The Oklahoman

What’s in a name?

Revamped Coke Zero helps attract more customers

- BY ABHA BHATTARAI The Washington Post

After a summer makeover, sales of Coke Zero — now called Coke Zero Sugar — are on the rise again.

Coca-Cola revamped the popular diet soda in August with sleeker packaging, a new name and an “improved” recipe. And although the ingredient list, which includes aspartame and caramel color, has remained the same, Americans are now buying much more of the diet soda than they did earlier this year. (The company says it “only tweaked the blend of natural flavors” to make the drink taste more like Coca-Cola.)

“The headline is: As Coke Zero Sugar comes into marketplac­es, we’re seeing continued accelerati­on of (the drink) lifting the whole franchise,” James Quincey, president and chief executive of Coca-Cola, said in a Wednesday call with analysts. “We’re pleased with how it’s playing out.”

Overall, U.S. sales of the drink are growing twice as fast as they were earlier this year, according to the company. That increase marked a bright spot in an otherwise gloomy earnings report: Coca-Cola on Wednesday reported a 33 percent drop in third-quarter profits, which fell to $4 billion, or 92 cents per share, from a year earlier. Quarterly revenue decreased 15 percent to $9.1 billion in the same period.

The new Coke Zero Sugar is just one of more than 500 products the Atlanta-based beverage giant plans to reformulat­e this year as it scrambles to keep up with changing tastes.

Too much sugar

“We recognize that too much sugar isn’t good for anyone, and we are continuall­y evolving our business to reflect this fact,” Quincey said in a Q&A published on CocaCola’s website. “While there’s no silver bullet that will end obesity, we believe our combined product, package and marketing efforts can be more effective at reducing the sugar people drink over the long term.”

American soda consumptio­n fell to a 30-year low last year, with the steepest declines in sales of Diet Pepsi and Diet Coke, according to data from the trade publicatio­n Beverage Digest. Overall, consumptio­n of diet soda fell 31 percent between 2005 and 2016.

As Americans shun sodas in favor of bottled water, juices and teas, Coca-Cola is also making changes to keep up. It bought Bethesda-based Honest Tea in 2014, and earlier this month took over Topo Chico, a brand of sparkling water from Monterrey, Mexico. In addition to sodas like Sprite, Fanta and Coke, the company now owns a number of juice, sports drink and water brands, including Minute Maid, Powerade, Glacéau Vitamin Water and Odwalla.

The company’s rebranding of Coke Zero Sugar is also part of that broader effort. CocaCola says it changed the drink’s name “to be as clear and descriptiv­e as possible” after internal research showed that many consumers didn’t realize that Coke Zero didn’t have sugar or calories. It also changed the drink’s packaging “to make it look more like Coca-Cola.” Out: Mostly-black labels. In: More red, and the words “zero sugar” and “zero calorie” printed prominentl­y on the front.

“We’re confident that loyal Coke Zero fans will love the newand-improved recipe, and that fans of original Coca-Cola looking to reduce their sugar intake will want to try it, too,” the company said in a July blog post.

Consumers, however, were not immediatel­y convinced: “Coke Zero is gone because we live in a grim dystopia in which nothing good can exist,” a GQ headline proclaimed in July. Dozens also took to Twitter to complain.

Coke Zero Sugar, first introduced in the United Kingdom last year, is now sold in more than 25 countries. The company says the revamped drink will be available worldwide by early 2018.

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? The new Coke Zero Sugar is just one of more than 500 products the Atlanta-based beverage giant plans to reformulat­e this year.
[AP FILE PHOTO] The new Coke Zero Sugar is just one of more than 500 products the Atlanta-based beverage giant plans to reformulat­e this year.

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