Jump to content

SodaPop Lids--Entertainments New Promo' Gimmick


Recommended Posts

A Web Refugee Turns to Music and Says, The Sky's the Lid

March 29, 2004

By BERNARD WEINRAUB

LOS ANGELES - Jeffrey T. Arnold his seen his future - in a soda cup.

About 16 months ago, Mr. Arnold, a co-founder and former chief executive of the WebMD Corporation, was visiting Los Angeles when a colleague showed him a lid for a 34-ounce

plastic soda cup. Tucked inside a transparent pocket were several coupons offered to customers at a convenience store. Mr. Arnold said he was dumbfounded.

"I said, 'Forget the coupons. What if this was entertainment? What if it was music on CD's or movies on DVD's or games?' " Mr. Arnold said. "I thought, 'If this was entertainment, this could be a blowout.' "

By early 2003, Mr. Arnold had formed LidRock to make and

distribute the tops. He purchased the exclusive rights to

19 patents which, he said, guaranteed that LidRock solely

owned the rights to place whatever it wants in the lids.

Then, Mr. Arnold swept into music industry boardrooms in

New York and Los Angeles with a proposition: promote new

and established artists by putting promotional three- and

five-inch CD's in soda lids to be sold in movies, fast-food

chains and sporting events.

Remarkably, the industry, which cannot ordinarily agree on

anything, took up Mr. Arnold's offer. Arista, Virgin

Records, Universal Music, Def Jam and EMI Publishing are

among the companies that have joined in the venture. By the

end of 2004, said Mr. Arnold, 50 million soda lids with

CD's featuring artists like Avril Lavigne, Pharrell

Williams and Britney Spears will be shipped across the

nation to movie theaters, fast-food chains, Nascar races

and theme parks.

"It's an absolutely fantastic form of alternative

distribution in the future," said Larry Mestel, executive

vice president and general manager for Arista Records.

"Most people tend to buy records the traditional way - at

stores or online. Why not reach consumers where they're

spending money?"

Record executives do not view LidRock as a panacea for the

difficulties - like the illegal sharing of music online -

that beset the industry. Already some artists have declined

to have their songs placed in lids, and there are questions

over pricing. The majority of artists involved receive some

compensation, but each deal is structured differently,

according to LidRock. Drinks sold with the lids generally

sell for an extra dollar or two, but the price is still

more or less arbitrary. Beyond this, there is the

indefinable mood and taste of the teenage consumer who may

- or may not - find LidRock a passing fad.

But record industry executives plainly view it as more than

the promotional tool.

"When Jeff explained this to me, I really embraced it, and

I'm a difficult guy to please," said Robert H. Flax,

president of EMI Publishing, the world's largest music

publisher. "What's exciting is you could be tapping into a

new base of music buyers at movie theaters, at ballgames,

at malls. Why not, if priced properly, buy this unique,

cool-looking lid? This could be a legitimate vehicle for

selling records."

Getting people to buy into his vision is something that

comes naturally to Mr. Arnold, 34, who was born in Dallas

and raised in Atlanta and has plenty of Southern charm. He

first gained recognition in 1994 when, while living in a

small apartment in Atlanta with his wife, he took a $25,000

loan from his father-in-law to start a heart-monitoring

business. Four years later, Mr. Arnold and his wife, Meg,

sold the business for $25 million.

After that, Mr. Arnold started WebMD, a medical services

Internet service used by doctors, insurers and

pharmaceutical companies. The company rode the Internet

boom, spending more than $10 billion on acquisitions,

according to news reports at the time, until investors

started questioning its rapid growth and Mr. Arnold's

grandiose plans to become the dominate figure in the

Internet health-care field. Mr. Arnold left in November

2000 - on his own terms, he insists - with what Forbes

magazine estimated was a fortune of $100 million.

By nature and personality, Mr. Arnold is almost giddily

optimistic. He formed LidRock as a unit of the Convex

Group, a media and entertainment business that he set up in

2002. Recently, he opened a factory in Suwanee, Ga., a

suburb of Atlanta. The factory, using robotic machines, has

replaced Hong Kong distributors, and is producing 800,000

lids a day. The CD's on the lids are generally usable in

all players, with some exceptions.

Mr. Arnold, in expanding his company, relies heavily on

three associates: Thomas Tull, president of Convex and

LidRock; Dawn Whaley, executive vice president of marketing

and communications; and Dan Adler, the Los Angeles-based

chief strategic officer who formerly led the new media

group of the Creative Artists Agency. Mr. Adler said the

company is seeking to offer a new way in which music, games

and perhaps even movies can be distributed.

"Ultimately, it's a new network in the broadest sense of

the word - offering compelling content for its audience, a

unique platform for marketers and a way for creative people

to broaden their audience in a changing market."

