What 301 CPG Brands Reveal About People Inc.'s INVERSION BetNew CPG breakout data from the past decade and Q1 2026 earnings from Meta, Amazon and Google shed light on the speed and competition dynamics facing publisher-led product strategies.Last week’s essay on People, Inc.’s “INVERSION” strategy—owning branded products instead of licensing those brands—generated a fun debate in a thread with some colleagues from ON_Discourse. Matt Alldian, a CPG brand strategist and founding partner at Happy Robots—asked: “Other than [MrBeast’s] Feastables, what was the last giant hit in CPG that wasn’t a product or brand extension in the last 5 years?” He then answered the question himself using Claude Code, which ingested 383 brands across nine industry breakout lists (e.g., Bain Insurgent), and then filtered it down to 301 brands. Alldian asked Claude to enrich each company entry with data including founding year, ownership, revenue and exit data—then filtered it all against strict criteria. The exercise found that among the 301 brands, every “giant” hit in the last 5 years—excluding Feastables—was founded 2015–2019 and broke out over the last five years. That includes soda brand Olipop (2018, $1.85B valuation), water brand Liquid Death (2018, $1.4B valuation), nutritional supplements brand Alani Nu (2018, $1.8B Celsius acquisition) and meat snack brand Chomps (2012, ~$500M revenue). Among companies founded between 2021 and 2026, only Happy Dad, Lemme, Prime Hydration and Byoma are on multiple lists but none has reached the multi-list, billion-dollar-outcome tier yet. Only Byoma is not a creator-led brand. Last week I argued that “faster” is the key variable of the “faster, cheaper, better” maxim in both AI-era content development and product development. Last week’s earnings calls shed light on why this is a crucial market obstacle to People, Inc.’s ambitions. Past essays related to today’s analysis: |