Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tropicana will hope customers’ bitterness about the change sweetens, so as not to repeat the fallout of its redesign efforts 15 years ago. In early 2009, the juice brand switched its packaging ...
Product recalls are one of a number of corrective actions that can be taken for products that are deemed to be unsafe. The recall is an effort to limit ruination of the corporate image and limit liability for corporate negligence, which can cause significant legal costs. It can be difficult, if not impossible, to determine how costly can be ...
PepsiCo moved Tropicana into Chicago so all of its juice brands would be consolidated into one Chicago-based unit. [37] Until 2004, Tropicana Products was headquartered in the four-story Rossi Office Building in Bradenton, Florida. In 2004, the building, which was completed in 2002, was offered for $20 million.
Tropicana’s sales dropped 20% following the redesign, sinking by $30 million. Tropicana abandoned the glass of orange juice just six weeks after rolling it out and brought back the old orange ...
Slice was reintroduced in India by PepsiCo in 2008 as a mango-flavored fruit drink [1] where it is currently advertised as Tropicana Slice. [3] The trademark rights for “Slice” in the United States and Canada were acquired by "New Slice Ventures LLC" in 2018, [4] which introduced it as a brand of sparkling water containing organic fruit ...
While Tropicana says it suggested a lower price point for the new design — 46 ounces for $3.99, versus the old 52 ounces for $4.69 — not all retailers have changed the price alongside the product.
Tropicana has dropped its signature orange juice carafe design: the clear, plastic, rounded rectangular-shaped bottles, which featured a round, beveled neck and thick, crown-like bottle cap.
In 1970, Tropicana orange juice was shipped in bulk via insulated boxcars in one weekly round-trip from Florida to Kearny, New Jersey. By the following year, the company was operating two 60-car unit trains a week, each carrying around 1 million US gallons (3,800 m 3) of juice. In 1978, Rossi retired and sold Tropicana to Beatrice Foods.