Building The Brand with James Burtt

Grenade Founder Juliet Barratt: Building Carb Killa, £200M Exit & Why Success Felt Like Grief

1 h 13 min · 29. apr. 2026
episode Grenade Founder Juliet Barratt: Building Carb Killa, £200M Exit & Why Success Felt Like Grief cover

Description

Juliet Barratt is the co-founder of Grenade, one of the most successful British brands of the last decade. In this episode of Building The Brand, Juliet shares the real story behind Grenade, from launching with limited resources, driving a tank into the NEC to stand out at BodyPower, getting picked up by major retailers, creating the Carb Killa bar, helping bring protein into mainstream retail, taking on private equity and eventually selling to Mondelez. IN THIS EPISODE, JULES SHARES: ▪️ How Grenade was born from years of experience in sports nutrition ▪️ Why Juliet believes founder-market fit matters more than just having a good idea ▪️ How Grenade spotted a gap in a category full of generic white tubs and scientific names ▪️ Why the grenade-shaped packaging gave the brand instant memorability ▪️ How standing out at BodyPower helped get the attention of GNC ▪️ Why early brand building was about being different, not having the biggest budget ▪️ The story behind launching Carb Killa ▪️ How Grenade helped move protein bars from niche sports nutrition into mainstream food retail ▪️ Why timing was crucial to Grenade’s success ▪️ How the brand educated retailers and consumers at the same time ▪️ Why Juliet says the secret to Grenade’s success was simply “giving a shit” ▪️ The reality of having almost no money in the early days ▪️ Why Juliet and Al did not take salaries for years ▪️ How private equity changed the business ▪️ Why selling a majority stake may not always be the right move ▪️ What it really felt like to sell Grenade to Mondelez ▪️ The emotional impact of exiting a business you built from scratch ▪️ Building a business with your spouse ▪️ Why Grenade kept Juliet and Al together professionally even as their marriage changed ▪️ The difference between building a brand and running a numbers-led business ▪️ What Juliet looks for now when she works with founders and brands KEY MOMENTS: 0:00 — Intro 01:24 — The one thing that made Grenade successful 01:43 — Why “giving a shit” became Grenade’s real advantage 02:00 — Juliet and Alan’s experience before Grenade 03:14 — Why the first version of Grenade did not sell 04:20 — Going from distributor to brand owner 05:00 — The gap in the sports nutrition market 07:00 — Why Grenade’s branding came from gut instinct 08:46 — Retiring, getting bored and deciding to build again 10:25 — Creating a product people could actually feel working 12:26 — Wanting Grenade to be the Red Bull of sports nutrition 13:52 — Driving a tank into the NEC 15:00 — How Grenade started attracting athletes and advocates 17:00 — Why bricks and mortar made sense before DTC 18:43 — The tough early days of building Grenade 20:18 — Running lean, paying suppliers and not taking salaries 21:45 — Taking private equity in 2014 23:00 — Bringing in a CFO and freeing up the founders 25:00 — Launching Carb Killa 25:50 — Why Juliet still worries about money 28:16 — The emotional finality of the Mondelez deal 30:00 — Why selling Grenade felt like giving away a child 31:05 — Still feeling protective over the brand 32:08 — PAUSE POINT: Creating a category 35:00 — Leaving the business and losing founder identity 40:31 — How Carb Killa moved Grenade into mainstream FMCG 41:30 — Educating Tesco and helping build the protein category 45:00 — PAUSE POINT: Why timing matters in business 47:00 — Why taste mattered more than health claims 48:19 — Building Grenade as husband and wife 51:44 — Did Grenade break up the marriage or hold it together? 56:40 — PAUSE POINT: The truth about co-founder relationships 58:45 — How the Oreo collaboration came about 1:01:10 — Did Juliet and Al build Grenade to sell? 1:03:00 — Selling a majority stake and what Juliet would rethink 1:07:34 — Why founder DNA matters as a business scales 1:08:59 — Carb Killa, timing and creating opportunity 1:10:30 — Juliet’s work with founders, boards and entrepreneurship 1:12:00 — What Juliet looks for in the brands she supports

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