| Unilever
Takes Bertolli Brand Frozen;
Premium Dinner Line Debuts in USA
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| Hearty Chicken & Linguine is just one of
eight premium dinners for two under Unilever’s Bertolli brand. |

After two years of development and successful test marketing
in northeast, pasta-based Dinners for Two headed for national rollout,
with massive advertising campaign.
Bertolli? In the United States, it’s been just olive oil
and pasta sauces, but in Europe the brand covers a wide range of
products like Italian specialty sandwiches. Now it’s making
its debut in the USA for premium frozen dinners.
That’s despite the fact that the premium dinner segment has
faltered of late, and despite a profit warning in September that
made Wall Street analysts skeptical of the parent Unilever Group’s
involvement in such slow growth categories.
With Unilever unloading some of its food operations in Europe and
outsourcing production for Birds Eye frozen foods in the United
Kingdom, there has been speculation that the Anglo-Dutch consumer
products giant might be gradually lowering its profile in the retail
food business. But that doesn’t seem likely from the push
Unilever put behind two years of test marketing of the Bertolli
frozen dinner line in the northeastern United States. That test
was pronounced a “phenomenal success” by Brian Manning,
senior director for Bertolli, who said the brand achieved a 37%
penetration of the segment.
National rollout is now under way, with heavy TV and print ad support
and in-store promotion. McCann Erickson Worldwide, a leading ad
agency, is in charge of the campaign, which will push the message
that consumers can now get restaurant quality meals that take only
10 minutes to prepare at home.
An Italian Restaurant in the Kitchen
Complete Skillet Dinners for Two, according to the company, are
“meant to bring an Olive Garden-like dining experience to
your kitchen.” Just why these are dinners for two when single-serve
dinners are the rule, isn’t explained, but it may have to
do with a similar venture by Marie Callender – or even a store-brand
line of reduced calorie Dinners for Two from Safeway Stores.
The Bertolli line includes eight varieties – Grilled Chicken
Alfredo; Italian Sausage and Rigatoni; Shrimp Scampi and Linguine;
Spinach and Ricotta Cheese Ravioli; Chicken Parmigiana and Penne;
Chicken and Garden Vegetable Primavera; Roasted Chicken and Linguine;
and Shrimp, Penne and Asparagus.
Unlike the Safeway dinners, they aren’t nutritionally correct.
The Spinach and Ricotta Cheese Ravioli, for example, packs 27 grams
of fat, 42% of the recommended daily total, and a whopping 1,350
milligrams of sodium, 56% of the recommended daily intake. The prices
for the 24 oz. items aren’t light either – $7.59 at
Price Chopper, an upstate New York chain where they were test marketed.
Bertolli chef Anthony Strong spent three months in Italy, working
to perfect the product for distribution in the United States, according
to The New Times, an online alternative newspaper in Syracuse, New
York. “You can have a total Italian experience in 15 minutes,”
he said during a visit to the e-paper. “The packet is made
up of individually frozen pieces – it’s not one big
clump of ingredients. The herbs aren’t pre-cooked; you cook
them and that releases the aromas.”
The New Times said a run in its test kitchen bore that out. “After
placing the spinach and ricotta cheese ravioli in a non-stick skillet
and covering it, the place smelled great and in ten minutes we had
dinner,” the e-paper reported. “Despite the nutritional
gut-check, Bertolli Dinner for Two is a welcome addition to the
undisputed category leader of frozen foods. According to A.C. Neilson,
consumption of Italian frozen entrees hit a nearly 10% increase
from 2000 to 2001.”
More recent figures from Information Resources, Inc (IRI), cited
by Advertising Age in a more skeptical article, said that sales
in the $1 billion frozen dinner and entrée category had dropped
three percent for the 52 weeks ended Oct. 3. The same article pointed
out that sales of even the leading brands in its $27 billion frozen
foods segment dropped 1.5%. IRI data, Ad Age said, also show that
another high-profile venture by Unilever – low-carb versions
of standard items like mayonnaise and peanut butter – has
been a flop.
Careful Positioning
Despite seeming to buck a trend of overall category declines, however,
Manning noted that the Bertolli lineup of pasta-based Italian meals
is targeted squarely within the premium multiserve segment, which
is “growing substantially at rates of between 5%-10% annually,”
he said. ConAgra Foods’ Marie
Callender’s Complete Dinners, for example, grew by double-digits
over the past year. By contrast, sales of Nestlé’s
Skillet Sensations, which successfully launched in 1998, have dropped
by double-digits over the past year. Nestlé is now trying
other ideas, such as whole-grain Lean Cuisine Spa Cuisine.
But the Italian angle may make all the difference, according to
Unilever. Bertolli started life in 1870 when Francesco Bertolli
and his wife Caterina opened a small shop in Lucca, Tuscany, Italy.
The family company was the first to export olive oil, supplying
Italian emigrants to the US with the Italian foodstuffs they missed.
Today Bertolli represents Italian-inspired, healthy Mediterranean
cuisine, with a range of olive oils, spreads, dressings, pasta sauces
and meal solutions, and sales have grown by 10% a year over the
past three years to reach $600 million. So the same expertise that
made it possible to leverage the brand into new categories in Europe
is now being applied to the US market.
Nestlé Gets Out of Frying Pan, Renames
Skillet Dinner Line
Swiss food giant Nestlé is going to have to stop calling
its frozen stir-fry dinners “Skillet Sensations” after
a year-long trademark battle with the Applebee’s restaurant
chain.
Nestlé spokeswoman Roz O’Hearn said the company’s
Stouffer’s subsidiary in the United States would rename the
meals “Stouffer’s Skillets” and “Lean Cuisine
Skillets” in the spring of 2005.
The two companies filed a joint motion to settle a lawsuit against
Nestlé filed by Applebee’s in October 2003, claiming
the company’s use of ‘Skillet Sensations’ on its
meals would confuse consumers with Skillet Sensations meals sold
in Applebee’s outlets – which were on the market first.
Applebee’s said it began using the Skillet Sensations name
in 1996 for entrees consisting of meat, poultry or fish with vegetables,
sold in company restaurants or through takeout. Stouffer’s
began using Skillet Sensations about a year later for frozen prepared
dinners consisting of meat, vegetables and potatoes with rice or
pasta.
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