
With the future of the hard seltzer category still up for grabs,
Mountain Dew will become the first major soft drink to go alcoholic in early 2022 under a partnership between PepsiCo and The Boston Beer Company.
The new brand, Hard Mtn Dew, marks
Pepsico’s entry into the hard seltzer wars, although the company also recently filed a trademark request for Rockstar Hard Seltzer, which would extend the energy drinks line it acquired in
2020.
PepsiCo’s rival The Coca Cola Company entered the hard seltzer business earlier this year with the launch of Topo Chico Hard Seltzer, in partnership with Molson Coors.
Boston Beer, whose portfolio includes one of the leading hard seltzer brands, Truly, will develop and produce Hard Mtn Dew, with PepsiCo setting up a new entity to sell, deliver, and merchandise
the product.
Hard Mtn Dew will be sugar-free and caffeine-free with 5% alcohol, and come in at least three flavors: regular, black cherry and watermelon.
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Amid conflicting reports on
whether or not the hard seltzer craze is simply a fad or will be longer-lasting, convenience retailer data platform Skupos reported per-store revenues in the category down 25% for June vs. the same
month in 2020.
“We anticipate rapid adoption [of Hard Mtn Dew] by retailers, with potential to ride the brand name to consumer uptake," Jake Bolling, Skupos co-founder and CEO, told
Marketing Daily. “With the explosive growth that the category saw in 2020 drop off in 2021, this is exactly the type of thing that brands need to do in order to sustain growth and keep
consumers interested.”
“Topo Chico leveraged a recognizable brand name, and with the strength of Coke's bottling network, was able to successfully launch a product into this
category,” Bolling noted. “With a strong brand in Mountain Dew, and Pepsi's distribution capability, it will be interesting to see how [Hard Mtn Dew] performs.
While hard seltzer
may be growing at a slower rate than it had previously, it’s still, well… growing.
Just this week, Allied Market Research this week pegged the global industry at $10.92 billion by
2027, up from $3.83 billion in 2019, and growing at a rate of 12.7% annually.
Meanwhile, as soft drinks move into the alcohol arena, PepsiCo and Boston Beer are likely to come up against
another quandary of the hard seltzer business: consumers’ lack of knowledge of exactly what they’re drinking.
Such has certainly been the case as beer brands moved into the
category, with less than a third of Americans 21+ knowing the main ingredient of hard seltzer, according to survey results released last month by alcohol ecommerce giant Drizly.
The correct
answer, which holds just as true for Hard Mtn Dew: carbonated water with alcohol made from malt or sugar.
Not knowing exactly what they’re drinking, consumers often confuse hard seltzers
with another hot alcohol category: ready-to-drink (RTD) cocktails, according to Drizly.
“When asked what they'd reach for first this summer, respondents gave RTDs (30%) the slight edge
over hard seltzer (29%), speaking to likely confusion between the two segments,” Drizly said, “especially when considering that hard seltzers have outsold RTDs by two-to-one on
Drizly so far this year.”
So, as beverage categories continue to blur, anyone care for a Rum and Coke?
Anheuser-Busch’s Cutwater canned cocktail brand already offers a
Three Sheets Rum & Cola, but can actual Coke in a canned cocktail -- or a hard seltzer -- be far behind?