Startup To Scale
Startup To Scale
268. Building a Brand People Believe In
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What actually happens when a CPG founder and a creative agency build a brand together from the ground up?
In this episode, I sit down with Dana Francks of JK Creative NYC and Grace Finerman of Date Smarter Snacks to break down the real-world branding process behind an emerging snack brand.
We walk through how Date Smarter developed its visual identity, packaging, ecommerce presence, and overall customer experience and why having one connected creative partner can make scaling a brand significantly easier.
The conversation also explores:
- The hidden operational cost of fragmented branding
- How cohesive design improves retail readiness and ecommerce conversion
- What founders should prioritize first when budgets are tight
- How to create premium perception without overspending
- The relationship dynamics between founders and creative agencies
- Lessons learned from building a modern snack brand in a crowded category
If you’re building a CPG brand and trying to make your packaging, website, social content, and customer experience actually feel connected, this episode is packed with practical insights.
Startup to Scale is a podcast by Foodbevy, an online community to connect emerging food, beverage, and CPG founders to great resources and partners to grow their business. Visit us at Foodbevy.com to learn about becoming a member or an industry partner today.
Jordan buckner (00:00)
When most founders think about branding, they immediately think about packaging design or logos. But great brands are built in two layers. The first is your values, your personality, and how your company shows up in the world, what you stand for, how customers emotionally connect with you. The second is the visual identity that brings those values to life in a way that people can instantly recognize and remember.
Today I'm joined by Grace Finerman founder of Date Smarter Snacks, and Dana Franks, co-founder of JK Creative. And we're going to be breaking down how Date Smarter Snacks built its brand identity, how creative decisions evolved over time, and what founders should think about when building a brand customers actually recognize and believe in. Grace and Dana, welcome.
Grace (00:42)
Thank you.
Jordan buckner (00:43)
Excited to have you on. So, Grace, starting out, I would love just to get an overall sense of, you know, what was the original vision behind Date Smarter Snacks?
Grace (00:54)
Yes, twofold, kind of like you just said, the product and then the creative aspect behind it. So I was a TV news anchor reporter and I was traveling throughout the country and I always brought a cooler to work that had all of my healthy snacks and everyone thought I was nuts because I was living all over. So they gave me this little cooking segment on a slow news day and then eventually someone said, this is interesting. You should sell it. So once I had that idea of the product in my
head, I started to think about what I wanted it to look like. And in my family house growing up, we had 50 style coke machines and cash registers. And I always thought that was super fun and nostalgic. And I wanted to have branding that represented that and made the product also feel like it was nostalgic and fun and quirky and different and would pop off the shelves. So I reached out to JK Creative and I said, you
this is my vision, but I need help to kind of get there. I had some ideas for a logo and it didn't quite hit and I was having trouble really getting the vision, know, getting the vision to come to life. So I reached out to Dana and worked with them and it was pretty quick, you know. We found the packaging and that's kind of how it all began.
Jordan buckner (02:11)
I love that. So, Dana I'd love to understand from your perspective when you first looked at Date Smarter and met Grace, what stood out to you about the brand opportunity behind the product?
Dana Francks (02:22)
Yeah, so when I met Grace, she had already put in so much time and effort into making her chocolate date. She had...
spent over a year with the food scientists making it taste perfect and she was just itching to get them on the shelves and in people's hands. And in her case, she came to us with a pretty clear idea of the theme of her packaging as she just spoke about the vintage vibes and she sent us some references and she had that first iteration of the logo that she wasn't really loving.
It was really her baby and we were happy to take it from there and kind of do a creative exploration with her. So that's actually the most fun part for us is when a CPG founder comes with all of their ideas and their passion and we get to bring it to life. There's a little tagline on our website that says you plant the seed and we'll make it flourish because a lot of people
that are wearing a million different hats as CPG founders, they're not necessarily visually creative. So we love to be able to like take all of that off their plate and you know, starting with whether they need brand new packaging or they want to refresh their packaging. We really love that part of the creative process and kind of envisioning how it's going to go from just the package on the shelf to what it's going to look like on their website.
and what it's gonna look like on their social media and just ensure that their brand looks established even if it's just brand new.
Jordan buckner (03:52)
think that's really important. And, you know, I'm curious around like, you had this initial framework around the retro look, but how did you start talking with Grace around, you know, her values and that, that she wanted within the brand and then creating that visual identity around it so that it would be recognizable.
