They are three very different companies in three very different businesses. Each category has its quirks, from the stodgy milk industry to the easily commoditized canned vegetable business to the two-company category of carbonated soft drinks. Each category has seen its share of consolidation, with clear leaders emerging. But as the top guns got bigger, they also turned into battleships: unassailable at what they do best, but incapable of sharp turns. That leaves a lot of room around the edges.For instance, Pepsico made headlines back in March when it announced it would unveil a mid-calorie cola, Pepsi Edge, sometime this summer. (Those fair-weather dieters among you who have been mixing regular and diet Pepsi at home are entitled to a "duh.") Coke, in a marketing stroke of genius, claimed to have had one in the works, too, and would beat Pepsi to market. Jones Soda, suspecting there was at least some short-term hay to be made, promised nothing but quickly launched a mid-calorie soda. "It's not rocket science," says CEO Peter van Stolk.Despite their differences, our three Davids also have some things in common. Product development in all three is a multifunctional and somewhat casual affair, from salespeople bringing back ideas from grocers to voting for new soda flavors on a web site to sampling customers at convenience stores. Hirzel and Wawa also tightly integrate manufacturing into the R&D process; both have surprisingly sophisticated manufacturing processes for their size and their categories. While Jones outsources its bottling, it has forged especially close relationships with both its copackers and its ingredient suppliers, who play important roles in product development. All three companies admit to making some mistakes, but regard errors as inextricable parts of ideation.All also have a strongly entrepreneurial spirit, which is particularly refreshing in a industry that, despite claims to the contrary, still keeps score in 13-week increments. "We don't have the budgets our competitors do, so we have to take risks and move quickly," says van Stolk.Far from walking in the shadows of the giants, these small companies are leaving some pretty big footprints of their own. Their stories follow.
,'Everybody does R&D'
,'All it costs us is labels'
With a captive audience in its C-stores, Wawa Dairy gets immediate feedback on new products.In 1998, when most of the stodgy milk industry was just beginning to think about single-serve plastic bottles, a small eastern Pennsylvania dairy named Wawa jumped in with both feet and saw a 30 percent jump in single-serve sales.'We need to take risks and move quickly'
Jones Soda creates a pop culture around unusual flavors, retro bottles and an emotional connection with its young consumers.Turkey and gravy-flavored soda? A web site that greets you with "Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like bananas" (sent in by a customer). An energy drink called WhoopAss.Peter van StolkAnother reason customers feel connected to this company is they provide the labels. For instance, a bottle of that new watermelon soda has a black and white photo of bowling pins. Tiny type along the side of the picture says: Photo #2748: Rachel Bowman, Indianapolis, IN. That means two things: 1. Customer Rachel sent in this photo in a long-running photo contest, and 2. This is the 2,748th label used on a Jones bottle. Van Stolk says the count is above 4,000 now.Van Stolk started the company in 1987 as Urban Juice and Soda Co., a western Canada distributor of Coke, Pepsi and an increasing number of innovative , some would call them "new age" -- beverage lines such as Just Pik't Juices, Arizona Iced Tea and Thomas Kemper sodas. In the early 1990s, van Stolk followed the meteoric rise of Snapple Beverage, and he saw the potential of emerging "alternative" products in the beverage industry. By 1994, Urban Juice and Soda was well established as a full line beverage distributor in western Canada with a reputation for picking winners among these up-and-comers.In 1995, van Stolk decided to create his own brands. Wazu Natural Spring water debuted in April 1995, followed by the January 1996 launch of Jones Soda in six flavors (raspberry, grape, strawberry-lime, lemon-lime, cherry and orange). In 2000, the company name was changed to Jones Soda Co. and he moved the company to Seattle.Don't forget the noseWhile van Stolk will put his products' taste and overall quality up against anybody's, what he chooses to focus on are components other companies might not. One is the smell emitted when a bottle of Jones is opened. "It's a high-impact smell, one that tells you right off the bat we're different," he says. It requires working with ingredient suppliers as much on this component as on flavor.Unusual flavors are another critical component. The closest thing to a cola is vanilla cola, the taste of which van Stolk claims beats the Coke product. But he's more jazzed by green apple (his favorite), cream soda (tied with green apple as top seller), blue bubblegum, orange & cream, crushed melon and fufu berry (a fictitious name for what van Stolk describes as a cross between watermelon and raspberry).Currently there are 22 flavors and they include a few mundane ones, such as root beer, cherry and grape. Jones uses sucralose as the sweetener for its sugar-free flavors.