A One-Stop-Shop Co-Manufacturer

A wide range of services as well as an emphasis of employee engagement drive the Utah-based co-manufacturer Honeyville into the future.

Honeyville’s Ogden Utah facility.
Honeyville’s Ogden Utah facility.

Like many co-manufacturers, Honeyville needs to continuously differentiate itself to attract and serve its customers. To do that, the 70-year-old company history delivers a wide range of services and strong investment in its workforce kept the company thriving during the labor shortages the industry faced in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Honeyville, a co-manufacturer serving the food and beverage industry, was founded in Honeyville, Utah as a milling and processing plant for specialty grains in 1951 by Lowell Sherrat, Sr. and remains a primarily family-owned business.

A history of innovation and entrepreneurial drive

When Lowell Sr. died, he left the company to his son, Lowell Jr., who was bent on driving Honeyville into the 21st century. The company entered the business of buying and reselling bulk ingredients and by the mid 1990s, the company had spread to Ogden, Utah, Chandler, Ariz. and Rancho Cucamonga, Calif. And had invested in its first blending operation, primarily for bulk.

By the late 90s, blending operations had extended to small pack for CPG customers and the contract manufacturing side of the business was born. Honeyville’s co-man business has become a growth engine for the company and mainly operates out of the Ogden facility. The co-man invested $8 million last year in new equipment and robotics and is investing another $5.5 million in new equipment this year.

Johnny Ferry, vice president of business development at Honeyville.Johnny Ferry, vice president of business development at Honeyville.“Lowell Jr. could look at a line and he could say we can do this better. Or he was willing to take his money which was invested in the company and figure it out,” says Johnny Ferry, vice president of business development, who started as a production line worker at the company in 2000 and married into the Sherrat family.

Lowell Jr. passed on in 2018, and the company is now owned by various family members. They have brought on industry professionals, such as David Brown, who has been CEO since September 2022. This transition allows Honeyville to grow in new ways, while striving to keep the same innovative drive that Lowell Sr. and Lowell Jr. instilled.

Considering Honeyville’s history with dry ingredients, it’s no surprise that it serves the breakfast, baked goods and cold and hot drinks industries, but it also delves into dry blends for dinner meals, soups and side dishes. Besides traditional co-man services to CPG and brand customers, Honeyville also works in e-commerce, direct-to-consumer and emerging brands. Co-man services the company provides include:

  • Dry ingredient mixing, blending and packing
  • Custom grain milling
  • Heat treatment to ensure sterilized dry ingredients
  • Material sourcing
  • Outsourced supply chain for logistics, fulfillment and supply planning
  • In-house research and development (R&D) services, including formulation and nutritional analysis

Primary packaging formats range from vertical — sachet, pillow bag, bag in box — to horizontal format — fill pouch and pre-made pouch — to cupping format. Honeyville also provides bulk bib, super sack and pinch bottom formats.

   Connectivity – Making the Data Support the Work

Co-man as an innovation partner

Searching for innovative solutions widens the CM/CP’s range of abilities, which can open the door to further contracts that require abilities the company didn’t realize it could possess. Ferry shares two projects that increased Honeyville’s applications.

The first he stumbled upon at a trade show. A few soccer moms had created a granola dish that was healthier and tastier for their children and was being served as oatmeal-in-a-cup out of their garage. At the time, the concept was fairly new to the industry. Lowell Jr. gave Ferry the green light and the company lined up tables in the warehouse, dropping in the ingredients until the process and ratios had been nailed down.

Then came automating the line to improve efficiency. Through Honeyville’s blending capabilities, the process was decreased to four drops — oats, powders, berries, and one other variable component. The company experienced enough success with that processing line that a second line and a high-speed third line were also opened.

Honeyville’s cupping line.Honeyville’s cupping line.The second project involved a large brand that approached Honeyville last year to put a mix in a rigid, traditional 502 canister with metal end-seam paperboard. Due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, the costs of those materials had gone up exponentially. Honeyville connected the customer with the packaging supplier but the high cost took the project off the table. Ferry offered to find another packaging solution.

Keeping in mind that the customer wanted a durable container, Ferry and the Honeyville team took their cup format and connected with their supplier to create a giant-sized version to fit three pounds of product. The new packaging format cut the cost of manufacturing by more than half. Other benefits of the new format were improved shelf space utilization and recyclability.

“We looked at what we would have to do to modify our equipment to make it work on the line. And it was a simple plate change to go from a small little round to a bigger container that would nest that as we filled it. And the customer loved it. It resurrected the five million pound a year project,” says Ferry.

He also explains that thinking of the project as simply a larger version of their smaller container format brought many benefits, one of which was the higher speed those lines work at. The new machine has been running since June for three customers with more on the way. What normally would have been about a two-year process was compressed to six months and the product will be on the shelves this fall 2023.

Focusing on a diversity of supply

CM/CPs can offer other services to be a valuable partner to its brand and CPG customers. Ferry listed diversity of machinery — the ability to run different pack formats as customers branch out to reach more consumers — and diversity of supply, which involves essentially becoming a one-stop-shop, as examples.

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