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Coca-Cola Vanilla

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Coca-Cola Vanilla
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TypeVanilla flavored Cola
ManufacturerCoca-Cola Company
Country of origin  United States
Introduced1950s as a fountain drink
2002 as packaged
VariantsDiet Vanilla Coke
Related productsPepsi Vanilla, Coca-Cola, Diet Coke, Coca-Cola Black Cherry Vanilla, Coca-Cola Cherry, Coca-Cola with Lime
Websiteus.coca-cola.com/products/coca-cola-flavors/vanilla Edit this on Wikidata

Coca-Cola Vanilla (also known as Vanilla Coke, and, for a time in the summer of 2003, V) is the soft drink Coca-Cola made to a recipe with extra vanilla. It was available as early as the 1950s at many soda fountains and restaurants, which added the flavoring themselves. Mass production began for the United States market on May 15, 2002,[1] as part of competitive plans against rival Pepsi and other soft drink producers. By 2004, the company had marketed Vanilla Coke in over 30 countries around the globe.[2]

The introduction of the vanilla flavor was hailed by the Coca-Cola Company as "the greatest innovation since Diet Coke in 1983" [3]. In 2005, the Coca-Cola Company announced, in an unusual turn of events, they would be phasing out the product in the United States and Great Britain by the end of the year.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). It would later be revealed that testing for a vanilla flavor had been completed and that the new beverage would be available in months. However, in late April the company announced that Vanilla Coke would be produced as early as May.[1] Following its discontinuation, Coke CEO Neville Isdel confirmed in an interview with an Atlanta newspaper the return of Vanilla Coke.

The company began mass-producing Vanilla Coke (also known as Coca-Cola Vanilla) for the United States market on May 15, 2002, as part of competition plans against arch-rival Pepsi and other soft drink producers. As of 2003, Vanilla Coke was marketed in European countries as well as Australia and New Zealand (in mid-to-late-2002). By 2004, the company had marketed Vanilla Coke in over 30 countries around the globe.

Marketing campaign

File:Vanilla coke ad.jpg
Promotional material.

The marketing campaign for Vanilla Coke aimed to appeal across all generations. Yolanda Ball, brand manager for Coca-Cola Classic, commented that "We had to learn how to balance the newness of vanilla with the established qualities of Coca-Cola".[4]

One of the first notable advertisements was a television ad created by The Martin Agency which was based upon the product's original campaign line of "Reward Your Curiosity". The ad featured actor Chazz Palminteri, in which he and another man pull aside a teenager into an alley when they caught him peering into a hole. Palminteri gives the boy a Vanilla Coke, as a reward for his curiosity.

Ball commented on the television ad by saying that "We were trying to create something new and intriguing... Half of it was about new, different and change of pace, and the rest of it was about how people love and trust Coca-Cola. But we didn't have to say New from Coca-Cola. We didn't have to hit them over the head with it."[4]

Vanilla Coke debuted at the Vanilla Bean Café, locally known as "the Bean," in the scenic town of Pomfret, Connecticut. The diet variety would be directed primarily at middle-aged women.

Product information

File:Lg diet vanilla coke.jpg
Two forms of the diet variety.

Nutritional

Average quantity per 12 oz serving per 100 mL (about 3 oz)
Energy
165 calories

44 calories
Protein 0 g 0 g
Fat, total 0 g 0 g
- saturated 0 g 0 g
Carbohydrates 41.3 g 11.0 g
- sugars 40.9 g 10.9 g
Sodium 35 mg 10 mg

Packaging

Vanilla Coke was packaged in standard bottles in accordance with appropriate Coca-Cola packaging. For a brief period of time in mid-2003, the bottles that Vanilla Coke came in, which had before said Vanilla Coke, were changed simply to V (which matched Cherry Coke's new labeling showing a picture of a cherry). Afterwards, the original labeling was resumed.

Varieties

  • Coke Vanilla
  • Diet Coke Vanilla

In late 2002, a sugar free version of the soft drink, Diet Vanilla Coke, arrived on supermarket shelves. In some countries, including Australia and New Zealand, a similar drink is marketed as "Diet Coke with Vanilla." and in others is known as Coca-Cola light Vanilla (or Vanilla Coke Light) In 2005, the sugar-free product in the United States and Canada became "Diet Coke Vanilla," with more emphasis on the Diet Coke label. All varieties were discontinued in 2006 in the United States and the United Kingdom. Both varieties are still available in Australia and Hong Kong.

Reception

Its inaugural year in 2002 was unsurprisingly its best. It is estimated that the product was purchased by about 29% of all United States households that year.[5]

It has been speculated some of the reason that Vanilla Coke was not received as well as Coca-Cola had hoped was because while many enjoyed the Vanilla flavor, it was frequently associated as tasting like Cream soda mixed with Coke.[citation needed]

Discontinuation

Doubt was cast over the future of Vanilla Coke and its splinter beverages as it was revealed that 2004 sales amounted to 35 million unit cases in North America, compared to 90 million in its inaugural year. Vanilla Diet Coke dropped by almost half since debuting in 2003 with 23 million unit cases sold, it fell to just 13.[6]

On November 3, 2005, the Cola-Cola Company announced that Vanilla Coke and its diet counterpart would be discontinued in the United Kingdom by early 2006. A day later it was announced that it would be phased out in North America by the end of 2005.

Coca-Cola introduced Black Cherry Vanilla Coke and Diet Black Cherry Vanilla Coke in North America in January 2006. The company said Vanilla Coke and Diet Vanilla Coke may be made available again in the future.[6]

"We are exploring ways to bring them back at another time, but right now Diet Black Cherry Vanilla Coke and Black Cherry Vanilla Coke are what consumers are telling us they want."[7] Vanilla Coke beverages are still produced in markets like Australia and France.

One may still find Vanilla Coke on sites like eBay for about $10 per 12-can case. [citation needed]

Some have suggested that the original discontinuation of such a loved product and the weak reasons given for it point to an unusual marketing manouver by The Coca Cola Company, partly to make people want it more when it reappeared.

Reintroduction

From February 19, 2007 Vanilla Coke was reintroduced into New Zealand.."[8]. Some US restaurants have recently started to carry Vanilla Coke at fountains as well.

Coca-Cola made it official that Vanilla Coke will be sold again in supermarkets in the U.S. later in 2007. A Coca-Cola Vanilla Zero will also be introduced later in 2007 as well. However, when exactly the product will reappear is unknown, as is whether Coke will use the old style cans and logo, or a new design similar to the can at the top of this article."[1].

The product is to be released nationwide within the next couple of weeks and this is now the new design for the soda


The New Look For 07.

Notes

References

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