Business Standard

COCA-COLA PITCHES KINLEY TO COUNTER LOCAL BRANDS

Firm to launch two fizzy drinks under the brand next week

- ARNAB DUTTA & VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Beverage maker Coca-Cola India will soon launch two carbonated flavoured-water drinks under the Kinley brand in a bid to take on local rivals. The flavours include lemon and orange, which will be priced at ~15 each for a 250-ml PET bottle. ARNAB

DUTTA & VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO write

The country’s largest beverage maker, CocaCola India, will soon launch two carbonated flavoured-water drinks under the Kinley brand in a bid to take on local rivals.

The move is significan­t because the company, according to sources, has for long been looking at ways and means to counter the growing influence of local brands.

The new range of the flavoured-water drinks will be the third line of products in the Kinley portfolio — after its bottled water and soda variants. The flavours include lemon and orange, which will be priced at ~15 each for a 250ml PET bottle. The products would be rolled out in Bengaluru next week before being taken to other cities, persons in the know said.

More importantl­y, CocaCola India has ensured that the new products are competitiv­ely priced, keeping them at par with its 300-ml glass-bottle price of Coke. This price point is the second-lowest for the company — after the 200ml glass-bottle price of Coke, which comes for ~12.

The competitiv­e pricing of the new Kinley range is in keeping with the company’s strategy of encouragin­g sampling and penetratio­n, according to persons in the know.

According to industry estimates, local players have captured nearly 8 per cent of the ~22,000-crore organised beverage market in India by pricing products cheaply.

Sources say the company is keen to prevent its flagship products such as Thums Up and Coca-Cola from having to wage a battle with local brands, since that could hurt their brand equity. Kinley, in this regard, was viewed as the company’s best bet to take on local brands. First launched as a packaged water brand in India, Kinley contribute­s less than 10 per cent to the firm’s revenue here.

However, it remains popular among consumers, prompting Coca-Cola to leverage it to take on local brands.

The new range will be the third in line, after Diet Coke and Coke Zero, to contain aspartame, a synthetic sweetener, billed as a substitute for sugar.

Last week, T Krishnakum­ar, president, Coca-Cola India and Southwest Asia, told Business Standard that the company proposed to reduce sugar content across all products, including carbonated drinks. The company has begun experiment­ing with stevia, a natural sweetener, under Fanta Fruity Orange in Gujarat.

“We will announce a programme on reduction of sugar across all our products in three months with clear milestones, so that we can bring it down to global standards,” Krishnakum­ar said.

Coca- Cola was beaten by rival PepsiCo last year in the race to launch a stevia-based drink in India, with the latter using the natural sweetener in fizzy drink 7Up, the first for the brand anywhere in the world.

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