Europe August 17, 2007, 2:01PM EST

The Success of Germany's Bionade Soda

The organic soft drink helped save a family brewery, but its commercial success and advertising campaign may alienate trendy, niche customers

It's a success story that sounds suspiciously like it might have been conceived in Hollywood. An entrepreneur sees that his family business is failing; spends years and virtually all the firm's money in developing a new product; and finally, 20 years later, his vision becomes a runaway hit.

But you won't find this story on the big screen. Instead, you'll have to head for your local beverage aisle. Bionade, a smooth-tasting organic soft drink, has taken Germany by storm. And it now stands to conquer the world.

"Germany is now too small for it," says Jens Pollmann, a PricewaterhouseCoopers consultant specializing in beverages. "It's only option is to expand internationally."

First, though, Bionade has to catch up to demand at home. Since 2003, the company has seen annual production growth of a massive 300 percent. This year it plans to produce 200 million bottles, up from 70 million last year—already 10 times more than the 7 million bottles produced in 2004. The staff has grown too; Of the company's around 150 staff, 100 have been hired in the last year. The company refuses to give out profit and sales figures.

Growth Explosion

The company has been struggling to expand its production facilities quickly enough to keep up with demand. "It's been a permanent construction site here in the last three years," says Wolfgang Blum, a marketing expert at Bionade who helped kick off the growth explosion.

Most Bionade drinkers in Germany—overwhelmingly from the hip, healthy, hairspray set—would be surprised to learn that the drink has been around longer than just a couple of years. Indeed, some shelves have been stocked with the stuff since 1995, but few consumers were interested in the boring, health drink.

But in 2000, newly-hired Blum began a makeover, eventually transforming the drink into a must-have with its retro yet enviro-friendly appeal. The flavors—elderberry, lychee, herb, ginger-orange and the new, sporty "forte"—likewise have a cool, "you're drinking what?" sensibility. And the broadly-striped label, bulls-eye cap and 1920s-style font exude sophistication.

The re-launched drink hit the zeitgeist exactly, appealing to health-conscious consumers who were drinking less beer just as they were embracing organic food and drink. Bionade (pronounced "Bee-oh-nah-deh") soon became a firm fixture on supermarket shelves and behind the bar in trendy nightspots.

"Instead of selling it as an 'ecological' drink based on ideology, we appealed to a certain lifestyle," Blum says.

Difficult Nut to Crack

The drink itself is the brainchild of German brewer Dieter Leipold. Back in 1985, he saw that declining beer consumption was threatening the long-term survival of his family brewery in the small Bavarian town of Ostheim vor der Rhön. He thought the development of an organic, non-alcoholic drink for kids would be the answer to his prayers.

He spent years toying with different recipes before he finally discovered gluconic acid bacteria. Instead of turning sugar into alcohol—like the yeast used in beer brewing does—the micro-organism transforms sugar into gluconic acid, which makes sugar taste sweeter. Leipold was thus able to cut back on the sugar added to the final product and keep the calorie count low.

Now, of course, kids are no longer central to Bionade's business plan, having been replaced by German hipsters. Even they, though, are no longer enough to satisfy the company's thirst for success, and now Bionade is expanding internationally. It is already present in Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, the Benelux countries, Italy, Spain and Portugal, and is just now hitting the shelves in Ireland. But the company has its eyes set on a much larger prize: the US. The search is already on for a suitable American distribution partner.

Profits on the other side of the Atlantic, of course, are by no means guaranteed, warns PricewaterhouseCoopers analyst Pollmann. On the one hand, the country's size and diversity can make it a difficult nut to crack.

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