Dana Francks (04:09)
The creative exploration kind of started with Sharone and I. I have to mention him, he's my ⁓ creative partner. He's got a background in illustration actually and photo compositing and over the last few years as AI has completely blown up everywhere he's been trialing everything from the start. Every week it's a new trial and new testing and everything's
than it was a month earlier. So when you have the right vision and you have the prompt, it can spit out a million different things for you, but like the key is really finding the one that matches the values of the brand. So we weed through all of those, you know, whatever AI is spitting out at that time. And some of them really speak to us, some of them are total garbage, but we really look for what's important
the brand, how does the consumer want to feel when they come to the website, and it's a bunch of different things. It's the colors, the fonts, the claims, so it's really what's important to show when you pick up that package. Like what do you want to get? It's a two-second thing in your brain as a consumer and it has to read right away.
Jordan buckner (05:22)
I love that. Yeah, I think that's so important. Grace, tell me a little bit about the actual product itself what is the product and how do you imagine people eating it as part of their daily life?
Grace (05:34)
Man, I forgot the main part. I was so excited to talk about everything else. That's too funny. Yeah, so Dates Smarter, we make caramels made out of dates instead of sugar. So they're gluten-free, refined sugar-free, dairy-free, vegan, kosher. ⁓ there's the packaging right there, yeah. And then we have, we two flavors there.
Dana Francks (05:53)
Keep them on my desk.
Grace (05:55)
But we do have three, so that's two out of three, which is pretty good. So we have our original, our peanut butter and our peppermint. And for me, I wanted better for you food to be accessible to people when it comes to taste, you know, a lot of people have thought, I'm going to go have a better for you candy. And it's not going to be that great, but it's going to be good enough so that maybe I don't crave whatever it is that I actually want. And I just didn't think that was sustainable. And also,
So I've noticed from my time in news traveling throughout the country, I live in New York. I have a lot of family in LA, family in Florida, and I found that people in those states really want to focus on the macronutrients of what's in the product. And of course, people everywhere care about those things, but I found when I was in the South a bit, people really valued cooking and taste, and so I wanted it to be something that they would enjoy as well.
And of course people everywhere have different preferences, maybe different diets that they like to focus on, but I just felt I wanted to be have a product that was sustainable in that way. So people have it as a snack, as a dessert, after a meal, whatever it is.
Jordan buckner (07:10)
I think, I mean, the product looks delicious and just like full of kind of decadence. You know, one thing about kind of a chocolate covered caramel is I'm curious like how they they photograph, right? Like you have to be able to describe to someone that experience in the mouth appeal. And then I know like on the packaging, I see things like the piece, the date square kind of being pulled open and seeing like the gooey caramel coming out. And so I'd love to know some of the key
parts of the experience that you wanted to highlight on the package that really stood out for you to run.
Dana Francks (07:43)
Right, I think always like even you know not as a designer but as a consumer myself I want to pick up something and be like that looks amazing I need to eat it right now. So there was you know a lot of changes to Grace's actual chocolate over the first couple of months I guess and we wanted to make sure we were showing how tasty it
it looked on the package, but you know sometimes the shape changes. So like at first it was square and then it was a rectangle, it's still a rectangle, and it's fun for us because we don't have to redo a photo shoot every time something is different with the product. We use AI to make it look like we did another photo shoot. Our background is in photo retouching, so Sharon
is phenomenal at making fake things look real and yeah you you have to see how delicious it looks right when you pick up the package.
Jordan buckner (08:42)
I love that. Dana, as... Okay, Chris.
Grace (08:43)
And to go off on that as well
too, I just want to emphasize
Dana said. You know, when you're smaller, there will be changes that you'll make.
whether you change co-packers, where the product's made, you test things out, you learn from customers. And I felt that it was really important to not just have the packaging, but also have a formula to make little tweaks to the packaging as we have to make those for production as well. And we made some changes to the pull apart image with Dana and Sharon to make sure that it was as close as it could be to the actual product.
which for buyers was very important because they wanted the person obviously buying the product to have an idea on what they were getting, especially when it's something like a date caramel that people may not be accustomed to.
Jordan buckner (09:35)
Yeah, I think you're right. And I love that the speed of the tools that you're using now. So I know a lot of companies, right, they have like a long process. It takes months to go through and make changes. And so, you know, I think you mentioned a lot of that like speed to to make changes, but I'm wondering if there's any other benefits to how you run your creative agency differently than maybe more traditional ones by using some of these tools and other processes that makes it a better fit for emerging CPG brands.
