Packaging, brand name make sake product approachable

Unique design agency approach to packaging supports Hiro Sake LLC’s strategy to launch an authentic Japanese spirits brand that demystifies sake for U.S. consumers.

Cold and hot varieties are distinguished by blue and red, respectively.
Cold and hot varieties are distinguished by blue and red, respectively.

Thick, black, swooshing brush strokes, like the precise movements of a samurai sword, the iconic outline of a samurai warrior’s helmet, and a bold, contemporary Japanese style are all design elements of the packaging for a new imported sake brand developed to bring approachability to a spirits category not well understood in the U.S. Hiro brand sake was introduced in spring 2011 by three spirits industry veterans who were inspired by their love of sake and saw an opportunity to create an authentic, premium brand that consumers could ask for by name.

Says Hiro Sake LLC co-founder, CEO, and president Carlos Arana, who has worked with brands such as Jose Cuervo, Seagrams, and Jim Beam, “From long experience in the spirits industry, my partners and I know that consumers like brands, not categories. So they don’t go and ask for a vodka; they ask for a specific brand. The same with tequila, the same with rum, the same with whiskey. So it was a little bit of an eye-opener for us to realize that with sake, consumers were not asking for a brand. That’s where we really saw an opportunity.

“Japanese restaurants and Japanese food are becoming more popular, so people are beginning to learn about and consume more sake, but they don’t know how to order it; the names are unpronounceable. So we thought, let’s go for it, let’s develop a brand.”

After coming up with a catchy, easy-to-remember brand name, Hiro Sake looked to New York City design business Monday Collective to translate its strategy into a package design that would be “modern, authentic, and eye-catching,” says Arana. Using a unique design approach, Monday Collective created simple, distinctive brand imagery that both differentiates the brand in the crowded spirits category and connects with the international spirits consumer.

Hiro sake is packaged in a stock, 720-mL glass bottle with a frosted, translucent white surface. Hot and cold varieties are differentiated by artful touches of color: Red is used for Junmai Sake, or Hiro Red hot sake; blue is used for Junmai Ginjo Sake, or Hiro Blue cold sake. Says Arana, “Monday Collective did an incredible job. I get to see it every day when I introduce the brand to new outlets, to consumers, and to wholesalers. The first thing they say is how much they love the package; it’s wonderful, really wonderful.”

Curating expertise
A relatively new firm, Monday Collective was established in September 2010 by designers Rochelle Martyn and Lisa Simpson to “challenge the epidemic of mediocrity in brand design with more disruptive thinking,” explains Martyn. “Not disruption for the sake of it,” she adds, “but disruption that connects with people in a way that’s valued.”

While the “Monday” portion of the agency’s name refers to the theme-based field trips and excursions Martin and Simpson take on Mondays to gather design inspiration, the “Collective” part of their name refers to the diverse teams of outside experts they assemble for each specific project.

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