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Chobani Account Planning / Research | Newhouse Advertising Graduate Program
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3. Executive Summary
Problem Presented: 40% of yogurt consumers
don’t eat Chobani. Why?
We studied topics like healthy snacking, mealtime, and natural foods.
Through qualitative research, we uncovered 5 insights about the
brand, the users, and the category.
We have confirmed ALL FIVE insights through quantitative research, a
total of 400 participants.
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Background
• 5 years of category expansion,
driven by Greek
• 130 new Greek yogurt products
in the US in the first half of 2012.
• Chobani’s success has encouraged
Dannon and Yoplait to introduce
Greek yogurts of their own.
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Yogurt Market
• 75% of the yogurt consumers are women
• 69% in a professional occupation
• 67.1% earns around $70,000
• 63.6% from the Northeast
• 64.4% from the West
• 63.6% come from a big city
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40% of yogurt consumers don’t buy Chobani. Is this an awareness problem,
a problem with the product, or are consumers brand-loyal to competitors?
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Research Objectives
• Discover why yogurt consumers do not eat Chobani
• Understand the social undercurrents and trends that are relevant to healthy
snacking and mealtime
Why the project is worth conducting
• AdAge, June 29, 2012: the Greek Yogurt category was a craze, a fad, or an
unsustainable category.
• Whether or not this is true will impact Chobani’s future as a business.
• According to the CMO of Chobani, they would like to better understand the
segment of yogurt consumers who do not purchase Chobani.
• We hope to find a durable idea in the category that Chobani can leverage on for
years to come.
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Cultural Insight Research Questions
• What are the most popular views Americans have on healthy
snacking?
• What are society’s views on how technology has affected the food
we consume?
• What are society’s views on foreign cuisine and diet?
• What are society’s views surrounding mealtime?
• How is yogurt viewed in America?
Methodology
• Secondary research
• Simmons
• MRI+
• Mintel
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Cultural Insight
BACK TO BASICS
• Greek culture is known for being the basic foundation of athleticism, religion,
politics, and civilization. Greek yogurt is yogurt distilled to its essence.
• As people strive for simplicity, we also try to uncomplicate our lives. Yogurt is
simple and pure.
• It’s available everywhere, it’s cheap, it’s healthy, it’s easy to consume, and it fits in
with busy schedules.
• People have always been conscious of diets, but dieting methods have always been
complicated.
• Over the past 30 years, we have watched a transition from the Atkin’s diet to low-
calorie diets like Weight Watchers, to organic foods, to local farm-fresh buying, and
finally, back to where we started 2,000 years ago in Greece.
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Qualitative Methodology
• Twelve focus group sessions with 48 participants.
• Participants engaged in various activities including creating collages, picture sorts, word
associations, and open-ended discussions utilizing techniques like laddering.
• Our moderators were instructed to utilize non-directive questions to carry out an
informal open-ended discussion with participants on a first-name basis and encourage
divergent thought and discussion and debate on the topics presented.
• The focus group was conducted in the Newhouse focus group room, eliminating a
majority of physical environment stimulation.
• The room featured a one-way mirror as well as audio and recording equipment.
• Focus group sessions were recorded via a camcorder and later transcribed.
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Themes Identified in Qualitative Research
#1: Consumers are becoming more and more conscious of healthy eating habits.
#2: Moms mold children’s food choices and these are carried through adulthood.
#3: Consumers form a distinct imagery on each yogurt brand.
#4: Consumers attempt to eat healthy and manage weight by eating yogurt.
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Consumer Insight
YOGURT AS PENANCE (For Dietary Sins)
There is a clear difference between the perception of being healthy and the food
choices people make.
Food consumption decisions vary significantly even for individuals with whom
healthy eating is top of mind. In many cases, otherwise healthy eaters give in to
“cheat days,” “cheat meals” or even “cheat weeks.” The guilt of making unhealthy
eating decisions forces these consumers to exaggerate their healthy eating habits
by dieting, engaging in calorie restriction, consuming natural or organic foods, or
foregoing snacks. It is, however, impossible for an individual who regularly eats
unhealthy foods to immediately switch to a healthy diet, so snacks become
“healthy snacks” and meals become “meal replacements,” like yogurt.
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Yogurt as Penance
“I usually eat yogurt if I’ve been eating a lot of crap lately and my diets been bad so I
should start eating it instead of a lot of snacks. I don’t replace meals with it, because
there’s not really enough I’ll replace it with snacks like chips and stuff.”
