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The Jon 2004
May 29th, 2004, 01:16 AM
http://money.cnn.com/2004/05/25/news/fortune500/coke_c2/index.htm

http://money.cnn.com/2004/05/25/news/fortune500/coke_c2/coke_lowcarb_bottle.jpg

Exec calls mid-calorie cola "the biggest thing since Diet Coke," but some analysts aren't so sure.
May 25, 2004: 2:01 PM EDT
By Parija Bhatnagar, CNN/Money staff writer



NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Coca-Cola's ad for the new C2 cola may be set to the Rolling Stones' classic "You Can't Always Get What You Want." But Coke's North American president doesn't seem to be buying that message when it comes to expectations for the low-carb, mid-calorie cola.

"C2 will be the biggest thing to arrive since Diet Coke's debut over 20 years ago," Don Knauss said in an interview with CNN/Money.


Coca-Cola C2 is expected to hit stores next month.
Coca-Cola (KO: Research, Estimates) will unleash C2 in stores nationwide June 7, and Knauss says he's already certain of its success.

But whether C2 will actually give Coke a leg up in the infamous cola wars remains to be seen -- especially since archrival PepsiCo Inc. (PEP: Research, Estimates) is also gearing up to release its own low-carb soda called "PepsiEdge" in mid-June.

With C2, Coke appears to be capitalizing on the popularity of diets such as Atkins and South Beach, since the new cola is billed as having half the carbs, half the calories and half the sugar of regular Coke.

"We think C2 really has the power to become a global trend," said Knauss. "This is a new product for people who want an active and healthy lifestyle but who don't want to compromise on taste."

But some industry watchers are cautious.

Morningstar analyst Debbie Wang said she has doubts about the likelihood of success for the mid-calorie colas. She said that both Coke and Pepsi could end up cannibalizing other brands in their portfolio, especially if consumers start to defect from either the full-calorie or the diet category brands.

That could also hurt overall sales volumes, Wang said.

Coca-Cola last year saw its overall share of the $63 billion U.S. soft-drink market decline by 0.3 percentage point to 44 percent, according to Beverage Digest, while Pepsi's market share inched up 0.4 percentage point to 31.8 percent.

Vanilla Coke slips
Among the brands that lost ground last year were Vanilla Coke, which the company introduced in 2002, and Diet Coke with Lemon, introduced in 2001. The volume for Vanilla Coke decreased 21 percent in 2003 and fell 56 percent for Diet Coke with Lemon.

Said Wang, "Both these brands were introduced with a big splash and then began to struggle."

Knauss, however, dismissed those concerns.

"C2 will pose little risk to the other categories," he said. "Diet Coke consumers are very loyal to it. Diet Coke has a base of about 100 million consumers. And those who haven't migrated into the diet category already love the taste of regular Coke."


Coke's new TV ad for C2 debuts Tuesday evening on FOX's "American Idol."
So who is the market for C2?

"We've found that as people age, their taste shifts," Knauss said. "That's our sweet spot. These are consumers who don't go for the diet colas because of the taste and they want to avoid the sugar in the regular cola."

John Sicher, editor of Beverage Digest, thinks mid-calorie sodas are "potentially a very good idea" that could help revitalize carbonated drink sales, which grew just 0.6 percent last year compared to a strong 25 percent growth for the bottled water category.

"Innovation is absolutely essential to this industry," said Sicher.

"I'm a little suspicious about this 'new market' that Don is talking about," she said. "Is there really this big category of consumers out there who are so dissatisfied with any of the cola options that they're not drinking any sodas and that they'll actually crawl out of the woodwork when C2 hits the stores? I'm not sure about that."

The Jon 2004
May 29th, 2004, 01:19 AM
http://www.rep-am.com/business/8g6n.htm

Coke joins low-carb craze

Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Bloomberg News

Coca-Cola Co., the world's largest maker of soft drinks, will give away more than 12 million samples of its new C2 cola in the company's largest marketing campaign since Diet Coke's debut in 1982.

