Huy Fong's Sriracha hit revenue of $150m+ a year...with no sales team, no trademark and $0 in ad spend.
Its creator is Vietnamese-American David Tran, making the sauce's success a tale of immigrant hustle and a product that literally sells itself.
Here's the story🧵
1/ The Sriracha story traces back to the 1930s.
In a Thai town called Sri Racha, a housewife named Thanom Chakkapak created a paste of chili peppers, distilled vinegar, garlic, sugar and salt.
Variations of this recipe have travelled across the globes in the decades since.
2/ One variation was created by David Tran, a major in the South Vietnamese army.
In 1978, the Tran family joined 3k+ refugees and fled Communist Vietnam on a Taiwanese boat called the Huey Fong (means "Gathering Prosperity”). The boat inspired the business name Huy Fong Foods.
3/ Tran landed in the US and ended up in LA.
At the time, Sriracha was absent from California. So Tran brought his recipe, swapping out chilis for a local ingredient: jalapeños.
He filled recycled baby jars and sold product out of a Blue Chevy Van, making $2.3k the first month.
4/ To really make the product stand out, Tran slapped a Rooster logo on everything he sold.
Why? He was born in 1945: The Year of the Rooster.
He would later design the famous squeeze bottle and added a green cap as a sign of "freshness".
5/ The sauce's popularity took off in the early-1980s among Asian restaurants and grocers. He kept upgrading manufacturing to meet demand:
◻️ 1980: a 5k sq ft building in Chinatown LA
◻️ 1987: a 68k sq ft warehouse in Rosemand, CA
◻️ 2010: a 650k sq ft warehouse in Irwindale, CA
6/ Sriracha's success has come with:
◻️ No sales team (Tran has mostly maintained the same 10 distributors and wholesale pricing from the 80s)
◻️ No ads (Sriracha's cult-like status comes from "word of mouth")
In 2019, sales hit $150m (10% of the US hot sauce market).
7/ With so few ingredients, Tran prioritizes the best ones to win the market.
Timing fresh jalapeños is tough: the ripening window (green to red) leaves no room for error.
Due to the harvesting seasons, Huy Fong may make a whole year's supply of Sriracha in a 10-week span.
8/ For 28 years, Huy Fong was able to maintain its exacting quality standards with one exclusive jalapeño supplier.
In 2017, the partners had a falling out. Huy Fong now sources from 3 suppliers.
Its factory runs 16hrs a day and it goes through 100m pounds of chilis a year.
9/ Interestingly, Tran never trademarked "Sriracha" (he did trademark the green cap and rooster, though).
This is the reason why so many competing brands -- from Heinz to Tabasco -- have a "Sriracha" sauce.
10/ Tran doesn't care about competitors:
"I never worry about [other brands] because we're too busy making it. I can't make enough of my product to meet the demand, so let them have it and work together for the consumer."
Or brands using the name:
"It's free advertising."
11/ One competitor is back in Thailand: The Winyarat family purchased the original recipe in 1984 and creates "Sriraja Panich".
It uses Thai cayenne peppers instead of jalapeños but has struggled to make in-roads in the US.
12/ The universal appeal of Huy Fong's Sriracha is encoded in the label, which includes 5 languages.
In the US, the sauce has clearly achieved cult status (and was even named Bon Appetit's "Ingredient of the Year" in 2009).
13/ Investors have been knocking on Tran's door for decades.
In November 2020, Choulala hot sauce was acquired by spicemaker giant McCormick & Co. for $800m (on $92m sales).
A similar price / sales multiple (~9x) for Huy Fong easily nets a $1B+ valuation.
14/ Tran doesn't need the money. His motto is "a rich man's sauce at a poor man's price" (he caps retailer selling price <$10).
"My American Dream was never to become a billionaire. We started this b/c we like fresh, spicy chili sauce.”
His children will keep the legacy going.
15/ Follow @TrungTPhan for other glorious business stories.
PS. I wrote this thread because my parents told my sister I need more "Viet" content.
Here’s another Viet story for you, my great-grandfather was Vietnam’s leading nationalist at the turn of the 19th century and also sported a legendary beard: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_B%E1…
19/ FINAL NOTE: When Huy Fong moved to Irwindale, the City of filed a lawsuit alleging that the sauce-making released "odors and eye-watering airborne irritants".
A judge threw out the case in 2014 and now Huy Fong lets people tour the factory to judge for themselves.
20/ We are def talking about Sriracha on the next episode of the Not Investment Advice (NIA) podcast.
Throw me all your questions ("Is it OK to drink Sriracha?") and I'll answer them:
The invention of bánh mì is a combination of climate, trade and urban layout of Saigon in late-19th century designed by French colonist.
When the French captured the area in 1859, most economic activity in the region took place along the Saigon river.
The population built makeshift homes tightly bundled by the river banks. Outgrowth from this eventually lead to narrow alleyways between many buildings that is trademark of the city (the Khmer named the region Prey Nokor then French renamed it Saigon and then it was renamed to Ho Chi Minh City in 1976 after end of Vietnam War).
Over decades, the French created European street grids and built wide Paris-type boulevards in the city to funnel commerce to larger markets (also make the city easier to administer).
It was at these markets that French baguettes were introduced and traded.
Bánh mì bread is known for being flaky and crispy on the outside while fluffier on inside (so god damn good).
Two features of Saigon helped create this texture:
▫️Climate: The heat and humidity in Southeast Asia leads dough to ferment faster, which creates air pockets in bread (light and fluffy).
▫️Ingredient: Wide availability of rice meant locals added rice flour to wheat flour imports (which were quite expensive). Rice flour is more resistant to moisture and creates a drier, crispier crust.
Fast forward to the 1930s: the French-designed street layout is largely complete. Now, the city centre has wide boulevards intersected by countless narrow alleyways.
The design was ideal for street vendor carts. These businesses were inspired by shophosue of colonial architecture to sell all types of goods as chaotic traffic rushed by.
Vietnam has some of the most slapping rice and soup dishes, but many people on the move in the mornings wanted something more portable and edible by hand.
Bánh mì was traditionally upper class fare but it met the need for on-the-go food.
Just fill the bread with some Vietnamese ingredients (braised pork, pickled vegetable, Vietnamese coriander, chilies) along with French goodies (pate).
Pair it with cà phê sữa đá (aka coffee with condensed milk aka caffeinated crack) and you’re laughing.
Haven’t lived in Saigon for 10+ years but ate a banh mi every other day when I did.
While there, I also sold a comedy script to Fox (pitch: “The Fugitive meets Harold & Kumar set in Southeast Asia”).
reminder that no “asian guy and stripper” story will ever top Enron Lou Pai’s “asian guy and stripper” story
Totally forgot Lou Pai got the stripper pregnant.
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