Perrier fooled Americans into drinking water instead of cool drinks

Perrier fooled Americans into drinking water instead of cool drinks
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Perrier fooled Americans into drinking water instead of cool drinks

Tennis fans watching the French Open specifically remember the water cooler prominently displaying the word ‘Perrier’ the king of mineral water in the world.

Perrier fooled Americans into drinking water instead of cool drinks
The spring in Southern France from which Perrier is drawn was called Les Bouillens. Local doctor Louis Perrie bought the spring in 1898 and operated a commercial spa there; he also bottled the water for sale. He later sold the spring to Sir Saint-John Harmsworth. Harmsworth closed the spa. He renamed the spring Source Perrier and started bottling the water in distinctive green bottles.

Harmsworth marketed the product in Britain at a time when anything French was seen as 'chic' and ‘must have’ to the middle classes.
Soon Perrier spread its wings and went across the Atlantic. It went to the USA, the mother of all market places. The timing was perfect. The company did market research. The four Ps were fine-tuned to a nicety, the pricing as perfect, the trade was told how to take care of the demand and the launch was impeccable.
The results were disconcerting. The product was not doing as well as expected. The feedback was positive. There were no complaints about the quality or the price, promotion or distribution. So what was going wrong?

To understand what was going wrong we will have to delve deep into the psyche of a typical American. Americans are brought up on Coke and Pepsi. They find drinking water alien. The author's personal experience was very enlightening. When asked for water, most of the bartenders had a puzzled expression. They would hand out plastic cups. The plastic cups would have H20 written on them. The author himself had to go to the soda fountain and get a fill of water.

Americans do drink water. But the water has to be colored. Adding color to the distinctively crystal clear Perrier mineral water would be going against the grain of the product itself. So what to do? Taking the help of the American psychology a solution was arrived at. Americans have a fight going on with themselves all the time. America is filled with calorie-filled goodies and quite frequently a typical American would gorge on fatty foods and wash it down it with a huge glass of Coke or Pepsi. Then the guilt would step in. He/she would make a beeline to the nearest gym or a tread mill and try to work out the calories that he/she had binged upon.

Perrier hit upon a brilliant idea. Their next campaign talked about Perrier as a ‘zero calorie drink”. There was an underplaying of the word water and emphasis on the catch phrase “zero calorie”. It was clearly saying eat what you want to eat but instead of washing it down with Coke or Pepsi have Perrier and save 300 to 400 calories as water is totally calorie free. Perrier showed us how a product need not be tinkeredwith all the time, one can subtly change the communication and the product can be set on the certain path of success.

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