Showing posts with label Iced Tea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iced Tea. Show all posts

Saturday, April 13, 2013


CAN BIG DATA FIND THE MYSTERY SHOPPERS OF "BEST STUFF ON EARTH"?

"The Best Stuff on Earth" are found missing from store shelves. Data scientists are trying to investigate the data analytics report to find the Mystery ShopperWho is the Mystery Shopper? Where does he/she live and what does he/she do ? How many are they?


Snapple Iced tea, the pioneer product 'Made From the Best Stuff on Earth' whose huge success created a whole new category of Ready-To-Drink (RTD) Iced Tea in the over-cluttered and saturated beverage industry. In 1972 (pre social media era), an All-Natural refreshment drink was sold for the first time through health stores in New York City. The Snapple craze soon spread to all 50 states by 1992. Witnessing the phenomenal growth in this category big giants such as Brisk (Pepsi-Lipton), Nestea, Arizona, Honest, Sobe etc entered the market. And thus, the Hunger Games for market share began!



Hunger Games Part I: Companies started to invest money to create unique product differentiations such as owning a distinct product attribute like "Made From The Best Stuff on Earth" by Snapple, "Real Brewed" by Lipton, "All-Natural" by Honest Tea; launching product variants for instance "Half & Half", "Diet", "Fruit Punch"; attracting shopper attention through packaging differentiation such as "Wide mouth Glass Bottle", "Colorful Graffiti Cans" etc.

Hunger Games Part II: After each brand assured a pie of the market share, companies invested more money to build loyal tribes of customers through content-driven brand engagement. Now the RTD Iced Tea category is more than 40 years old, all major brands have a dedicated website building engagement through unique content to subtly boost product advocacy, consumption, usage rate, usage occasions etc. For instance: Lipton Iced Tea has created a whole community of mothers who share their recipes using Lipton Tea products whereas Snapple Iced Tea has its followers raving about 'Sip on some knowledge with Real Facts' printed under its bottle caps.




But what came first: The Chicken or the Egg? Let me rephrase the question: What came first The Mystery Shopper or Snapple? May be Big Data can help us solve that mystery!!Numbers have always fascinated humans and quite important to how we grasp the world around us. Numbers help us to measure our subject of interest to make better decisions. I believe our brains want to see patterns. Not only in numbers. We also see faces from clouds to moon craters. That's what Data Scientists, a fairly new breed of analysts do. They collect, analyze and report consumer insights and create brand stories to engage and enhance User Experience (UX) with the brand.

With all the talk about “big data”, I thought of sharing results of a latest CMO survey published in Feb 2012 issue of CMOSurvey.org indicating rise in the percentage of marketing budget spent on marketing analytics and number of people employed in marketing analytics. And most important, the trend is expected to continue in future. 


The big question is when is a brand ready to unleash the power of big data and reveal the identity of the Mystery Shopper? Factors such as product category, product life cycle, point-of-sale, drivers of consumption, marketing channel used to communicate and engage with the target audience etc play a crucial role in deciding the readiness of a brand to unleash the data big bang. The RTD Iced Tea is a growing product category which still primarily relies on product-centric advertising with erratic content driven engagement on social media platforms limited from campaign-to-campaign.

Now, Big data can change the rules of the game. It is helpful to analyze past sales and ad campaign figures to identify new growth areas, category trends, pricing power, higher segment penetration, better distribution, space/shelf management, key messaging, media channels etc. Research can show that ads with Little Fruits appeal to kids and adults in their 40s, but those in the in between ages are more interested in the upbeat, peppy spots. Taking this into consideration, Snapple came up with an idea to revamp the brand for teenagers through 34 year olds by animating its bottles depicting skate rats and punks, complete with clothes and hairpieces. Thus, personifying the bottle reflecting the target demographic based on research.

As part of its "Real Experiences" campaign, Snapple implements the 'Design Thinking' approach in its promotions. "What's Your Story" contest asks consumers to submit their own experiences through the Snapple website. The grand-prize winning spot is played out by the bottles and premiered as a Snapple commercial. Entry required applicants to provide demographic information, which in turn arms Snapple with more information on its target market. Here's a Snapple fan spotlight video from a 'cap creation' campaign.




Broadly speaking the Mystery Shoppers for RTD Iced Tea can be defined as college students and young professionals between 18-34 years of age, living in urban/sub-urban areas who are health conscious, look out for all natural, organic products and want to avoid soda, artificial flavors as part of their daily meals. They love to experiment with new flavors and patronize a unique blend which best expresses their personality. They love to hang out with friends and instantly share their fun experiences on social media platforms. Presence on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram etc. is a must to engage with these buyers.

Since the RTD Iced teas are sold through convenience stores, gas stations and local restaurants, brands remain shy on platforms such as search engine marketing and year-long TV advertising is rare to spot. Having said that some RTD brands even use traditional couponing to promote point-of-sale promotions to attract some value seekers such as Gen -Xers and Mothers. 

