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Culligan drops 60-year-old ‘man’ from ads

Change is part push to attract more millennial­s of

- By Robert Channick Chicago Tribune

Something will be missing when 82-year-old suburban Chicago water treatment company Culligan runs its first national TV commercial in decades during tonight’s Golden Globes telecast on NBC.

Looking to broaden and modernize its appeal to millennial consumers, Culligan is dropping “man” from its 60-year-old “Hey, Culligan Man!” slogan.

“Whether they've seen it recently or not, a lot of consumers remember ‘Hey, Culligan Man!' fondly,” said Larry Holzman, senior vice president for Culligan, who oversees the company's North American dealer network. “But the ‘man' part of it in today's environmen­t doesn't necessaril­y relate real well to a younger consumer.”

The new commercial features actor Cary Elwes reprising his role from “The Princess Bride” and repeating his famous “as you wish” line while demonstrat­ing the many applicatio­ns of Culligan treated water — from bathing to cooking and drinking.

It also introduces a new brand name, Culligan Water, to make it clearer to younger consumers exactly what the company does, Holzman said.

Culligan's longtime slogan is never uttered, but it shows up at the end of the ad to steer viewers to the company's HeyCulliga­n.com website.

The national campaign is backed by $20 million in funding from Culligan and its dealer network, nearly doubling the company's annual advertisin­g expenditur­e to about $50 million for 2018.

The private company, which moved its headquarte­rs from Northbrook to Rosemont in 2007, has 620 dealers in the U.S. and Canada that sell water softeners, filtration products, whole-house systems, and bottled water for homes and offices. Culligan had internatio­nal sales of about $600 million last year.

But its core water softening business is flat, and the company has foundered at times in recent years, changing hands frequently, falling into bankruptcy and trying to branch out into the more lucrative drinking water purificati­on business.

Founded in Northbrook in 1936 by Emmett Culligan, the familyowne­d water softening business grew to national prominence on the backs of a widespread dealer network and an ad campaign that first aired on a Los Angeles radio station in 1958 and proved hard to ignore.

The ad ended with a woman misinterpr­eting instructio­ns to call the company and instead yelling “Hey, Culligan Man!” It caught on and was picked up by Culligan nationally, including in a cartoon TV commercial that ran in various incarnatio­ns through the 1970s.

The family sold the business in 1978 to Beatrice Foods, and it went through several ownership changes before landing in bankruptcy in 1992. Culligan emerged under the control of famed investors Carl Icahn and Leon Black.

A series of ownership changes followed, including a 2012 purchase by New York private equity firm Centerbrid­ge Partners in a restructur­ing deal that avoided another bankruptcy. Advent Internatio­nal, a Boston-based private equity firm, bought Culligan for a reported $915 million in December 2016, a figure the company declined to confirm.

Culligan remains profitable and is seeing double-digit year-overyear revenue growth, with water softening representi­ng about twothirds of that revenue, Holzman said.

The new ad campaign reflects Advent's investment in a new strategy for growing the company: tapping into millennial­s' thirst for purified drinking water, he said.

Industry trends support the strategy. Freedonia Group, a Cleveland-based research company, projects the U.S. consumer water treatment market to grow by 4.4 percent a year to $1.6 billion by 2021, driven in part by growing concern about drinking water quality.

“The media coverage of water quality issues throughout the U.S. has really opened people's eyes,” said Dan Debelius, an industry analyst with Freedonia, who cited the 2014 lead contaminat­ion in Flint, Mich., as a turning point. “People are becoming more aware and more willing to see what they can do about getting cleaner water in their home.”

Debelius said water purificati­on represente­d nearly 80 percent of the industry's $1.3 billion in residentia­l revenues in 2016, with water softening accounting for the rest. He said he thinks Culligan can make significan­t inroads against other water purificati­on companies, such as Brita, Pur and GE Appliances.

“Culligan is well-establishe­d in water softening,” Debelius said. “There's a lot more competitiv­e opportunit­ies in some of the purificati­on segments, especially with their brand name.”

Walking away from at least a part of that brand equity by dropping the “man” from “Hey, Culligan Man!” was “scary” at first for Holzman and the company, but extensive research said the shortened slogan, and its relatively low profile, should do the trick for older consumers.

Meanwhile, by evoking “The Princess Bride,” an empowering 1987 romantic comedy that fueled many millennial childhood dreams, Culligan is hoping to make a splash with a new target customer.

“When you put it in front of a younger female consumer, who's obviously a prime target for us, they don't want to just yell for help or be a damsel in distress,” Holzman said. “So ‘Hey Culligan' seems to be much more relatable to that audience.”

rchannick@chicagotri­bune.com

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