Dana Francks (10:04)
Yeah, definitely. So when we...
design the art, we have all of the future steps in mind because we've done it so many times that we know what's going to come next. So if you know the ingredients list changes or they need to add an asterisk somewhere or they want to add a fiber sticker, it's not gonna be a big deal. We have the file ready to go, it takes as quick as you can imagine, it's just a couple of clicks and you can save the same change to all
the skews pretty easily. ⁓ We know that things change, we know that different co-packers are gonna ask for the different templates, we know that different, know, Erewhon needs something a little different than Whole Foods and we're ready to make those changes and make it really easy and seamless for people like Grace. You know, she's got a million other things to worry about, so for us to be able to take all of that off of her plate.
We love to be able to do that and it's not just the packaging, it's then on the website it has to change and on social media it has to change. So we want to make that very easy for our clients.
don't make it three separate issues. It's your brand, anything that changes from here is going to change across the board, it's going to be consistent, and the consumer is going to see the change across the board. It's not a big deal to make changes on the visuals, you know?
Jordan buckner (11:27)
You know, I think that's actually a really good point because a lot of times a lot of brands might work with a creative agency to do like their packaging design, but a different group to do the website design and social media or maybe just doing it themselves. And it leads to kind of disparate parts where everything's a little different, especially as you mentioned, like if the packaging design changes, maybe they don't go back and update the website or do other pieces. And so, you know, I'd love from your perspective, you know, what a cohesive creative system looks like and how
Dana Francks (11:43)
Mm-hmm
Jordan buckner (11:56)
you really think about it across everywhere the brand shows up.
Dana Francks (12:00)
Right, I would say you want your brand to look the same every time you encounter it. You don't want to...
see it in the store and then once you run out and you want to go online and buy another batch of it, you want to come to the website and feel like, yeah I love this brand, it's established, I trust it, and when I click on that Instagram link it's gonna feel the same and I'm not gonna be like, ⁓ the founder definitely made that post while they were lying in bed after a long day of work. You want it to all look professional, so it's great that we can handle all of those things and
and the founders can worry about all the other fires that they have to put out.
Jordan buckner (12:41)
Yeah, I mean, as you're doing that too, I think that's so important. And I'm curious, like, just in terms of your process for keeping everything consistent, do you have a way of working to make sure that, like, as you're building things, you're kind of like checking off to make sure everything looks the same, you kind of generally know where things are so that you can update it at once? Or even just like when you're talking with founders, how you think about that whole cohesive picture? And are there things different about a packaging design than the website design? Like, how do you kind of bring those
Dana Francks (12:49)
Mm-hmm.
Jordan buckner (13:11)
elements through all the different parts.
Dana Francks (13:13)
Right, I think once your packaging on the shelf is exactly what you want it to be, you can do different things with the website and still have it feel like it's a cohesive brand.
And it also can go a lot of different directions on social. For example, like some brands have just graphic looking ads while other brands have a lot of influencer videos. So it's really whatever you want it to be, we kind of just make sure that it feels like it matches with the style and the general vibe so that you're not feeling disjointed.
as you go from place to place.
Jordan buckner (13:51)
And then Grace, from your side as the founder, how has having a single creative partner helped to simplify the execution of this?
Grace (13:58)
It's been huge, especially for someone, you know, like me. I've been doing this for about a year and a half and there's always something that has to be done. Whether you're going to a trade show and you need a banner or you're pitching to a big retailer and the little sell sheet I made myself on Canva back before I started, it's just not going to cut it. And you want to make something that looks more professional or, know, I had to pitch to a big retailer and I wanted to
PowerPoint that felt like it had all the graphics and the branding that I wanted. I've found that
You have to think of the brand like a person and think of, you know, the personality and the colors and the font even, you know, some of the pictures and make it uniform and going to the same person just changes the look, in my opinion, and makes it seem, you know, like a, a small business and I think it makes our branding seem like we belong with the big guys.
Jordan buckner (15:00)
Yeah, I think that's so true. And there's always something else to be designed, as you mentioned, like there's always a flyer or piece of content that you need. And in some ways it's never ending. So it's great to have a partner who has all the foundations and knows just how to make it look great without having to like go through a whole creative
or something every single time.