“Where I live on campus we have a chef, he usually gets big Cheetos, nutri-grain bars, if
I’m in a rush and not thinking about my diet, I’ll just grab that but if I reflect back and think
that I’ve been eating the like a bag of Cheetos for the past couple days I think I need to
start eating more yogurt in my diet to replace those.”
Insert data on diet and healthy eating
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Product Insight
PRICE CONSCIOUS CONSUMPTION
Individuals who consume yogurt more often are not willing to pay a high price for it.
Meanwhile, individuals who rarely consume yogurt are willing to pay more.
Specifically, individuals who consume yogurt less than once a week are willing to pay
up to $0.00 per single-serve yogurt.
Individuals who consume yogurt more than once a week are willing to pay up to
$0.00 per single-serve yogurt.
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Competition Insight
THE CHOBANI SQUEEZE
By squeezing out other brands from their respective positionings, Chobani capitalizes on
the work done to associate the yogurt category with those positionings.
Over the past thirty years, Yoplait and Dannon have spent millions to develop their
brand associations: Yoplait is strongly associated with diets, Dannon with yogurt for
children, and Fage with Greek yogurt. These associations are strongly supported by our
focus group discussions. Chobani entered the market with a better diet product,
evidenced by the low fat and high protein composition of the product, the Chobani
Champions line, a product that eliminated funky colors and artificial flavorings, and a
more popular Greek yogurt. Rational consumers then make buying decisions by
comparing within the category they are concerned about: diet-conscious consumers
compare Yoplait with Chobani. Mom buying yogurt for children compare Dannon with
Chobani. Greek consumers compare Fage with Chobani. In most cases, when our
participants gave rational explanations for the yogurt they chose, they selected Chobani
over its competitor.
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Media Insight
CHOBANI IS THE DESIGNER YOGURT
To illustrate the high status associated with eating Chobani, we intend to tie in
with New York Fashion Week and deliver messaging associated with health,
esteem, and weight management issues. We can encourage local restaurants to
promote yogurt-based meals, utilize SoHo artists in residence to promote the
designer aspect, and encourage visits to the Chobani SoHo location. The key
yogurt-eating demographic that we are targeting is highly correlated with the
fashion world, young diet-conscious females.
“[Chobani is] modern and classy.”
“[Chobani is] the premium yogurt.”
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Summary of Insights
Throughout the course of intensive quantitative and qualitative research, encompassing
more than 400 participants and over 750 cumulative hours of analysis, ‘Cuse Planners
has identified several key insights:
Cultural Insight: Back to Basics, the cultural trend toward a more sustainable way of life.
Consumer Insight: Yogurt as a penance for one’s dietary sins, absolving oneself of the
guilt of consuming unhealthy foods.
Product/Competition Insight: The ingenious ability for Chobani to compete with other
brands’ in positions where those brands have previously dominated and actually
outperform those brands in the areas in which they have spent countless dollars to
market themselves. In addition, we demonstrate a link between consumption frequency
and price awareness illustrating that less frequent consumers are willing to pay more for
yogurt.
Our insights confer immediate benefits to Chobani and provide actionable wisdom.
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Creative Brief
Objective:
To persuade coming of age women that Greek is the healthiest cuisine and that Chobani is the most Greek yogurt. Thus,
Chobani is the healthiest yogurt.
Target Audience:
Jessica
She is free-spirited recent graduate and a job seeker. She’s an accounting major living San Francisco fresh out of Berkeley
Haas Business School. She keeps herself busy by preparing to take the CPA’s for an accounting firm which she has signed
with. In her spare time she likes to practice photography, meet with her friends and go biking and hiking. With her busy
lifestyle she doesn’t have the extra time to prepare the healthiest of foods. Some of her meals have to consist of granola
bars and a cup of yogurt.
What does the target currently believe:
She knows very little about Chobani because she’s been eating Yoplait all her life. She believes that yogurt will keep her
fit.
What do we want them to believe:
Chobani is a better, healthier option.
Single minded proposition:
Chobani is the only yogurt you can eat that makes you feel better about all the other bad things you have eaten.
Reason to Believe:
Yogurt is part of a healthy balanced diet, Greek yogurt is the healthiest yogurt available, and Chobani is the authentic
Greek yogurt. Therefore, Chobani is the healthiest yogurt.
3 Schultz, E.J. (2012). Who’s Winning the Greek Yogurt Revolution? Advertising Age . Retrieved from http://adage.com/article/cmo- strategy/winning-greek-yogurt-revolution/235206/ 4 MRI Fall 2009 Yogurt Data
4 MRI Fall 2009 Yogurt Data
Put more on slide 8… doesn’t follow clearly to the insight