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Monitoring and evaluating Monitoring and evaluating food industry progress

Jennifer L. Harris Institute of Medicine Workshop

November 5, 2012

Independent researchBenefits• Transparent, rigorous methods• Name names• Name names

Objectives• Identify marketing practices• Monitor progress• Encourage changes to improve the diet of

children and adolescents

Improving children’s diet?

The number of food and beverage advertisements on children’s television fell by 50% from 2004 to 2010

Grocery Manufacturers Association 5/2/2011

Total exposure to food ads

18-49

12-1712-17

2-11

Nielsen 2012

Improving children’s diet?

Two-thirds of our spend is on light or low-calorie products

Coca-Cola 5/5/2011

Coca-Cola media spending (2010)

Regular soda All other products

Advertised brands

7 brands:Coca-Cola, Sprite, Fanta, Mello Yello,

27 brands: Coca-Cola Zero, Diet Coke, Diet Sprite Dasani, SmartWaterHonest Tea, Nestea

Nielsen 2011

Mello Yello, Vault, Lift, Fresca

Honest Tea, NesteaMinute Maid, Odwalla, SimplyPropel, SoBe, VitaminWaterPowerade, Full Throttle, NOS

Media spending $151.0 mill (43%) $202.2 mill (57%)

- top brand $131.3 mill (Coke) $ 46.7 mill (Coke Zero)

- avg per brand $ 21.6 mill $ 7.5 mill

Coca-Cola media spending (2010)

Regular soda All other products

Advertised brands

7 brands:Coca-Cola, Sprite, Fanta, Mello Yello,

27 brands: Coca-Cola Zero, Diet Coke, Diet Sprite Dasani, SmartWaterHonest Tea, Nestea

Nielsen 2011

Mello Yello, Vault, Lift, Fresca

Honest Tea, NesteaMinute Maid, Odwalla, SimplyPropel, SoBe, VitaminWaterPowerade, Full Throttle, NOS

+ “brand” ads (e.g., Coke Rewards)

Media spending $151.0 mill (37%) $260.9 mill (63%)

Improving children’s diet

• Reduced exposure to marketing for calorie-dense nutrient-poor foods– All media– All media– All forms of marketing– All youth

• Promote foods that are “desirable to market to children to encourage a healthful diet” IWG (2011)

Monitoring progressQuantity

Traditional media • Media spending*

• TV ad exposure*

• Radio ad exposure*

• TV product placements*• TV product placements*

Digital media • Website traffic*

• Banner ad impressions*

• Social media fans

• Mobile traffic*

Other marketing • In stores: shelf space, promotions

• In restaurants: signs, menu boards

*Syndicated data sources: Nielsen, comScore, Arbitron

Cereal marketing: 2009-2012

www.cerealfacts.org

Reduced advergame exposure• Discontinued Millsberry and Postopia

Per month in 2008: Avg child visitors Avg minutes

Banner ad impressions

Millsberry 386,800 66.3 121.9 mill

Postopia 154,400 30.4 2.2 millPostopia 154,400 30.4 2.2 mill

Reduced TV ads• Children’s exposure went down by 25%

1.8 per day

Cereal FACTS 2012

But does cereal company marketing now support better diets?

Nutrition quality• Improved for 13 of 16 child-targeted brands• Child-targeted products are still the least

nutritious cereals

Healthy

Child-targeted cereals: 2012

Innovative marketing

Marketer of the Year: Coca-Cola

Not Too Big or Too Staid to Innovate, Beverage Giant Earns Top HonorBeverage Giant Earns Top Honor

Advertising Age, Nov 2011

No child-directed adsCoca-Cola North America will not place any of our brands' marketing in television, radio and print programming that is primarily directed to children under the age of 12 and where the children under the age of 12 and where the audience profile is higher than 35% of children under 12.

Coca Cola North America, CFBAI restated pledge, October 2010

Establishing a relationship

We can’t afford not to talk to teens. You can’t think, ‘Teens already know us,’ and skip a couple of years. Every six years skip a couple of years. Every six years there’s a new population of teens in the world.

