Archive for May 29th, 2008

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Is there anything cooler than Kool-Aid? Kraft (NYSE: KFT) believes there’s, my friends. In fact, Kraft thinks a healthier Kool-Aid is pretty darn hip!

According to this AP article, Kraft wants to position the Kool-Aid brand to health-conscious moms as a beverage that’s okay for children to consume. The food company will be adding vitamin E to one of the Kool-Aid varieties, and it has reformulated its sugar-free lineup to improve the taste. There’s also a new Kool-Aid product on the market called Burstin’ Waters that’s supposed to be relatively healthy.

The company actually has been pretty good about trying to make its products not as junky. As the article says, Kraft introduced an initiative a few years back to create a set of nutritional guidelines that would aid the company in making its portfolio more in tune with the current zeitgeist; indeed, moms everywhere seem to be getting sick of putting sugary, fat-inducing foodstuffs into the stomachs of their kids. Of course, I’m sure kids still get away with eating junk at times (it’s like an inalienable right of the youth); for the most part, though, consumer choices are shifting, and woe be the consumer-goods entity that does not respond. Just ask Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) and PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP). Those two have been kicking it into high gear when it comes to alternatives to sugary carbonated sodas. Pepsi and Coke now offer all kinds of waters and enhanced beverages; in Pepsi’s case, many of its salty-snack products are decidedly healthier. Coke purchased VitaminWater last year, and has been doing well with it. And with vitamins all the rage, Kraft would be smart to really promote the heck out of that vitamin-E addition.

From this point on, the public is going to increasingly demand food and drink of a higher quality, consumables that can promote wellness. Kraft needs to sell the public on its new Kool-Aid, especially since, no matter how much improved it is, it still is, well, Kool-Aid. It’ll never be the healthiest thing on the market, but with the right campaign, perceptions can change, and sales can grow. Kool-Aid is still a famous brand, and tiny evolutions like this can help it remain relevant.

Disclosure: I own shares of Coca-Cola; positions can change at any time.

 

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Like it or not, “American Idol” season seven champion David Cook is off to an impressive start with 11 songs entering Billboard’s Hot 100 chart this week, and 14 songs enter the magazine’s Hot Digital Songs, both records. Billboard notes that the Hot 100 placing is the most any artist has enjoyed on that chart since The Beatles scored 14 hits in 1964. Cook’s record is the first in Billboard’s Nielson Soundscan “era” (i.e. since 1991) and shatters Miley Cyrus’s 6-song debut in November 2006. Cook’s digital debut is also a record and beats out Cyrus again. According to Billboard, Apple Inc. ’s (NASDAQ: AAPL) iTunes Store withheld reporting digital sales until the show had ended.

Cook is also ready to enter the studio, according to E! On the internet. The winner signed to RCA Records, a Sony BMG label, and 19 Recordings for a new album in the fall. E! erroneously calls the new album Cook’s “debut”, when he released an independent album in 2006, but that album and its songs were pulled from Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) as he worked his way through “American Idol” competition.

Simon Fuller, “American Idol” creator, told E! that he “honestly believes that David has the potential to go on to become one of the most successful Idols of all time.” If early success and an independent album can hold fans until the fall, then Cook will certainly enjoy a huge release. Regardless, “American Idol” winners and finalists albums always seem to do well at first. It’s only later that they lose steam or interest from their supposed fans. Still though, 11 chart debuts is impressive and Cook might never be in the same league as The Beatles, but his success might well come close to copying the Fab Four.

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