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How an Olive Oil Lover Found Success in The US Market

After discovering her passion for extra virgin olive oil in Crete, Joanne Lacina built a successful importing and online retail business in the U.S.

Joanne Lacina
By Daniel Dawson
Mar. 13, 2024 16:25 UTC
5.6K reads
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Joanne Lacina
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Joanne Lacina dis­cov­ered her love for olive oil while teach­ing in Crete, lead­ing her to found Olive Oil Lovers to bring high-qual­ity olive oils to the U.S. mar­ket. Over the years, she has seen a rise in olive oil con­sump­tion in the U.S., dri­ven by fac­tors such as health ben­e­fits, increased demand for unique fla­vors, and expo­sure to diverse olive oils through tourism in the Mediterranean.

Joanne Lacina did not become an olive oil lover until her mid-20s when she expe­ri­enced an epiphany on Crete.

A few years after fin­ish­ing uni­ver­sity, the Minnesota native decamped to the Mediterranean island home to about one-third of Greek olive oil pro­duc­tion.

Launching a brand in the U.S. is a very costly and risky endeavor. It was true then, and it’s true today. That’s just the real­ity.- Joanne Lacina, founder, Olive Oil Lovers

After col­lege, I moved back to Minneapolis and worked for a legal claims pro­cess­ing com­pany,” she told Olive Oil Times. It was a great com­pany, but I wanted to do more in life than that.”

Lacina took a sec­ond job work­ing in a restau­rant, and after sav­ing enough money, she signed up to be an English teacher in Crete.

See Also:Reflections on 45 Years Championing Italian Olive Oil in America

It was just a four-week pro­gram, but I ended up stay­ing for two years,” she said. I made some good friends from the pro­gram. It’s a beau­ti­ful island. Summer was com­ing. The food was amaz­ing, and I wasn’t in a hurry to leave.”

Lacina soon started work­ing for an olive oil com­pany. I became very inter­ested in this deli­cious prod­uct that I was eat­ing with every meal,” she said.

The extra vir­gin olive oil Lacina tasted on the island was a far cry from the mass-mar­ket brands her mother kept in the fridge in Minnesota dur­ing the 1980s and 1990s.

That’s all I knew of olive oil, so I was just blown away by the fla­vor,” she said, adding that the quan­ti­ties of olive oil used by the Greeks – esti­mated at 12 kilo­grams per per­son annu­ally – also came as a sur­prise.

Lacina became fur­ther entwined in the olive oil busi­ness when the com­pany enlisted her to help set up an import­ing and pack­ag­ing facil­ity in the United States.

I was learn­ing a lot about the indus­try, but I was still very green and wanted to learn more,” she said. This was just a nat­ural path to con­tinue, to come back to the U.S. and try to bring great olive oil with me.”

Lacina found that distributing olive oil in the U.S. was very different from doing so in Europe.

Lacina returned to the U.S. in 2008 and spent two years set­ting up the facil­ity, which even­tu­ally imported Greek, Spanish and Italian olive oils. The goal was to pack­age for pri­vate labels and have our brands sell at retail and to food ser­vice,” she said.

Lacina soon found that dis­trib­ut­ing olive oil in the U.S. was far dif­fer­ent from doing so in Europe. It was quite a learn­ing curve,” she said. The U.S. does not oper­ate in the same way as European super­mar­ket chains and dis­tri­b­u­tion chan­nels.”

Lacina quickly found that super­mar­kets and restau­rants were more inter­ested in find­ing the best price point than dif­fer­en­ti­at­ing olive oils by their organolep­tic pro­files.

Launching a brand in the U.S. is a very costly and risky endeavor,” she said. It was true then, and it’s true today. That’s just the real­ity.”

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While Lacina was try­ing to estab­lish the company’s U.S. foot­print, she trav­eled to food shows world­wide, meet­ing pro­duc­ers and try­ing their extra vir­gin olive oils.

By this point, I knew that the super­mar­ket chan­nel was not going to be the best route for many of these brands, espe­cially smaller com­pa­nies,” she said. They have small bud­gets and expen­sive oper­a­tions. These are not cheap every­day oils. They are beau­ti­ful, spe­cial prod­ucts, and they cost a bit more.”

Lacina samples freshly-milled extra virgin olive oil with the award-winning Pruneti brothers in Tuscany. (Photo: Joanne Lacina)

Lacina real­ized that super­mar­ket shelves, where a bot­tle of high-qual­ity extra vir­gin olive oil can spend three months before it is pur­chased, were not the best place to show­case these brands.

