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Robotics can help food and beverage companies reach full potential, former Bai COO says


CPG industry veteran Barak Bar-Cohen believes tech and robotics have the ability to lead the food and beverage industry to the cutting edge of future trends. 

Bar-Cohen launched Sojo Industries, a manufacturing company using robotics that works with food and beverage businesses to create “variety packs” to be sold in bulk for products like snacks and beverages, with a focus on driving down emissions created within the food supply chain. Bar-Cohen said his late father, Dr. Avi Bar-Cohen, an expert in thermal science who worked with NASA on mobile roving units used for missions on the moon and Mars, inspired him to implement automated machinery into his new company.

In an interview with Food Dive, Bar-Cohen said the challenges food and beverage companies currently face, from keeping up with consumer trends to driving down emissions, can be tackled with the help of robotics technology.

Bar-Cohen served as the chief operating officer of better-for-you beverage maker Bai Brands from 2012 to 2017. That year it was acquired by Dr Pepper Snapple (now Keurig Dr Pepper) for $1.7 billion.

barak bar-cohen bai sojo

Barak Bar-Cohen, founder and CEO of Sojo Industries.

Courtesy of Sojo Industries

 

FOOD DIVE: After your experience in the C-suite at a large beverage company, what made you want to enter manufacturing?

BARAK BAR-COHEN: I was an early investor and the chief operating officer at Bai Brands. I did 100% of our variety packing in-house. Forty to 50% of the volume was variety packs, and it was really hard to manage that because over 80 percent of the industry is still manual.

We could not wait to get into more automated ways of doing business. We ended up buying a big robotic cell, but only ran it for six or seven months, and then ended up selling the business and that went with it. For a couple of years after leaving Bai I just kept getting call after call from friends in the industry, brands and people that I’ve worked with asking about variety packs. “How did you guys do it at scale? And how did you manage the multiple touches and all the pain points that come from, from the variety pack world.”

My dad had unfortunately passed in October 2020, and I was going through a lot of his publications. He was one of the top people in the world in heating and cooling of electronic components and got his PhD at MIT. I noticed that he had worked a lot on NASA projects, to Mars and had had to do a lot with the just the variances in temperature, which was his expertise: the reentry into the atmosphere, and all the material properties associated with that, and then the cold in space, and then stuff landing on multiple planets. And I noticed he worked on the mission to Mars, on July 4, 1997, which was the first actual robot to land on another planet. The name of that robot was Sojourner, named after African-American abolitionist Sojourner Truth.

I had the aha moment looking at the robotics and thought, why not take a page out of the wine industry, where a lot of the corking and bottling comes to the vineyard, right, not the other way around. Why not use mobility and robotics to solve this problem in the variety pack world. We shortened Sojourner to “Sojo” and filed a handful of patents around the anchoring level empowering and transporting of robotics and automated lines to other locations. I also needed a bricks and mortar environment just to start, so I got a 100,000 square feet location in Bristol, Pennsylvania, and decided I needed to get the band back back together. So I went ahead and called the the operators, forklift folks, engineers and commercial gang that I’ve worked with.

Since the beginning of the year, we’ve taken 635 metric tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere as a result of the fact that we brought lines onsite and we didn’t have to have trucks shipping things all over the world, which is the equivalent to 418 flights from Newark to LAX.

We’ve also been playing really close attention to the FDA’s Food Safety Modernization Act changes that are due to go into full effect January 20, 2026. We are trying to get ahead of of that and bring a more technology driven mindset to solving some of those problems. So if you can do those things, I think you’re building something special, you’re really building a technology business that is solving a huge problem in the variety pack world, and sort of applying that mindset to an industry that’s still mostly manual labor. For us, today it’s beverage, tomorrow it’s food, the next day it’s health and beauty. I see this world of variety packing is manifesting across industries.

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