
đ° Sunday Business: Lessons from Building a BBQ Brand
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Sunday Business: Lessons from Building a BBQ Brand
I remember the first thing my co-packer told me:
âThis is not a get-rich-quick business. Youâre going to have to work hard, and youâre going to have to sell it.â
That was Jonathan Leal from Miloâs WGW, and it was the most honest advice Iâve ever gotten in this journey. Before him, every co-packer I talked to promised me overnight success. They wanted the recipe, told me how fast we could scale, how much money Iâd make. But Jonathan slowed me down and asked me if I was sure this was the business I wanted. That was the first time I felt like I was talking to someone I could trust.
Like most entrepreneurs, I started my business chasing financial independence and more time with my family. The truth? In the early years, you get neither. A young business is like a newborn â crying, hungry, always needing you. You lose sleep, you sacrifice weekends, and you pour everything into getting it to walk on its own.
For me, the challenge was even bigger. I was recovering from two eye surgeries, sidelined during COVID, and staring at the reality that I couldnât keep driving to Staten Island at 3 a.m. for work anymore. Starting a business wasnât just about money â it was about survival and legacy. I needed something I could build, own, and eventually pass down to my son.
The hardest truth Iâve learned? Sales donât equal profit. Everyone will tell you about million-dollar sales on Amazon. What they donât say is you can do a million in sales and owe Amazon $999,999 â walking away with a dollar and a headache. Google ads can burn you the same way. If you donât know what youâre doing, youâll pay thousands for clicks that never convert. Influencers will brag about five million views, but views donât pay bills unless they turn into sales.
Thatâs why every decision matters. Every dollar you spend, every partner you trust, every risk you take. And thatâs why I put this story out here â so you donât fall into the same traps I did. Thereâs no get-rich-quick. Thereâs only consistency, discipline, and the daily choice to sell, grow, and protect your business.
1) Timing is everything
Donât launch until your product is tested and loved outside of family and friends. Your cousin might rave about your sauce because itâs free. That doesnât mean theyâd pay $7.99 for it. Real testing comes from strangers, at markets and tastings, where feedback isnât biased by love or loyalty.
2) The co-packer choice
The hardest part of my journey was finding a co-packer that could handle everything in-house â FDA testing, stability, pH, shelf-life. Many places only test one or two things, which forces you to juggle 3â4 labs. I chose a co-packer who could do it all. That saved me money, time, and stress. And it meant my product hit the shelf faster, without bouncing between specialists.
3) Donât go it alone financially
One of my biggest mistakes was self-funding. It drained me and slowed growth. If I could go back, Iâd start with a business loan or even a Kickstarter. Funding gives you room to scale, market, and breathe. Self-funding often keeps you small, tired, and boxed in.
4) Business plan before business
Write your plan before you file your paperwork. Know your sales goals. Know your pricing. Know how many units you want to move in Year 1. Be realistic, and price based on ingredients + packaging + time + margin. Donât guess. Numbers tell you whether youâre building a business or a hobby.
5) Quality matters more than shortcuts
I chose more expensive ingredients on purpose. Why? Because I eat this food. My family eats this food. I wanted it clean, premium, and filler-free. Customers can taste the difference. Cheap spices with fillers might pad margins, but they weaken your brand. Never settle on quality.
Why Made in America matters
For me, quality isnât just whatâs in the bottle â itâs who makes it. Thatâs why Iâve always kept my products made in America. Could I save a few pennies producing overseas? Maybe. But the truth is, between tariffs, shipping, and lost oversight, you donât really save. And what you lose in trust and pride is worth far more than a few cents.
Every bottle of Uncle Clarence BBQ sauce is blended, packed, and sealed here by American workers. Iâve been a laborer myself, my parents were laborers, and Iâll never forget the hands that keep this country moving. Supporting them isnât just talk â itâs part of how I do business. When an American worker puts their stamp of approval on my bottle before it ever reaches me, thatâs a seal of quality I can believe in.
Thatâs why knowing your co-packer matters. They arenât just a factory; theyâre the people you trust to carry your standard. If they respect the product, your customers will taste it. At the end of the day, if workers here donât have jobs, how are they supposed to buy the very products weâre making? For me, itâs simple: keep it local, keep it honest, keep it high quality.
6) Taxes, paperwork, and frugality
Learn your state tax codes or hire a planner. Keep your books clean from Day 1. And spend carefully. In business, Iâve always felt like a seal swimming 2 miles from land with sharks circling. Everyone wants a bite. Marketers, consultants, vendors â theyâll promise the world, but most only want your money. Be frugal. Vet every partner. And never sign a long-term deal without a trial.
7) Contracts and trust
Give everyone three months to prove themselves. Then, if it works, sign for a year. If it doesnât, walk away. Donât lock yourself into 12 months of payments with someone who isnât delivering. And remember: if youâre paying them, you deserve every ounce of value. Donât feel guilty for demanding results â itâs business, not friendship.
8) Confidence is non-negotiable
If you donât believe in your brand, your product, your business â why should anyone else? Confidence isnât arrogance; itâs clarity. I know my sauces and rubs can stand with anyoneâs, and I welcome the test. Competition doesnât scare me, because Iâm not competing with anyone. Iâm building my lane. Confidence means I can sell better than anyone else because I know what Iâve built. And confidence grows with consistency â every batch, every sale, every win. Donât wait for permission or validation. Believe in it, then go prove it.
9) Growth takes time
You wonât succeed overnight. Not in 12 months, not even in 4 years. Some businesses take 10 years before they feel stable. Think like a farmer planting seeds. Every year, you sow, water, and wait. Some crops die, some thrive, but the harvest always comes with time and persistence.
10) Master your craft
Whether itâs sauce, rubs, or smoked meats, learn it inside out. Read. Study. Watch. Test. Be the best at what you do. Elevate your product every chance you get. Because at the end of the day, anyone can start a business â but only the ones who keep learning survive.
Final takeaway: Starting is easy. Sustaining is hard. The difference comes down to patience, confidence, and decisions. Learn when to say no, sleep on every deal, and never stop rebuilding. Thatâs how you stay alive in an ocean full of sharks â and eventually make it to land.
â Clarence âCoryâ Mitchell, Founder of Uncle Clarence BBQ
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