At the time, e‑commerce was becom­ing increas­ingly com­mon­place. Lacina and her part­ners decided to set up a web­site ded­i­cated to sell­ing olive oil.

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In 2010, this idea came to fruition, so I set forth on a two-year project sourc­ing oils, going to trade shows, meet­ing pro­duc­ers that I had come to know, and going on har­vest tours in Spain, Greece and Italy,” she said.

By 2012, Lacina founded Olive Oil Lovers. And here we are nearly fif­teen years after the idea came into my head, and, yes, peo­ple absolutely buy olive oil online.”

However, bring­ing olive oil from small-scale, high-qual­ity pro­duc­ers across the Mediterranean to con­sumers’ doorsteps in the U.S. remains com­pli­cated.

By December or January each year, Lacina starts order­ing oils using com­pany ana­lyt­ics that show sales trends and prod­uct sales his­to­ries.

Over the years, she has become adept at iden­ti­fy­ing trendy pro­duc­ers with strong sales growth and has kept those oils well-stocked for her cus­tomers.

Ordering is always a fun, com­plex time,” she said. I spend about one month at the begin­ning of the har­vest sea­son work­ing long hours to order all these prod­ucts myself. Then I play Tetris, putting together beau­ti­ful pal­lets of all the prod­ucts I order.”

Lacina stores her imported oils in a dedicated warehouse before shipping them off to individual consumers. (Photo: Joanne Lacina)

These pal­lets are then gath­ered in the ware­houses of local con­sol­ida­tors in Greece, Italy and Spain before being packed into ship­ping con­tain­ers and sent to New York.

Lacina does not worry too much about the extra vir­gin olive oils being shipped at cool enough tem­per­a­tures since the Northern Hemisphere’s har­vest takes place in the autumn, and the con­tain­ers nav­i­gate the North Atlantic in the win­ter.

Once the ship­ping con­tain­ers arrive in New York, they are sent to the company’s ware­house 20 min­utes away and stored in cool, dark con­di­tions year-round until they are pur­chased by a cus­tomer and shipped to their door.

Over the past decade and a half, Lacina has seen a trans­for­ma­tion in the olive oil world. Initially, she said it was rare to find com­pa­nies har­vest­ing olives early to pri­or­i­tize intense fla­vors and supe­rior qual­ity over quan­tity.

Now, the trend has caught on. Today, there are far too many pro­duc­ers than I could ever rep­re­sent, but that’s a great thing,” she said.

Along with qual­ity, Lacina has seen a rev­o­lu­tion in pack­ag­ing. She believes that how olive oil is pre­sented is very impor­tant to con­sumers. While pack­ag­ing must be func­tional, beau­ti­fully labeled bot­tles help catch con­sumers’ atten­tion.

In 2023, the United States over­took Spain and became the world’s sec­ond-largest olive oil con­sumer. Lacina said she has seen a change in pref­er­ence for larger for­mats as more Americans use more olive oil.

The bag-in-box is becom­ing more trendy,” she said. Our cus­tomers appre­ci­ate larger for­mats. They’re more cost-effec­tive. They want a five-liter bag-in-box in the kitchen that keeps the oil fresh. If you go through a lot of oil, it’s a great option.”

Lacina visits producers to see the harvest, milling and storage. (Photo: Joanne Lacina)

In recent years, Lacina has also seen increased demand for olive oil with high lev­els of polyphe­nols from con­sumers and home­o­pathic med­ical offices. A big sell­ing point is, of course, the health fac­tor,” she con­firmed.

America’s grow­ing appetite for extra vir­gin olive oil has also led Lacina to look for new fla­vors and cul­ti­vars to offer her con­sumers. As much as I love Picual, Koroneiki and Arbequina, there are a lot of those oils out there,” she said. I’m look­ing for some­thing unique.”

Lacina believes the rise in tourism to the Mediterranean over the past few decades has helped increase olive oil con­sump­tion back home and exposed con­sumers to a more diverse range of olive oils.

They try a really good oil for the first time, and it just opens their mind,” she said. Then, it’s really hard to return to a generic, cheaper oil that does­n’t taste great. That’s why I think con­sump­tion will con­tinue to grow in the U.S.”

While she agrees that the U.S. could soon over­take Italy and become the world’s largest olive oil con­sumer, Lacina says there is no sin­gle trend that U.S. con­sumers are fol­low­ing. Customers love all kinds of things,” she said. Everyone’s palate is dif­fer­ent.”


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