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ANHEUSER-BUSCH SAME DAY DELIVERY - April 2004 |
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SITE
INDEX
Anheuser-Busch to offer same-day-packaged beer
this month
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Pressing its "born-on dating" to the max,
Anheuser-Busch has brewed up a promotion to tout freshness by offering
certain Budweiser and Bud Light drinkers the chance to sample the beer
the same day it was packaged.
The world's largest brewer announced the
promotion this week, tapping April as "Freshness Month." As
part of the effort, the St. Louis-based company said trucks will pick up
Budweiser and Bud Light packaged that morning at Anheuser-Busch
breweries, then deliver it to wholesalers to hustle to certain eateries
and retailers for sale to consumers those evenings. Such "freshness days" will be scattered
throughout the year across the country. Though it takes about a month to brew Budweiser
and Bud Light, Anheuser-Busch says the beer as promoted will be
packaged, shipped, delivered and served within 18 to 20 hours. That's a
fraction of the 35-day span between the time Budweiser or Bud Light is
packaged to when it typically is bought by a consumer. The message: Unlike fine wine, beer may not taste
better with time. It's all about new brew. "We're really doing it to make the point
that fresh beer tastes better," said Tom Shipley, Budweiser brand
manager. "Some consumers don't realize that beer is a food product.
Some wines do get better with age, but beer is different. Beer tastes
best when it's fresh, and we're always thinking of new ways to
communicate that to consumers." The company also plans to offer same-day-packaged
Budweiser and Bud Light on certain Fridays and Saturdays this month at
its tour centers at breweries in St. Louis; Merrimack, N.H.;
Jacksonville, Fla.; Fort Collins, Colo.; and Fairfield, Calif. Anheuser-Busch introduced the consumer-friendly
"Born On" date coding in September 1996, noting on each bottle
or can the date the beer was brewed. On such packaging, the company
touts that Budweiser and Bud Light are at their peak freshness and taste
within 110 days from the "Born On" date. Jim
Dorsch, editor of the quarterly trade
magazine American Brewer, applauded the move, saying that
"people need to be aware of freshness issues when it comes to beer,
and this brings that to the fore." "Freshness is always good in beer; there is
a difference," he said, adding that Anheuser-Busch appears to be
taking advantage of its national breadth of breweries to press the
promotion. "It's something they can quite easily do." Molly
Reilley, a Miller Brewing Co. spokeswoman,
declined to discuss Anheuser-Busch's same-day effort, saying that
Milwaukee-based brewer generally does not discuss competitors'
promotions. Messages left with Adolph Coors Co., based in
Golden, Colo., were not returned. The promotion is the latest by Anheuser-Busch as
it looks to blunt a surge by rival Miller. Last month, Anheuser-Busch
— eager to woo weight-conscious drinkers — launched a marketing
effort touting all light beers as a tasty, carb-friendly alternative. Shares of Anheuser-Busch were up 39 cents to
close at $51.03 on Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange.
Anheuser-busch
Companies
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