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Consumers no longer act as walking billboards
The biggest change will be how consumers experience their beverages. Using a machine and presumably a glass or bottle from home means consumers won't walk around with the product flashing everyone around them. That free advertising and brand awareness could disappear. Beverage manufacturers can counteract this by investing in designer reusable bottles. Coca-Cola branded S’well bottles could take the place of 20-oz. PET bottles.
On the bright side, innovation becomes much easier: if it can fit in a pod, it can be rolled out to market. Manufacturers no longer have to go through the arduous process of selling bottlers on new products. If a retailer shows resistance, put it on Amazon and see what happens. Shipping lightweight pods is far easier than a 12-pack of cans.
Mother Earth can take a deep breath
Among the winners in this transformation is the environment. While industry leaders have done much to improve their practices, a world filled with Keurig Kold machines will undoubtedly be better for the environment. The plastic needed for a pod is far less than what’s needed for a bottle of soda. There should be less waste due to products going bad as the pods will likely have longer shelf lives. Total energy consumption summed up across all the individual machines is likely greater than scaled production at bottling plants. That said, all of the energy saved in transporting light weight pods instead of heavy bottles and cans should outweigh those costs.
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