3: Nestle's prebiotic breakfast cereal
Case Study 4: PepsiCo Flat Earth fruit and vegetable chips
Case Study 5: Booster Broccoli
Case Study 6: PepsiCo Driftwell relaxation drink
Case Study 7: Nomva probiotic smoothie
Case Study 8: Swedish potato milk
Case Study 9: Genius gluten-free bread
Case Study 10: Beyond Meat plant-based burgers
Case Study 11: Happy Inside pro- and prebiotic cereals
Case Study 12: Benecol cholesterol-lowering foods

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