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PEPSI UNVEILS AD CAMPAIGN EMPHASIZING FOOD AND COLA
By Chad Terhune
Wall Street Journal
November 20, 2003
That meatloaf would taste even better with a Pepsi.
That's one of the messages coming from PepsiCo Inc. behind its first new
slogan for its flagship cola since 1999. The new advertising campaign, "It's
the Cola," replaces "The Joy of Pepsi" and its original version, "The Joy of Cola."
Pepsi unveiled the first three TV commercials in the campaign as well as
initial radio spots and outdoor advertising. Pepsi said the TV ads will
begin airing this Sunday during National Football League games and
prime-time shows.
"Our whole new campaign is about driving consumption of food and Pepsi,"
said Dave Burwick, chief marketing officer of Pepsi-Cola North America. "If
this was your last cheeseburger ever, you would want Pepsi, not peach iced tea."
The problem for Pepsi, Purchase, N.Y., and rival Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, is
that consumers are increasingly reaching for those flavored teas, waters and
other noncarbonated drinks at the expense of colas. Pepsi-Cola volume
dropped 5.5% for the first nine months of this year, while Coca-Cola volume
fell 2.9%, according to Beverage Digest. Those figures exclude fountain and
vending sales.
Industry observers say it's imperative for Pepsi and Coke to stabilize their
cola business because it requires so much growth in their smaller brands to
make up for even slight declines.
Katie Lacey, Pepsi's vice president of colas, said the cola category has
been losing "drinks, not drinkers" to the proliferation of new beverages.
She said the goal is to reclaim those "cola occasions" by emphasizing food,
fun and energy in the new campaign.
Pepsi's longtime agency, BBDO, a unit of Omnicom Group Inc., created the
ads. Pepsi said it planned up to 12 different TV commercials in the new
campaign.
"It is an exceptionally versatile theme and gives them a lot of latitude in
terms of directions they can take the creative," said Gary Hemphill, senior
vice president at Beverage Marketing Corp., an industry consultancy in New York.
Coke has paired cola with food for decades. In the 1920s, Coke's advertising
featured its signature soda with hamburgers and hot dogs.
"We are going to a whole new place (Coke) has never been," Mr. Burwick said.
Pepsi will be counting on TV ads like "Summer Job," which features a young
woman dressed in a hot dog costume passing out leaflets for the grand
opening of Wiener World. She becomes distraught when passersby ignore her,
but she finds a friend in a young man dressed as a Pepsi can outside a
nearby store. They walk off holding hands.
Another TV ad, "Tailgating," shows a group of men grilling out before the
game and reaching for ice-cold Pepsi. The third TV ad shown, "Vacuum," has
comedian Dave Chappelle losing his pants to a robotic vacuum thirsty for his
Pepsi. Several radio ads, also heavy on humor, emphasize that Pepsi is the
"difference between a good lunch and a great lunch."
In the outdoor ads, Pepsi plans to post signs in delis and stores with lines
such as, "That pastrami and rye would taste even better with a Pepsi" and an
arrow pointing to the product nearby.
In several of its new ads, particularly billboards, Pepsi pairs its cola
prominently with burgers, pizza and fries.
Some public-health advocates found that somewhat surprising given the
growing concerns about obesity. "To promote their sugary beverage with
burgers and pizza is sending two wrong messages, not just one," said Tracy
Fox, a registered dietitian in Bethesda, Md.
Larry Cohen, executive director of Prevention Institute, a national
nonprofit organization in Oakland, Calif., that focuses on community health,
said that Pepsi is reflecting what many consumers eat, but he worries that
such advertising reinforces an unhealthy diet.
Pepsi said a variety of foods would be featured over time. "We don't want to
be too apologetic," Mr. Burwick said. "People can have pizza and hot dogs
and not get obese."
There are also logistical reasons why certain foods were used in some ads.
"You can't spiral a chicken breast," Mr. Burwick joked, explaining why one
of the tailgaters throws a hot dog to a friend across the stadium parking lot.
Pepsi traditionally kicks off new advertising with a big Super Bowl splash,
but this year executives didn't want to miss a marketing opportunity during
the holiday season, particularly with their emphasis on food and social
gatherings.
For the upcoming Super Bowl, Pepsi plans an ad about its promotion next year
with Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes Music Store.
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