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Budweiser Introduces New Can Shape

4/22/2013
This spring Budweiser will introduce a new beer can – a bowtie-shaped aluminum can that mirrors Budweiser's iconic bowtie logo. The new bowtie-shaped can becomes available in a special 8-pack on store shelves nationwide beginning May 6, 2013.
 
"This can is incomparable, like nothing you've ever seen before," says Pat McGauley, vice president of innovation for Anheuser-Busch. "The world's most iconic beer brand deserves the world's most unique and innovative can. I think we have it here."
 
The proprietary can, in development since 2010, will be available only in the United States and in an 8-pack and will not replace the traditional Budweiser can.
 
To make the new can possible, Anheuser-Busch engineers needed to solve a number of technical challenges, and major equipment investments were required at Budweiser's can-making facility in Newburgh, N.Y. Significant capital investments also were required to upgrade packaging lines at the Budweiser breweries in Los Angeles and Williamsburg, Va., the first breweries with capability to package this unique can innovation.
 
Newburgh, about 60 miles north of New York City and 90 miles south of Albany, is where proprietary equipment is located that shapes the can. Creating the can requires a 16-step process – 10 steps to form the bottom half of the can, with an additional six steps to form the top portion. 
 
The Anheuser-Busch Global Innovation Group has been investigating potential can innovations for several years.
 
"We explored various shapes that would be distinguishable in the marketplace, but also viable from an engineering standpoint," McGauley says. "Aluminum can be stretched only about 10 percent without fracturing, which requires that the angles of the bowtie be very precise."
 
An initial run of more than 10 million bowtie cans were produced in Newburgh through March 31 for the spring introduction. An additional 8 million cans are scheduled to be produced this month.
 
Due to the can's slimmer middle and sleek design, it holds 11.3 ounces of beer and has about 137 calories, approximately 8.5 fewer calories than a traditional 12-ounce can of Budweiser.
 
"This can is certainly a conversation starter: eye-catching, easy-to-grip, trendy and – according to our research – very appealing to young adults," McGauley says. "It's a beer can like no other."
 
Though there is no written documentation on the origins of the Budweiser bowtie, it is a brand icon found the world over. According to company lore, the bowtie was introduced when too many people were using the "Bud" bar call too frequently, so the double triangles were added to emphasize the full Budweiser name.
 
The Budweiser bowtie can is a natural progression from the new packaging introduced in 2011 that emphasized the iconic bowtie, a symbol that first appeared in a national advertising campaign for Budweiser in 1956.
 
The launch of the can is being supported with a marketing campaign that includes digital, print and television. It will be offered for sale in grocery stores and super markets, convenience stores and packaged liquor stores.
 
In other packaging innovations on the horizon in the United States for Anheuser-Busch, the company is announcing it is test-marketing in 10 states a new 25-ounce can that replaces a 24-ounce serving – giving consumers an additional ounce of beer. Sales of this new can will begin this summer.
 
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