Pepsi Generation

The Pepsi Generation was the theme of an advertising campaign for Pepsi-Cola, a US brand of soft drink, that launched in 1963 as the result of a slogan contest. A new car was awarded to the writer of the winning slogan. The contest was the brainchild of Alan Pottasch, a PepsiCo advertising executive, and it was won by Appleton, Wisconsin resident, Ellen M. Reimer. Her slogan invited consumers to "Come Alive! You're the Pepsi Generation!" The original "Come Alive" jingle was performed by singer Joanie Sommers in her memorable "breathy" vocal style.

Earlier campaigns for Pepsi-Cola had emphasized price competition. Twelve US fl oz (350 ml) Pepsi bottles contained twice as much beverage as seven US fl oz (210 ml) standard Coca-Cola bottles, and Coca-Cola was by far the leading brand of soft drink. Pepsi launched a jingle campaign in 1939, "Pepsi-Cola Hits the Spot":

Pepsi-Cola hits the spot
Twelve full ounces, that's a lot!
Twice as much for a nickel, too
Pepsi-Cola is the drink for you.
[1]

This 1939 jingle focused on the simple proposition that Pepsi was just as good as Coke, but better value. The Pepsi Generation campaign represented a major shift away from that line of thinking; rather than being just as good as Coke, Pepsi was different from Coke. The Pepsi Generation and its associated jingle

You've got a lot to live
And Pepsi's got a lot to give.

told Pepsi drinkers, now enrolled in the Pepsi Generation, that Pepsi-Cola was taking a stand with the "young" side of the 1960s-era "generation gap". Television ads featuring the campaign typically displayed young people pursuing exotic entertainments like motorcycle or watercycle riding or piloting a windship through a desert, while an announcer described Pepsi drinkers as people who saw the "young view of things". "Who is the Pepsi Generation? Livelier, active people with a liking for Pepsi-Cola!"[2] Previous Coca-Cola advertisements had featured Norman Rockwell styled images of small towns and nostalgic scenes, as well as traditional figures such as Santa Claus. Pepsi told soft drink consumers that there are Coke people, and there are Pepsi people, and if you're a Pepsi person you are young, and the future's on your side.[3]

The original lyrics were:

There's a whole new way of livin'
Pepsi helps supply the drive.
It's got a lot to give
for those who like to live
'Cause Pepsi helps them
come alive.

It's the Pepsi Generation
Comin' at ya,
goin' strong...
Put yourself behind a Pepsi
When you're livin...
you belong...

You've got a lot to live...
and Pepsi's got a lot to give...
You've got a lot to live...
and Pepsi's got a lot to give...


This "image campaign" inspired Coca-Cola to do a similar "hip" campaign in 1971, "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (in Perfect Harmony)," which also sold the lifestyle rather than the soft drink itself.

Pottasch, creator of the campaign, said that "For us to name and claim a whole generation after our product was a rather courageous thing that we weren't sure would take off." The "Pepsi Generation" was one of the first and best known instances of what came to be known as "lifestyle marketing". It focused on portraying Pepsi drinkers as possessing desirable qualities such as youth, rather than on the characteristics of the product itself. Pottasch said that "Pepsi was young, spirited, people doing active things—playing volleyball on the beach.... but younger we said in mind, in attitude, in feeling. Young in spirit. Young in heart."[4] Pottasch repeated the themes of the Pepsi Generation with the 1984 campaign, "The Choice of a New Generation". In 1997, during Super Bowl XXXI, a sequel campaign featured the theme "GeneratioNext".

Many artists have been the voice of the "Pepsi Generation" commercials including Del Shannon, Michael Jackson & Britney Spears.

References

  1. Norback, Peter G.; Norback, Craig T.; Costa, Kenneth, eds. (1976). Great Songs of Madison Avenue. Quadrangle. ISBN 0-8129-0626-8.
  2. Frank, Thomas (1998). The Conquest of Cool: Business Culture, Counterculture, and the Rise of Hip Consumerism. University of Chicago Press. p. 175. ISBN 0-226-26012-7.
  3. Zyman, Sergio; Brott, Armin (2003). The End of Advertising as We Know It. John Wiley and Sons. pp. 71–73. ISBN 0-471-42966-X.
  4. Stewart, Jocelyn Y. (August 2, 2007). "Alan Pottasch, 79; ad exec helped create 'Pepsi Generation' campaign". The Los Angeles Times.
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