Coke and Diet Coke Cans Should Be Polar Opposites, Buyers Say

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Coke and Diet Coke Cans Should Be Polar Opposites, Buyers Say

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Don’t worry, Coke fans, those classic red cans are on their way back.

The Coca-Cola Co. told ABC News today that it would be following up last month’s release of its white, holiday “Arctic Home” cans adorned with polar bears with a “limited-edition” red version. The Arctic Home campaign will run through March 2012
“We launched ‘Arctic Home’ to raise awareness and funds for the polar bear. … We committed up to $3 million to World Wildlife Fund and are encouraging others to join us in helping protect the bears and their habitat,” spokesman Rand Carpenter wrote via email. “The plan is to continue shipping the billion-plus white cans until they run out and we are nearing that now.”

Some consumers told ABC News today that although they liked the message behind the redesign, they mixed up the white can with Diet Coke.

“We were confused and did think it was diet at first,” Lucie Kamuda McHan commented on Facebook. “I understand why they are doing it, but they still could have kept them red and just painted white polar bears on them. I like the red ones better.”

“I purchased three six-packs because I thought they were diet,” Gail O’Donnell of Danvers, Mass., told ABC News via email. “I drank one and wondered why it tasted so good. I didn’t look at the can. … I am a diabetic and can only drink diet sodas. … They need to make it so it is not confused.”

Others said the beverage tasted differently in the white can, but Carpenter told ABC News the beverage’s ingredients were the same.

“Whenever we change our packaging, we nearly always hear from a handful of people that believe the taste is different,” he said. “Of course, it isn’t.”

Sam Craig, a marketing professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said that although he didn’t believe Coke’s brand would be tarnished or altered by backlash, the message was clear: “Don’t mess with the brand.”

“The fundamental thing is that people don’t like change,” he said.

In 2009, when PepsiCo ditched the straw-in-the-orange logo on the packaging of its Tropicana Pure Premium orange juice, customers did more than complain. Many stopped buying it.

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From January, when the new packaging was launched, until February, sales of the juice dropped 20 percent, according to Advertising Age.

PepsiCo scrapped the new packaging and brought the orange back. The failed redesign cost the company a reported $35 million.
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In October 2010, Gap sought to replace its more than 20-year-old blue square logo with a more contemporary design. Within days of the launch, the retailer had done away with the idea after consumers took to Facebook and Twitter to voice their outrage.

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And earlier this year, Frito-Lay released a quieter compostable bag for its SunChips brand after a 2010 redesign was pulled from the shelves because of complaints that it was just too loud.

As for Coca-Cola, Carpenter would not comment on sales during the “Arctic Home” promotion but said the company was “excited about the positive impact this campaign is having with our consumers and customers to help protect the polar bear’s home.”

As of Tuesday, more than $137,000 had been raised for the animals.

Article from: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/business/2011/12/white-cans-of-coke-get-frosty-reception/
 
People really stopped buying tropicana after they switched packaging, and now they switched to clear bottles it got even worse. No one buys it anymore!

It's really sad how people are so set in their ways sometimes :(
 
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PepsiCo Inc will sell its Tropicana Pure Premium orange juice in clear bottles, not the familiar coated-paper cartons, as it tries to take back market share from the Coca-Cola Co brand Simply Orange.

Tropicana, the largest U.S. orange juice brand, said on Wednesday that clear plastic bottles will replace most of the cartons it has long sold bearing a picture of an orange with a straw stuck in it. It is "a natural step" after the company got a positive response selling its lower-calorie Trop50 juice in clear bottles, Tropicana spokeswoman Gina Judge said.

News of the packaging change was first reported by Beverage Digest, which quoted Massimo d'Amore, chief executive of PepsiCo Beverages Americas, as saying the change "will generate a lift in volume."

The industry newsletter said Coke's Simply Orange has been making inroads against Tropicana. This is not the first change to Tropicana's packaging. Last year, it trimmed the size of its cartons to 59 ounces from 64 ounces to offset higher costs.

In 2009, the company replaced the orange and straw logo with a glass of orange juice, but quickly brought back the old logo after sales plunged.

Tropicana holds 28.2 percent of the market for orange juice and orange juice blends sold in supermarkets, but its volume fell 9 percent last year, Beverage Digest said. Simply Orange holds a 13.9 percent share, but volume rose 11 percent, Beverage Digest reported.

Coke and Pepsi are involved in a lawsuit regarding claims by Coke of an alleged similarity between the packaging for Trop50 and Simply Orange.

A Coke spokesman declined to comment on Pepsi's repackaging.
 
stupid people are STUPID!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
People really stopped buying tropicana after they switched packaging, and now they switched to clear bottles it got even worse. No one buys it anymore!

It's really sad how people are so set in their ways sometimes :(


I hate the bottles so I really don't buy it much and your damn right about set in the ways... I love Sun Chips and when they changed to those god awful bags that could wake a dead person up just by getting one chip I stopped buying them...
 
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