You might be wondering like I did before- why are
companies spending money to give away free product samples to consumers?
I researched for the answer and here is what I found:
Giving away free product samples and free coupon started during
the time of Mr. Asa Candler. Is this the first time you heard of his name? Okay let’s try Coca Cola. Of course you’re
familiar with that one right? Asa Candler is the pharmacist guy who bought Coca-Cola
from John Stith Pemberton, the inventor of the sweet syrup that serves as the
base for the drink. By 1891, Candler had
purchased the entire company for just $2,300, the equivalent of about $54,400
today.
He grew Coca-Cola into a global giant, using his master skills
in marketing. He bestowed free samples on pharmacists and other consumers; he
secured the earliest celebrity endorsements and fervently guards the Coca Cola
secret formula.
We all know now the power of advertising and it is being
use continuously worldwide. But Candler was among the earliest entrepreneurs who
took great advantage of it. It has nothing to do with a catchy company name or
even a unique logo. Candler’s greatest achievement was his marketing strategy.
When he purchased control of Coca-Cola, it was a fledging
five-cent soda fountain drink that only sold about nine glasses a day in its
first year on the market. Why it has become so popular now? Candler is the
ultimate marketer! What did he do? He gave away coupons for a free glass of
Coca-Cola and offered pharmacists who were reluctant to sell the drink the
first barrel of syrup for free. Those
same pharmacists quickly returned as paying retailers when they saw all the
coupon-wielding customers wandering in.
The free coupon giveaway made a great impact on Coca
cola’s success. Where do you think Candler got this bright idea? It is from John Stith Pemberton bookkeeper,
who started giving away tickets for free tastes of Coke, but Pemberton chided
him for ‘extravagance.’ Then Candler who purchased Coca Cola from him picked up
the idea and launched it. The coupon for free as we know it was born.
By 1913, Coca-Cola had redeemed 8.5 million ‘free drink’
coupons.” Even by today’s standards, that’s a lot of product for a relatively
new company to be producing, let alone giving away for free. But as we all can
see, it really paid off.
There you have it! Now you know why companies are giving
away free product samples and free coupons. They let the products speak for it.
Asa Candler let Coca-Cola do just that, and it said an awful lot.
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