Lodi News-Sentinel

General Mills has surprise growth star: Totino’s frozen pizzas and rolls

- By Kristen Leigh Painter

MINNEAPOLI­S — All the sales growth and deal making in the food business these days seems to be in products that are health-oriented, organic or natural. And then, there’s Totino’s. When General Mills earlier this year told investors it had sorted out its huge portfolio of products between steady performers and fast growers, it put its Totino’s frozen pizza and snack roll brand in the second group.

It looked out of place next to some good-for-your-health brands like Annie’s. But General Mills, rather than glossing over Totino’s image, is recasting the narrative and aiming it at 20- and 30-something consumers who don’t like being pandered to through traditiona­l advertisin­g.

To reach these skeptical young buyers, the marketing team has pushed many boundaries at General Mills, a 150-year-old company fiercely protective of its products’ reputation­s.

“There have been times in the building where I have had to pitch ideas where I thought, ‘I am totally going to get fired today,’” said Brad Hiranaga, director of marketing at Totino’s.

That discomfort is due to Totino’s new image as an irreverent and at times absurd brand that is cozying up to young people through the digital channels they use.

Totino’s pizza rolls are the bestsellin­g frozen snack and appetizer in U.S. retail stores, controllin­g more than 26 percent of the segment. General Mills sold more than $530 million of pizza rolls in the previous year ending Oct. 2, according to IRI, a Chicago-based research firm. Meanwhile, Totino’s frozen pizzas were the third-most popular frozen pizza during the same period — trailing Nestle SA’s DiGiorno and Schwan Food Co.’s Red Baron — with $360.8 million in sales.

Many of Totino’s target consumers have memories of eating pizza rolls as a kid. But the brand got its start in 1951 in northeast Minneapoli­s when Rose and Jim Totino helped bring Italian food and pizza to Minnesota for the first time.

The small family restaurant with red- and white-checked tablecloth­s, bistro tables and red vinyl booths was an immediate success. By 1962, the Totino family built a frozen pizza plant in suburban Minneapoli­s to meet the increasing U.S. appetite for convenient meals. Rose sold the business in 1975 to Pillsbury, which later was bought by General Mills. Today, nearly a million Totino’s pizzas are sold in the U.S. every day.

Sales grew between 3 percent and 5 percent in fiscal year 2014 and 2015 but saw a small 1.6 percent decline in fiscal year 2016, which ended in May. General Mills said that is due to new competitio­n in the frozen snack category.

In the last two years, the company pivoted its marketing of Totino’s products from parents to young adults. The brand has resonated with this large consumer group not by overtly pitching its products, but by interactin­g with them in ridiculous and lightheart­ed ways that defy traditiona­l advertisin­g.

“When we decided to go after that millennial audience, we saw thousands of people were making fun of the product on social media, being irreverent, but having fun,” said Caio Correa, marketing manager for Totino’s. “We realized, they were talking to us, but we weren’t talking to them.”

The team started interactin­g with these online conversati­ons by retweeting funny comments about Totino’s, creating memes out of snarky hashtags and distributi­ng self-effacing content. Last fall, Totino’s developed a campaign around this approach, called “Live free, couch hard.”

“We started to see the passion points, which were things like show streaming, gaming, binge-watching Netflix, and we started to create content around those things and targeting the folks when they were doing this,” Correa said.

Much of their content was inspired by what the consumers were telling Totino’s, Hiranaga said, “Our fans love that. They see there is truth in it, in the self-awareness that Totino’s has.”

Saturday Night Live, with comedian Larry David, produced several skits poking fun at Totino’s and football fans, which tickled the team at General Mills. Comedians Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim, who have a large following online, created a video ode to Totino’s pizza rolls that has been viewed 1.1 million times on YouTube.

General Mills partnered with Twitch, the world’s top platform and community for video-gamers, on Super Bowl Sunday last year for a Totino’s Bucking Couch event.

The gist: Fans watched celebrity gamers play video games while viewers controlled the motion of the mechanical couch the gamer was sitting on.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Totino's marketing leaders Brad Hiranaga and Caio Correa show off their Totino's pizza sticks and stuffed nachos in Golden Valley, Minn.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Totino's marketing leaders Brad Hiranaga and Caio Correa show off their Totino's pizza sticks and stuffed nachos in Golden Valley, Minn.

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