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Pepsi's mid-calorie soda aims to win back drinkers

With 60 calories "Pepsi Next" tries to lure those who don't like diet or regular soda

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Pepsi is hoping to win back soda drinkers with a compromise.

Some people don't like the calories in regular soda, but loathe the taste of zero-calorie diet drinks. So America's No. 2 cola company is rolling out "Pepsi Next," a cola that has about half the calories of regular Pepsi at 60 calories per can.

The cola, which is slated to hit store shelves in the U.S. by the end of March, is Pepsi's biggest product launch in years. The drink comes as people increasingly move away from sugary drinks to water and other lower-calorie beverages because of health concerns. It's also an attempt by Pepsi to revive the cola wars against Coke and others.

Pepsi Next isn't the first drink to try to hit the sweet spot between diet and regular cola. Dr Pepper Snapple rolled out its low-calorie Dr Pepper Ten, which has 10 calories. The company said the drink, which has sugar unlike its diet soda, helped boost its fourth-quarter sales.

But coming up with a successful "mid-calorie soda," which has more calories, has been more challenging for beverage makers. In 2001, Coke rolled out "C2" and Pepsi in 2004 introduced its "Pepsi Edge," both of which had about half the calories of regular soda. Both products also were taken off the market by 2006 because of poor sales.

"The problem was that consumers either wanted regular soda or a diet drink with zero calories — not something in between," said John Sicher, editor and publisher of Beverage Digest.

Pepsi says its latest stab at an in-between soda uses a different formula to more closely imitate the taste of regular soda. Pepsi Next is made with a mix of three artificial sweeteners and high fructose corn syrup.

A Pepsi spokeswoman, Melisa Tezanos, said the company developed the cola by researching the "taste curve" that consumers experience when drinking regular soda. She compared that arc to how someone might evaluate a sip of wine, from the moment the liquid hits the tongue to the aftertaste it leaves.

"We wanted to develop a taste curve that gives the full flavor of regular Pepsi," Tezanos said.

Pepsi Next also follows the company's lower-calorie variations of its other drinks. Gatorade, a unit of Pepsi, has "G2," which at 20 calories has a little less than half the calories of the original version. And the company's Tropicana unit introduced "Trop50," which is half of the 110 calories in a regular 8-ounce (225-gram) glass of orange juice.

But orange juice and sports drinks have nutritional benefits that a drink maker can market. A mid-calorie soda is a tougher sell because it provides only empty calories. So health-conscious drinkers usually opt for diet soda or quit soda altogether.

Sales in the $74 billon soft drink industry have been fizzling out, with volume falling steadily since 2005, according to Beverage Digest, which tracks the industry. Meanwhile, healthier drinks are growing more popular, with bottled water accounting for 11 percent of all beverages consumed in 2010, up from 2 percent in 2000. Consumption of sports drink rose to 2.3 percent, from 1.2 percent.

Diet soda also rose to 29.9 percent of the carbonated drink market in 2010, up from 24.7 percent a decade earlier. To keep up with changing tastes, Coke and Pepsi have introduced newer versions of their diet drinks — Coke Zero and Pepsi Max — that promise a taste that's more like their regular sodas.

Pepsi hopes Pepsi Next will help it gain back the market share it's lost in recent years. The company's namesake drink had its share in the carbonated soft drink market fall to 9.5 percent in 2010, from 13.6 percent a decade earlier, while Diet Pepsi's share remained steady at 5.3 percent.

Coke is still the top selling brand, with 17 percent market share. Diet Coke follows with 9.9 percent.

PepsiCo Inc., based in Purchase, New York, said earlier this month that it plans to increase marketing for its brands by $500 million to $600 million this year. A centerpiece of that will be the company's first global ad campaign this summer, a peak time for the soda market.

 

