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Just Add Water: To Improve Sales, Campbell Remakes Its Condensed Soups
AP ^ | 12-26-2002 | Geoff Mulvihill

Posted on 12/26/2002 11:59:34 AM PST by Cagey

CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) - When Campbell Soup Co. began selling its condensed soups in their red and white cans, it couldn't have been easier - just add water and heat.

But this convenience food has been surpassed by even more convenient foods, and now the company is trying to convince the public that its products, including stalwarts like alphabet soup, are really M'm! M'm! Better!

Campbell isn't relying on advertising alone. It's making changes to the soups themselves in an effort to stop consumers from defecting to other foods.

The alphabet soup, for example, now has more 40 percent letters and the vegetable chunks are crisper.

Doug Conant, who became Campbell's CEO nearly two years ago, said the company does not expect to revolutionize dinner tables.

"Our goal is to stabilize our condensed soup business," he said.

Sales of Campbell's condensed soups have been falling between 1 percent and 2 percent a year, canceling out some of the growth in other businesses for Campbell, which also sells Pepperidge Farms cookies and crackers, Pace picante sauce and Godiva chocolates, among other brands.

Whether the changes are enough to stabilize sales could determine the fate of the condensed soup market, some analysts say.

Andrew Lazer, an analyst for Lehman Brothers, said if the soup upgrades flop, the company will have even more soul-searching to do.

"Does this management team throw in the towel on condensed?" Lazar asked.

Campbell officials say condensed soup, with sales of around 1 billion cans a year in the United States, is here to stay no matter what. Three soups - tomato, chicken noodle and cream of mushroom - are among the 15 best-selling products in U.S. supermarkets, company officials said.

Campbell has tinkered with its soups before - adding more chicken to the chicken noodle, for example - but the company has never had an overhaul like this. The firm is about midway through its three-year plan to improve the soups.

So far, 10 vegetable soups including its minestrone, vegetable soup with alphabet-shaped noodles and Southwest-style chicken vegetable, have been revamped. Next year at this time, the company plans to have another batch of 13 soups, including chicken noodle, reconstituted using the same process.

In the past, Campbell's soups have been in plants roughly the way people at home would make soup from scratch: in one big pot.

The company is now using a new cooking technique, called "cold-blending," which allows different ingredients to be added at different points in the process and some ingredients to be cooked less. The result is a soup with a clearer broth and crisper ingredients.

Walter Gordon, 72, of Cinnaminson, tried some of the new vegetable beef for lunch recently and said he liked it because it was meatier than the old version.

"If they say that they're making similar changes in the others, I'd be inclined to try them," said Gordon, the retired provost of Rutgers University's Camden campus.

A group of financial analysts also tried the new soups a few months ago. Lehman Brothers' Lazar said he was impressed, but with a caveat: "It was still condensed soup."

The changes are expensive. The company won't say exactly how much the new equipment that makes them possible is costing, but it spent $300 million to upgrade the technology in all its plants during the fiscal year that ended July 31.

Analysts say store brands have improved their quality over the years and cut into Campbell's business, particularly in the condensed market. But the company thinks the changes will put Campbell in a better position.

"It's going to be very much harder for our competitors to follow," said R. David C. MacNair, Campbell's chief research officer.

Analyst Mitch Pinhero, who follows Campbell for Janney Montgomery Scott, said that beyond changing the soups, "there's not a whole lot more they can do unless they cut prices."

The company also needs to make its products easier to find. In a supermarket in Maple Shade recently, two shoppers stared at the soup section and complained about the difficulty at finding what they wanted from the sea of varieties all in red and white cans.

Campbell's knows about that problem and has tried to fix it. Business director Michael J. Ferry said about two-thirds of the nation's supermarket chains have agreed to at least some of the company's proposed new soup organization principles, which call for grouping soups by brand and flavor group.

If the changed taste and organization of the condensed soups doesn't draw customers, Campbell's has one more trick to attract buyers interested in convenience: putting on easy-open tops that will make can-openers unnecessary. It's already in place on the company's ready-to-serve varieties.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: good; mmmmmm; mmmmmmmm
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To: MinuteGal
I have a nice big holiday ham bone waiting in the wings for Mama Leni's split pea soup

Yum. I like using both a ham bone and some smoked turkey wings.

21 posted on 12/26/2002 1:08:46 PM PST by dirtboy
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To: FourPeas
What happened with Reggie White? I seem to remember something about him being outspoken about his religious convictions. Was that a problem with Cambells?
22 posted on 12/26/2002 1:13:02 PM PST by Cagey
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To: Cagey
What a time for this story to appear. I've had a big batch of minestrone brewing all day long in the crockpot. I'll throw in the barley and garbanzos when I get home - goooooood eatin'. Puts anything inside a Campbell's can to shame.
23 posted on 12/26/2002 1:13:35 PM PST by strela
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To: TomGuy
Not just coffee, bacon used to be always 1 lb, now it's usually 12 oz for the same price, also ice cream packages are smaller. I guess they think we're too dumb to read the label and notice.
Maybe they still think we don't know what unit pricing is lol
Campbell's should take a hint- people buy the store brand because it's cheaper!
The soups aren't expensive per se, but compare a $1 pkg of balogna and a can of soup- which makes more lunches?
I can make a big pot of homemade soup for about $1.50, so why buy Campbell's?
24 posted on 12/26/2002 1:13:43 PM PST by visualops
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To: Cagey
(I think 99% of the diners in NJ are Greek owned) have great homemade pea soup which is always served with these huge croutons that are incredibly good.

