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- "Snapple Escapes the Grip of Rumors"
- by Barbara Presley Noble
- _New York Times_, January 19, 1993
-
- At first, there were only one or two inquiries, by phone and very
- specific: Was Snapple, soda maker to the New Age, supporting Operation
- Rescue, the anti-abortion group that tries to shut down abortion
- clinics? Odd, thought Arnie Greenberg, a company founder and the chief
- operating officer, but not especially vexing. "Eh," he said of his first
- reaction in early August, emphasizing the syllable with a shrug that
- brings one floral suspender up near his ear.
- But a week or two later his brother came home to Long Island from a
- trip to the Poconos. He told Mr. Greenberg people were saying, "Your
- brother's anti-choice."
- Mr. Greenberg said in a recent interview at the company's headquarters
- in Valley Stream, L.I., that he knew instantly it did not matter that
- Snapple took no position on abortion. If the Poconos were buzzing, so
- would be the rest of the Northeast, California, and the West and
- anywhere else Snapple's many apostles are found. Snapple was about to
- become boycott bait.
- Welcome to the Snapple Beverage Corporation's near nightmare.
- Once Snapple, the fastest growing beverage company in the country,
- pondered how much it had to lose, it moved quickly. It wrote back to
- customers, got in touch with abortion-rights groups and hired a
- detective. By late December, the fuss had evaporated, and whatever
- attention had been diverted was back on soda.
- In the last couple of years, the company has had a fairy tale
- existence, transforming itself from a pedestrian maker of fruit juices
- sold in health-food stores into star soda maker, with "natural" iced
- teas as its specialty.
- In the first nine months of 1992, Snapple had revenue of $177 million,
- more than double the corresponding period a year earlier. In December,
- the 20-year-old company raised $88 million in an initial public offering
- that succeeded vastly beyond its expectations, if not its fantasies. The
- stock was offered at $20 a share, but began trading at $31, and closed
- yesterday at $31.375.
- Rumors never arrive at a convenient time, but this one had the
- potential to devastate Snapple. "Their momentum is based on hitting
- every cylinder," said Tom Pirko of Bevmark Inc., a beverage industry
- consulting company that has had some dealings with Snapple. "Any bad
- news can stun that momentum. They can't afford any ill will."
-
- Brawling for Shelf Space
-
- Beverages is not a business for wimps. In the brawl for shelf space,
- no jealousy is too petty, no deceit too extravagant, no expression of
- greed too excessive. The industry's intricate three-tiered system of
- interdependent manufacturers, distributors and retailers seems
- guaranteed to foment rogue-provocateuring. It is home to a well-
- established tradition of dirty tricks and mischief.
- Last year, rumors that Tropical Fantasy caused sterility in black men
- torpedoed sales of the cola, made by the Brooklyn Bottling Company.
- Similarly, in 1987, there were whispers that Corona Extra, the brew that
- turned a perfect yin-yang following of surfers and yuppies into a
- meteoric and highly profitable broad popularity, was contaminated with
- urine. Sales tanked. Corona and Tropical Fantasy lived to be consumed
- again, largely because the companies involved took the you-eat-the-bear-
- or-the-bear-eats-you approach. They countered with risky high-visibility
- publicity campaigns.
- Snapple trod softly on publicity but firmly on inquiries. After Mr.
- Greenberg's Pocono-inspired moment of clarity, the company moved to
- contain the damage. By then, according to the rumors, the company was
- not only contributing to so-called pro-life causes, it was also giving
- money to the Ku Klux Klan and anti-gay groups. Late in the episode,
- Snapple also heard it was brewing some of its teas in South Africa.
- Snapple has both the advantage and disadvantage of being popular with
- college students and of being particularly popular in the beverage-happy
- Bay Area, a campus-rich region. The company received frantic calls from
- distributors when anti-Snapple fliers began appearing near local
- colleges and universities, where students have long been highly
- politicized if not always interested in due diligence on issues.
- Tom Louderback, a former Oakland Raider who is a beverage distributor
- in Oakland, has been in the area long enough to remember the United Farm
- Workers boycott of Gallo wines and the more recent boycott of the Coors
- Brewing Company for a myriad of supposed sins. Mr. Louderback was
- afflicted by bad memories when he began to hear that Snapple, his
- hottest ticket of the moment, might be the target of a boycott. "It
- started in hotbed areas, around the universities," he said.
- He would not be surprised if the rumors were started by a competitor,
- but he believes they are passed on by "people who believe in good things
- but don't know the truth." He began asking his retailers what they were
- hearing and from whom. And he talked to Snapple. "I pleaded with them to
- take a stance," Mr. Louderback said.
-
- Answering the Mail
-
- Snapple, meanwhile, began answering the letters that came in, at the
- rate of a couple dozen a day. One person wrote: "I am dying for one of
- your fine beverages, but I am holding back. Please send a response." The
- company sent each correspondent -- including the opponents of abortion
- who sent in their blessings -- a statement of the company's neutral
- position. It sent affadavits to that effect to distributors, retailers
- and any relevant established political groups. The reaction began to
- taper off once the company got in touch with pro-choice organizations.
- When anti-Snapple fliers began appearing, Snapple sent out its own
- counter-fliers and hired a detective. The company says he never found
- the original source of the Operation Rescue rumor but did find one
- person in the Bay Area who seemed to be at the center of several
- networks where the rumors were especially lively. Snapple asked him to
- stop; it says he did. The source of the Klan rumor apparently was the
- kosher marque that Snapple -- like hundreds of companies -- puts on the
- bottle to indicate its drinks are prepared to rabbinic standards.
- In the end, says Jude Hammerle, Snapple's vice president for
- advertising and its self-described bird dog on the rumor front, the
- episode was not as traumatic for the company as it might have been. It
- certainly, Snapple says, did not disrupt its sales momentum. The main
- cost was in secretarial time. It was a slight distraction, said Arnie
- Greenberg, "having the girls answering letters."
-
- [End Quote]
- --
- Greg Franklin
- f67709907@ccit.arizona.edu
-