Betty Crocker
History Timeline
- 1921 — Washburn Crosby Company (later General Mills) receives thousands of consumer letters asking for baking advice
- 1921 — Company creates "Betty Crocker" as a pen name for consumer response letters: "Betty" for a wholesome, friendly feel; "Crocker" in honor of retired executive William G. Crocker
- 1936 — Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air debuts on NBC radio — one of the first cooking shows on radio
- 1936 — First Betty Crocker portrait painted based on a composite of employee preferences — the face is not a real person
- 1950s — Betty Crocker becomes the #1 food brand in America, riding the post-war baking boom
- 1960s — Betty Crocker cake mix becomes the best-selling cake mix brand in the US
- 1996 — General Mills creates a digitally rendered Betty Crocker to modernize the image
- 2005 — Forbes ranks Betty Crocker as the #1 most trusted food brand in America
- 2021 — Brand celebrates its 100th anniversary
Business Model
- Product Range: Cake mixes, frosting, brownie mixes, baking accessories, recipe books (Betty Crocker Cook Book has sold 65+ million copies)
- Brand Extension: Betty Crocker name extends to cookware, kitchen tools, and a content platform with thousands of recipes
- Digital Presence: bettycrocker.com is one of the most visited recipe sites in the US
Moat Analysis
- Intangible Brand Asset: Betty Crocker is a fictional character with 100 years of consumer trust — no real person could have this longevity
- Recipe Database: Over 30,000 tested recipes create a content moat that competitors cannot easily replicate
- Cultural Embeddedness: Generations of Americans have used Betty Crocker products — the brand is woven into family food traditions
Key Data
- Parent: General Mills (NYSE: GIS)
- Book Sales: Betty Crocker's Picture Cook Book: 65+ million copies sold
- Brand Trust: Ranked #1 most trusted food brand by Forbes (2005)
- Product Range: 200+ SKUs across baking mixes, frostings, and baking accessories
Interesting Facts
- Betty Crocker was never a real person — the name was invented by a male advertising executive in 1921. Seven different "portraits" of her have been painted over the decades, each reflecting the ideal American woman of that era
- In 1936, General Mills held a contest to find the "real" Betty Crocker — 21,653 women submitted photos. The company selected five "Betty Crocker Homemakers" as brand ambassadors, all chosen to match the painted portrait