Pinup girls position value beer brand for growth

Canada’s Sleeman Brewing updates the package design for Old Milwaukee beer with pinup-girl graphics, positioning the brand for growth against major mainstream beers.

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The iconic Varga Girls of the 1940s and ’50s have re-emerged in all their playful, voluptuous beauty on new package designs for Sleeman Brewing and Malting’s Old Milwaukee beer brand in Canada. Launched in spring 2011, the designs use retro pinup-girl illustrations to add some panache to the value brand, while emphasizing its historical relevance.

First brewed in 1890, Old Milwaukee was reintroduced in 1955 as a value-priced beer by the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co. In 1982, Schlitz and the Old Milwaukee brand were acquired by Stroh Brewery Co. of Detroit. In 1999, Ontario-based Sleeman brought the brand to Canada, when it acquired the rights to all of Stroh USA’s value-brand beers.

In 2010, Sleeman set about updating packaging for Old Milwaukee with brand design firm Dossier Creative to capitalize on the steady growth in Canada of value-priced beers and to position it against the biggest mainstream beer brand in the market. “This redesign was really to position Old Milwaukee very firmly against Budweiser,” explains Bryce Zurowski, partner and COO of Dossier, who at the time of the redesign was western regional vice president of Sleeman. “The redesign was intended to show consumers that a branded value beer can be number one, taste great, and have a more contemporized image without the big-budget TV media dollars that Budweiser boasts.”

Launched on a staggered basis to the Canadian provinces beginning in spring 2011, the pinup-girl packaging was an instant hit, resulting in brand growth of up to 40% to 50% in some markets by summer 2011.

Consistency across the provinces
One complementary aim of the Old Milwaukee package redesign was to bring consistency to a brand that donned different package graphics depending upon the market in which it was sold. This, Zurowski explains, was the result of the corporate structure at the time of Sleeman’s purchase of the brand and the nature of Canadian beer markets. “Sleeman was a young company, and the brand was managed independently,” he says. “In Canada, each province is really a unique beer market. Consumers are very different, the brand assortment is very different, pricing is very different, and oftentimes, brands can have different identities or positions.”

Bringing the whole portfolio together under one, consistent brand design provided both marketing and operational benefits, Zurowski relates. From a marketing standpoint, it allows Sleeman to run national brand campaigns “projecting the Old Milwaukee brand with a stronger, clearer message across the country,” he says. Operationally, the redesign simplified the complexity of the number of SKUs in the portfolio from more than 80 to approximately 50.

But, because of the diverse nature of Canadian beer markets, there was also a risk with a wholesale packaging change that the new graphics may not appeal to some markets. “It’s always a concern with any rebrand when you are trying to appeal to more of a mass market that you may lose the intricacies,” says Zurowski. As an example, he cites the Ontario market, where the Liquor Control Board is responsible for all the beer purchases in that province. “And for them to put packaging that was perceived as a little bit more risqué or irreverent on the shelf was in doubt,” he says.

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