Making Milk More Vending Friendly
November 13, 2006
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| Innovative 8-oz aseptic plastic
milk bottles from Bravo! Foods
put milk in the spot previously
occupied by soft drinks. |
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When a company decides to make
milk accessible to all types of consumers
at all times of the day, vending
becomes a key channel.
In schools, for instance, changes
to federal child nutrition programs
in 2004 eased marketplace constraints
on milk vending. Nestlé
USA, Glendale, Calif., was one
of the first companies to embrace
this opportunity, putting its 8-
oz and 14-oz 100% flavored milk
Nesquik® products into vending
machines in schools across the country.
“With Nesquik in the schools,
we are providing a nutritionally
dense option for kids wherever they
are,” says Cathy Dean, marketing
manager, Nesquik Ready-to-
Drink Beverage Division. Nestlé
approaches vending in three ways:
by offering free branded vending
machines to qualified outlets, working
with independent vending partners
and securing a "button or two"
in machines owned by soft drink
manufacturers.
“Overall, we are very committed
to the vending channel,” says Dean,
who notes Nestlé made its first forays
into vending in 2003. The company
recently launched a Nesquik
product line in 14-oz aseptically
processed plastic bottles that not
only fit in vending machines but
also can be shipped and stored at
ambient temperatures and chilled
for serving. Nesquik, which is the
number one brand in flavored milk,
offers such flavors as Chocolate,
Strawberry and Double Chocolate
in its new 14-oz bottle.
Bravo! Foods International
Corp., North Palm Beach, Fla.,
also has invested in aseptic processing
and filling of plastic bottles.
“Milk sales have historically been
relegated to cold-chain distribution,”
says Benjamin Patipa, Bravo!
COO. “Our single-serve, shelf-stable
milks in plastic bottles can be
stored at ambient temperature for
up to eight months.”
Being able to distribute at ambient
temperature enabled Bravo! Foods
to team up with the nation’s largest
beverage distributor, Coca-Cola
Enterprises (CCE), Atlanta, Ga., to
deliver shelf-stable milk bever ages
on the same big red trucks that
transport soft drinks. “While technology
and branding are extremely
important, distribution may be the
most critical part of growing our
business,” adds Patipa.
In August 2005, Bravo! Foods
signed an exclusive 10-year distribution
agreement for CCE to
distribute the company’s milk beverages
nationwide. “The original
agreement covered convenience
stores, education, vending and
small independent stores,” explains
Patipa. “Just this past June, we
expanded those channels to include
grocery stores, drug stores and mass
merchandisers.”
Bravo! is rolling out an 8-oz aseptic
plastic bottle that fits a vending
machine and has the same
dimensions as a 12-oz Coke® can.
The 8-oz product line includes 3
MUSKETEERS® Slammers®,
Trix® Slammers, Cocoa Puff®
Slammers and three flavors of Pro
Slammers®. Later in the school
year, CCE will add co-branded
Bravo!TM Organic Valley Family of
Farms to the 8-oz lineup.
Nestlé is looking beyond schools
to office vending. “We are focused
on getting Nesquik wherever and
whenever a consumer wants a beverage,”
says Dean. “Wherever you
see a carbonated soft drink, we
want to have Nesquik.”
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