Episode 79: Arla Foods: Gilai Nachmann on Open Innovation, the AI Nutrition Threat, and How to Pilot with a €15B Dairy Giant
In this episode, I sit down with Gilai Nachmann, Senior Project Manager of Open Innovation & Partnerships at Arla Foods, the largest dairy cooperative in Europe with €15 billion in annual revenue. Gilai breaks down Arla’s aggressive new mandate: sourcing 30% of all innovation ideas externally by 2030. He shares the exact playbook for startups looking to partner with Arla, detailing the specific problem statements they are actively funding pilots for—including sugar reduction, alternative cocoa, and navigating impending CO2 taxes. Gilai also reveals Arla's strategic fear of AI-driven personalized nutrition apps cutting FMCG brands out of the consumer relationship, and how startups can help them stay relevant in a digital-first food future.
🎧 Listen to the full episode to hear exactly how much sample volume you need to trigger a paid pilot with Arla and why pitching them precision fermentation dairy is a non-starter.
Key Facts Arla Foods Open Innovation:
Goal: To execute an Open Innovation strategy where 30% of all new product ideas come from external sources (startups, SMEs) by 2030.
Milestone: Integrated the Open Innovation team with an internal accelerator to drastically speed up the pilot and LOI process for external startups, reducing corporate bottlenecking.
Alex’s Top Findings:
The "Goldilocks" Timing for Novel Ingredients (2 Years Out). Startups often struggle with when to approach a massive FMCG corporate. Gilai is highly specific: if you are 4-5 years away from commercialization, it is too early. However, if you are exactly two years away from EFSA (European Food Safety Authority) regulatory approval and can produce 20-50 kilos for a pilot plant test, that is the perfect time to engage Arla so they can prepare to launch alongside your approval. "If you're two years away from EFSA, I'd say that's the perfect time to engage because we want to be first runners in the area... we can all launch together when you're ready... They need to have sufficient quantity for us to pilot it... at least 20 to 50 kilos."
The Strategic Threat of AI-Driven Nutrition. Arla isn't just looking for physical ingredients; they are actively scouting digital solutions. Gilai highlights a major corporate fear: if AI agents (like ChatGPT integrated with Instacart or HelloFresh) begin dictating personalized meal plans, legacy food brands could become invisible commodities. Arla wants to partner with digital platforms to ensure their products are the recommended health solutions inside these closed AI ecosystems. "If the AI picks your food for you, what is the position of a big FMCG company in this world?... Maybe in a future where AI selects food products for you, brands don't exist. And how do we stay relevant in that future?... We don't want to build these engines... but we want to be the health partner."
Don't Pitch Precision Fermentation Dairy to a Farmer Co-op. It is critical to know your audience. While Arla is actively seeking solutions for sugar reduction and alternative cocoa, Gilai warns startups against pitching precision-fermented dairy proteins (like synthetic whey or casein). Because Arla is fundamentally a cooperative owned by dairy farmers, their mandate is to support cow-based agriculture, not replace it. "Arla is a farmer-owned cooperative. And our opinion is we're not going to look into precision fermentation as a core area for our business. We're going to focus on building our farmers' capabilities... It's not something we're going to invest in doing pilots on."