Understanding Advisors with Jamie Borteck
The Startup CPG Podcast
Startup CPG
4.9 • 642 Ratings
🗓️ 7 March 2026
⏱️ 45 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In this episode of the Startup CPG Podcast, host Hannah Dittman sits down with Jamie Borteck, independent board member and advisor, to explore what it really means to bring an experienced operator into your corner—and why the right advisor can be the difference between surviving and scaling. The conversation dives deep into the advisor-founder dynamic, what makes a brand compelling to a seasoned operator, and why building the financial and operational foundation of your business early is non-negotiable.
Jamie shares his path from brand management training at Kraft Foods (Chips Ahoy, Ritz, Back to Nature, 100 Calorie Packs) to scaling high-growth startups including Food Should Taste Good (acquired by General Mills), Justin's (acquired by Hormel), and Grillo's Pickles (acquired by King’s Hawaiian)—each a chapter in over 20 years of CPG leadership. After years of presenting to boards, traveling relentlessly, and building businesses from scrappy startup to national category leader, Jamie channeled everything he learned into JCB Growth, a board-level advisory practice helping emerging CPG founders navigate growth strategy, leadership inflection points, and the journey toward exit.
Throughout the episode, Jamie shares how he evaluates brands and founders (product, brand name, founder energy, velocity data, margin structure, and scalability), what the ideal advisor-company relationship looks like in practice (weekly check-ins, catered to life stage and founder needs), and why the advisor role is as much about being a trusted thought partner and confidant as it is about strategic guidance. He also offers a compelling perspective on D2C as a proof-of-performance strategy for early-stage brands seeking investment, and why building brand equity before jumping into national retail may be the smarter path.
Whether you're a founder wondering when to bring on an advisor, an operator thinking about transitioning to an advisory role, or a brand trying to understand what board-level support actually looks like, this conversation offers clarity, candor, and a lot of hard-won wisdom from someone who has been in the weeds—and come out the other side.
Listen in as they discuss:
- Jamie's path: Kraft Foods (Chips Ahoy, 100 Calorie Packs) → Food Should Taste Good → Justin's → Grillo's Pickles → Independent Advising
- How to evaluate external partners: match gaps, life stage understanding, category knowledge, and mutual fit
- What the ideal advisor relationship looks like: weekly one-on-ones, situational support, catered to founder style and business needs
- Advisor vs. fractional: strategic mentorship and thought partnership vs. operational execution
- The lifecycle of an advisorship: from pre-Series A through exit, and when relationships evolve or end
- How Jamie evaluates brands: brand name, packaging, founder energy, velocity data, margin structure, scalability, and exit optionality
- Case studies: Rind Snacks (Matt Weiss's vision for snacking), Actual Veggies (iconic brand potential), Stone & Skillet
- Lessons learned: build the foundation first—forecasting, co-packer management, cash flow planning, and margin structure
- Handling obstacles well: accountability, transparency to the board, and human leadership in tough moments
- D2C as a proof-of-performance strategy: why early-stage brands with D2C traction have a fundraising advantage
- Why investors need data: velocity, Amazon ratings, brand metrics—not just a buyer saying "great"
- When to bring on an advisor: it's a gut-level call, not a revenue milestone
- Advice for operators transitioning to advising: be yourself, know where you add value, meet people organically
Episode Links:
Jamie Borteck, Independent Board Member/Advisor
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jamieborteck
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Show Links:
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- Episode music by Super Fantastics
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey friends, today I get to tell you about another amazing brand from our community that's in the Redwood Capital Partners Consumer Fund. They're called Sunny. Let's be honest, we all still have a soft spot for those nostalgic snacks from our childhood. We want that same convenience, but we're done with the junk. That's exactly why Sunny exists. |
| 0:25.4 | Sunny is bringing convenience and nutrition together for busy families and snacking adults. |
| 0:27.8 | We want products that are truly cleaned up. |
| 0:31.7 | We're talking seed oil-free, gluten-free, and totally free of refined sugars. |
| 0:36.5 | Get your hands on Sunny's sea salt or cheddar crackers or maybe one of their snack packs. |
| 0:41.4 | You could go for the sunflower butter and strawberry jam or maybe the margarita pizza snack. |
| 0:46.7 | You can shop Sunny at Target, Full Foods Market, and their crackers just launched at Select Sprouts Farmers Market locations. |
| 0:48.3 | You can check out their website at sunny snacks.com. |
| 0:51.2 | That's S-U-N-N-N-I-E snacks.com. That's s, you N-N-N-I-E-Snacks.com. |
| 1:16.4 | Sometimes I've heard founder just say, hey, Jamie, I need your advice on something. |
| 1:21.4 | We're trying to get investment and got into this one account, which isn't measured by Nielsen or something like that. |
| 1:22.7 | And buyer said, great. |
| 1:24.2 | And I'm like, no, you need some data. |
| 1:26.2 | You need some proof in the pudding. So advice to all that |
| 1:29.2 | is try to find those places. And if your category product type can work in D to C, even Amazon, |
| 1:36.6 | ratings, economics, and you're building something into the brand, I would go that route because |
| 1:43.2 | investors, I believe, will look at those stats |
| 1:45.7 | to say, hey, there's something here and I can't wait to see. Maybe you have to do one retail |
| 1:50.3 | test, but it could be small. And you might be in an early state and you can't afford or |
| 1:55.7 | don't have the team to do the national jump into retail so you can sector it that way. |
| 2:01.5 | That's one area I'm kind of intrigued by a lot. |
| 2:05.3 | Hey everyone. |
... |
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