The pipeline applies four operational definitions to qualify or disqualify each brand. These criteria were fixed before discovery began and are not adjusted per-brand.
"Giant hit"
A brand qualifies if it appears on at least one of these breakout lists, edition years 2021–2026:
- Bain & Company — US Insurgent Brands (annual since 2017). Methodology: $35M+ revenue in NielsenIQ-tracked channels, growth ≥10× category average over 5 years, positive growth last 2 years.
- Numerator — Brands to Watch / Fastest Growing Brands (annual). Methodology: proprietary consumer-panel data, survey psychographics, purchase metrics.
- Circana (formerly IRI/NPD) — US CPG Growth Leaders (annual). Methodology: tiered by revenue band ($100M to $8B+) with leaders in each tier by share gain and sales growth.
- Inc. 5000 (Food & Beverage cut, via Food Dive). Methodology: 3-year revenue growth, filtered to F&B.
- Pear Commerce — Top CPG Brands to Watch (annual). Methodology: editorial pick by retail-media platform.
- The Food Institute — Fastest-Growing F&B Brands (annual). Methodology: editorial pick drawing on Circana/NielsenIQ data.
Stronger signal: appearing on multiple lists, or the same list across multiple years. The Brands page is sorted by list-count, descending, for this reason.
"Not a product or brand extension"
A brand IS an extension (and disqualified) if:
- Launched as a sub-brand of an existing product line (e.g., Coke Zero, Cheerios Protein, Oreo Thins).
- A celebrity rebrand of an existing manufacturer's product where no new entity was formed.
- A private label or retailer brand.
- A line extension where the parent brand existed first and the new brand is clearly downstream.
A brand is NOT an extension (and qualifies) if:
- Founded as an independent company, even if later acquired by a strategic.
- Created a new category, format, or brand identity from scratch.
- Founded by a celebrity but as a new operating entity (e.g., Feastables — MrBeast's chocolate company, not Hershey's MrBeast bar).
"Last 5 years"
Two interpretations are tracked separately:
- Founding window: founded 2021–2026.
- Breakout window: first appeared on a breakout list 2021–2026.
The breakout window is the more useful frame for the headline question — it catches brands like Olipop and Liquid Death that were founded earlier but broke out during the window.
"US"
US-headquartered or US-market-primary. Brands like Samyang Foods (Korean) that show up on US lists due to US distribution growth are flagged but excluded from the primary answer set.
Edge cases (and how they're handled)
| Brand | Database verdict | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Athletic Greens / AG1 | extension (rebrand of older product) | Disqualified. |
| Ghost (energy) | independent founding (2016), acquired by Keurig Dr Pepper 2024 | Pre-acquisition appearances qualify. Ghost Energy (the drink, 2020) is is_extension: true. |
| Prime Hydration | independent (2022, Logan Paul + KSI) | New entity, new brand. Qualifies. |
| Feastables | independent (2021, MrBeast) | Explicitly excluded from the answer set per the question, but kept in the database as the reference point. |
| Tree Hut | created 2002 under Naterra International | is_extension: false because Tree Hut wasn't extending an existing Naterra brand. Edge case for "independent founders" vs. "new brand identity" — see judgment-call note on the Answer page. |
| Brand collabs (e.g., Liquid Death × Yeti) | Not new brands | Don't count as separate entries. |
What is NOT included
- Tech/software CPG-adjacent (Spoiler Alert, Bossa Nova Robotics) — infrastructure, not consumer brands.
- DTC services (meal kits as a service, subscription boxes that aren't shelf products).
- B2B ingredient suppliers (Plantible Foods).