brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on July 31, 2012 09:01 AM

GM has new CMO tout Chevy relationship with Manchester United, after changing the terms, as pundits make recommendations on GM's way forward.
Chick-fil-A brand perception drops in wake of LGBT controversy.
Anheuser-Busch InBev sees North American drag on results.
Apple gets knocked for new "Genius Bar" Mac TV campaign as company mulls uses for corporate cash hoard.
BP posts weak earnings.
Chobani celebrates success that led to Team USA sponsorship.
Chrysler earnings leap on U.S. gains.Continue reading...
More about: Brand News, AB InBev, Apple, BP, Chevrolet, Chick-Fil-A, Chobani, Chrysler, Coca-Cola, ConAgra, Dr Pepper TEN, Dr Pepper Snapple, Facebook, Five Guys, GM, Genius Bar, Hot Dog on a Stick, J. Crew, KBB.com, Ricki Lake, Liberty Mutual, Manchester United, Nokia, Red Bull, Supervalu, UBS, Unilever, Yahoo, YouTube
London 2012
Posted by Mark J. Miller on July 25, 2012 12:22 PM

That's Team USA gymnast (and five-time Olympic medalist) Nastia Liukin, above, doing the splits with the special London 2012 Summer Olympics edition Dora the Explorer doll. Mattel's Fisher-Price will sell the interactive Fantastic Gymnastics Dora doll starting in August for $50. What makes the latest doll from the Nickelodeon hit series interactive? Consumers can download the free, Fantastic Gymnastics Dora augmented reality app on retail shelves or download from Apple's App Store.Continue reading...
More about: London 2012, Olympics, Sports, Campaigns, Sponsorships, Advertising, Adidas, Chobani, Coca-Cola, Dora the Explorer, Fisher-Price, Gillette, Lego, Mattel, Omega, Samsung, David Beckham, Roger Federer, Tyson Gay, Nastia Liukin, Ryan Lochte, Apps, Mobile, Luxury, Toys, Retail
brand extensions
Posted by Dale Buss on July 9, 2012 03:01 PM

It may be too early to say the cola wars are over, although it's clear that PepsiCo is ready and willing to take on another archrival. Following years of competing with Coca-Cola with its array of beverage and snack food brands in the U.S., PepsiCo is now getting into the red-hot yogurt market and adding Dannon to its competitive set.
Faced with a U.S. yogurt market that is more crowded than ever with brands, and demonstrating almost no growth except in the Greek yogurt category, PepsiCo announced Monday that it's introducing a fresh brand to yogurt-loving Americans — and one that isn't focusing on Greek — via a new partnership with the Theo Muller Group, Germany's largest privately held dairy
That's the prospect for Muller Quaker Dairy when it finally enters stores in northeastern and mid-Atlantic states with three lines of yogurt products birthed by the joint venture. Muller Quaker promises "innovative premium" products that aim to create differentiation and taste excitement in a U.S. yogurt category that PepsiCo executives believe is lacking both.
"It's been an 'I gotta have it because it's good for me' kind of a product," Dr. Mehmood Khan, who oversees PepsiCo's global research and development, commented to the New York Times. "The 'wanna have it' was missing."Continue reading...
More about: PepsiCo, Quaker, Muller, Theo Muller Group, Muller Quaker Dairy, Food, Yogurt, CPG, Brand Extensions, Chobani, Dannon, Fage, Coca-Cola, General Mills, Kraft, Retail, Joint Ventures, Greek Yogurt, Obesity, Health
chew on this
Posted by Dale Buss on July 2, 2012 05:05 PM

