08/22/2005 11:49:00 PM (1)
Actor, song-writer and martial arts master, Steven Segal just launched his own line of energy drinks, adding yet another brand to an already crowded category.

Energy drinks first came to the US from Europe. The category creator, Red Bull grew up on the snowboarding slopes of the Alps, with the extreme crowd who took it with them into clubs and the rest is history.

The most interesting thing about the category is how open it is. There seems to be a new entrant every day.

One reason is the elasticity of the concept of energy. It's obviously a critical component of any thriving culture in the United States. There isn't a group or culture that is relevant to a young adult and youth audience that doesn't possess energy. The micro brands understood this and exploited it, while the bigger guys including Red Bull stayed focused only in the extreme sports arena. The micro-brands come from the sub-cultures that define energy in a different way to extreme sports, for example:

Crunk Juice

"The creation of beats and hooks so powerful that the audience is instinctively moved to sway, dance, and lose themselves in the moment, gave birth to crunk music. Crunk identifies music so powerful a word hadn't been produced for such a reaction until the imprint of crunk on the American consciousness."

There are now over 1,000 brands in the energy drink marketplace, it's micro-fragmentation to the max.

Although the category that is dominated by Red Bull, it's a brand that doesn't really advertise. Their strategy has been to support a few sub-cultures with grassroots activities. It appears that others are copying their tactics, but are creating products tailored to appeal strongly to small groups, e.g.- martial arts or hip-hop fans.

It will be interesting to see if these micro brand owners can be satisfied with a tiny market share, if consumers continue to support them and if the bigger beverage companies with large budgets can crush the smaller players.
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Comments
actually Red Bull is NOT a company focused only on the extreme sports arena
While it may look like that because of many of the unique extreme sports-style events Red Bull creates, you're overlooking a few things. <br> <br>1) Red Bull's quirky cartoon advertising is done in that specific style for a reason - it is something that almost anyone can find funny, thus it stays away from targeting individual groups or sub-cultures <br> <br>2) Red Bull has mobile marketing teams in every major market in the U.S. These teams work in the field finding people that are in a situation where they need energy whether that's because they're playing sports, working, studying, driving, or whatever. This is done to target the largest amount of people rather than demographics or psychographics. <br> <br>Red Bull is the most successful brand because it was the first energy drink, it's been excellently branded, and because of its great marketing strategies.
Posted by Eric Hansen on 08/24/2005 01:53 PM
It appears you don't have Flash installed.
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