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Miller Says It's OK To Drink Cheap Beer
ClickonDetroit ^ | November 13, 2006 | AP

Posted on 11/13/2006 5:34:40 AM PST by ShadowDancer

Miller Says It's OK To Drink Cheap Beer

Ad Campaign Targets Affluent 20-Somethings

POSTED: 8:08 am EST November 13, 2006

MILWAUKEE -- With affluent drinkers straying to imports and crafts, a new ad campaign by Miller Brewing Co. embraces Miller High Life's emphasis on value, saying it's OK to savor a lower priced brew.

Milwaukee-based Miller, the nation's second largest brewer, targeted affluent 20-somethings with an ongoing ad campaign that proclaims Miller Genuine Draft is a "grown up" beer for drinkers who want the better things in life.

But that campaign missed older drinkers, typically 35-year-olds with kids, who still want a low-priced brew, said Tom McLoughlin, marketing director for Miller High Life.

With sales of domestic beer dropping, the company can't afford to leave out prospective customers.

On Friday, Miller launched new television ads in 14 markets in the Midwest, including Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota and Ohio. The ads feature a delivery man removing Miller High Life from a bistro, dance club and other highbrow establishments, saying the brew doesn't belong there.

People can't have the finer things in life all the time and have to balance their purchases, McLoughlin said.

"As much as people trade up to experience more luxury goods, they can't do that all the time," he said. "There are places where you have to trade down."

Miller is banking on Miller High Life to help it offset a decline in U.S. sales. Its parent company, London-based SABMiller PLC said Thursday that U.S. volume was down 2.6 percent overall in the first six months of the year.

But sales of light value-priced beer have been up the past few years, according to a new report by research firm Mintel. Sales of both Miller High Life Light and Busch Light were up about 4 percent from 2004 to this year, while sales of the full-calorie equivalents were down about 6 percent each, the report said.

With sales of imports and crafts up about 11 percent in the first half of this year, Miller's new campaign shows the company is trying to capitalize on any growth trend it finds, said Eric Shephard, executive editor of the trade publication Beer Marketer's Insights. In this case, it's value-priced beer.

"Any kind of little bit of apparent change, even if they're not real, tends to get people reacting," Shephard said. "These could be short trends, but people have looked at it."

The new spots for Miller High Life could be the first of many, McLoughlin said. All three spots feature a delivery man who becomes indignant at the cost of items in establishments selling the beer. In the bistro clip, he looks at a menu, sees that burgers cost $11.50 and then hauls away cases of the beer.

"This beer is about helping people live the high life," he says. "It's a good honest beer at a tasty price."

McLoughlin said Miller believes some consumers don't really want to pay for higher-priced brews. A six-pack of High Life sells for about $4.99 in the Midwest, while Miller Genuine Draft goes for about $1 more.

"We want to call people on that and show them there's a way they can live the high life and that we rail against pretentiousness," he said.

Christy Brinnehl, a beverage analyst with Mintel Customs Solutions, said people tend to stick to beers in one price range. The ads aren't likely to convince people to switch to Miller's economy brew, but they could help reinforce attitudes among existing customers, she said.

The image of the delivery driver ought to resonate with those drinkers, many of whom are working class - and that's a smart move, Brinnehl said.

"I think that sometimes when the manufacturers are always targeting those affluent, younger 20s people who just started drinking," she said, "they're kind of leaving out those older drinkers or baby boomers."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: beer; boycott
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To: radar101
Why this immigrant ILLEGAL ALIEN rights march is brought to you by Miller

Hey gringo! Eet's pronounced Meeeeller!

21 posted on 11/13/2006 5:47:33 AM PST by uglybiker (Don't look at me. I didn't make you stupid.)
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To: ShadowDancer
Miller Says It's OK To Drink Cheap Beer

Well as long as they say so, I guess it's okay.

22 posted on 11/13/2006 5:49:19 AM PST by SaveTheChief (This is my "+3 tagline of smiting")
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To: RayStacy

I can drink all sorts of different beers, some I obviously enjoy more than others, but the entire Miller line is a grouping I cannot stomach.


23 posted on 11/13/2006 5:50:14 AM PST by ShadowDancer (No autopsy, no foul.)
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To: ShadowDancer
Miller Says It's OK To Drink Cheap Beer

And so, sales of Milwaukee's Beast skyrocket...

24 posted on 11/13/2006 5:50:16 AM PST by JRios1968 (Tagline wanted...inquire within)
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To: ShadowDancer
Nice that they're acknowledging that they are really 'Miller Low Life'. The old Olympia Brewery in Tumwater, Washington was taken over by Miller some years ago, and then finally closed three years ago. Craft brews (also called microbrews out here) have dominated, and Widmer Brothers just broke ground for an additional $22 million brewery in Portland.

