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Sept. 6, 2024

Ask the expert: What Pop-Tarts can teach us about entrepreneurship

Laurel Ofstein, faculty director of the Burgess Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Michigan State University.
Laurel Ofstein is the faculty director of the Burgess Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Michigan State University.

Sept. 14 marks the 60th anniversary of the Pop-Tart, the beloved breakfast creation developed by Kellogg’s that can be found in vending machines and pantries across the country.

Earlier this year, Jerry Seinfeld’s film, “Unfrosted,” which chronicled the race between Kellogg’s and rival company Post to create a toaster pastry, debuted on Netflix. While the film itself didn’t receive rave reviews, the true history of the Pop-Tart can teach a valuable lesson about the perseverance of serial entrepreneurs and the strategic decisions that can create a competitive advantage.

In her 15 years of teaching, research and work with student entrepreneurs, Laurel Ofstein, faculty director of the Burgess Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Michigan State University, has learned that entrepreneurial ideas don’t have to be “new to the world” to achieve success.

Here, Ofstein — who resides near Battle Creek, Michigan, where Kellanova, the food and snacks company that was formerly part of Kellogg’s, is headquartered — shares lessons from Michigan’s serial cereal entrepreneurs and their quest to make the perfect toaster pastry.

Answers are excerpts originally published in The Conversation.

What is the history of the rivalry between Kellogg’s and Post?

In 1876, John Harvey Kellogg, a well-known physician and author, took over as head of the Battle Creek Sanitarium. The famous medical spa attracted thousands of patients each year to the small town of Battle Creek, Michigan.

John’s younger brother, William Keith Kellogg, ran the day-to-day operations, while John sought to give his patients fresh air and a vegetarian, whole-grain diet, which he termed ‘biological living.’

The diet inspired the brothers to develop a formula for a healthy breakfast recognizable today as flaked cold cereal. John Kellogg viewed the cereal as a remedy for his sick patients and created the Sanitas Food Company to manufacture it for the sanitarium guests.

Will Kellogg thought healthy people might also enjoy the product. Although he saw the wider commercial potential, he didn’t act on the idea until he saw the entrepreneurial success of a patient of the sanitarium who produced a similar product. That patient’s name was Charlie ‘C.W.’ Post.

Post couldn’t afford to pay full room and board at the sanitarium, so he worked in the kitchen, gaining access to the recipes.

After leaving the sanitarium, Post started his own company, Postum Cereal Company, in 1894 and brought the first ready-to-eat cold cereal to the broader market.

Post’s success led Will Kellogg to leave the sanitarium business in 1906 to found the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company, which became a direct competitor of Post. The company was renamed the Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Company in 1909 and the Kellogg Company in 1922.

How did Kellogg’s and Post employ entrepreneurial strategies early in their business?

While this history of cold cereal predates the Pop-Tart story, it demonstrates some ways in which entrepreneurial ideas come to light.

In the case of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, serendipity played a role.

Although there are slightly different versions of the original story, the gist is that after rolling out wheat dough and forgetting it overnight, the Kellogg brothers found that the stale dough flaked easily into thin pieces that could be used to create cold cereal. Will later produced the flakes with corn, which had more crunch.

Another entrepreneurial lesson is that success can come simply from recognizing an opportunity.

The method for creating cold cereal was discovered by accident and then perfected through trial and error over time by the Kellogg brothers. C.W. Post adopted — some may say stole — the method for commercial use without needing to spend time inventing and perfecting the product.

While the Kellogg brothers may have invented a healthy breakfast alternative, Post was the first to market the invention — and, thus, the first to demonstrate its commercial viability.

How did the Pop-Tart go to market?

While Post may have won the cold cereal battle in the product’s early days, Kellogg’s was victorious in the toaster pastry competition depicted in ‘Unfrosted.’

Following Post’s death in 1914, his daughter, Marjorie Merriweather Post, took over the company when she was just 27 years old, becoming one of the first American female chief executives. The Postum Cereal Company became General Foods Corporation in 1929 after Marjorie Post made many corporate acquisitions.

What happened next demonstrates that being first to market does not always create a competitive advantage. In fact, there is often what some marketing experts call a ‘second-mover advantage.’ One industry study suggests that first movers beat out late movers in just 15 of 50 product categories.

That’s what we see in the story of the Pop-Tart.

It was Marjorie Post’s announcement in February 1964 of the forthcoming Country Squares — shelf-stable, fruit-filled pastries — that gave Kellogg’s the idea to create their own version.

Within six months, and before Country Squares even hit store shelves, Kellogg’s released “Fruit Scones.” They were quickly renamed Pop-Tarts after the era’s popular Pop Art movement.

What are the lasting impacts of the toaster pastry battle — and can we learn about entrepreneurship from it?

Pop-Tarts were a hit. In 1967, Kellogg’s added frosting that wouldn’t melt in the toaster and additional flavors to complement the original four — blueberry, strawberry, brown sugar cinnamon and apple currant.

As for Post’s Country Squares? They became Toast’em Pop-Ups in 1965, and the brand was sold in 1971 to Schulze and Burch Biscuit Co., now the largest supplier of store-brand toaster pastries in the world.

In a nod to this history, the Pop-Tarts website states, “Others may have attempted the art of the toaster pastry, but only one perfected it."

While the first mover may have an advantage, a fast follower often wins the game in the long run.

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