Posts Tagged ‘pepsico’

Pepsi Makes a Major Blunder with Gatorade

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

gatorade

The CEO of Pepsico admitted this week that they made a major mistake with their rebranding of Gatorade.  In just the first quarter of 2009, sales of Gatorade fell by a whopping 13.7% and have continued to plummet.

When the rebranded Gatorade appeared on the shelves, it was a true head-scratcher.  Was this the same old Gatorade?  Was it a new kind of Gatorade?  Or, maybe it wasn’t even Gatorade.  It was near impossible to tell.  It’s amazing to me that, in their desperation to appeal to the “hip” consumers, the marketing people at Pepsi would come up with this horrible design.  It’s maybe even more amazing that the powers that be at Pepsi would sign off on it. 

Gatorade had always been the first name in sports beverages.  And even as they faced much new competition, they were still in the position of being the brand most associated with the sports beverage category.  So, it’s amazing that Pepsi would take their brand and simply flush it down the toilet.  And make no mistake about it, that’s exactly what they did.  From the new look on the bottle to the horrible ad campaigns (what, exactly, was going on in those ads?), they destroyed it.  You would have sworn that their goal was to make choosing and buying a Gatorade the most confusing task in the world.

In the ultra-competitive beverage market, mistakes like this shouldn’t be made.  It shows bad judgement on everyone’s part who had anything to do with it.  Pepsico now has the task of rebuilding the brand in the midst of a sports drink war, and they’ve got no one to blame but themselves.

Will Pepsi Throwback Take You Back To The Golden Era Of Soda?

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

pepsi-throwback1

To great fanfare, Pepsico has rolled out its Pepsi and Mountain Dew Throwback choices, which are sweetened by sugar, rather than High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS).  HFCS has been the predominate sweetener in soft drinks since the early 80′s. 

While many soft drink enthusiasts have lamented the change-over from sugar, there were other changes that had a major effect on how soda tasted and its carbonation.  The mass-market switch to plastic bottles, rather than glass, probably had a more profound effect than the sweetener modification.  The carbonation didn’t “hold” like it did in the capped glass bottles, therefore the switch to plastic made all soda a bit flatter.

Over the years, Coca-Cola has been back in the marketplace with six-packs of their small glass bottles and Pepsi has done small runs of the same.  Some Costco stores have started carrying the Mexican version of coke in bottles, which still contains sugar as its sweetener. 

While using sugar instead of HFCS does make a positive taste difference, it’s rather subtle when being consumed from a plastic bottle.  In a perfect world, the sugar and the glass bottle would be back in place, so we could enjoy these beverages the way they were meant to be enjoyed.

Coke Is Still The Choice At McDonald’s

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

In February, McDonald’s ended a test-run of selling PepsiCo’s bottled Mountain Dew and Gatorade beverages.  Coca-Cola, which has been the beverage of choice at McDonald’s for five decades, has to see this as a major victory. 

According to Beverage Digest, Coca-Cola controls about 70% of the US fountain drink market, while Pepsi controls approximately 20%.