What Bitchin’ Sauce Built Before The Revenue Story
By the time Bitchin’ Sauce hit $56 million in annual revenue, the company had been doing something unusual for years. It had built a childcare program for employees. Not as a headline, not as a recruiting play. Because Bitchin’ Sauce founder Starr Edwards believed no parent should have to choose between providing for their child and actually being present to raise them.
That belief, more than any single business decision, explains a lot about how this company operates at scale.

Bitchin’ Kids Started As A Playroom, Not A Reimbursement Program
The program did not launch as a financial benefit. It launched as a free, on-site childcare at the facility, a dedicated space where kids were in a loving, educational environment and parents could walk in during a break or at lunch to spend time with them. It was not daycare in the clinical sense. It was a workplace that felt like a neighborhood, with kids growing up alongside each other and parents becoming something closer to a community than a crew of coworkers.
When the company shifted to a remote workforce, Bitchin’ Kids shifted too. The on-site room became an annual reimbursement program so working parents could access support wherever they were. Since 2019, the company has offered more than $1.6 million through the program. Each eligible employee receives $7,500 per year, non-taxable.
Over the years, total benefits across the company average approximately $42,000 per employee annually.
The Retention Numbers Read Like Proof Of Concept
Voluntary turnover at Bitchin’ Sauce sits at 16.4%. The food industry average runs closer to 28%. That gap is not explained by pay alone. It is explained by people staying somewhere they do not want to leave.
Forty percent of the current team has been with the company for five years or more. Average tenure is four years. In an industry where churn is treated as a fixed cost, those numbers are genuinely unusual.
The business case for what Starr Edwards built is not complicated: employees who feel supported show up differently. They stay longer. They care more about the product. And in a company where the product has not changed its recipe since 2010 and still carries no preservatives, stabilizers, or gums, consistency of people is a big part of the secret sauce.
The $56M Number Has A Labor Story Inside It
Bitchin’ Sauce launched from farmers markets in San Diego, grew on reinvested revenue, and reached 15,000+ retail locations including Costco, Target, Kroger, Whole Foods, and Sprouts.
None of that trajectory happens with a revolving door of staff. The institutional knowledge that accumulates in a team with four-year average tenure, in a company where the founder is personally sourcing ingredients and the product requires human oversight to get right, is not easily replaced. The retention numbers are not incidental to the revenue number. They are part of how it got there.
The 2026 snacking platform, which includes Bitchin’ Chips, Salsacados, refrigerated bean dips, and a combo pack collaboration with The Good Crisp Company called the Snacker, requires the same thing the core dip always has: people who know the product and care about getting it right.
And that is a large part of what Bitchin’ Kids was always actually building.
About Bitchin’ Sauce
Bitchin’ Sauce is a family-owned, Carlsbad, California-based brand founded in 2010 by Starr and Luke Edwards. The company pioneered the almond-based dip category and has grown from local farmers markets to national distribution in 15,000+ retail locations including Costco, Whole Foods, Sprouts, Target, and Kroger. Committed to clean-label manufacturing and industry-leading employee benefits, Bitchin’ Sauce remains a plant-based, better-for-you leader in the snacking category. Learn more at bitchinsauce.com.
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