BHflB Prominently present in downtown Toronto: a sightseeing bus with highly distinctive Heineken signage. The liquor store in Toronto that sells more than all the rest is the Queens's Quay Liqour Store. In the week before Christmas last year this store had a turnover of 1 million Canadian dollars. The man who manages the beer section in this store has long noticed an upward line in the sales of Heineken. "Heineken is doing very well. Right now espe cially the keg can is a big success". The keg can, introduced on a small scale on the market in June as a summer gim mick, is proving an unexpectedly good seller. The manager in another store told us that a pallet of Heineken in the keg can is empty within a couple of days. The consumer's ent husiasm is best illustrated by a lady who is putting three cases of Heineken in her trolley and describes the keg cans with the words "Aren't they cute?". Not only in Ontario are the keg cans popular. They are also selling well in Western Canada. John Kennedy is therefore determined to order dou ble the quantity next year. A pack format that Mr Kennedy also expects a lot from is the new 33 cl bottle twelve-pack, which was introduced in Alberta and Ontario in July this year. "A 24-pack for a more expensive brand like Heineken is often a little bit too much of a good thing for the consumer. The twelve-pack is then a good in-between solution", feels John Kennedy. With a view to developing Heineken sales in Canada he keeps a close watch on the situation in the U.S. "Our strategy is to learn from experiences that Heineken USA has had and determine if they can be applied to Canada. In that respect the twelve-pack is a good example. We have seen how suc cessful it has been in the U.S. and that strengthens us in our conviction that it will also meet a need in Canada." Restaurant Bettie's, a trendy outlet that also serves Murphy's. LINK Heineken is doing well in Canada. Ask a Molson employee to give the reason for that success and you'll invariably hear the name of John Kennedy, the man who is driving the brand and mapping out a clear course for the future. John counters those words of praise by pointing out that there is a genuine sense of commitment at Molson. That, he feels, is the reason for the great success. Commitment not only in the top management of the organisation, but also - very importantly - in the people in, say, sales and distribution. For they are the ones who must work to build the brand day in, day out. Not that it's a question of 'must' in the case of Heineken. The Molson sales organisation has fully emb raced Heineken as one of its own. The close link between Molson and Heineken forms the cornerstone for the further success of Heineken in Canada, everyone is convinced of that. The upward line is develo ping well and, if it is up to John Kennedy, Heineken will have a two per cent share of the total beer market within seven years. A staggering share, especially when compared to the position that Heineken held several years ago. A two per cent market share is an ambitious objective, but neither Heineken nor Molson are nervous about it. They know the market and they know the strength of the brand. 21

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World of Heineken | 1999 | | pagina 21