Tuesday, November 27, 2007

pepperidge

Pepperidge Farm
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Pepperidge Farm was founded in 1937 by Margaret Rudkin, who named the brand for a property her family owned in Connecticut (which itself was named for the pepperidge tree, Nyssa sylvatica). In 1961, the company was purchased by Campbell's.

Its products include Milano, Dark Chocolate and Nantucket cookies, Goldfish crackers, and varieties of bread.

Contents
1 History
2 Cookies
2.1 Distinctive Cookies
2.2 Old Fashioned Cookies
3 External links


[edit] History

The Margaret Rudkin Pepperidge Farm Cookbook, 1965
Margaret Rudkin began baking bread for her son Mark in 1937 because he was sick with asthma. She baked bread without preservatives and artificial ingredients, hoping it would be more healthy. The bread was popular, and she developed a mail order business out of her own kitchen. Soon, she sold to local grocers, and a few years later, she expanded her bakery to Norwalk, CT.

By 1950 Rudkin was appearing in commercials on television. At the same time, under her management the bakery was expanding into other products, including the Goldfish snack. In 1961 she sold the business to the Campbell Soup Company and became a director of that company. Although having sold Pepperidge Farm, she still ran the company until her retirement in 1966. Her interest in food led Margaret Rudkin to collect ancient cookbooks. She drew on her knowledge of food in writing The Margaret Rudkin Pepperidge Farm Cookbook (1963), which became a best seller. Her book (right) was first published in 1963.

Pepperidge Farms The Cookie Trail Doesn't Lead To Social
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1vote Pepperidge Farms is the newest company that has launched a social media strategy called Art of the cookie. However, Pepperidge Farms - I can't find the social

"Do you have to play games to make a relationship work?" - Cary, Sex In The City

And if you do play games shouldn't you at least know the rules? Social media marketing is turning into the hottest, sexiest marketing game in town. Slap the "social media" label on your web or internet strategy and you're in the groove. Or not.

The rules of social media include: honesty, transparency, authenticity and yes indeed girlfriend, add a big dose of passion about the topic. The center of social media, or the heart, is providing the opportunity to create dialog/conversations and share ideas online. Without this type of functionality, at least in my book, no matter how clever the strategy, it is not social.

Pepperidge Farms is the newest company that according to according to the mainstream media outlets and online pubs like C/Net, New York Times, Marketing Vox, Media Buyer and iMedia Connection has launched a social media strategy called Art of the cookie. But Pepperidge Farms - I can't find the social.

The articles quote Michael Simon, vice president and general manager at the Pepperidge Farm snacks division, "The goal is understanding your consumer, understanding what's important to them and how to connect to them in a relevant way." Mr. Simon seems to have great intentions - "We started with this notion of wanting to move our communication with our consumers from telling them about us to having a dialogue with them." But Pepperidge Farms - I can't find the social.

The Art of the cookie campaign is all about how women can can connect and reconnect with friends. The micro site includes videos and photos of the campaign spoke-person's trip cross country. There are lots of tips on how to renew friendships and some ideas that even include using Web 2.0 tools like web videos, photo-sharing, blogs, texting. But Pepperidge Farms - I can't find the social.

Jeff Jarvis has an excellent take on the absurdity of the campaign. While I agree with him for the most part, I think that if Pepperidge Farms had followed the Dove model and opened it up to the people who they spent so much time and money researching in the first place .. the women who told them that life has become so hectic that spending time with friends over tea and cookies .. or appletinis and tapas (tho I do like tea and cookies and I bake awesome brownies too!) .. gets lost in day-to-day life .. it could have been a great way to build community and give back to their community too.

Instead of static pages of ideas from Pepperidge Farms about how to connect with friends Let's Get Social! Michael Simon if you're listening in on the conversation here's an early holiday gift of how to turn Pepperidge Farm's Art of the cookie .. Social!

Hear (podcast) the stories told by the women themselves not a company or a spokesperson.
Learn how mothers and daughters stay in touch during the teen years.
Find college roommates and celebrate those friendships at cookie parties. Perhaps a blog or vlog reality show of how several women try to find their friends from college, or high school or even kindergarten.
Create videos of the special traditions that help us stay connect.
Develop a Flickr or photo sharing page complete with tags.
Develop a widget that downloads songs that bring back memories of the way we were.
Launch a blog about GNO (girls night out) ideas.
Create a wiki where any women can add her ideas.
Tap into women from the Wild Women Blogger W List.
Perhaps Pepperidge Farms develops a community voted a la Digg contest where the best ideas win GNO spa weekends or trips to a Tuscan cooking school to learn how to bake yummy cookies or a trip to London to have high tea and cookies. Add a vlog or even a text photo blog element and what a fun viral social time we'd have with you.

Giving back to the community - Perhaps Pepperidge Farms adopts a women's shelter or inner city Girl Scout Troop. Perhaps a GNO is helping raise funds for the cause. Perhaps it turns into bigger way to stay connected. Perhaps the social in this social media marketing strategy goes further than tea and cookies to changing lives.

What was your fun-est GNO? Mine was a weekend in New Orleans with Mary, Lori and Laurie complete with vampires, benoits and well .. what happens at a GNO stays in a GNO ;-) What was your best from the heart GNO? Mine was when Mary, Lori, Beth, Laurie and I adopted a family for XMAS and collected so many gifts they filled my entire car. - Source By: Diva Marketing Blog

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