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When
Coke and Pepsi released their respective entries into
the not-quite-diet-drink category this month, we thoroughly
expected both companies to come out swinging.
True
to form, C2according to the C2 micro-site, Coke's
shorthand for the basic promise of one-half the carbs
and half the calories of regular Cokelaunched
with an aggressive TV advertising onslaught set to the
tune of the Rolling Stones', "You Can't Always
Get What You Want." Coke bombarded television viewers
with the message that, while we can't always get what
we want when it comes to other things in life, we can
get a soda with less carbs and fewer cals, but with
a great taste. Links via MSN and other engines to a
micro-site for C2 followed the next morning. Like the
ads, a voice-over comes up as the site opens reminding
us we can't do this or that, but we can get a soda with
less carbs and calories but the same great taste. The
30-ton, $6.5 million dollar billboard currently under
construction in Times Square in New York City will also
promote C2 beginning July 1.
Yet,
strangely, Pepsi has remained eerily quiet in the wake
of C2's hearty pitch even though Pepsi Edge, its lower
carb and low cal entry, hit store shelves virtually
at the same time as C2.
Though
some, the editor of Beverage Digest, for instance,
have referred to C2 and Pepsi Edge as the biggest industry
news in 30 years, others view the lower carbs/low cal
alternatives with skepticism. "These drinks likely
need a reason for being beyond just being 'reduced calorie'
versions of existing products, otherwise they will be
cannibalistic," explained Bill Pecoriello, a beverage
analyst for Morgan Stanley. "However, with a compelling
point of difference, they can perhaps create large new
categories that drive growth."
So
does the campaign for C2 demonstrate a "compelling
point of difference?" Not bad creatively, the campaign
also shares a clear message: you don't have to compromise
on taste to get less carbs and calories. So "taste"
appears to be that "compelling point of difference."
As an aside, are we the only ones left wondering if
Coke is implying Diet Coke with 0 calories tastes bad
in its C2 advertising? That to get 0 calories you have
to drink something God-awful?
Pepsi
also seems to be taking the taste tact with Pepsi Edge.
Though we haven't seen an ad or dedicated website for
it as of this writing, the packaging for Pepsi Edge
has "Full Flavor, 50% Less Sugar" emblazoned
across the front. "Full Flavor," to us means
that we're going to get something pretty darn close
to Pepsi
Obviously,
if you're going to advertise taste and flavor, you'd
better have something good. So we put the claims to
the test with a panel of "expert" tasters,
a mix of men and women, different ages, devoted Atkins
adherents and carb-lovers, and soda drinkers and non-soda
drinkers. C2 won the blind taste test hands down, but
our testers didn't exactly use words like, "delicious,"
or "yummy," to describe C2. Pepsi Edge was
just terrible (which could explain why Pepsi's staying
on the down-low with this one for the moment), so C2
essentially won by default. Most complained both sodas
had a chemical taste and strange smell. Granted ours
was an unscientific test, but it wasn't exactly a ringing
endorsement of taste or flavor as believable or sustainable
points of differentiation for C2 or Pepsi Edge, in any
case.
Our
prognostications: we don't see either C2 or Pepsi Edge
leading to new categories that drive growth. More than
likely, they'll strip away sales from the diet extensions
of the core brands (they do taste better than diet)
and certainly won't bring non-soda drinkers into the
market. There's still a whole lot of sugar and carbs
in C2 and Pepsi Edge AND they are full of chemical sweeteners.
What's attractive about that to a non-soda-drinker or,
for that matter, a regular soda drinker? If pressed
to pick a winner, we'd pick C2, based purely on the
results of our taste test and the marketing blitzkrieg,
but we think it'll be a Pyrrhic victory for Coke.
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