Coca-Cola C2, which has half the calories and carbohydrates of regular drinks, will go on sale the weekend of June 11, the Atlanta-based soft-drink maker said. Coca-Cola's number of samples is four times the amount given away for Vanilla Coke's introduction in 2002, one of the company's biggest new products in recent years.

PepsiCo Inc. is moving up its introduction of Pepsi Edge cola, also with half the calories and carbohydrates, to mid-June from September, spokesman Dave DeCecco said.

Purchase, N.Y.-based PepsiCo, the world's No. 2 soft-drink maker, said the scheduling change was intended to take advantage of greater summer sales of soft drinks and prompted by demand by its bottlers.

Coca-Cola and PepsiCo are trying to revive sales of soft drinks, which have risen less than 1 percent annually the past five years as dieters reduced purchases. Both new drinks are intended to appeal to consumers who don't like the taste of diet sodas.

"With the focus on low-carbohydrate diets, this is perfectly on trend," said Don Knauss, president of Coca-Cola's North American business. The drink, packaged in black-and-red bottles, also is likely to be sold in Canada, though a timetable hasn't been set, he said.

aguilera_lover
May 29th, 2004, 06:48 PM
:rolleyes:

Glucose
May 30th, 2004, 11:46 PM
Gosh the coca-cola company is certainly coming up with a variety of coca-cola's now. Diet, diet vanilla, vanilla, diet lemon, lemon, my Mum recently bough a bottle of diet lime coca-cola. Oh and the cherry coca-cola.

Zipster
May 31st, 2004, 02:25 PM
Diet Coke with Lime is bangin... everything is low carb now a days!!

TrueB&B_BritFan
May 31st, 2004, 06:09 PM
or like the biggest flop since "Pepsi ONE" :p

Glucose
Jun 1st, 2004, 10:52 PM
What is pepsi ONE?

tiger_rascal
Jun 1st, 2004, 11:36 PM
I remember Crystal Pepsi, it was ok, but it didnt last long.

My favorite is Cherry Coke, but its hard to find in my area now. Mine and my grandmas favorite snack was Cherry Coke and cheese puffs!

Also, has anyone noticed that in the 80s cola tasted much better in those tall glass bottles!

Glucose
Jun 3rd, 2004, 02:42 AM
I had coke in a glass bottle not long ago - my Mum got it for me from the fish & chips shop. But I didn't notice a taste difference, that's b/c I only ever drink diet coke. :D

TrueB&B_BritFan
Jun 3rd, 2004, 06:33 PM
http://www.pepsione.com/

oooo Pepsi One wallpapers :p

FAJTAFan123
Jun 20th, 2004, 10:28 AM
If you don't want carbs or sugar or calories, why not just drink diet coke? That's what I do. I have never really liked regular soda. Too much sugar for me. I could drink it if I had to though and there were no other options. I don't think it is really disgusting, I just prefer diet. A lot of my friends think diet is horrible though. They don't know why I drink it.

Smitty162
Jun 26th, 2004, 06:14 PM
If you don't want carbs or sugar or calories, why not just drink diet coke? That's what I do. I have never really liked regular soda. Too much sugar for me. I could drink it if I had to though and there were no other options. I don't think it is really disgusting, I just prefer diet. A lot of my friends think diet is horrible though. They don't know why I drink it.


I agree. Why buy a low carb soda when all you have to do is drink diet. Diet has no carbs.

AJsSweetLady
Jul 8th, 2004, 02:39 PM
I never use to be a fan of diet drinks myself but I think they've gotten better tasting over the years. I find many of the diet drinks taste just like regular soda and once you get use to taste, it really isn't so bad. I gave up drinking reg. soda 6 months ago and I really don't miss it at all.:biggrin:

Zipster
Jul 11th, 2004, 06:29 AM
The low carb soda tastes a lot more than nasty Diet stuff