New way of packaging food that hasn’t found a market

Tom Marin

January 30, 2014

2 Min Read
New way of packaging food that hasn’t found a market

What happened:
This past week Le Whif introduced the first breathable, organic chocolate and coffee. According to its creator, David Edwards, a Harvard professor, “Le Whif uses particle engineering to form chocolate in particle sizes that are small enough to to become airborne though too large to enter the lungs.” Flavors include pure chocolate, raspberry chocolate, and mint chocolate with coffee to be introduced later this month. Food and packaging tester, Barry Silverstein tried out Le Whif and found out for himself. He reported that Edwards says Le Whif Coffee “offers the kick of coffee without the cup,” since it contains an amount of caffeine equivalent to an espresso. For Silverstein, the experience left him unimpressed. And it’s pricey at over $2 per canister.

supertaster_le_whif_inline1.jpg

For a video review of this product you can check it out here:

le-whiff-youtube.jpg

Why it matters:
This is a great example of what happens when a marketplace is not researched before a product is produced. Despite the many firsts the company can claim, first to be able to inhale, all organic in a tube, etc., the product experience is fleeting at best with a price point that bars it from entry into the mass market it was designed for. Although this is an extreme example, it serves as a perfect case study of what not to do when introducing a new brand. Smart marketers know a great product starts with the interests, needs and wants of its intended customer. This one is sure to find few.

________________________________________
Tom Wants To Hear About Your Branding Issues: Tom Marin, Managing Partner of MarketCues, wants to hear from you! Follow MarketCues on Twitter for branding and social media tips - as well as the latest trends. Tom also welcomes emails, new LinkedIn connections, calls to 407.330.7708 or visit www.marketcues.com. How can he help solve your branding issues?

Note: If you are a printing company or product/services company serving the print-media market, and would like to be considered for a feature in this blog, please contact Tom Marin for an interview.

Sign up for the Packaging Digest News & Insights newsletter.

You May Also Like