Senior VP, Coca-Cola, 2011

Sugary Drink FACTS (2011)

TV ads

Product place-ments Radio

Companywebsites

Banner ads

Social media Mobile

Coca-Cola

Gatorade

Dr PepperDr Pepper

Kool-Aid

Capri Sun

Pepsi

Mountain Dew

Sunny D

www.sugarydrinkfacts.org

Product placements

• 730 appearances on 429 telecasts• 14.4 seconds

Company websitesVisitors per month

2-11 years 12-17 yearsMinutes

per month

MyCokeRewards.com 42,000 128,900 9.2

Coca-Cola.com 3,800 32,600 1.6

MyCoke.com 6,200 28,400 1.8MyCoke.com 6,200 28,400 1.8

Banner ads on 3rd-party websitesUnique viewers

per monthAds placed on

youth websitesAd views per

month

My Coke Rewards 38 million 19% 479 million

Coca-Cola Classic 20 million 15% 113 million

Coca-Cola products 25% 280 millionCoca-Cola products 25% 280 million

Social media• 30 million Facebook fans

#1 brand on Facebook

• 300,000 Twitter followers• 300,000 Twitter followers

• 23 million YouTube upload views

Mobile apps• Downloaded by 40,000 teens (25-40%

of users)

Mobile advertising

• Banner ads: 61 sites over 7 months

• Text messages

From My Coke Rewards, 3/4/11:Want to boost ur balance? It’s easy to do. Enter 3 codes in the next 10 days and u’ll get 20 Bonus Points on us. Reply HELP for help.

Total exposure to ads for top brands

Teens

1 Coca-Cola Soda 100

2 Gatorade Sports drink 42

3 Dr Pepper Soda 393 Dr Pepper Soda 39

4 Kool-Aid Fruit drink 38

5 Capri Sun Fruit drink 33

6 Pepsi Soda 25

7 Mountain Dew Soda 23

8 Sunny D Fruit drink 23

Total exposure to ads for top brands

Teens Children

1 Coca-Cola Soda 100 72

2 Gatorade Sports drink 42 16

3 Dr Pepper Soda 39 133 Dr Pepper Soda 39 13

4 Kool-Aid Fruit drink 38 45

5 Capri Sun Fruit drink 33 56

6 Pepsi Soda 25 15

7 Mountain Dew Soda 23 7

8 Sunny D Fruit drink 23 25

Supporting parentsKey actors – from food and beverage companies, to restaurants, food retailers, trade associations, the media, government and others – all have an important role to play in creating a food marketing important role to play in creating a food marketing environment that supports, rather than undermines, the efforts of parents and other caregivers to encourage healthy eating among children and prevent obesity (2010)

www.yaleruddcenter.org/marketingsurvey

Thank you!

This work is funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Rudd FoundationJohnson Foundation and the Rudd Foundation

For more information:

www.yaleruddcenter.org/marketing

Cereal FACTS (2009)• Most heavily marketed packaged food

category to children• Products marketed to children are less healthy

than those marketed to adultsthan those marketed to adults

Visitors to advergame sites• High visitation, but lower time spent• Increased focus on single-brand sites

Per month: Avg child visitors Avg minutesBanner ad

impressionsPer month: Avg child visitors Avg minutes impressions

Millsberry (2008) 386,800 66.3 121.9 mill

Postopia (2008) 154,400 30.4 2.2 mill

FrootLoops 161,900 4.4 17.7 mill

AppleJacks 116,200 4.7 9.5 mill

CornPops 59,500 8.0 1.8 mill

LuckyCharms 52,300 2.2 35.3 mill

HoneyDefender 42,700 3.4 12.7 mill

ReesesPuffs 29,300 4.6 15.9 mill

Krave cerealKrave is not approved for child-directed advertising. But from Jan-Mar, 2012:

• Children (2-11 yrs) saw 11.2 Krave TV ads– Adolescents saw 10.6, adults saw 4.9– Adolescents saw 10.6, adults saw 4.9– 70% aired on Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network

• 38,000 children (6-14 yrs) visited Krave’sFacebook page– 24% of total visitors– QR code on packages

Nutrition quality• 13 of 16 child-targeted brands improved

2006 2009 2012