LidRock, a privately held company, said it would start

earning a profit this year on $50 million in revenue.

According to the current business plan, the retail venue,

such as the film or fast-food chain, pays LidRock 80 cents

for each lid. LidRock uses the money for the manufacturing

and content costs of the lid - that is, payments to make

the lid as well as payouts to record companies. There are

added revenue opportunities because the lid may also

contain details about concert tours and information on

purchasing the CD's and DVD's of the artists involved.

Anthony J. Missano, president for business development at

Sbarro, the national pizza and pasta chain, said he ordered

a half-million 32-ounce cups with CD's last summer at 750

locations. The four bands on the CD's were relatively

unknown with the exception of Lighthouse. The extra cost on

the 32-ounce drink for the CD lid was 60 cents.

"Within seven weeks, we were basically sold out," Mr.

Missano said. "I said 'let's find some name groups.' Lo and

behold, we got Britney Spears. I ordered two million

32-ounce cups. That is a tremendous amount. We ordered it

in November and we were mostly sold out by the end of

February." Those drinks cost an extra $1.50. To coincide

with an upcoming Avril Lavigne album, Sbarro is also

selling a CD with three of her songs.

At the moment, LidRock's biggest customers include the

Regal CineMedia Corporation, which is the largest movie

chain in the nation with more than 6,100 screens. There,

CD's as well as DVD's from such performers as Jessica

Simpson, Ashanti and Elvis Presley are distributed at no

additional cost to customers who buy large-size drinks.

Sample video games have also been placed on the lids by

Electronic Arts Inc., the gaming company.

"We know our consumers love the product," said Cliff Marks,

president for marketing and sales at Regal CineMedia.

Joining Regal this year in LidRock is the Loews Cineplex

Entertainment chain, with 1,300 screens.

In the case of the movie theaters, owners are using the

lids to entice customers to buy the most expensive sodas.

Sodas are one of more cost-effective items in the movie

theater business - and very costly to customers. That could

be one reason why movie chains are reluctant, so far, to

raise prices further.

The fast-food chains are also joining up. The McDonald's

Corporation has started a pilot program, and Taco Bell is

starting one on April 15. KFC outlets in the New York City

area and in Atlanta last week began selling soda lids with

CD's with hip-hop acts Pharrell Williams, Kelis and the

band N.E.R.D.

"The sky's the limit. It would be in every store

nationwide," said Scott Bergren, executive vice president

for marketing and food innovation of KFC and Yum Brands

Inc., which owns both KFC and Taco Bell.

Randy Acker, general manager of Def Jam Records, said that

the soda lids were a vehicle to stir music fans who are

often difficult to reach. For example, Def Jam is

considering placing several songs by Lloyd, a relatively

unknown Atlanta-based hip-hop artist, on soda lids sold at

Nascar events. This is an unusual venue for a black hip-hop

artist because, at the moment, most Nascar events are

sparsely attended by African-Americans, according to Def

Jam and LidRock executives. Nonetheless, record companies

say that the audience for urban black music has a large

young, white audience.

"You're targeting an active consumer here," Mr. Acker said.

LidRock, aware of the value of the Nascar crowds as

customers, is sponsoring Nascar's only black driver, Bill

Davis, and each month will be releasing a CD of a different

musical artist on a lid.

Mr. Arnold has an even bigger goal: selling movies in a

soda lid. He said he is considering either older films on

DVD's in the lids or a first-run movie that would

"self-destruct" after 60 hours.

"The technology's out there," Mr. Arnold said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/29/technolo...a10fcbb19501cdc

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Our picks

    • Wait, Burning Man is going online-only? What does that even look like?
      You could have been forgiven for missing the announcement that actual physical Burning Man has been canceled for this year, if not next. Firstly, the nonprofit Burning Man organization, known affectionately to insiders as the Borg, posted it after 5 p.m. PT Friday. That, even in the COVID-19 era, is the traditional time to push out news when you don't want much media attention. 
      But secondly, you may have missed its cancellation because the Borg is being careful not to use the C-word. The announcement was neutrally titled "The Burning Man Multiverse in 2020." Even as it offers refunds to early ticket buyers, considers layoffs and other belt-tightening measures, and can't even commit to a physical event in 2021, the Borg is making lemonade by focusing on an online-only version of Black Rock City this coming August.    Read more...
      More about Burning Man, Tech, Web Culture, and Live EventsView the full article
      • 0 replies
    • Post in What Are You Listening To?
      Post in What Are You Listening To?
    • Post in What Are You Listening To?
      Post in What Are You Listening To?
    • Post in What Are You Listening To?
      Post in What Are You Listening To?
    • Post in What Are You Listening To?
      Post in What Are You Listening To?
×
×
  • Create New...