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Warburtons Snacks – Inspired or Confused Targeting?

Posted by Dave Lawrence on February 22, 2010
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Warburtons have just announced that they are due to launch two separate sub-brands in an assault on the savoury snack category. It makes intutitive sense for Warburtons to extend the brand in this way and will no doubt build a strong base of incremental sales to its core bakery product portfolio.

The typical snacker profile tends to be much younger than the supermarket shopper profile and this is reflected in how Warburtons have crafted the snack propositions and their sub-brand expressions. Whilst the Warburtons parent brand remains as an umbrella endorsement, the two brands ‘ChippidyDooDaa’ and ‘Snackadoodle’ are both prominently used as the primary on pack branding and the tonality of the pack design combined with the flavours appear to have been created to appeal to a young adult (male) audience.

As part of the mix, they have also developed brand characters for each which are highly visible on pack and this looks to be an interesting move given that such characters are usually deployed in this way to appeal to young children (especially so within this category). Warburtons do not explicitly mention ‘kids’ as one of the core target audiences in the launch announcement although I would predict that the characters will indeed prompt interest with tweens and teens. Furthermore, their potential popularity will be strengthend with this ‘aspirational’ audience largely because of the absence of any other kids branding cues.

Despite this potential interest from tweens and teens however, the presence of the characters may work against the success of the snack products in that they may serve to limit interest amongst older adults (who may be existing brand loyalists) or else risk overall confusion as they sit alongside the core Warburtons brand…

The comfort blanket for brands

Posted by Dave Lawrence on January 23, 2010
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Its always interesting to review ‘The Grocer’s Top Product Survey’ every year to reflect on the supermarket winners and losers. Given the economic pinch felt by all shoppers in 2009, this year’s ranking was especially interesting reading.

One thing that stood out for me was the relative good fortune of the baby product categories, in particular the baby snacks sector which recorded the sixth highest annual sales with growth increasing almost 13% year on year.

The recession has been a time when people have made various compromises in their spending and its is clear that they are less prepared to make perceived sacrifices when it comes to buying products for their children. When you speak with parents, they frequently say that they tend to make sure that their kids ‘do not go without’ even if that means a degree of cutting back on their own personal indulgences. This is well demonstrated with the fortunes of organic food & drink, which overall has struggled to justify its price premium within the regular shopping basket, yet organic kids products have bucked this particular trend and remain as buoyant as ever.

Whilst some traditionalists may argue that children are over-indulged in today’s society, it is very evident that companies that continue to provide quality products underpinned by trusted & recognized brands can continue to command a price premium for doing so.