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Green Mountain Scaled by Starbucks in Single-Serve Coffee Battle

Posted by Dale Buss on September 20, 2012 10:01 AM

Green Mountain Coffee is in a pot of trouble. And that's even before Starbucks introduces Verismo, its own single-serve brewing system for consumers that's rolling out in October (and already available on Verismo.com), to challenge the iconic K-Cup system by Green Mountain that features its Keurig pods. 

The brand has been a darling of consumers for several years, on a continued growth tear as K-Cups led a revolution in how Americans consume much of their coffee by making the single-serve system de rigeur in homes and offices. The company fed strong double-digit sales growth by continuing to proliferate the types of pods, to include "iced" drinks and juices as well as coffees and teas.

Green Mountain also had been a darling of investors seeking to cash in on a boom that, for the six years after the Vermont-based company acquired Keurig, managed to thrive without attracting the competitive interest of Starbucks.Continue reading...

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On the Shelf: Kroger and Safeway, K-Cup Kopycats

Posted by Barry Silverstein on June 14, 2012 03:57 PM

K-Cups are everywhere in the news now that Starbucks is rolling them out from coast to coast. Yet in the grocery aisle, those little "K-Cups" designed for single serving Keurig brewing machines are highlighting the battle between store brands (private labels) with name brand consumer packaged goods for shelf space.

Both Kroger and Safeway, two major U.S. grocery chains, are launching private label "coffee pods" for the Keurig machine. Safeway announced it will bring to market five types of Keurig-compatible filtered coffee pods. The chain already makes three store brand instant products for the machine.

The move by Safeway and Kroger caused shares of Green Mountain, the company that sells K-Cups along with Keurig brewing machines, to plummet. Since September, in fact, its stock has dropped 82 percent, according to Reuters. Two of the patents that cover the K-Cup design will expire in September 2012, which means other companies, not just Green Mountain, could manufacture Keurig-compatible cups.Continue reading...

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Nespresso Taps Into Explosion in U.S. Single-Cup Coffee Market

Posted by Dale Buss on April 30, 2012 02:02 PM

Nestle appears to be right on trend with Nespresso, a single-cup espresso machine that is breaking out with its first U.S. television advertising breaking today. It'll have competition from a new single-cup espresso machine from Starbucks in the fall, under the Verismo brand, and from others.

But according to Larry Levin of SymphonyIRI, there's likely to be plenty of room for Nestle, Starbucks and more as the single-coffee-cup market continues to explode in America. Nine coffee and tea innovations, including six manufacturers of single-cup pods for Keurig and other machines, were among the most successful packaged-goods brands of last year as identified by Symphony IRI in its recently released 2011 New Product Pacesetters.Continue reading...

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Starbucks Grinds Out New Territory with Its Own Single-Cup Coffee Maker

Posted by Dale Buss on March 9, 2012 12:33 PM

Talk about vertical integration! Starbucks is taking the concept to new heights — er, depths — with its announcement of the imminent introduction of its own machine to make single cups of coffee.

The product, named Verismo, will be launched soon and sold at some Starbucks stores as well as specialty retail locations right away and then more heavily marketed and sold in the fall. The machine was developed with Krueger, a German-based company, and it "combines Starbucks signature Espresso Roast and drink recipes with precise Swiss engineering and a patent-pending high pressure extraction capability," Starbucks said in a press release.

The move is yet another bid by Starbucks to broaden and deepen its franchise over the last couple of years. The company also today, in Amsterdam, was scheduled to open its first "concept shop" laboratory meant to imbue its retail outlets with more "local flavor." Inspired by concept stores in its hometown of Seattle, the new Amsterdam store features in-house-baked cookies, for instance, and will test other ideas. It's housed in an old bank vault in the city's historic Rembrandt square.Continue reading...

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