Case Studies Marketing
Case Studies Marketing
Case Studies Marketing
Last month Pepsi launched a global re-styling of its Pepsi cans, with a series of 35 new
designs, with themes such as music, sport or fashion. The globe logo and the
lettering on the cans will remain the same, but a new theme will make its debut
every few weeks. Each one has its own website with video clips and other enticements
to engage consumers. The aim is to represent the “fun, optimistic and youthful spirit”
of Pepsi, says the firm. Analysts believe changing the packaging is a tired brand’s last
refuge.
During its 109-year history Pepsi has undergone many re-brandings, of course, none
on this scale. By next year the current red, white and blue Pepsi can, will disappear from
the shelves. The company instead promises a “sustained discovery” for people of all
ages and – not surprisingly – a new “experience.”
In most parts of the world Coke’s sales are driven by the famous fizz, with richer
countries, where calories are all too abundant, leaning increasingly towards Diet Coke,
developed in 1982, and poorer countries leaning towards the original sugary stuff
dating back to the 19th century. Not so China’s poorer interior, where the dark colour
of colas is associated with the dark tea traditionally used to mask the sediment
in the local water. Here the consumers prefer the clear, citrus-flavoured Sprite,
developed in 1981.
After much consumer and product research at a new laboratory in Shanghai, Coke
came up with a drink that combines the ingredients of plain old orange-juice and real
pulp, accounting for about one-fifth of the liquid – with calcium, vitamins and lots of
water. The diluted drink costs about $0.30 for a 500mL container, or about a quarter
as much as pure orange juice. Following a small test-marketing project in 2003, “fruit
pulp orange” has steadily been rolled out across China and has recently become
available throughout the country.
The results have been staggering, particularly in poor regions, where the usual orange
juice sold by Coca-Cola’s Minute Maid subsidiary would be unaffordable. The new
drink quickly became the most popular or second-most popular juice in every region of
the country.
Melbourne will be the Australian home of budget carrier Tiger Airways which has
already managed to spark a price war.
Jetstar pre-empted Tiger's decision by selling 30,000 domestic route tickets at $3 each
to its customers.
From midnight, it also began offering 100,000 tickets for $3 for domestic flights and
tickets to Honolulu, Bangkok and New Zealand during restricted times with the
purchase of another Jetsaver fare.
The "take a friend" promotion meant seats for selected flights and times in June, July,
October and December allowed a second seat on the same flight for $3.
Tiger, which is 49 per cent owned by Singapore Airlines, will require space at
Tullamarine to house five aircraft. The fleet is expected to grow to about 20 in the years
ahead. Virgin Blue operates with about 50 planes while Jetstar has about 25.
Melbourne Airport would not comment on the decision ahead of this morning's
announcement but confirmed it had "plenty of room" at Tullamarine for Tiger.
It is expected that Tiger will initially offer services from Melbourne to Sydney, Brisbane,
Canberra and Adelaide.
The airline could be ready for take-off in the domestic market within months.
When it came to promoting its new video game console, the Wii, in America, Nintendo
recruited a handful of carefully chosen suburban mothers in the hope they would
spread the word among their friends that the Wii was a gaming console the
whole family could enjoy together. Nintendo thus became the latest company to use
“word of mouth” marketing. Nestle, Sony and Philips have all launched similar
campaigns in recent months to promote everything from bottled water to electric
toothbrushes. As the power of traditional advertising declines
The difficulty for marketers is creating the right kind of buzz and learning to control it.
Negative views spread just as quickly as positive ones, so if a product has flaws, people
will soon find out. When Microsoft send laptops loaded with its new Windows Vista
software to influential bloggers in an effort to get them to write about it, the resulting
online discussion ignored Vista and focused instead on the morality of accepting gifts
and the ethics of word-of-mouth marketing. Bad buzz, in short.
When Lion Nathan was devising a marketing campaign for Tooheys Extra Dry Premium
it knew it could not rely on mainstream media such as TV and magazines alone to reach
its main target of men aged 18-24, many of whom are not big consumers of mass-
market media.
Instead, Lion’s marketers and its creative and media ad agencies developed a campaign
covering 30 different media channels. These channels included websites, mobile
phones, ads in toilets, and promotions in pubs, clubs and liquor stores. It also created
a Tooheys Extra Dry Premium website that included interactive features such as games
to engage the audience and give them a way to interact with the brand.
