wiki/knowledge/brand-strategy/doudlah-farms-institutional-food-supply-partnership.md · 615 words · 2026-04-05
Doudlah Farms Institutional Food Supply Partnership (Marty Travis)
Overview
As of early January 2026, Doudlah Farms is part of a farmer network led by Marty Travis in Illinois that is developing a high-end institutional food supply chain targeting hospitals and large food service distributors (including Cisco) in the Chicago area. The partnership is nascent — no formal agreements are in place — but represents a potentially significant wholesale channel for both popcorn and beans at volumes far exceeding current DTC and B2B operations.
This opportunity surfaced during the [1] January 2026 marketing strategy call and was flagged as a long-term strategic priority rather than an immediate action item.
The Opportunity
Scale
- Potential order volumes of 400–4,000 boxes per week for popcorn and/or beans
- Institutional buyers (hospitals, large food service operators) offer recurring, high-volume demand with less price sensitivity than retail
Channel Fit
- Aligns with Doudlah Farms' premium, organic, regenerative positioning — institutional "clean food" procurement is a growing segment
- Complements the new [2] by creating a potential bulk/foodservice SKU pathway distinct from the retail premium bag
Network Structure
- Marty Travis leads a multi-farm cooperative network in Illinois
- Doudlah Farms already participates in this network, delivering product to Illinois monthly (approximately two pallets per trip)
- Travis's network handles last-mile distribution to institutional buyers, removing the need for Doudlah Farms to manage Chicago-area logistics directly
Long-Term Vision: Wisconsin Replication
Jason Doudlah articulated a broader strategic ambition: replicate the Marty Travis model in Wisconsin, with Doudlah Farms serving as a regional distribution hub for other local farmers supplying institutional buyers statewide.
This would position Doudlah Farms not just as a producer but as a regional aggregator and distributor — a meaningful shift in business model that could:
- Increase revenue per delivery run
- Deepen relationships with institutional buyers
- Strengthen the farm's role in the regional food system
Current Status
| Dimension |
Status |
| Formal agreement |
None — exploratory |
| Volume commitments |
None confirmed |
| Products in scope |
Popcorn, beans (both discussed) |
| Geographic focus |
Chicago (near-term); Wisconsin (long-term vision) |
| Next action |
No specific action item assigned as of Jan 2026 call |
Strategic Context
This partnership opportunity emerged in the same conversation where the team decided to reduce Amazon dependency following an account suspension. The institutional channel via Marty Travis represents one of several diversification vectors being considered alongside:
- The [3] (direct wholesale ordering)
- The [4] (childcare facility pipeline)
- DTC growth via the Doudlah Farms website
The Marty Travis channel is distinct in that it operates at a scale and through a network structure that the other channels cannot replicate in the near term.
- Marty Travis — Illinois farmer network lead; primary relationship holder for institutional channel development
- Jason Doudlah — Primary Doudlah Farms contact managing the Travis relationship
Open Questions
- What SKUs and pack sizes are appropriate for institutional buyers (hospitals, Cisco-distributed accounts)?
- Does the popcorn vending/small-bag format or a bulk foodservice format make more sense for this channel?
- What is the timeline for Travis's network to be ready to place initial orders?
- What pricing and margin structure applies at 400–4,000 boxes/week volumes?
- Who are the specific institutional buyers in the Chicago network, and what are their procurement cycles?