Some other recent related examples I've seen of changing the format to differentiate:
Guacamole squeeze bottle: Typically guacamole at supermarkets come in tubs, but one company put it into a squeeze bottle which lets it last longer and use it to squirt on your tacos easier. Normally I would compare prices / taste but the format trumps all of those other factors. https://www.instacart.com/products/21844889-yucatan-guacamol...?
Flour: I typically see flour sold by multiple companies in these small paper bags that you would throw away after you put it into a real container. Wondra put theirs in a shaker bottle, making it easier to use when you want to thicken up a sauce while cooking. Now their brand is shown and maintained when other wise it would just be yet another flour company: https://www.instacart.com/products/16409225-gold-medal-wondr...?
I do, because I find the bag to be messy. No matter how careful I am, it's impossible to open, take flour out, and close it without spilling a fine mist of flour around it.
With a container (I recommend Anchor Hocking's aluminium containers that have a rubber seal and a metal latch), I never have any issues. Open, carefully scoop out, close. Easier to wipe down, too. And the latch keeps stuff sealed even if the container falls over or is moved around. Easier to stack in a cupboard, too.
I also use this type of container for rice, grains, spices, pasta, etc.
Perhaps you might not have been looking close enough. If you are not blasting through flour very quickly and you leave it in a bag, even clipped, you can get weevils and mites. This is not new. Ask elderly home cooks that you know. Putting it in sealed containers or jars, however, it can keep for a good while.
Huh, I guess the likelihood of this depends on where you live. I have had this happen only once in my entire life, and a 1kg bag of flour can last me several months! (I rarely bake cook with flour)
True. It's apparently one of the most common pests in Norwegian households and in the Scandinavian countries, but not that common elsewhere[1]. Seems it might be related to our climate, with cold winters but warm indoor temperatures.
>For the past month or so, as an experiment, I’ve been opening my calendar each week for video calls with whoever books a time. It’s been amazing. Wednesday is now my favourite day.
>I loved those open conversations over coffee in the Before Times. There’s an ostensible reason to connect, so you talk about work, or compare notes about an idea, or whatever.
>But then the unexpected emerges. There are things in your head that you only know are there when you say them.
One could argue that Nike using influencer marketing with Michael Jordan was one of these hacks as well (at least at that time). Apple's 1984 ads and the marketing made them more valuable and that is step 1 of distribution.
The Gas app by Nikita also had this new distribution channel through Instagram etc.
These are actually the real secrets of business. If you do know one of them you are for sure not sharing them on Youtube.
The last example definitely is. They used instagrams notification of follow-backs to do mass simultaneous follow-backs of another platform as an install call to action to increase the chances of their geospatially clustered users having social interactions in-app.
The most important thing I think that activity teaches you is that business is a huge multidimensional space, and you can always find a quiet region within which there’s probably some profitable point. So much startup advice is basically how to structure a walk through this space.
Indeed, other times the customer relationships, or the packaging, sometimes it is even about technology, but not so often .) Having attended and then participated in the masters program in Technological Entrepreneurship @ Sofia University, this all seems now so apparent. But you can only really grasp it when you have a business activity, otherwise it is sounds like common sense talk.
Some other recent related examples I've seen of changing the format to differentiate:
Guacamole squeeze bottle: Typically guacamole at supermarkets come in tubs, but one company put it into a squeeze bottle which lets it last longer and use it to squirt on your tacos easier. Normally I would compare prices / taste but the format trumps all of those other factors. https://www.instacart.com/products/21844889-yucatan-guacamol...?
Flour: I typically see flour sold by multiple companies in these small paper bags that you would throw away after you put it into a real container. Wondra put theirs in a shaker bottle, making it easier to use when you want to thicken up a sauce while cooking. Now their brand is shown and maintained when other wise it would just be yet another flour company: https://www.instacart.com/products/16409225-gold-medal-wondr...?
Interesting that there is demand for this, I couldn't imagine using either one. Maybe it's a small niche, but with very profitable margins.
