Budweiser spends big on Super Bowl, targets small markets
Send a link to a friend
[February 01, 2019]
By Philip Blenkinsop and Jarrett Renshaw
BRUSSELS/PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - This
Bud's for you.
At least, that is what Anheuser-Busch InBev hopes as it strives to
reach more than 100 million U.S. TV viewers during Sunday’s Super
Bowl, promoting vintage brands such as Budweiser and Bud Light.
The world’s largest brewer will not say how much it is spending for
nearly six minutes of commercials, but industry sources estimate it
is more than $50 million. That is up from the $42 million that
Kantar Media said the brewer spent for four minutes of ad time last
year.
It is only part of the company's strategy to recapture market share
from craft beers and Mexican imports.
Brendan Whitworth, the head of sales for U.S. arm Anheuser-Busch,
told Reuters the company would retain its big, national campaigns
but also push ahead with its new strategy of tailoring brand
marketing to individual American cities.
“The things we've started to work on this year, we're starting to
see real results. We're looking forward to scaling up those
localized programs even more," he said.
The Super Bowl’s huge and diverse audience has makers of cars, beer
and other consumer goods scrambling to create eye-catching
commercials that are sometimes more memorable than the game.
Budweiser this year will bring back its iconic Clydesdale horses,
while telling drinkers that the beer is produced with renewable
energy from wind power. Bud Light has continued its mock medieval ad
series.
Driven by the need to pay off some $100 billion from its 2016
purchase of rival SABMiller, the company, which is known for
acquisitions and cost savings, has made top-line growth its
priority. U.S. management, overhauled in late 2017, believes it is
on course to rebound in the company's biggest market. Part of that
is the local-ad focus and fresh versions of 143-year-old staple
Budweiser, as well as Bud Light – available now in an orange flavor.
The two main brands make up 56 percent of its U.S. beer sales,
according to market research company Euromonitor International. That
is down from more than 60 percent in 2013. Whitworth, a former
Marine, CIA officer and PepsiCo Inc director, said the goal is to
boost the brand's shares and eventually halt their sales decline.
AB InBev has a 36.4 percent share of the U.S. beer market, according
to Euromonitor, followed by Molson Coors and Constellation Brands.
In general, mainstream lagers including Bud and Bud Light have
fallen, while the shares of craft and imports have risen, according
to market research group Nielsen. Drinkers have also shifted to wine
and spirits.
Executives at Heineken, the world's second largest beer maker, have
said brewers need to work together to win back drinkers. Industry
leaders say there still is a space for mainstream beer, which is
cheaper and less caloric than many crafts.
"When (fans)are watching an NFL game, that's a four to five hour
experience... I'm not sure it's a craft moment," said Jonnie Cahill,
Heineken USA's chief marketing officer.
Given recent trends, Anheuser-Busch needs the equivalent of a 'Hail
Mary' pass. Its share of beer sales in the United States, its
biggest market, is set to have declined 0.50 percentage points in
2018 after a 0.75 drop in 2017. That may seem slight, but the trend
is in the wrong direction.
A return to growth is not imminent.
"It's a supertanker and it's not going to turn on a six-pence. I
think it's going to be a slow journey," said Trevor Stirling, a
London-based beverage analyst at Bernstein Research.
[to top of second column] |
A souvenir sign is for sale in the gift shop of the Anheuser-Busch
brewery in Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S., March 2, 2017. REUTERS/Rick
Wilking/File Photo
AB InBev's share of the U.S. beer market has declined every year but
one since its formation in 2008, when Belgium-based InBev bought
America’s Anheuser-Busch. Budweiser has steadily fallen. Bud Light’s
share last rose in 2012, when it rolled out an offshoot: Bud Light
Lime-A-Rita, a margarita-flavored brew with double the alcohol and
calories of Bud Light.
Despite the revival, Anheuser-Busch said it has learned that the
company should not stray too far from a brand's roots.
"Those extensions, they didn't necessarily reinforce the mother
brand's position," Whitworth said.
The brewer removed "Bud Light" from Lime-a-Rita cans this year.
Last summer, it launched Bud Light Orange, brewed with orange peels.
The product, with slightly more calories, is sweet and fruity, akin
to an orange soda with alcohol, some drinkers say.
Whitworth said it was one of the industry’s most successful new
products of 2018, boosting sales and margins and bringing in more
female drinkers. The company hopes some Bud Light Orange drinkers
will become regular Bud Light fans.
Bud Light has partnerships with 28 of the 32 NFL teams, including
this season’s finalists, the Los Angeles Rams and the Boston-based
New England Patriots. But its marketing efforts with them have been
modest to date, including special cans showing each team's logo.
Earlier this season, Bud Light focused on Cleveland, whose team, the
Browns, was experiencing one of the longest losing streaks in the
sport. When the Browns finally won, the brewer set up "victory
fridges" in bars across the city. Bud Light's share of core beer
sales there grew as a result, Whitworth said.
Citing another localized effort, Whitworth pointed to Philadelphia,
the nation's sixth largest city. Bud Light offered free beer to fans
of the Eagles when they won their first Super Bowl in 2018. This
season the company unveiled a statue to commemorate the “Philly
Special," a trick play in which the quarterback turned receiver for
a touchdown in the championship game.
Whitworth said the approach led to Bud Light sales growth of 9
percent in Philadelphia in the first half of 2018.
"They had an army of people handing out beer at the parade,” said
Pete Ciarrocchi, chief of Chickie and Pete's, a popular chain of
sports bars in the Philadelphia area.
The brewer's U.S. arm is hoping the sales boost will help build
long-term loyalty.
In one potentially positive sign, Philadelphian Peter Rosa, who
normally chooses regional craft brands such as Dogfish Head and
Troeg, said he turned to Bud Light this season when watching his
beloved Eagles.
"I have become superstitious and will only drink Bud Light during
Eagles games," he said.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels and Jarrett Renshaw in
Philidelphia; Richa Naidu and Kenneth Li contributed reporting;
Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Julie Marquis)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |