Vital Farms: Matt O’Hayer. How a serial entrepreneur re-branded the egg
How I Built This with Guy Raz
Guy Raz | Wondery
4.7 • 31.4K Ratings
🗓️ 23 March 2026
⏱️ 70 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
For decades, a dozen eggs was just… a dozen eggs.
No story. No real branding. No reason to care who produced them.
Then Matt O’Hayer came along and asked a question almost nobody in America was asking: what if store-bought eggs could be different? What if they tasted better, looked better, and came from hens raised in a much more humane way?
The business he launched– with 20 hens and some used trailers– is now the number-one pasture-raised egg producer in the US, with a network of 600 farms, and a projected revenue of nearly $1B this year.
When he started Vital Farms, Matt was in his 50s, living in an RV on the farm, and trying to convince people to pay premium prices for eggs.
Before that, his passion for business drove him to pursue an astonishing range of ideas: carpet-cleaning, a barter-exchange franchise, a stint as a charter-boat captain and broker. One of his businesses left him nearly broke after 9-11, and there were many other hard lessons along the way.
This is a story about metabolizing failure into success, and turning one of the most overlooked shelves in the grocery store… into a billion dollar opportunity.
What you’ll learn:
- The hard lessons Matt learned from 3 (+) decades of founding businesses
- How 9/11 changed his life
- What 4 years as a boat captain taught him about leading–and serving
- How “conscious capitalism” became the blueprint for Vital Farms
- Why pasture-raised eggs were a branding opportunity hiding in plain sight
- How Whole Foods became an early and critical partner
- Why great products grow faster when customers do your work for you
Timestamps:
- 07:48 – “I didn’t have 300 dollars.” Matt starts a carpet-cleaning company with no real plan
- 11:31 – The barter business that taught Matt how to scale complex ideas
- 17:58 – Building a travel company, taking it public, and growing it to roughly $50 million in sales
- 22:57 – The morning of 9/11: Matt watches his business collapse in real time
- 25:59 – Starting over, Matt becomes a charter boat captain –plus chef, teacher, and toilet-fixer
- 31:16 – The blog essay that transformed how Matt thought about business
- 34:19 – The lightbulb conversation: pasture-raised eggs could become a real company
- 41:03 – Starting the farm in Austin: “I bought a thousand baby chicks.”
- 43:58 – The first eggs taste great, but nobody wants to pay for them
- 49:53 – Finally: The first Whole Foods pallet
- 50:52 – A label mistake gets Vital Farms pulled from shelves
- 1:03:09 – How the egg carton became one of Vital Farms’ most powerful branding tools
- 1:08:24 – Why humane eggs cost more—and why Matt believes they should
This episode was produced by Kerry Thompson, with music by Ramtin Arablouei.
Edited by Neva Grant, with research help from Casey Herman.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I heard this stat recently that really stuck with me. Most businesses only use 20% of their data. |
| 0:08.4 | That's like reading a book with most of the pages torn out. How can you get the full story? And where's the other 80% of that data? |
| 0:17.1 | It's trapped in emails, buried in call logs and chat transcripts where businesses can't use it. |
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| 0:31.1 | Because when you know more, you grow more. Visit HubSpot.com to get started. |
| 0:39.9 | This podcast is brought to you by Squarespace. |
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| 1:50.3 | From the time that you started with the first hens until the time you could actually sell eggs. |
| 2:01.3 | Was it weeks? Was it months? |
| 2:03.3 | Months. I figured to get started, I wanted to start selling to restaurants. |
| 2:06.9 | But I was getting a lot of nose because they were paying. |
... |
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