Dana Francks (15:16)
Right, it's,
yeah, like I
the day Grace emailed us about the sell sheet and I think when you're in need of something to happen quickly and you also have 20 million other things to do, it was easy for her to just send me a quick email and be like, hey, I need a sell sheet tomorrow.
can you do it? And it's like for us, of course we can. We have all of the elements ready to go and we're just gonna lay it out for you. We're good at this. Like let me take it off your plate. So that's what we love to do.
Grace (15:48)
innovation as well for different flavors or potentially down the line different products. ⁓ I think we have a really good setup where it's pretty easy to get that done with any new flavors coming out.
Jordan buckner (16:00)
Yeah, especially right first, for your packaging, it's not just that you change the name of the flavor on the package, you actually have graphic elements for the peanut and like for the different flavors that are incorporated within the packaging. So it's more than just like a typography change.
Dana Francks (16:15)
Right, her new flavor that's coming out, I will not spoil the surprise, but we just did the new packaging for it and it was...
I don't know, a couple hours we had it ready to go because we already really knew the vibe of what she loves and ⁓ we showed her three options and she's like, that's the one. you know, from there, we already know we're going to update the website so we have everything prepped for once it's on needs to go on the Shopify and we can't wait for all the new ads we can do with the new flavor. So it's all just exciting and really fun for us.
too.
Jordan buckner (16:50)
So Dana, what do you think are some of the biggest branding mistakes or design mistakes you see early CPG brands making?
Dana Francks (16:57)
Well, I think we talked about that a little bit earlier, just that it looks like a do-it-yourself social media or do-it-yourself website because, you know, Shopify, there's like this template and you could tell which websites are using the bare minimum and just placing the images that they have on there and hoping that people come and buy stuff from their website. But...
You want it to look established and there's, it's hard to do that as a founder all yourself because you're so busy doing other things. And a lot of founders don't have the visual background. They have this amazing passion for their product, but they don't have the skills to do a professional job on the visual side.
Grace (17:40)
If I can add something to that, which is pretty funny. I have some friends. I've made amazing friends in the industry who have a ton of different kinds of businesses. Some of them in food, some of them in tech, whatever it is. And I did my website myself before Dana went in and I emailed them and I said, Hey, do you want to do a collab, a sampling event together? And now they're two of my close, close friends in life, not just
in business and one of them told me, we took a look at your website and we thought, hmm, I don't know about this one. So it's just quite funny but you know, it is really important and I think it's a fine line. You know, I always get excited when I just talked to an NYU student a couple weeks ago who's coming out with their own product and doing everything they can and I think the best thing to do is just start.
And if you have to just start on your own, that's what you have to do. But I think as soon as you can, investing in a website and the branding and in packaging, mean, those are the first investments that you make.
Dana Francks (18:42)
I also want to say that a lot of the founders...
who don't have huge budgets to begin with, we actually really enjoy the creative process at the beginning and we are happy to waive some fees for the the investor decks because we want we trust that the brand is going to grow with our support. you know brands that don't have a huge budget to start off it doesn't mean that they're not going to be very successful. So we have done it in the past where we'll start out knowing that we're not
going
to get paid right away, but we want to do the creative exploration and grow as the business grows and continue the relationship for years. So even if you're just starting off an emerging brand, know, even our website looks like we work with a lot of very established high-end brands, but we are happy to work with emerging brands as well.
Jordan buckner (19:35)
I love that. And thanks so much for helping supporting brands. Those are a lot of our listeners as well. And they kind of were looking for that first foot. And so just to kind of share, I'd love for you to run down through like where a lot of people are like, what does branding entail or design? Like what's possible? And so what's kind of the coverage that you and Sharon are able to do with your design services?
Dana Francks (19:55)
we designed the packaging to the point where it's handed off for printing. it's vector art and we can turn that into 3D images.
for any usage. We also can make your website from scratch. Everyone that I've come in contact with uses Shopify, so we're great at using Shopify, but whatever kind of add-ons you're interested in. And we provide images for you to use for your social and things like the cell sheet or the pitch decks. Really anything visual, we will never say no and we always want to help.
Jordan buckner (20:30)
Grace and Dana, thank you so much for being on and sharing the story of bringing the Date Smarter Snacks branding to life. If you wanna check out more on Date Smarter Snacks, I'll put the website in the show notes. And if you're an emerging brand that's looking to get creative design work done, packaging, design creatives, definitely check out jkcreativenyc.com and connect with Dana. Thanks so much everyone.