That is an unbelievabably correct statistic. It's a little known fact that if you affect a Greek accent when entering a NJ Diner...you get an automatic %10 discount.

Except for the Dover Diner on Rt 166 in Toms River, which boasts the best food sign ever seen.....

"Eat Here Or We'll Both Starve"

25 posted on 12/26/2002 1:15:29 PM PST by Focault's Pendulum
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To: Cagey
What happened with Reggie White? I seem to remember something about him being outspoken about his religious convictions. Was that a problem with Cambells?

I believe he made a religious comment about gays, and Campbell's dropped him as a frontman. Maybe someone can confirm that.

26 posted on 12/26/2002 1:15:50 PM PST by dirtboy
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To: visualops
Lately, some of the coffee companies (Maxwell House for one) are going back to the full 1LB cans. I believe they were one of the first packagers of "food" products to use the same size container and have less volume inside. Consumers have gotten smarter in the last ten or so years. Lazier, but smarter.
27 posted on 12/26/2002 1:17:51 PM PST by Cagey
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To: Focault's Pendulum
LOL ..What a great sign!

If you haven't noticed, the next time you pass the Tick Tock diner on Route 3 in Clifton notice the clock on the facade. It's from the original diner that was replaced about 12 years ago and on the face of the clock it says "Eat Heavy".

28 posted on 12/26/2002 1:20:52 PM PST by Cagey
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To: Cagey
Progresso is a BIG step up from Campbell.
29 posted on 12/26/2002 1:29:41 PM PST by ricpic
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To: Cagey
Maybe they ought to lower the price. Campbell's soup isn't really that cheap. I suppose the dollars they pay to Olympic ice-skating stars to give the pitch for them has something to do with it.
30 posted on 12/26/2002 1:29:56 PM PST by pray4liberty
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To: dirtboy
"After all, I finally did figure out a way to get decent Mexican food in Pennsylvania - married a Mexican woman from Colorado and dragged her back here..."

Congratulations are in order. For the matrimony and for the inventive solution to your culinary shortfall.

There is nothing better than a Mexican breakfast. You probably start the day two miles ahead of everybody else in Philly...

31 posted on 12/26/2002 1:38:44 PM PST by okie01
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To: Cagey
People can say all they want, but for my money Campbell's Cream Of Mushroom is one of the greatest inventions of the twentieth century because you can use it in recipes, or as soup. When I was a child in the South who grew up on meat and potatoes mushrooms was a pretty exotic thing to me. I almost always buy the house brand, but I tried the house Mushroom Soup a few years ago, and I was disappointed. Since you folks say it is now better I will give it another shot
32 posted on 12/26/2002 1:39:36 PM PST by dix
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To: Cagey
If you haven't noticed, the next time you pass the Tick Tock

I remember the old Tick Tock.....As a kid we'd pass it on the way to Rut's Hutt.

33 posted on 12/26/2002 1:40:18 PM PST by Focault's Pendulum
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To: okie01
Congratulations are in order. For the matrimony and for the inventive solution to your culinary shortfall.

Hey, it took me MONTHS to recover from that BBQ/Mexican food thread years ago. That demanded action to correct...

There is nothing better than a Mexican breakfast. You probably start the day two miles ahead of everybody else in Philly...

Yep - although I'm actually living in the boonies of Pennsylvania now. Had homemade red chili (made with real New Mexico peppers) with scrambled eggs cooked with lightly fried corn tortillas for Christmas breakfast. Yum.

34 posted on 12/26/2002 1:41:45 PM PST by dirtboy
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To: Cagey
The alphabet soup, for example, now has more 40 percent letters and the vegetable chunks are crisper.

This is lovely indeed. Tho' better for laughs than for sales, methinks. :-)

All kidding aside, Campbell's alphabet soup has been a comfort food when I've had colds. Also, Campbell's Chunky soup line is actually pretty palatable.
35 posted on 12/26/2002 1:43:32 PM PST by k2blader
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To: Focault's Pendulum
As a kid we'd pass it on the way to Rut's Hutt.

Ahhhh, Jersey dining at it's finest. Deep fried hot dogs and Frenchy Gravy! And after you've eaten you come out to find all those seagulls in the parking lot do more than just eat. Time to go to the car wash.

And then, there are Itlian Hot Dogs from Newark.

36 posted on 12/26/2002 1:46:34 PM PST by Cagey
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To: Cagey
Here is an article from Focus on the Family.
37 posted on 12/26/2002 1:46:53 PM PST by FourPeas
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To: chuknospam
I just went to their website and sent them a much longer version of your complaints. In fact, If they go the "crispy & clear" route then they will lose some of the customer base that they presently have.
38 posted on 12/26/2002 1:47:07 PM PST by gnarledmaw
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To: FourPeas
Thanks for the refresher.
39 posted on 12/26/2002 1:49:14 PM PST by Cagey
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To: Cagey
And after you've eaten you come out to find all those seagulls in the parking lot do more than just eat. Those would have been the meadowlands species...Ornery bastards aren't they? I understand they're related to the Keansburg flock of clam smashers.
40 posted on 12/26/2002 1:52:47 PM PST by Focault's Pendulum
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