> after you put it into a real container
What? Who recontainers flour?
I do, because I find the bag to be messy. No matter how careful I am, it's impossible to open, take flour out, and close it without spilling a fine mist of flour around it.
With a container (I recommend Anchor Hocking's aluminium containers that have a rubber seal and a metal latch), I never have any issues. Open, carefully scoop out, close. Easier to wipe down, too. And the latch keeps stuff sealed even if the container falls over or is moved around. Easier to stack in a cupboard, too.
I also use this type of container for rice, grains, spices, pasta, etc.
We do, easy way to avoid bugs getting in there.
Guess it's related to the fact we don't bake that often, a 2kg (4.5 lbs) bag of flour can last us a month.
And do you in practice seen bugs in your flour? How often?
Because i too consume flour at a similar rate to yours, I don’t recontainer my flour and never in my life seen bugs in flour.
Perhaps you might not have been looking close enough. If you are not blasting through flour very quickly and you leave it in a bag, even clipped, you can get weevils and mites. This is not new. Ask elderly home cooks that you know. Putting it in sealed containers or jars, however, it can keep for a good while.
Yes or more correctly, my wife and I used to until we started putting all such goods (flour, oats, rice) in sealed glass containers.
Yes, not terribly often but enough that the simple act of putting it in an airtight container is worth it.
Huh, I guess the likelihood of this depends on where you live. I have had this happen only once in my entire life, and a 1kg bag of flour can last me several months! (I rarely bake cook with flour)
True. It's apparently one of the most common pests in Norwegian households and in the Scandinavian countries, but not that common elsewhere[1]. Seems it might be related to our climate, with cold winters but warm indoor temperatures.
[1]: https://www.pestium.no/skadedyr-i-naeringsmidler/hvor-kommer...
Interestingly it happened to me a lot in France but never in Sweden. So it cannot be just about temperature
Everyone who has ever had to deal with food moths or weevils so many people I would guess. I also put it through the freezer before.
Air tight container is a game changer when it comes to properly storing dry goods for a long time.
I always pour flour from the paper bag into my giant plastic container. I haven't in almost half a year though.
You guys are talking about all purpose (wheat) flour, right?
I found this wonderful page on the author's website:
https://interconnected.org/home/2020/09/24/unoffice_hours
>For the past month or so, as an experiment, I’ve been opening my calendar each week for video calls with whoever books a time. It’s been amazing. Wednesday is now my favourite day.
>I loved those open conversations over coffee in the Before Times. There’s an ostensible reason to connect, so you talk about work, or compare notes about an idea, or whatever.
>But then the unexpected emerges. There are things in your head that you only know are there when you say them.
Upvoting this because it made me think about SaaS and its relationship with open- and fair-source.
Often a change in distribution v. closed-source can be its own moat.
Can you expand and maybe give an example of what you are saying?
kinda related: would love to see somebody to innovate in the book distribution space.
One could argue that Nike using influencer marketing with Michael Jordan was one of these hacks as well (at least at that time). Apple's 1984 ads and the marketing made them more valuable and that is step 1 of distribution.
The Gas app by Nikita also had this new distribution channel through Instagram etc.
These are actually the real secrets of business. If you do know one of them you are for sure not sharing them on Youtube.
That is not distribution.
The last example definitely is. They used instagrams notification of follow-backs to do mass simultaneous follow-backs of another platform as an install call to action to increase the chances of their geospatially clustered users having social interactions in-app.
Don’t sleep on any of the boxes in the business model canvas!
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Model_Canvas
The most important thing I think that activity teaches you is that business is a huge multidimensional space, and you can always find a quiet region within which there’s probably some profitable point. So much startup advice is basically how to structure a walk through this space.
Indeed, other times the customer relationships, or the packaging, sometimes it is even about technology, but not so often .) Having attended and then participated in the masters program in Technological Entrepreneurship @ Sofia University, this all seems now so apparent. But you can only really grasp it when you have a business activity, otherwise it is sounds like common sense talk.