The campaign was a success, leading to strong sales and high “brand health” scores. It
also provides a guide for other marketers who know they can no longer rely on two or
three media to reach consumers but are not sure how to create and manage a
multimedia strategy
L’Oreal Paris, the signature brand of the L’Oreal Group, operates at the prestige end of
the mass health and beauty market with a range of skincare, cosmetics and home hair
colour for women of all ages. This sector of the market is highly competitive. Numerous
products jostle for sales, with competitive promises and price leading to frequent
brand switching. Brand loyalty is a challenge to maintain.
Traditional forms of advertising, through glossy magazines and TV, have been the
preferred and accepted advertising approach. However, advertisers have become far
more selective in targeting their markets and spending their advertising and
promotional budgets.
L’Oreal Paris wanted to diversify its ability to reach its market. In an effort to
differentiate itself from competitors, strengthen brand values and consumer loyalty. It
sought a communications program which:
Established a direct communications channel that enabled targeting subgroups
of consumers
The results were compelling and the decision was to use the e-mail to communicate to
its customers. Rather than build an expensive website, the company took a more
The Beauty Club is a loyalty program, supported electronically and designed to reach
and hold customers. It is a monthly membership based email newsletter. In return, the
newsletter provides members with product reviews, beauty and fashion tips as well as
exclusive offers and competitions. The newsletter enables L’Oreal to showcase its
products, conduct market research, trial products and share its expertise with a loyal
consumer base.
Pepsi and Starbucks share a problem. The second-biggest maker of cola and the
world’s largest chain of coffee shops are both worried about how consumers perceive
their brands. Pepsi has always been about “experience”, says Ron Coughlin, a Pepsi
marketing executive. The trouble is that consumers are increasingly experiencing
healthier soft drinks and bottled water, rather than sugary cola. Starbucks, meanwhile
many have expanded too quickly, which is why Howard Schultz, its chairman, worries
that the “Starbucks experience” is under threat.
Mr Schultz says that the expansion from 1 000 to more than 13 000 shops over the
past ten years has led to a watering down of the Starbucks experience. One result, says
Mr Schultz is that some people find its stores sterile, cookie-cutter, no longer reflecting
the passion or partners feel about coffee.
Starbucks and Pepsi rank among the 50 most valuable brands in the world. Both have
prospered by exploiting their strong brands to sell what they are really commodities –
coffee and cola – at premium prices. A cup of coffee costs about three times more at
Starbucks than at an ordinary coffee shop in New York and Pepsi sells for 60-70%
Mr Schultz suggests the company needs to go back to its roots. The smell of fresh
coffee beans is supposed to waft through brightly lit cafes fitted with tables and
comfortable chairs. Electrical plugs let customers recharge their portable music players
or laptop computers. Most Starbucks in America and in some other countries provide
wireless Internet access.
But during its expansion Starbucks installed automatic espresso machines, rather than
hand pulled ones, added drive-through windows for motorists and started to sell hot
food, mugs and even CDs. As McDonald’s, Dunkin’ Donuts and other fast-food
chains moved upmarket, Starbucks looked less distinctive. A US magazine
published reviews of consumer products, recently rated McDonald’s coffee more highly
than that sold at Starbucks.
Mr Schultz’s desire to return Starbucks to its roots would appear to be at odds with the
company’s stated goal of growing to 40 000 outlets worldwide. Some analysts think
Starbucks’ brand is already over-stretched. This year Starbucks lost first place in an
annual study of consumer loyalty in the coffee-and-doughnuts category to Dunkin’
Donuts.
The airline has just signed a six-year agreement with Sydney-based specialist Permagard
Aviation to rejuvenate and protect the exteriors of 72 current and future Boeing 737s
and new Embraer regional jets.
"By reducing the amount of grime which sticks to the aircraft and by extending the life
of the paintwork, we can reduce exterior cleaning time, defer major repainting and
exterior restoration and increase the time in which the aircraft are in the air," Virgin
chief operations officer Andrew David said.
The Permagard process cleans and completely seals the aircraft's outer surfaces without
using water, creating a permanent barrier between the aircraft's paint and the extreme
flying conditions in the Southern Hemisphere.
Virgin is required to wash each of its aircraft every 60 days, but Mr Pettitt said his
program eliminates the need to wash the planes, replacing this process with a re-
application of the protective coating every 12 months