January-February 2008Best of BevNET 2007 Best Packaging Innovation: NOS 22 oz. bottle, Fuze Beverages
By
BevNET staff
Fuze didn’t exactly get off to
a blazing start after its acquisition by the Coca-Cola Co. First there was a packaging switch for its core new-age
tea line, then spotty rollouts plagued its Rehab recovery beverage. But the company-within-a-company had an
ace-in-the-hole in its NOS energy drink, which had long held sway over a small
but dedicated group of automotive enthusiasts.
But
things have turned around for Fuze ever since it caught nitrous in a bottle, modeling the NOS 22 oz. container after
automotive afterparts maker Holley’s Nitrous Oxide System tanks. Having already
licensed the drink’s name from the
company, moving into the form of the product seems to have been a brilliant move.
“It’s
our number one SKU,” says William Meissner, the chief marketing offi cer at Fuze. “It’s been absolutely a game
changer for us [at Coke]. If you think
of your company as a brand inside the system, I cannot emphasize enough that we are with the best system, but there
are a million other things they can
do and take to retail. It’s really given us a presence.”
The NOS bottle took a simple licensing ploy and
turbocharged it, making it the kind
of product any gearhead worth his axle grease would be delighted to see drinking. In fact, the jumbo-sized
tank of energy has helped NOS break into a pile of exciting new channels, like
Napa and CSK auto parts stores, Home
Depot, and even NASCAR vending.
“Because
it’s iconic to motor sports, it’s really going to be our product for the automotive channel,” Meissner says.
“With that valve cover and the gleaming blue look, it’s become a real...
I’m not a fan of the word novelty. Especially since it’s our number-one package
in the [energy drink] category.”
Fuze has always had a strong emphasis on packaging
for its core new age tea line, but
hadn’t yet done major experimentation with the NOS brand. But one day Meissner was looking at a PET bottle
for the drink, and it got him
thinking.
“It just had this shoulder
that reminded me of the canister. We’ve got them here in the offi ce and we use them in our advertising, and
we saw the bottle and the shoulder looked very similar. We went to
[package designer] Zuckerman Honickman, they got after it and came up with the
design. We saw it and said, ‘that’s close, is there any way we could make a closure
that would look like the valve top?’”
By the time the design was done, Fuze had a
great package – and a dedicated marketing angle.
“We literally bought every single auto magazine over September and October, so in that
respect, marketing was really simple,” Meissner says. “And through Coke’s
relationships, we now have the ability to serve it at a lot of racetracks, where
we used to guerilla market.”
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