Sweet!

sweetRemem­ber Snap­ple?  A lit­tle over a decade ago, Snap­ple stormed onto the scene, devour­ing mar­ket share, cre­at­ing clever com­mer­cials and ad cam­paigns, and caus­ing quite a com­mo­tion in the bev­er­age indus­try.  Not since Wine Cool­ers had we seen such a dis­rup­tion.  Well, over time, Snap­ple sort of faded into the crowd of other bev­er­ages, gar­ner­ing a nice share of the mar­ket and serv­ing a loyal group of con­sumers.  Recently,  my friend Bill sent me an arti­cle stat­ing that Snap­ple was try­ing to shake up the bev­er­age world yet again, this time by announc­ing it would be remov­ing high fruc­tose corn syrup from its prod­ucts and replac­ing it with Sugar.

Now Pepsi is get­ting in on the act, by releas­ing Pepsi Throw­back and Moun­tain Dew Throw­back — both of which will revert to the for­mula from the 60’s and 70’s which used sugar instead of HFCS.  The offi­cial word is that these are just short term “pro­mo­tional” drinks, which will be removed from the shelves in June.  My guess would be that they are trial bal­loons to see if: 1.) peo­ple like the taste of sugar bet­ter and will buy the stuff.  2.) there will be any back­lash by those in corn pro­duc­ing states.  I think the strat­egy is a good one.  It allows them to test the mar­ket and gen­er­ate a huge amount of buzz with­out risk of los­ing peo­ple who pre­fer the cur­rent HFCS ver­sion of the drinks.

Why would they change from HFCS to sugar anyway?

Health:

Many believe that HFCS is respon­si­ble for child obe­sity and other health issues.  I am not sure if it is less harm­ful than sugar, but I do know that HFCS is seem­ingly in ever­thing.  Check your fridge.  Unless you avoid it inten­tion­ally, it is prob­a­bly one of the first 3 ingre­di­ents in 80% of your food.  I have yet to find ketchup that does not have it.  While it seems odd to use the inclu­sion of sugar as a health ben­e­fit, such is the world in which we live.  The nutri­tional mer­its of sugar vs high fruc­tose corn syrup are still being debated, and quite frankly if you are slam­ming down 3 or 4 Pepsi’s a day, you are not that con­cerned about the health effects of HFCS anyway.

If Pepsi throw­back is a suc­cess, look for the move to sugar to be some­thing like the next Atkins diet.   Coke will fol­low by releas­ing their sugar ver­sion more broadly.  Then the move­ment will leap to another food cat­e­gory — say salad dress­ing or yogurt.  Then another — maybe break­fast cereal.  Pretty soon mar­keters will be telling you that “pure, nat­ural” sugar not only tastes bet­ter and is  health­ier for you — true or not.  Per­cep­tion is real­ity.  If the per­cep­tion that sugar is bet­ter for you than HFCS catches on, you will be quickly innun­dated with this message.

Nos­tal­gia:

Face it, times are tough.  A huge part of the appeal of Pepsi Throw­back or Coke with sugar will be to take younger Boomers and Gen Xer’s back to the “Good Old Days.”  This tends to hap­pen in tough eco­nomic times.  Peo­ple yearn for the sim­ple days gone by.  Sim­ple prod­ucts from those sim­ple times help to pro­vide a sense of com­fort and nor­malcy in a crazy world. These drinks be mar­keted to “take you back to the good old days” of recy­clable glass bot­tles with a 10 cent deposit fee and hip­pies hold­ing hands, drink­ing coke, and singing in the fields.   Peace and pros­per­ity brought to you by Sugar.

I’d like to buy the world some sugar, and keep it company.”

Taste:

Taste presents an inter­st­ing chal­lenge.  For the Boomers and Gen Xer’s out there, the taste of sugar sodas may harken back to years gone by.  Sugar drinks tend to be a lit­tle sweeter than their HFCS coun­ter­parts.  Sugar drinks also seem to have a dif­fer­ent con­sis­tency than those with HFCS.  They are thin­ner and fizzier.  The prob­lem is that for decades peo­ple have got­ten used to these drinks as they cur­rently exist.  Sure some will love the move back to sugar and all that comes with it, but for many this will be an unwel­come depar­ture.  The drinks are dif­fer­ent, and some­times dif­fer­ent is not good.  (Remem­ber New Coke?)  Thus Pepsi is tak­ing a smart strat­egy by rolling this out as a lim­ited time exten­sion of the exist­ing brand.  It is a real time focus group.  Who is buy­ing it?  Why?  How much are they buy­ing?  Should we cre­ate a new brand for it?  Should this con­tinue on as a sea­sonal item like the sum­mer­time fruit fla­vors?  All ques­tions that Pepsi can answer in the com­ing months.  For Snap­ple, there is more ben­e­fit in the buzz of  just blow­ing up the old HFCS brand and mov­ing to the new.  For Pepsi, I think the grad­ual move strat­egy is sound.

