Food & Drink

How Dr Pepper passed Pepsi by marketing around football, flavor innovation

As a vintage advertising maintained, it’s Dr Pepper time. The soda brand made headlines this month with news that it is now the number two carbonated soft drink in the U.S. behind Coca-Cola and passing Pepsi, which long held the spot, according to Beverage Digest data shared with Marketing Dive. The sales data is in line with consumer brand perceptions: Dr Pepper ranked 41st, two spots ahead of Pepsi, in FutureBrand’s recent Consumer Index report.

“In comparison to Pepsi, consumers view Dr Pepper as having a more promising future, doing a better job at keeping up to date and, importantly, being more distinctive and different than Pepsi,” said Lynne Field, head of strategy at FutureBrand.

Since the 2018 acquisition that brought together Keurig Green Mountain and the Dr Pepper Snapple Group, Dr Pepper’s parent company has remained committed to the brand amid a portfolio-wide double-digit increase in marketing spend. Dr Pepper’s success can be attributed to a combination of investment and patience, said Brad Rakes, senior director for brand marketing at Keurig Dr Pepper. 

“It really is a commitment across the board, not just in things like content and media, but also investment in prioritization and making sure that Dr Pepper continues to be the workhorse for the organization,” the executive said.

As it has looked to differentiate itself from cola wars stalwarts Coke and Pepsi, Dr Pepper has embraced its identity as a disruptor with a one-of-a-kind taste that provides consumers a treat and creates connections between them. In the last few years, its marketing has walked the tightrope between being consistent and breaking the rules.

“The brand is 140 years old,” Rakes said. “If you do the same things you were doing 140 years ago, that’s not going to fuel growth.”

First mover in college football

Star quarterback Caleb Williams shows off a nail polish kit made with Dr Pepper.

Courtesy of Dr Pepper

 

For the last few years, Dr Pepper’s marketing has revolved around college football. The brand in 2014 became the first official sponsor of the college football playoff, and was a first mover in the name, image and likeness (NIL) rights space when it signed quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei in 2021 to be part of its long-running “Fansville” campaign.

“Fansville,” a parody of high school sports dramas like “Friday Night Lights” with an ongoing story about football-obsessed fans in a fictional town, launched in 2018 and has remained a platform for advertising creative and player partnerships. The campaign, created with Deutsch LA, will be returning for a seventh season this year, Rakes revealed to Marketing Dive.

“There’s more runway for growth here,” he said. “Consumer interest in the advertising is high, it is breakthrough with some of the top-scoring, top-performing advertising that we have ever done on Dr. Pepper.”

College football continues to be a fertile creative space that allows Dr Pepper to connect with fans around whatever is driving conversations in the sport. For last year’s iteration of the effort, that meant teaming with Heisman trophy winning quarterback Caleb Williams to release “FANicures,” a nail polish kit that nodded to Williams’ divisive gameday tradition, itself inspired by his nail-technician mother.

“The nail painting thing … is part of his own brand, and it was a great way for us to bring that part of his branding into our own universe and play that up,” Rakes explained. “The secret sauce of ‘Fansville’ is authenticity and showing that we understand the space.”

Innovation drives recruitment

The carbonated soft drink market has been awash in new flavors and brand extensions as marketers rush to bring in new consumers and meet demands around healthier drink options. Coca-Cola has made its Creations platform a key part of its global marketing and Pepsi has stepped up limited-time flavors around seasonal food moments. 

Dr Pepper is no different. Its Strawberries & Cream flavor generated more than $300 million in sales last year, while its new Creamy Coconut LTO is up more than 50% in volume sales in just its first five weeks compared to 2022’s Dark Berry LTO, per Circana data shared by the brand.




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