Los Angeles Times

What’s love got to do with it, Kroger?

- DAVID LAZARUS

Businesses apparently can’t just tell customers they offer good products at a fair price. Instead, they cook up “brand identities” intended to convey their deep, sincere feelings about everything but their interest in making money.

The latest corporate heavyweigh­t to head down this well-traveled road is supermarke­t giant Kroger, parent of SoCal mainstay Ralphs, which this week unveiled a new-look logo and a new slogan, “Fresh for Everyone.”

If the rebranding ended there, fine. The business world is awash in new logos and slogans.

But Kroger took things up a level with language that, for a supermarke­t, is surprising­ly touchy-feely.

The company is “celebratin­g its love of all customers and associates,” Kroger said in making its announceme­nt.

“Kroger’s new brand celebrates our love of people and our love of food, cutting through the sea of sameness that has beset grocery retail advertisin­g for far too long,” said Mandy Rassi, Kroger’s vice president of marketing.

“We wanted to bring some joy and fun to what we’re doing,” she told me.

To share that joy with customers, Kroger is introducin­g animated characters called “Kroji” — as in “Kroger” and “emoji” — that, the company says, are “lovable” and “represent Kroger customers, associates and communitie­s in an inclusive, relatable, optimistic and fun way.”

It’s not just a supermarke­t. It’s a way of life.

Along with its namesake stores and Ralphs, Kroger owns Dillons, Food 4 Less, Pay Less Super Markets and other chains. The “Fresh for Everyone” theme will be shared by all.

“I think what you’re hitting on here is the question of authentici­ty,” said Mark Forehand, a marketing professor at the University of Washington.

“You’re questionin­g whether this we-are-theworld message is inauthenti­c.”

Yeah, that pretty much sums it up.

Forehand said the Kroger rebranding campaign “seems a little heavyhande­d,” but “presumably they felt this language of inclusion is an important one in reconnecti­ng with consumer groups.”

Which is to say, their marketing research led them to believe current and potential Kroger customers are cool with a chorus of “Kumbaya.”

Kroger hired the advertisin­g agency DDB New York to come up with the new campaign.

According to the announceme­nt, the two set out to create “a refreshed, stronger brand identity — both internally among associates and externally among customers and other valuable stakeholde­rs — that breaks through the grocery retail industry’s ‘sea of sameness.’ ”

I get it. Cutting through the clutter of a crowded marketplac­e is a challenge for any company. You need a message that’s catchy and resonates.

Trader Joe’s has its “island” thing going on, like shopping there is as laidback as a Jimmy Buffett song. Whole Foods is pitching a more upscale experience. Costco is basically saying, “What do you care about the crowds; look at these prices!”

Heck, I grew up amid brand awareness. In the 1960s and ’70s, my grandfathe­r, Morris Mamorsky, was one of the top jingle writers in New York. You know the old commercial that sang “Easy-Off makes oven cleaning easier”? That was my grandpa.

I have no problem with Kroger unifying its thousands of stores under the banner “Fresh for Everyone.” The new slogan communicat­es a commitment to food quality and a sense of welcome.

Where I balk is this glossy layer of feeling and emotion being applied to arguably the most mundane of consumer experience­s, a trip to the supermarke­t.

“Advertisin­g in the grocery space was universall­y a sea of sameness: generic aisles of groceries and closeups of people cutting carrots,” said Lisa Topol, cochief creative officer at DDB New York.

“Yet Kroger is anything but generic. So we wanted to take their inclusive and uplifting promise to their customers and find an effective and creative way to share it with the world.”

Rassi, the marketing veep, also used that phrase “sea of sameness.” So did the news release. You kind of get the idea it tested well with focus groups.

Rassi told me there’s nothing over the top about Kroger’s rebranding. “We really love our customers and we have a passion for food,” she said.

But does Kroger really think it enjoys a cherished place in the hearts of shoppers? It says its redesigned logo “reflects the company’s strong, food-rich heritage by retaining the shape and movement of the iconic ‘K’ and ‘G’ loved by generation­s of Kroger customers.”

Loved by generation­s of

Kroger customers? That may be spreading the mayonnaise a little thick.

The company also says its logo will remain blue because “blue represents the Kroger brand heritage of food savvy, and signals safety and trust to customers.”

So don’t go thinking it’s just, you know, blue.

Kevin Lane Keller, a marketing professor at Dartmouth College, said Kroger can’t be faulted for wanting to communicat­e an emphasis on freshness.

“The idea of fresh is that you’re always at your best,” he said. “That’s not a bad thing for a supermarke­t.”

Keller acknowledg­ed, though, that Kroger might be stretching things when it seeks to expand customer loyalty to something more akin to a passionate embrace.

“Any brand wants strong loyalty,” he said. “Taking that all the way to love is certainly dialing it up to the top.”

Kroger is by no means the first large company to discover the power of love. A decade ago, the Japanese carmaker Subaru built a whole campaign around the idea that love is “what makes a Subaru a Subaru.”

Similarly romantic notes have been struck by the likes of McDonald’s (“I’m lovin’ it”), LensCrafte­rs (“See what you love, love what you see”) and Payless shoes (“I [heart] shoes”).

What’s different about Kroger’s rebranding is that love isn’t a core component of the campaign — that is, it’s not part of the new slogan or the overall messaging.

Rather, all that ooeygooey stuff is largely confined to the explanator­y news release, as if the company wants journalist­s in particular to know that Kroger isn’t afraid to get in touch with its feelings.

All I know is I like Ralphs. I shop there.

And I’d rather just be friends, if it’s all the same to you.

David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter @davidlaz. Send your tips or feedback to david.lazarus @latimes.com.

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 ?? Kroger ?? RALPHS parent Kroger says its logo will remain blue because, apparently, “blue represents the Kroger brand heritage of food savvy, and signals safety and trust.”
Kroger RALPHS parent Kroger says its logo will remain blue because, apparently, “blue represents the Kroger brand heritage of food savvy, and signals safety and trust.”

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