4 Ways to Get Your Product on the Shelves at Whole Foods These BIZ Experiencess took on the Whole Foods challenge and won, demonstrating that a variety of approaches can help you make the cut.

By Lambeth Hochwald

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

To some BIZ Experiencess, the ultimate accomplishment is snagging a spot on the shelves of Whole Foods Market. But before you book your meeting with a store rep, you need to be sure your product fits the chain's demanding quality standards and the needs of its customers.

"The Whole Foods shopper is slightly different in that he or she is driven more by health and taste than by price," says Phil Lempert, a food analyst and trend watcher known as the Supermarket Guru. "You don't want to force-fit your product into Whole Foods if it isn't quite right."

So what's an BIZ Experiences to do to crack this market? First, it's important to understand that Whole Foods is decentralized. The company is organized by regions--11 in the U.S. and one in the U.K.--and each one has autonomous purchasing teams for all product categories. At the same time, decisions are also made on the local level. So, a single supermarket in the chain of 332 worldwide can opt to stock your line. "There are many paths to getting your product into our stores," says Jeremiah McElwee, executive Whole Body (supplements and personal care products) coordinator at Whole Foods in Austin, Texas.

Here are four strategies that can help you make the cut and grow your business:

Know What Makes Whole Foods--and Your Product--Distinctive.
If you think you're ready for your Whole Foods debut, first visit the company's website, which lists acceptable and unacceptable ingredients, quality standards and other important guidelines. "If your product doesn't fit, go back to the drawing board," McElwee says. If it does, make sure it meets one more requirement: distinctiveness. Whole Foods isn't looking for me-too products, McElwee says. For example, an existing Whole Foods vendor found a source for fair-trade cacao from a small tribe in Panama. "This company is going to be making chocolate bars and supplements using this super high-end antioxidant," McElwee says. "This was such a compelling story--it's a functional food, it's fair-trade, and we had nothing like it in the stores so it made sense to launch this line of products nationally."

Related: Gluten-Free Lifestyle Offers a Growing Market for BIZ Experiencess

4 Ways to Get Your Product on the Shelves at Whole Foods
Effie's Homemade co-owners Irene Costello, pictured left, and Joan MacIsaac show their line at the 2011 Summer Fancy Food Show in Washington, D.C.
Photo courtesy of the company

Pitch Your Local Whole Foods Store First.
But don't count on that kind of national launch. When Irene Costello, cofounder of Boston-based Effie's Homemade decided to try to expand the company's crackers and biscuits beyond specialty food stores, she and her partner first approached the local Brighton, Mass., Whole Foods store. "We had an untried, untested product line so we had to prove ourselves," she says. "We did demos at this store and met the marketing manager. She liked us and loved our first product, the oatcakes. She got behind the brand." Once Effie's established a track record in Whole Foods' North Atlantic region and the brand won some industry awards, Costello decided to gauge interest in stocking the line at more Whole Foods stores. Today, Effie's products are available at 93 stores in five regions.

Related: BIZ Experiencess Tap into the Healthy Spice Trend

Study Store Layouts.
Before you meet with a local Whole Foods buyer, study the store aisle-by-aisle so you know exactly where you think your product should be stocked. "Think of the store in real estate terms and sketch out whether your product is meant as a quick counter pickup or whether it's strictly a grocery or bakery item," says Mitchell Merrick, vice president of domestic sales at Jessie Steele, a whimsical apron and kitchen goods company based in Berkeley, Calif. "Tell your rep where you could see your product in the store. You want to lead the horse to water so to speak." Initially, Jessie Steele items were stocked only in the Whole Body department with personal care products, but the company eventually got them in the grocery aisles of some Whole Foods stores, too. The products are now stocked in about 30 stores in the Pacific Northwest and North Atlantic regions.

4 Ways to Get Your Product on the Shelves at Whole Foods
Gina Buskirk, co-owner of Gina's Homemade, prepares a cheese plate featuring her homemade mozzarella.
Photo courtesy of the company

Build Buzz at Farmers' Markets.
While you're getting your Whole Foods paperwork in order, sell your wares at your area farmers' markets. That's where many Whole Foods buyers browse regularly, looking for regional artisanal goods. That was the lucky discovery of Chris Buskirk, cofounder of Scottsdale, Ariz.-based Gina's Homemade, a line of soft Italian cheeses and biscotti. "When we started selling at farmers' markets, we didn't know there was any likelihood of the Whole Foods buyers seeing us there," he says. "We were primarily interested in developing a brand identity and getting our product in front of people who cared about food." After a few months working the farmers' markets, Buskirk started calling his local Whole Foods without getting a response. After several attempts, he finally reached a buyer, who knew about the company both because of the farmers' markets and because Whole Foods customers were coming in and asking for Gina's Homemade. "Happily, our line got approved on the spot" after a tasting, Buskirk says. Gina's Homemade is now available at the seven Whole Foods stores in Arizona, as well as the two in southern Nevada.

Related: College BIZ Experiencess Find a Green Niche in an Online Farmers Market

Lambeth Hochwald is a freelance journalist, whose stories have appeared in magazines such as Coastal Living, O The Oprah Magazine, Real Simple and Redbook. She is also an adjunct professor at NYU's Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Growing a Business

What Top Founders Know About Domains That Most BIZ Experiencess Miss

Top founders and VCs secure premium domains early to signal credibility, build trust and boost long-term brand equity and investor confidence.

Business News

75-Year-Old Billionaire Ray Dalio Just Sold His Last Shares in the Hedge-Fund Firm He Founded. Here's Why He's 'Thrilled About It.'

Dalio served in a variety of positions at Bridgewater Associates, including CEO, CIO and chairman, over decades.

Business News

Here's How Much Palantir Pays Its Top Tech Talent, From Software Engineers to AI Researchers

With stock up nearly 500% in a year, Palantir is booming. Here's how that translates into pay for its employees.

Starting a Business

I Built a $20 Million Company by Age 22 While Still in College. Here's How I Did It and What I Learned Along the Way.

Wealth-building in your early twenties isn't about playing it safe; it's about exploiting the one time in life when having nothing to lose gives you everything to gain.

Science & Technology

AI Isn't Plug-and-Play — You Need a Strategy. Here's Your Guide to Building One.

Don't just "add AI" — build a strategy. This guide helps founders avoid common pitfalls and create a step-by-step roadmap to harness real value from AI.