San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Behind Juul’s smoke screen

- By Kevin Roose

Juul Labs, the company behind the insanely popular vaping device, has a message for the nation’s estimated 37.8 million adult smokers:

It really, really, really cares about them. And it wants them (and only them — got that, teens?) to try vaping instead.

“For smokers. By design,” blares the San Francisco company’s website. A new $10 million TV ad campaign called “Make the Switch” echoes that theme, featuring testimonia­ls from ex-smokers, all comfortabl­y above the legal smoking age, who have swapped their cigarettes for a Juul.

This benevolent­sounding mission — helping nicotine-addicted adults switch to something far less likely to kill them — is Juul’s new pitch, and the way it hopes to rehabilita­te its image as one of the Bay Area’s most problemati­c startups.

You can’t fault Juul for trying. The company, which is valued at $38 billion, has been through the wringer lately — with regulators, public health advocates and concerned parents accusing it of fueling an epidemic of teenage nicotine addiction by marketing to young people with fruit-flavored pods, colorful youth-filled ads and social media campaigns. It has been sued by users and lambasted by lawmakers, and the Food and Drug Administra­tion, which is investigat­ing whether Juul’s marketing practices deliberate­ly targeted underage users, conducted a surprise inspection of the company’s headquarte­rs last year. (In November, Juul announced it would shut down its Instagram and Facebook accounts, and stop selling most flavored pods in stores.)

Adding to the concern is that last month, Juul took a $12.8 billion investment

Ship traffic

Due to arrive today from Altria, the tobacco giant behind Marlboro and other popular brands, in exchange for 35 percent of the company.

Now, after making billions of dollars and joining forces with Big Tobacco, Juul is billing itself as a public-health crusader.

Juul is far from the first company to attempt a humanitari­an makeover. Facebook, an outgrowth of a Harvard student’s juvenile attempt to quantify the attractive­ness of his classmates, now claims to have been motivated by a virtuous impulse to connect the world; Uber, created by two tech entreprene­urs who wanted to zoom around San Francisco in luxury cars, later tried to convince people that it wanted to provide affordable mobility to the masses.

But in Juul’s case, revisionis­t history is particular­ly important, because the way Juul markets itself is central to the question of how it should be treated. Many consumers, investors and ethical technologi­sts would rightly shun a company that knowingly targeted minors with harmful products and cleaned up its act only after public pressure. But if you believe that Juul had a noble anti-cigarette mission all along, it’s easier to excuse its missteps as the product of innocent naivete.

Unfortunat­ely for Juul, plenty of evidence suggests the company didn’t always take its public health agenda so seriously.

In 2015, in an interview with the Verge, Ari Atkins, a research and developmen­t engineer who helped create the original Juul, said that “we don’t think a lot about addiction here because we’re not trying to design a cessation product at all.”

He added that “anything about health is not on our mind.”

In other early interviews, James Monsees, Juul’s co-founder and chief product officer, played down the idea of a public health mission.

“We’re not an activist company,” he said in a 2014 interview. “If you don’t like what we’re making better than cigarettes, then have a cigarette, that’s fine.”

In an interview the next year, Monsees called Juul’s predecesso­r, a tobacco vaporizer known as Pax, “the dystopian future of tobacco,” and said the company’s vaporizing technology might someday find a market beyond cigarette smokers.

In a statement last week, Monsees said the company had been forced to be careful about its marketing. Under federal regulation­s, the company is allowed to bill its device as a “switching product” for smokers, but not as a smoking cessation tool or a health device. He said that while Juul “initiated campaigns in the past that we would not do today,” it was always focused on eliminatin­g cigarettes.

“Since 2005, we have been focused on creating a product to help people switch away from smoking combustibl­e cigarettes — the number one cause of preventabl­e death in the world,” Monsees said. “That focus has been clear in the key milestone moments in the creation of the company — it is what we said in our 2005 Stanford graduation thesis and our first fundraisin­g letter in 2007.”

Juul’s founders did, in fact, talk about improving health as a motivating factor early in the company’s existence. In a 2007 email sent to potential investors, Adam Bowen, Juul’s other co-founder, mentioned wanting to “offer a new alternativ­e for health-conscious smokers.” The pair’s graduate thesis presentati­on, done when they were studying at Stanford in 2005, pitches vaping as a healthier substitute for cigarettes.

But the marketing told a different story. Few of the early Juul ads made any mention of cigarettes’ risks or advocated that smokers switch; most played up vaping’s cool factor. As recently as 2017,

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 ?? Caroline Tompkins / New York Times ?? After making billions and joining forces with Big Tobacco, Juul is trying to reinvent itself.
Caroline Tompkins / New York Times After making billions and joining forces with Big Tobacco, Juul is trying to reinvent itself.

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