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Arnell's "Explanation" of Failed Tropicana Design Resembles His Nonsensical Pepsi Document

By Jim Edwards | Feb 26, 2009

When he launched a new design for Tropicana, Peter Arnell gave a rambling, pseudo-intellectual explanation of the packaging.

This was the packaging that was just cancelled by Pepsico after it emerged that consumers really, really liked the old packaging.

But Arnell’s explanation of the new trade dress — captured on video by Ad Age — rings familiar. Why? Because of Arnell Group’s even more ludicrous explanation for its redesign of the Pepsi logo (that was the one where Pepsi is linked to the power of gravity and the Mona Lisa).

Here’s a digest of Arnell’s Tropicana explanation. Compare it with the Pepsi fiasco. One might argue that made-up bullshit is part of Arnell Group’s DNA:

We thought it would be important to take this brand and bring it or evolve it into a more current or modern state.

Well, this is the problem, isn’t it? Does orange juice really need to “evolve” into a “modern state”? Of course not. It just needs to be cold and fresh and taste strongly of oranges. But this is lost on Arnell.

Emotionally, it’s still very, very difficult to, and it still remains difficult, for everyone to grasp the importance of that change because it’s so dramatic.

Clue No. 2: If everyone finds your new concept “difficult” to grasp, then is this concept ready for the marketplace? No! Consumers have to be able to understand what you’re doing.

Historically, we always show the outside of the orange. What was fascinating was that we had never shown the product called the juice.

“Historically”? Seriously? This is OJ, not sociology 101.

Having said that we wanted to take the orange and put it somewhere. We engineered this interesting little squeeze cap here … so that the notion of squeezing the orange was implied ergonomically.

Note that the cap does not, in fact, squeeze. It’s made of hard plastic. Why doesn’t Arnell know this? More significantly, if the orange is so important, and the product is made of fresh oranges, does it really make sense to not show a picture of an orange on the box?

… the idea of course is to have a consistency between the purity of the juice, which is coming directly from the orange, the cap which you squeeze every day and of course the carton.

Here Arnell’s explanation of the cap undermines the design he’s just in created: If the orange is so important, why is it not on the box? If you listen closely to the way Arnell pauses when he says this, you can almost see the penny dropping inside his head.

… “squeeze” maintains a certain level of I guess power when it comes to this notion emotionally about what squeeze means like my squeeze or give me a squeeze or the notion of a hug or the ideas behind the power of love and the idea of transferring that love or converting that attitude between mom and the kids, right?

Again, if the cap could actually be squeezed, then some of this would make sense. But it can’t. So it doesn’t.

Ironically, the cap is the only part of the design that Tropicana is keeping. The company paid Arnell $35 million for his design and its “explanation.”

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Peter Arnell Explains Failed Tropicana Package Design

    Ad Age - 348 days 16 hours 6 minutes ago

    NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Pepsico's Tropicana brand is junking the new orange juice package design it only just launched weeks ago. The beverage marketer is switching back to its old design whose centerpiece is an orange skewered by a drinking straw. In this video recorded at a press conference five weeks ago, Arnell Group CEO Peter Arnell...

  • Peter Arnell Still Has One Fan: Kyra Sedwick

    BNET Advertising - 249 days 6 hours 34 minutes ago

    Peter Arnell may be the most hated man in advertising but someone still loves him — Kyra Sedgwick, star of Arnell’s ads for Tropicana (see video below). Arnell recently made a fool of himself on multiple fronts with high profile screwups on his Pepsi, Tropicana, and General Motors clients, and a catastrophically failed book deal. But...

  • In Blow to Arnell, Tropicana Drops Package Redesign

    BNET Advertising - 351 days 11 hours 20 minutes ago

    Tropicana is to abandon its trendy new orange juice carton design by Arnell Group and revert back to its traditional packaging, featuring an orange with a straw in it, the New York Times says. The move is the third high-profile design flop from Peter Arnell's Arnell group. Arnell's redesign of the Pepsi logo and product has been criticized for...

  • Late Breaks: Tropicana Feels the Squeeze, more

    Portfolio.com - 313 days 6 hours 27 minutes ago

    -Tropicana's sales plunged 20 percent in January and February, following certified advertising genius Peter Arnell's revamp of the brand's packaging and advertising. [ Ad Age ] -As ER ends tonight, one man reflects on how, as good as the show could be at times, it was still pretty embarrassing to admit to watching it. [ NYO ] - Maxim ,...

  • Tropicana Line's Sales Plunge 20% Post-Rebranding

    Ad Age - 313 days 11 hours 28 minutes ago

    NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Tropicana's rebranding debacle did more than create a customer-relations fiasco. It hit the brand in the wallet. After its package redesign, sales of the Tropicana Pure Premium line plummeted 20% between Jan. 1 and Feb. 22, costing the brand tens of millions of dollars. On Feb. 23, the company announced it would bow to...

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  •  
    1

    AdScam

    02/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Arnell's

    Maybe he watched too many Mr Whipple spots when he was growing up... The only one that got truly "Squeezed" here was the client $35 million... Un-F**kingBelievable. Sorry Jim, If I was posting this on AdScam, I would use the ***
    Cheers/George

  •  
    2

    edscott7

    03/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Arnell's

    Mickey O'Rourke and the new Tropicana package have something in common; The contents are the same but, OMG, what have you done to the outside!

  •  
    3

    clayco

    03/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Arnell's

    Like it or not, I would say this man is a genius if he can charge that kind of money and his clients will pay it. I would like to take lessons from Arnell just to know how he does it. Kudos to him!

  •  
    4

    adskan

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Arnell's

    This signals the end of a 10-year marketing trend where babble passes as knowledge or experience.

    Well-done packaging research, and not with focus groups, conducted with customers would have stopped this mess before it reached the marketplace.

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