49 comments

  • Regal  •  3 months ago
    Just make a sugar sweetened soda with half the sugar. Why do companies think we need 40g+ of sugar in one can?
  • MARC  •  Izhevsk, Russia  •  3 months ago
    with fake, possibly cancer causing, sweetners, i will never try this crap. just half the sugar would do. why not a low calorie with NO sweetner. some people like coffee or tea with no sugar.
    • Maryl H 3 months ago
      Marc...your formula is already available.Its called -water.
    • Maryl H 3 months ago
      Hi fructose corn sugar is cheaper sugar with added allergan.So you get the sugar cheaper with maybe, like I do, a reaction to corn.
    • Maryl H 3 months ago
      Unfortunately the result of Michele Obamas attack on sugar is twofold .A population that lives longer and will be out of work.See news of massive layoffs of lower skilled labor as sales drop.PEPSI Just announced 8700 layoffs .More to come.almost every job we have is making something bad for health......including hi tech .Tech is responsible for mining,more oil use,water use,garbage of the worst kind,eyesight,hearing loss,couch potatos. Think.... "war results"... and soda pop looks pretty benign.Banning cell phones would save more lives ;but atso cost jobs.We need to think bigger before acting ...
  • Rick  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    I don't have diet Soda because it contains artificial sweeteners. There are many other people who will not buy this new soda for the same reason. I think this will be another flop. I try to even avoid products that contain high fructose corn syrup such as Pepsi and Coke as much as possible.
  • John  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    i thought one artificial sweetener was bad enough 3+ HFCS are they all part of bill gates plan to depopulate the world...
    • Reality girl 3 months ago
      Paranoid much? He is Microsoft not a food and beverage manufacturer..
  • Octo-trader  •  Smyrna, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Can't believe how many smart brains are working on creating junk drinks that now kill you a little less slowly! On the other end of country, smarter brains are working overtime to create video games that make your brains duller!
  • Harry Kneecaps  •  3 months ago
    Its not your products keeping people away. Its your prices. In a tough economy consumers look for bargains. Store brands and generics cost far less. Some consumers facing more difficult financial times will just stop drinking all soda to save money.

    Come out with all the products you like. Once the novelty wears off youll be back where you started.
    • JamesF 3 months ago
      And the store brands are worth every penny saved. Ok for some, but not for me. Not that i've tried them all, but did you ever taste "HoJo Cola"? Yechhh....
    • Harry Kneecaps 3 months ago
      Rarely have I found a store brand or generic that was terrible. Im not a connoisseur of anything so I have no trouble finding alternative brands I can live with.
  • ellen c  •  3 months ago
    Sounds like another loser to me.
    • JamesF 3 months ago
      Could well be.... which kind of loser did you mean?
  • moviegeek  •  3 months ago
    Soda sales are declining because the prices are too high and they aren't good for you(acid, HFCS, food dye), I rarely have soda anymore and if I do it's a Sprite. Fast-food restaurants make their profit on the drinks not the food, why do you think they charge you $3 for .10 worth of soda?
  • James  •  Cairo, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Pepsi gives me acid indigestion. But at least now I can verp it up with half the calories.
    • Reality girl 3 months ago
      You are drinking flavored, carbonated acid. No surprise. Also exacerbates GERD.
  • Barbara  •  3 months ago
    It's not the taste of diet soda it's the risks that is in the ingredients. Aspertame for one. And I know I spelled it wrong.
  • vote2012  •  3 months ago
    Get real. Stop charging 1.00 for a .25 cent can of soda. Stop having your customer pay for your advertising by purchasing T shirt, cap and garbage. I am over paying for your NAS car paint jobs and Super Boul advertisements. Stop charging us for taking sugar out of you product.
  • Guest  •  3 months ago
    Anyone remember "Pepsi Light" from the 1970's? Had around 70 calories with a "lemon" taste.....Yeah, that didn't work either.
  • RobertM  •  3 months ago
    I really dig this. I hope it's good. I've been drinking half diet half regular for a while now. I know, I know, soda in any form is not very good for me but I drink maybe 2 per week, if that.
  • Raymond  •  3 months ago
    Half Pepsi + Half Diet = similar taste curve, half the calories, and no money wasted on developing a new product.
  • Blue-Collar Guy  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    i quit drinking pepsi products after they recently announced..."our valued associates hard work provided better than predicted results for pepsico, so now we're getting rid of 8700 of you. thanks for your effort. keep up the hard work and hopefully we'll have a better year next year."
  • Eccentric_Crank  •  3 months ago
    People who drink soda, either sugared or diet, are 160% more likely to be obese...
  • ME  •  3 months ago
    i guess laying off all of those pepsico workers helped pay for this...
  • kemoore68  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
    High fructose corn syrup + three types of artificial sweeteners? Now you can you poison yourself to death four times faster!
  • YvonneS  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    What ever happened to caffiene free pepsi? Was it totally caffiene free or was it 50% free. I love the taste of pepsi but can't have the caffiene. Maybe a little less sugar would do also..
  • zerohour  •  Akron, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    I don't care WHAT the soda companies role out, if they have aspartame or neotame, or HFCS, or GMO SUGAR from GMO Sugar BEETS, I WON"T DRINK IT. AND, I won't Buy it for ANYONE I know. I don't buy pop anymore, no cal or not. Its all chemicals.
 
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