
25 Mar 2024 Liquid Death water valued at $1.4bn – how so?
It’s a miracle. Liquid Death has created a billion-dollar brand, almost overnight, out of the elixir of life, that most precious but most commoditised of commodities, commonly known as water.
It’s a remarkable tale….. So how has it been done? Here are 10 reasons:
- It’s a great name. Ironically ‘death’ has been used to sell alcoholic drinks and even cigarettes, but using it for the safest, most healthy product possible is a further satirical and disruptive inversion.
- The branding is brilliant. The name is complemented by a heavy metal look and feel: on shelf, it pops. In the hand it turns heads.
- Its advertising – promising to ‘murder thirst’ – is humorous, punkish, irreverent, cartoonish (but in a shockingly violent adult way) and mocking of the establishment.
- Social media has pump primed the hugely memorable and shareable content.
- It’s surfing the anti-plastic wave. Liquid Death makes a heaven out of its (endlessly recyclable) metallic packaging, and a hell out of polluting plastic bottled water rivals.
- It’s an adult soft drink brand. Sounds obvious, but in our more temperate times it oozes attitude for those who don’t want to draw attention to their non-alcoholic-drinking status (an audience that is not just limited to Gen Z).
- It’s expanding its portfolio: moving into complementary categories such as flavoured sparkling waters (watch out Dash!) and iced teas is giving Liquid Death more strings to its bow.
- It’s American. The Mecca of buying stuff and raving about it. And based in California, the hype is turned up to 11. US sales are going through the roof with triple-digit growth for the third consecutive year.
- It’s going global. In the UK it’s carefully picking its distribution partners, with Tesco for volume and Nisa/Co-op for the niche, curated convenience market, and Amazon for online.
- It’s backed to the hilt by investors. With latest fundraise it’s raised over $250m.
Last sharp words to The Grocer’s columnist: “Of course there are lots of reasons why Liquid Death shoudn’t work: the cans are enormous and, unlike plastic bottles, unportable/unsealable; it looks so much like an alcoholic beverage that it’s likely to attract disapproving glances in offices; and you do wonder about the sustainability claims of a brand that relies on packaging to sell water.
“But Liquid Death has taken on a life of its own. It will surely go far.”
Source: The Grocer
Additional reading:
The Liquid Death strategy
Let’s explore some of the genius of this super-successful American canned water brand, Liquid Death….. Trends futurist guru Jonathan Cherry reports….