A few months back I waxed poetic about a won­der­ful expe­ri­ence I had enjoy­ing a bot­tle (glass bot­tle) of Cheer­wine ( soft­drink from the Car­oli­nas) at City BBQ.  This par­tic­u­lar bev­er­age was made with real cane sugar and was about the tasti­est thing I had drank in decades, beer excluded of course.  Fizzy, fruity, and not at all syrupy.  Deli­cious.  I enjoyed it so much, I went on to write a blog post stat­ing that If I Were in Charge of Coke / Pepsi, I would intro­duce real sugar bev­er­ages back into the mar­ket.  Now that Pepsi is doing just that, I am excited to see how the mar­ket responds.

I enjoy a soda from time to time, and as a Gen Xer, I will be happy to enjoy a sug­ary treat and harken back to the inno­cence and sim­plic­ity of my youth with a pure, nat­ural bev­er­age :)

Now time for me to get another cup of cof­fee — black.

http://www.daytondailynews.com/n/content/oh/story/news/local/2009/02/26/ddn022609sugar.html

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9 Responses to Sweet!

  1. Rebecca February 26, 2009 at 10:03 am #

    Inter­est­ing, Dave. Remem­ber, lots of us boomers and even x-ers are now hav­ing to think about weight and diabetes…ah, but the nos­tal­gia of “I’d like to teach the world to sing, in per­fect har­mony” beck­ons. And Diet Coke (even with lime) isn’t quite the same.

  2. davidebowman February 26, 2009 at 10:08 am #

    It will be inter­est­ing to see if the “head” deci­sion of just avoid soft drinks entirely because of weight and dia­betes will lost to the “heart” deci­sion of deli­cious sug­ary good­ness. Based on the deci­sion mak­ing track record of the tar­get demo­graphic, I am think­ing about invest­ing in Novo Nordisk and Coke.

  3. Ande February 26, 2009 at 10:36 am #

    Reminds me of the switch many peo­ple made (like myself) from those tubs of soft mar­garine back to stick but­ter when the down­side of mar­garine was released. There are so many great prod­ucts devel­oped that are touted as improv­ing our lives — only to find out a decade later that the oppo­site is true. For 100’s of years sugar in mod­er­a­tion never caused any­one any harm!

  4. Doug Dockery February 26, 2009 at 10:51 am #

    I’ve intro­duced my chil­dren to soft drinks that replace HFCS with sugar (cokes from Mex­ico, spe­cialty drinks like Cheer­wine, etc.). From a taste per­spec­tive and from a ‘cool’ fac­tor, these drinks are a home run. They harken back to my child­hood — cold glass bot­tles of sug­ary goodness!

    I’m all for it and hope to see more oppor­tu­ni­ties for us to enjoy sug­ary goodness!

  5. Jeff Zaret February 27, 2009 at 12:20 am #

    Since we are going back to the old days. Let’s go ahead and release Coke with cocaine, gum loaded with sugar, cars with no seat­belts and guns with no safety. All kid­ding aside lets allow Pepsi to have their fun with mar­ket­ing. Heck Bud­wieser even has a 16oz beer in a green can for St. Patricks Day. It’s all about the marketing.….

  6. nlduncan March 2, 2009 at 8:23 pm #

    You should see the movie King Corn. The HFCS in the food chain just may be a big­ger prob­lem than you think.

  7. Holly March 5, 2009 at 10:37 pm #

    Funny how things come back around in fash­ion. Who would have thought that peo­ple would mar­ket prod­ucts as con­tain­ing sugar. It’s inter­est­ing to think what seem­ingly harm­less food, drink or activ­ity we have now will be com­pletely taboo to our kids.

  8. Daniel Johnson, Jr. April 9, 2009 at 9:29 am #

    I tend to agree that HFCS is very insidious.

    Have you seen any of this Pepsi or Moun­tain Dew in south­west­ern Ohio? I’d like to try some of that. As far as the other soft drinks are con­cerned, I’d prob­a­bly rather try some of the Mex­i­can Coke than the stuff from Colom­bia, if you know what I mean. ;-P

  9. davidebowman April 10, 2009 at 7:01 am #

    I have not seen the real sugar Pepsi or Dew on local store shelves yet. I have seen the Snap­ple. They are run­ning ads for it now too. You are safe with the Mex­i­can coke. I can’t speak for “other” varieties.

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