Sargento’s Product Development and Manufacturing Work Together for New Natural Cheese

Working with manufacturing from the earliest stages of development meets consumer expectations, retailer needs, and the company’s own business goals.

Sargento's three new innovations, Sargento Natural American Cheese, Sargento Seasoned Shredded Cheese, and Sargento Shareables.
Sargento's three new innovations, Sargento Natural American Cheese, Sargento Seasoned Shredded Cheese, and Sargento Shareables.
Sargento

Innovation only creates value when it can be produced at scale, consistently, and cost-effectively. Product development teams may dream up the concepts, but those concepts never leave the lab without manufacturing know-how. Likewise, operations can only realize their full potential when they’re aligned with consumer needs and market direction. The interplay between these two functions is central to the long-term success of companies across the food industry.

Sargento Foods offers an example of how the balance is struck. Rod Hogan, Senior Vice President of Innovation, has spent nearly three decades with the company, helping to bring some of its most ambitious projects to life. “Innovation is core to what we do,” he says. “It goes back to our founder, Leonard A. Gentine, who was an innovator at his core. Sargento changed the way American consumers shop for, buy, and consume natural cheese. That spirit continues to drive our business today.”

Hogan describes innovation at Sargento as a meeting point between consumer expectations, retailer needs, and the company’s own business goals. Any new product must deliver across all three. That is why his team works in lockstep with manufacturing from the earliest stages of development. “It’s not just Rod sitting in an office and picking cool ideas,” he says. “We’ve got structured processes, rigorous approaches, and strong collaboration across R&D, business, and operations. We follow the process consistently, guided by our strategic plan.”

The launch of Sargento Natural American cheese slices illustrates the depth of this collaboration. The idea was simple: Create a natural cheese that delivers the melt, flavor, aroma, and texture that consumers are familiar with. In other words, a natural cheese that could melt and taste like processed cheese. But turning that vision into reality required a decade of persistence. “That is the longest project I’ve ever worked on in my professional career,” Hogan says. “We had project teams working for years, and at times we couldn’t get over the technological hurdles. We even stopped and told our R&D team, ‘You go develop the science, and when you have it, we’ll come back.’ Ultimately, it required rethinking many aspects of how natural cheese is made.”

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