Great Hefeweizen, give it a try! I saw it fairly widely available on a recent trip to Florida, at ABC Liquors.

25 posted on 11/13/2006 5:50:23 AM PST by hunter112 (Total victory at home and in the Middle East!)
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To: 7thson

How about a whole 6 pack of Micky's Big Mouth for $.87. Maybe I'm dating myself.


26 posted on 11/13/2006 5:52:35 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (BTUs are my Beat.)
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To: ShadowDancer
The beauty of this story is that Miller's entirely missing the boat. They're spending a nice kettle of money to figure out how they can best dupe the public into buying a crappy product, whereas, if they spent that same money developing a better product, they'd draw in customers even without the clever advertising.

I wonder how long it's going to take these macrobrewers to figure out that the homebrew revolution permanently changed America's beer purchasing habits. Except for the proverbial broke college student and the proudly unsophisticated Joe Sixpack, most people who drink beer don't mind paying a buck or two extra for a better-quality beer. A six of Miller High Life could go for a buck twenty five and I would still consider it a buck twenty five wasted.

27 posted on 11/13/2006 5:52:49 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: ClearCase_guy
"It breeds unhappiness.

DING DING DING. WE HAVE A WINNER!

That is what the commercials solve, buy this, buy that, be happy. For now. Because we'll just move the goal posts. You'll be unhappy then, and we'll make new stuff, we'll buy it and ......

28 posted on 11/13/2006 5:53:07 AM PST by Leisler
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

"Micky's Big Mouth"?? How yum, yum that sounds.


29 posted on 11/13/2006 5:53:48 AM PST by RayStacy
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To: 7thson
...Iron City...

(homer voice)...MMMMMMM, Iron City....

...or P.O.C. or Robin Hood Ale...

30 posted on 11/13/2006 5:54:07 AM PST by martin gibson ("I care not what course others may take, but as for myself, give me Ralph Stanley or give me death")
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To: ShadowDancer

Life is too short to drink bad beer....


31 posted on 11/13/2006 5:55:55 AM PST by Cincinatus (Omnia relinquit servare Republicam)
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To: ShadowDancer

http://www.rollbackthebeertax.com/

(Barrel of beer = 31 gallons.)


32 posted on 11/13/2006 5:56:35 AM PST by elli1
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To: 7thson

Old Milldog and Schlitz provided a few benders


33 posted on 11/13/2006 5:56:49 AM PST by dforest (be careful you don't become what you hate the most)
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To: radar101
I used to occasionally buy Miller Genuine draft. After their funding for illegals, NO MORE!
34 posted on 11/13/2006 5:58:05 AM PST by MBB1984
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To: ShadowDancer
A six-pack of High Life sells for about $4.99 in the Midwest, while Miller Genuine Draft goes for about $1 more.

Yikes, beer's expensive in the midwest. I paid $10 for a case of High Life yesterday

35 posted on 11/13/2006 5:59:07 AM PST by Gabz
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To: RayStacy

Same thing here, now I like Pilsner Urquell and Foster's.


36 posted on 11/13/2006 6:05:00 AM PST by stbdside
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To: SShultz460
My wife was traveling last week, so my son and I took the occasion to go to the chicken joint a couple times. My son is 17 and could be designated driver, so I had wings and beer - two nights in a row. On the third day, I wrote a new man law:

If the dog bites at the air after you break wind, no more wings and beer.

The voting was unanimous.
37 posted on 11/13/2006 6:06:22 AM PST by IamConservative (A mans true character is revealed in what he does when no one is watching.)
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To: sushiman
Miller High Life: The Champagne Gatorade of Beers
38 posted on 11/13/2006 6:10:04 AM PST by Ouderkirk (The democRAT party is the home of every kind of criminal and pervert imaginable)
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To: RayStacy

What's really sad, - Germans, despite all their faults, know how to make beer. Good beer - and it's cheap. I was buying it for 8 bucks a case when I was stationed over there. Maybe a dollar or so at a bar, with nary a fern in sight. Even in the bluest of blue collar bars, germans drink good beer. Here in the US, the "boutique" crowd has taken over, so the beer is just way over-priced. So it goes.


39 posted on 11/13/2006 6:10:55 AM PST by Freedom4US (u)
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To: RayStacy
Now it's Red Stripe, Raffo, Tsingtao, and Ichiban Kirin for me.

You call those good beers? They are just the foreign equivelents to Bud, Miller & Coors.

Try Dogfish Head, Stone Brewery's "Arrogant Bastard", or anything by Avery of Bolder Colorado, or Victory of PA or Bells of MI. These are true craft beers--as good or better than anything foreign, and 100% US made too.

40 posted on 11/13/2006 6:11:42 AM PST by AnalogReigns
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