From Texas Humor to 120,000 Orders a Month: How JB Sauceda Built and Sold a Culture-First 3PL | Supply Chain Saga Ep. 015
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
JB Sauceda is a serial entrepreneur who went from commercial photographer to Twitter parody account (Texas Humor) to launching his own retail brand — and when he couldn't find a 3PL that met his standards, he built one. Sauceda Industries grew from a 3,000 SF garage operation to 125,000 SF and 120,000 orders per month before being acquired by Cart.com in a 30-day close in July 2021. JB explains how culture, bootstrapping, and a "yes and" mentality drove every stage of growth.
TOPICS COVERED:
- From commercial photography (NYT, Wired, Southwest Airlines, Yeti) to launching Texas Humor on Twitter
- Why photography and logistics are the same business: vision, budget, timeline, and a rotating cast of people
- "Give a Shit" as a core value: writing job descriptions that attract the right people and repel the wrong ones
- Bootstrapping from 3,000 SF to 125,000 SF and $13M in revenue with zero outside investment
- Employee loan programs, paternal leave, and benefits that create generational wealth at no cost
- The 30-day exit to Cart.com: why clean books and an SPA vs. asset sale made it possible
- Why the Shopify Fulfillment Network mattered — and how Sauceda shipped the very first SFN package
- The 4PL model critique: why "software will take care of that" is never the full answer
- Venture capital in logistics: why Convoy failed and why Deliverr wasn't successful for the ecosystem
- Customer-centric FP&A as the real competitive advantage — not robots or software layers
CHAPTERS:
0:00 Introduction
0:56 JB's Story: From Commercial Photography to Texas Humor to 3PL
8:23 Early Days: From the Garage to a Proper Warehouse in 12 Months
14:36 First Warehouse: Forklift in 3,000 SF and Packages in the Silverado
18:22 Culture as Competitive Advantage: Outsider Perspective in a Traditional Industry
24:28 Job Descriptions, Core Values, and Recruiting for Culture Fit
31:54 Benefits and Employee Programs: Loans, Paternal Leave, and Retention
35:14 Growth Trajectory: From 3,000 SF to 125,000 SF
38:24 The Exit: How Sauceda Industries Sold to Cart.com in 30 Days
47:16 PE, VC, and Logistics: Why Bravado Without Operations Knowledge Fails
54:13 The 4PL Critique: Deliverr, Shopify Fulfillment Network, and Ecosystem Impact
1:06:29 Shopify, Amazon, and the Future of Entrepreneurial Retail
1:12:48 Closing Thoughts
ABOUT THE GUEST:
JB Sauceda is a serial entrepreneur based in Austin, Texas. He built Sauceda Industries from a garage fulfillment operation into a 120,000 order/month 3PL before selling to Cart.com in 2021. He previously ran a commercial photography studio (Public School) and created the Texas Humor brand.
KEY TERMS:
Sauceda Industries, Cart.com, Texas Humor, 3PL, culture, bootstrapping, D2C, direct to consumer, Shopify Fulfillment Network, SFN, 4PL, Deliverr, Convoy, venture capital, private equity, SPA, asset sale, quality of earnings, FP&A, Six River Systems, Saltbox, Shopify, customer acquisition cost
Supply Chain Saga is produced by Mark Taylor, CEO of Warehouse Republic, a 3PL serving omni-channel e-commerce brands that sell through marketplaces like Amazon, Walmart, and Shopify, as well as retail partners like Nordstrom, Scheels, and Bass Pro Shops.
Website: warehouserepublic.com
Podcast: supplychainsaga.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/warehouse-republic
Host: linkedin.com/in/marktaylor
Have a logistics question? Email mark@warehouserepublic.com