Dr. Pepper
By: Mike • Research Paper • 4,579 Words • December 24, 2009 • 1,799 Views
Join now to read essay Dr. Pepper
DR. Pepper
Current marketing factor
Brand History
Dr Pepper was created at MorrisonЎЇs Old Corner Drug store in Waco Texas in 1885, making it the oldest soft drink in the United States. It was first created by Charles Alderton, a pharmacist, when he mixed several fruit flavored carbonated beverages. After creating a flavor he liked his boss test-tasted it and decided to serve it at their soda fountain. Popularity grew and soon other soda fountain operators wanted to sell it so Morrison began producing syrup for the drink. Robert Lazenby a beverage chemist and proprietor of The Circle Ў°AЎ± Ginger Ale Company tasted the drink and offered to produce the syrup at his bottling plant. In 1904 Lazenby and his son-in-law J.B OЎЇHara introduced Dr Pepper at the Worlds Fair, giving 20 million people a chance to taste it (Dr Pepper/Seven Up). As Dr Pepper continued to grow, Morrison and Lazenby created a new firm, the Artesian Mfg. & Bottling Company, which later became the Dr Pepper Company. In 1923 the growing company moved from Waco to Dallas. In 1986 Dr Pepper Company merged with The Seven-Up Company. Cadbury Schweppes acquired Dr
Pepper/Seven Up, Inc. in 1995. It is currently the largest beverage division of the London based non-cola global beverages firm (Dr Pepper Packet).
Market Size
198,602,000 total adults
127, 979,000 consumers of non-cola carbonated beverages
28,065,000 consumers of Dr Pepper
Dr Pepper drinkers represent 14 % of the total market
(Simmons Choice 3)
Geographic Breakdown
NE 10.5% of Dr Pepper drinkers;
2,958,000 people
Midwest 20.7% of Dr Pepper drinkers;
5,808,000 people
3
South 46.6% of Dr Pepper drinkers;
13,080,000
West 22.2% of Dr Pepper drinkers;
6,219,000
(Simmons Choice 3)
Consumer Involvement
Dr Pepper has a very loyal market. The majority of sales go to a small portion of the total target population. Dr Pepper tries to maintain consumers and gets its message out to its audience in a variety of ways to help keep them informed.
Brand Loyalty: 63.5% of Dr Pepper drinkers are in the average ЁC far above average quintiles.
Informed consumers: 64.7% of Dr Pepper drinkers are in the average through far above average quintiles.
Ad Receptivity: 69.8 % of Dr Pepper drinkers are in the average-far above average quintiles.
Dr Pepper drinkers are mostly influenced by television ads, followed by magazine, radio and lastly newspaper.
TV: 40.1% above average influence
Magazine: 39.7% above average influence
Radio: 38.1% above average influence
Newspaper: 30.2% above average influence
Ad negativity does not seem to have a high impact on consumers of Dr Pepper.
As far as being influenced negatively by ads, 40 % of Dr Pepper consumers were below average, while 31.2% were above average.
(Simmons Choice 3)
Current sales, market share, awareness, goals
In recent years Dr Peppers sales have not done as well as they had in the past. This is in part due to the overwhelming number of competitors. Still, Dr Pepper is the highest selling non-cola in the US. Pepsi and Coca-Cola are at the head of the soft drink industry overall. Dr Pepper has implemented new marketing strategies as well as an abundant array of new products to maintain interest in the brand. Dr Pepper is looking to for a Ў°brand stretch,Ў± which is going beyond logic so that a brand can evolve and flourish. They hope to do this by going back to fundamentals by increasing business at convenience stores and gaining greater access to cold sales with positioning and placement for impulse purchases and focusing on vending machines (Branding). In 2001 according numbers released by the company; Ў°Dr Pepper was