But a huge limitation of Big Data is that it alone cannot help you to innovate for future. So, companies use qualitative research such as Focus Groups, Ethnographic Studies, product home reviews etc, in conjunction with quantitative research to unfold the insights of the mystery shoppers. Ethnographic study can help to define qualitative aspects of the product consumption such as the tea-ness, sweetness, chug-ability (sip/gulp), worth, flavor, variety, health, nutrition etc in addition to a data-driven category trend such as a carbonated-iced tea or sports-iced tea blend. So, brands first need to build a basic market infrastructure and hit consumer bulls eye by digging hidden insights with the help of quantitative and qualitative research tools. 

Sources:

Saturday, March 9, 2013


THE BRISK FORMULA IS LEAKED!!!
Yesterday I attended an event at New York University where Megan Kent, the Chief Growth Officer of a pioneering ad agency - J. Walter Thompson (JWT), introduced her new and proprietary approach to branding, called “Brand Synchronicity - 7 simple steps to creating brands people intuitively prefer”.  Her rationale relied on how people buy on emotion over reason. She explained how brands can win consumer hearts and gain a powerful competitive advantage in the market place by establishing 'Brand Synchronicity' with the target customers. Marketers must know that emotionally driven behavior prefers congruence, storytelling, engaging the senses, synchronous behaviors and actions.  

My inquisitive mind could not rest. I wondered if marketing still relied on rationality or was rationality officially dead!! I researched if storytelling really was that powerful to get people to follow a brand? During my research, I came across this amazing marketing campaign which simply established the victory of heart over mind for this brand. As a result, the brand surpassed the $1 billion mark by annual revenues displacing established competitor brands from the store shelves. Kudos to the ad agencies!!
 
 

Brisk is a tea and juice brand jointly launched by the Pepsi Lipton Partnership, which by the way just turned 16 last year. Brisk is targeted mostly towards guys (18-24 olds) who respect diversity, flaunt "in-your-face" attitude and share similar lifestyle choices. These guys mostly live in urban areas and spend a lot of their time hanging around with friends, shop in C-Stores to take a break and recharge. They have an optimistic outlook on the future, constantly seek new experiences and instantly share everything they do, both online and in person. Self-expression is key to who they are.  

Brisk as a brand believes in inspiring self expression and the brand hits congruence with those who want to speak their mind, who aren't afraid to do what they like, and who drink what they want. The Brisk formula is 100% pop culture with fusion of bold flavors such as of art, humor, music, technology and style. The brisk story engages with its unique shareable content by putting a new spin on the pop culture, millenials love. But why does Brisk story stand out? Because the brand not only talks to its fans but also entertains them in their own language that breaks the daily life boredom with a bold attitude. Be it the brand's blue color, bold graphics used on packaging or the sensory impact of its flavors.  

It all started with the first campaign executed by JWT in 1996 featuring pop-culture icons in claymations, and was revived in 2010 by creative agency Mekanism. The advertisements highlight worn out celebrities who are dramatically reinvigorated by drinking Brisk. Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Willie Nelson, Bruce Lee, Danny DeVito, Bruce Willis, Ozzy Osbourne, Sylvester Stallone, Danny Trejo and Eminem have all been featured in Brisk spots. Check out the first campaign snapshot here:  


Checkout how Brisk's storytelling gets pop culture twist, 'Reviving the Creative Mojo' in 2010

 
But traditional advertising alone didn't do the trick for Brisk. Brisk needed to let the millennial interact with the brand by sharing their own brisk stories. And thus 'Brisk 25' was created. It was a group of content creators, artists, bloggers who shared expertise on the millennial demographic. These thought leaders played a crucial role in creating innovative content and building a whole new online Brisk community. Through a series of facebook applications the campaign gained momentum as more and more millenials participated in the "Tell your Brisk Story" contest. And then, the final push came around the super bowl with the Eminem Brisk story, which soon became #1 video viewed on youtube. The buzz was further sustained with more content including uncut-versions, studio recordings and behind the scene videos. 
 
 
In 2012 the Brisksaber campaign took the brand's storytelling into the space, literally!! In 2012, Brisk partnered with the iconic Star Wars for the 3-D theatrical release of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. The true center piece of the campaign is the Brisksaber, the free mobile app along with digital content, popularized with both emerging media (instagram, Foursquare, Facebook, Twitter etc) and traditional advertising. 
 
The campaign was kick started with a 30-second spot featuring Star Wars characters as Briskified Yoda and Darth Maul, facing off for the first time on TV, radio, cinemas and youtube. Special Star Wars-themed cans were made available through a grassroots mobile marketing and a sampling tour. Brisksaber offered millenials with a highly addictive gaming experience bringing the iconic Star Wars characters closer to their fans right into their Androids, iphones and game consoles.  The way to proceed in the game was to buy especially marked Brisk bottles whose caps revealed a special code to be used on Brisksaber. This strategy married dollar sales with branded entertainment content. Here's the 2012 Brisksaber story for you.  
 
 
The campaign tripled Brisk's millennial community on social media with over 1.4 Million Facebook fans alone. Overall post campaign, Brisk annual sales jumped 27% in 2012. Yes Folks, the secret formula of Brisk's success is out - Brand Synchronicity established through congruence, storytelling, engagement and synchronous behavior and actions.
 
Sources:

http://mekanism.com/

http://www.ypulse.com/post/view/briskifying-urban-millennial-marketing-lessons-from-pepsi-brisk
Image in the header is a Bella Pilar creation