Sign In

How to tell the world organic tastes good

“You know the usu­al look,” says Annie Mor­ris, “very bright colours, lots of copy, that ‘back on the farm’ look – it’s hard­ly con­tem­po­rary.” The co-founder of new gra­nola brand Spoon, Ms Mor­ris knew exact­ly what she didn’t want when it came to the brand­ing of her prod­uct.

“Not only did I want clean lines, sim­plic­i­ty,” she adds, “but I didn’t want to put any claims on the front of the box. Its nat­u­ral­ness is implic­it. Some peo­ple get that. They’re prob­a­bly a minor­i­ty, though that’s def­i­nite­ly chang­ing.”

Lifestyle orientated branding

Cer­tain­ly it speaks vol­umes that the buzz­words of so many prod­ucts in the organ­ic and nat­ur­al food­stuffs sec­tor, as well as the cos­met­ics and cloth­ing mar­kets, have not aged well: Earth, syn­er­gy, fair and soul are the kind of new-age ter­mi­nolo­gies that now seem to be on the way out.

Indeed, accord­ing to Jonathan Ford, the cre­ative direc­tor of brand­ing agency Pearl­fish­er, the lat­est raft of healthy food com­pa­nies are dri­ving a new mar­ket dynam­ic: a shift away from what he calls direc­tive brand­ing of “this will be good for you”, to more lifestyle-ori­ent­ed brand­ing of “this makes sense to the way you live”.

Prod­ucts in this sec­tor used to push wor­ry­ing mes­sages or be some­what hair-shirt­ed in their atti­tude

“Our under­stand­ing of what is healthy has been great­ly improved in recent years, through the media, through gov­ern­ment cam­paigns,” says Mr Ford, who has worked with brands includ­ing Inno­cent and Green & Black’s.

Jonathan Ford from Pearlfisher praises companies such as Graze for their straightforward, bold packaging

Jonathan Ford from Pearl­fish­er prais­es com­pa­nies such as Graze for their straight­for­ward, bold pack­ag­ing

“Prod­ucts in this sec­tor used to push wor­ry­ing mes­sages or be some­what hair-shirt­ed in their atti­tude. But a much more cre­ative approach has been shaped in par­tic­u­lar by small­er, entre­pre­neur­ial brands, albeit often ones with some seri­ous start­up mon­ey. The mas­sive health brands are prob­a­bly in cri­sis fac­ing this onslaught.”

He cites as good exam­ples the likes of Graze, a com­pa­ny deliv­er­ing healthy snacks direct to the door, and pre­pared-sal­ad bowl com­pa­ny Bol, prais­ing their straight-for­ward, bold­ly graph­ic pack­ag­ing. But one of his own brands, Swedish juice com­pa­ny Froosh, launch­ing in the UK lat­er this year, also points to anoth­er impor­tant trend, name­ly a touch of direct humour – “Goji: strange name, super fruit” as one label has it or “No bad stuff. Zilch, zero, nada” as anoth­er stress­es.

“This is a sec­tor with a lot of flan­nel to cut through,” says Mr Ford. “There are lots of prod­ucts mas­querad­ing as ‘nat­ur­al’ or ‘healthy’. There needs to be truth back­ing up the direct­ness, but direct­ness can help.”

Directness

That’s been the route tak­en by new smooth­ie com­pa­ny Savse. Its head of mar­ket­ing Orr Vine­gold says it has seen a pret­ty amaz­ing response from con­sumers, not to men­tion from poten­tial stock­ists, to its in-house-designed, bus-side ad cam­paign launched this sum­mer. Again, the mes­sage is blunt: “No Bull”.

“The fact is there is a lot of hype in this mar­ket and, to be hon­est, we were get­ting quite angry about it,” says Mr Vine­gold. “We want to be main­stream, but we’re up against com­pa­nies that aren’t always very open about what they do. A direct mes­sage to the con­sumer seemed a good way to go for a small com­pa­ny like ours.”

Is direct also cool, per­haps a touch anti-estab­lish­ment? Gill Green is the mar­ket­ing direc­tor of Wes­sa­nen UK, which counts among its organ­ic brands Whole Earth, which under­went a major image over­haul a year ago, Kallo rice cakes and Clip­per tea. She argues that, what­ev­er the sec­tor, an expres­sion of moder­ni­ty is now high among con­sumer expec­ta­tions.

Spoon granola co-founder Annie Morris says she didn’t want to put any claims on the packaging as its “naturalness is implicit”

Spoon gra­nola co-founder Annie Mor­ris says she didn’t want to put any claims on the pack­ag­ing as its “nat­u­ral­ness is implic­it”

“Trends have sim­ply changed in what con­sumers find attrac­tive and the way you present a prod­uct, organ­ic or not, is increas­ing­ly impor­tant,” she says. “Whole Earth had a yes­ter­year feel to it, the look of the kind of thing you’d find in a health food shop. It felt a lit­tle wor­thy. But the fact is all these organ­ic or nat­ur­al prod­ucts are not tucked away in the health food trade now, but are up there along­side lead­ing, con­ven­tion­al prod­ucts.”

The over­all effect on image might be accu­rate­ly sum­marised as less is more. Intrigu­ing­ly, many new or over­hauled lines appeal­ing to shop­pers of organ­ic, nat­ur­al or healthy prod­ucts make lit­tle effort to even fore­ground this infor­ma­tion in pack­ag­ing or brand-build­ing.

Accord­ing to Pearl­fish­ers’ Mr Ford, if a brand is gen­uine­ly organ­ic, it would be fool­ish not to say as much. “But since there are so many mis­con­cep­tions about what that and ‘nat­ur­al’ actu­al­ly means, you have to stand out more than that,” he says. In foods, he stress­es, get­ting across that you’re organ­ic is not the pri­ma­ry con­cern; it’s get­ting across that you taste real­ly good.

Besides, our ways of shop­ping are chang­ing rad­i­cal­ly too, notes Charles Beard­sall, the UK man­ag­ing direc­tor of beau­ty brand Dr. Hausch­ka, which claims to make a cer­ti­fied 100 per cent nat­ur­al prod­uct, yet states this only in the small print on the back of its pack­ag­ing.

“We have a lot of data we could put on box­es, but when we rebrand­ed two years ago we went for a much clean­er, fresh­er look,” says Mr Beard­sall. “And the fact is that by the time con­sumers now come to buy nat­ur­al prod­ucts, typ­i­cal­ly they’ve already done a lot of their own research. In a mar­ket in which they may well not believe that many ‘nat­ur­al’ prod­ucts are actu­al­ly nat­ur­al, we want them to come to the brand only when they’re ready.”