Pepsi did it again. On Thursday 25th
April 2013, Pepsi India introduced its second brand of Cola – Atom. Pepsi
wants to cash in on the summer rush and also add weight to its product sales by
piggybacking on the hype and popularity of the IPL cricket tournament. It believes
it has a winner in hand – and its name Pepsi
Atom.
Pepsi Atom will be available across the country in various
packages including a 250 ml can at an introductory price of Rs 15 and a 500 ml
PET bottle at Rs 25 and a 200 ml
returnable glass bottles (RGB) which will be available in select markets at Rs
10.
Pepsi is sitting pretty in India. It outsells Coca-Cola
but still Coca Cola sells better than Pepsi overall in the cola market as it
has strong winners from the through bred winners that it bought over from the
competition. These are the brands that
Cola-Cola bought from Ramesh Chauhan of the Parle group – especially Thums Up. Thums Up is a out right
winner. It outsells both Coke and Pepsi in India.
Pepsi must be kicking itself for not considering buying
Thums up before Coca-Cola. They had all the chances. Pepsi moved into India the
second time in 1989, four years before Coke. But the top guys at Pepsi must
have felt that Thums up would pose a challenge to Pepsi itself. Whatever it was
it proved to be a decisive mistake. Pepsi along with Thums Up would have
sounded the death knell for Coca-Cola in India.
But that is all water under the bridge. Pepsi wants to counter
Coca-Cola in all segments. It brought in Pepsi Maxx a zero calorie drink in August
2010 to counter Diet Coke and failed miserably. Now Peso is firing the next
salvo.
Atom will be launched with a campaign and a tagline: “Piyo
Josh Mein Jiyo Hosh Mein” and its endorser will be Bollywood actor Sushant
Singh Rajput.
Pepsi is hedging Atom against Coca-Cola’s Thums up. It is being positioned as a stronger, fizzier
cola with a sharp taste. It is going to be a all-out war. The knives are out, already.
Check out the words of Deepika Warrior, VP-President (beverage marketing) “the
brand positioning redefines masculinity and portrays the modern Indian in a new
light”
She goes on to say "The atom campaign would be more relevant and projects relatable definition of masculinity as
opposed to much hyped mindless action”
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