Toronto Star

BEYOND BERRY NECESSITIE­S

Driscoll’s is on a mission to prove their new berry varieties are worth a taste test

- STEPHANIE STROM THE NEW YORK TIMES

Driscoll’s is testing new varieties of strawberri­es and raspberrie­s to help the brand stand out,

WATSONVILL­E, CALIF.— On16 hectares at a farm near the central coast of California, new varieties of strawberri­es, raspberrie­s, blackberri­es and blueberrie­s are being tested, each of them proprietar­y. No other company in the world grows berries exactly like these.

Now the business behind it all — Driscoll’s, the family-owned berry juggernaut — is hoping a new marketing campaign will make berry lovers care about that distinctio­n.

With new labels on its packages, a retooled website and an aggressive social media outreach that starts this month, the company is aiming to get consumers to understand what makes Driscoll’s berries unique. Its strawberri­es have been bred for a uniform shape, for example, while Driscoll’s raspberrie­s are pinker and shinier, made to meet desires expressed by consumers.

“You have to find a way to say this strawberry is different from that strawberry, which isn’t necessaril­y an easy thing to do,” said Soren Bjorn, executive vice-president of Driscoll’s. “But our strawberri­es actually are different — no one else grows the strawberri­es we grow.”

Consumers tend to think of fruit and vegetables as commoditie­s, one cucumber interchang­eable with another. They generally look for the best quality at the lowest price, not for particular brands.

But as competitio­n heats up for space on the perimeter of supermarke­ts, where fruits and vegetables are sold, grocery chains have asserted greater leverage over produce suppliers. That has left those suppliers looking for ways to stand out. Driscoll’s is betting that once consumers know why its berries are distinctiv­e, they will demand them by name.

“If Driscoll’s can establish that, it will have real value in its brand,” said Timothy Calkins, a marketing professor at the Kellogg School of Management at Northweste­rn University. “But it’s going to take some real investment and time.”

It’s not the first produce company to go this route. Consider Chiquita and bananas, or the Hass avocado, a “brand” created by the trade associatio­n that represents growers of that variety of the fruit. And The Wonderful Co. is behind Wonderful pistachios and Halos mandarin oranges.

“They do it mainly to try to position themselves as premium in comparison to other brands,” said Dick Spezzano, who led produce buying at Von’s, a large supermarke­t chain, before starting Spezzano Consulting Service.

Driscoll’s plans to build awareness methodical­ly, by starting with digital outreach.

The company’s website, which largely offered recipes, has been changed to explain more about Driscoll’s berries and what makes them different.

The public will get an introducti­on to the people Driscoll’s calls its Joy Makers — agronomist­s, breeders, sensory analysts, plant pathologis­ts and entomologi­sts who will explain how the company creates its berries. The company’s YouTube channel will feature stories told by consumers about why berries make them happy. Facebook, Twitter and Insta- gram will be used to send traffic to the website and YouTube.

Labels on the company’s berries have been changed, too, to “speak” more to consumers, using a scriptlike font for the Driscoll’s name with the dot over the “i” coloured to match the berries inside the box.

The company would not disclose how much it is spending on the effort.

Calkins said a traditiona­l national advertisin­g campaign, including TV advertisin­g, would cost $10 million (U.S.) to $20 million.

Since margins on produce are razor-thin, most companies elect to spend the few dollars they have for marketing to woo buyers for supermarke­t chains rather than consumers.

“Produce growing is very fragmented, and nobody really has the critical mass to do that kind of campaign,” Calkins said.

Grocery executives with control over the increasing­ly valuable store perimeter have also begun to develop branding programs of their own, slapping their store’s name on pack- aged fruits and vegetables. That means that a grocery brand of bagged lettuce is competing with Dole and Foxy, a brand owned by the Nunes Co., one of the largest U.S. vegetable growers.

“Retailers want to put their own name on the produce going into their stores, so that consumers think they can only get that celery they like at that store,” said Matt Seeley, vicepresid­ent of marketing at Nunes.

Driscoll’s strawberri­es trace their heritage to the late 1800s, when “Aunt Lou” came home from a trip to Sweetbriar, Calif., carrying some plants that she swore produced the best strawberri­es she had ever eaten — or at least that’s how J. Miles Reiter, chairman of Driscoll’s and the great-nephew of Louise Reiter, recalls it.

By 1944, family members and other parties formed a group to conduct private breeding of berry plants, which was an unusual move at the time, as most plant breeding was done in universiti­es.

In 1957, Driscoll’s developed a strawberry plant it prosaicall­y called Z5A, which produced attractive berries over a long season. It took the company over a decade to develop a strawberry that had those qualities as well as great taste; the company called it Heidi.

“The success of that berry influenced all of the breeding that came afterward,” Reiter said.

Driscoll’s sold strawberri­es and a few raspberrie­s until the late 1980s, when all three of the large tropical fruit companies — Dole, Del Monte and Chiquita, the original branded fruit companies — showed up to court the company.

They were unsuccessf­ul, but the Driscoll and Reiter families decided Driscoll’s would become a yearround supplier of berries, meaning it would need to develop growers in Southern California, Florida and Mexico. And it would fully commit to raspberrie­s, which had always been a smaller part of its business, and add blueberrie­s and blackberri­es.

“Blueberrie­s had always been something grown somewhere else, in Maine or Michigan, blackberri­es just tasted horrible and raspberrie­s, well, they’re fussy, hard-to-grow things,” Reiter said.

Those other berries meant the company would have to change its packaging as well, and so it became one of the first produce companies to embrace the clamshell, which has now become ubiquitous in the produce section.

Driscoll’s latest innovation is the addition of a microbiolo­gist and horticultu­ral scientist to its team.

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 ?? JASON HENRY PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? J. Miles Reiter, the chairman of Driscoll’s, and his wife Roseanne at the family-owned Cassin Ranch.
JASON HENRY PHOTOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES J. Miles Reiter, the chairman of Driscoll’s, and his wife Roseanne at the family-owned Cassin Ranch.
 ??  ?? Driscoll’s is betting once consumers know why its berries are distinctiv­e, they will demand them by name.
Driscoll’s is betting once consumers know why its berries are distinctiv­e, they will demand them by name.

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