Just because Chobani has opened up a huge lead in the Greek-style category it invented — and that is reshaping the U.S. yogurt business — doesn't mean that others can't try to chip away. Dannon has grabbed a significant share after sensing the opportunity with Chobani's rapid rise.
Other players, big and small, also are attempting to make more noise and get their stakes of a Greek-style market that has been calculated at about $1.5 billion a year now and still growing by strong double-digits — even coming up in discussions of Greece's Eurozone crisis. Yoplait, Hain Celestial and the Pinkberry chain are among the brands that are making their own plays. Ben & Jerry's just revamped its frozen yogurt line to make Greek Yogurt the basis of the line. Fage and Chobani have a friend in U.S. senator Chuck Schumer.
The most closely watched Greek yogurt brand is Yoplait. The General Mills line, which has shared the top of the U.S. yogurt market with Dannon for many years, got a particularly late start in the Greek segment. But now it's launching 40 new yogurt products, and Greek yogurt will be the centerpiece of that rollout this summer.Continue reading...
More about: Food, CPG, Dairy, Chobani, Dannon, Fage, General Mills, Greek Gods, Hain Celestial, Liberte, Nature Valley, Pinkberry, Yoplait, Ben & Jerry's, TCBY, Weight Watchers, Greek Yogurt, Health, Nutrition, Obesity
brand strategy
Posted by Dale Buss on June 21, 2012 10:01 AM

Chobani made Greek-style yogurt part of the American food mainstream, and now the brand is trying to stay on top against catch-up efforts by every other major yogurt brand in the land.
Dannon, with its Oikos brand, has managed to join the startup Chobani brand on the top tier of the only category of yogurt consumption that is growing in the U.S. market these days. But the original Greek-yogurt brand in America, Fage, and Yoplait, which also is trying to play catch-up, are fading in their efforts to ride the boom that Chobani created.
Chobani already has become about a $1-billion concern over the past few years and owns nearly 50 percent of the category, according to a recent report by the Sanford Bernstein securities firm. Even after a furious catch-up effort, Dannon USA still has a less-than-20 percent share, and Fage 14 percent, while General Mills' Yoplait brand limps in with just 6 percent.
"We're dealing with some large organizations that aren't as nimble as Chobani," Niel Sandfort, director of marketing for Chobani, told brandchannel. "We're a billion-dollar company but still entrepreneurial. And we're continually investing in our core."Continue reading...
social marketing
Posted by Sheila Shayon on January 24, 2012 02:02 PM

Pinterest, the virtual pin board at the crossroads of social and style, covered here in December when the buzz was reaching fever pitch, has burgeoned into a marketplace for consumer brands, offering a visual and demonstrable platform for engagement.
A wide range of major brands are using Pinterest to engage fans through social curation and as an online focus group to see what clicks with consumers, including:Continue reading...
More about: Social Media, Social Marketing, Pinterest, Bergdorf Goodman, Better Homes & Gardens, Chobani, Domestica, Etsy, Gap, Lands' End, Lands' End Canvas, Martha Stewart, NBC, Real Simple, The Today Show, Travel Channel, West Elm, Whole Foods
ad watch
Posted by Dale Buss on January 19, 2012 07:01 PM

Dannon USA hasn't advertised in the Super Bowl before, but executives of the American arm of France's Groupe Danone know a good Super Bowl ad when they see one.
"It has to be memorable," Michael Newirth, senior director of communications for Dannon USA, told brandchannel. "It tends to have a healthy dose of humor. And usually it's got some element of surprise. And you can expect to see some of all of those in [the ad] we share on February 5."
And actually, Dannon has given a lot away already about what its first-ever ad in the Big Game will entail.Continue reading...
More about: Super Bowl, Advertising, NFL, Sports, Oikos, Dannon, Group Danone, John Stamos, Celebrities, CPG, Chobani, Fage, Yoplait, Kraft, Athenos, Stonyfield, Yogurt, Rolled Gold Pretzels, Lays, Food
chew on this
Posted by Dale Buss on December 13, 2011 02:07 PM
Dannon USA executives have no illusions about Super Bowl party hosts clearing away the corn chips, savory spreads, sausage, beer and other decidedly nutrition-challenged fare from millions of tables across America on the day of the Big Game to make room for anything healthy — including yogurt.
But one of America's Big Two yogurt brands has decided to take a flyer anyway by buying commercial time during the Super Bowl. For the first time, Dannon will be advertising some of its nutritional yogurt brands and products alongside the Coca-Colas, Doritos, Budweisers and other snacktastic brands that traditionally have dominated game advertising.
The simple reason? It's time. "When we look at the U.S. as the world's single largest economy and the fact that yogurt is so under-represented in the American diet, and we think about what's the best way for us to bring the better-for-you message and food choices to a large population base, the Super Bowl is an avenue we haven't yet explored," Michael Neuwirth, Dannon's senior director of public relations, told brandchannel.Continue reading...