Nestlé Cereals — Lean Startup in a Global FMCG Machine

Nestlé's cereals category faces intense pressure from health trends and private label competition. As Global Innovation Coach, I was asked to help a cross-functional team navigate a new product development challenge: launching a high-protein cereal range in a category where taste is king.

The Challenge: The "Taste Penalty" of Health Innovation

Adding protein to a cereal typically degrades taste — a well-documented “taste penalty” that had killed previous launches. The team needed to identify whether a formulation existed that consumers would actually prefer over existing options, and validate this belief before committing significant R&D and manufacturing investment. Standard timelines would have taken 24–36 months. The brief was to do it in 18.

My Approach: Lean Startup Applied to Corporate Constraints

I coached the team through their first complete Lean Startup cycle — adapted to the realities of a large corporation, not a startup. This meant identifying the single riskiest assumption (“will consumers accept the taste of a high-protein cereal?”) and designing the fastest possible test to validate or disprove it.

I used Digital Experimentation to run rapid consumer tests on early-stage prototypes — before R&D had finalized the formula. This reversed the usual sequence: instead of perfecting the product then testing, we tested early and imperfect to learn fast. The insight from these tests directly shaped the final formula and eliminated dead-end development paths.

Results

Launch completed in under 18 months

roughly half the traditional timeline for this type of project

Taste penalty solved

consumer-validated formula identified early, before major R&D investment

Development dead-ends eliminated early

via rapid digital experimentation — significant budget saved

“Lean Startup in a corporation is not a methodology problem — it’s a mindset problem. The methods are simple. The hard part is convincing a team that it’s safe to test something that might fail. Once they see the first fast result, everything changes.”

Amandine Devergies