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Heinz New Ketchup Packet Gives You A Choice: Dunk Or Squeeze

SARAH SKIDMORE   02/ 4/10 06:11 PM ET   AP

Heinz New Ketchup Packet

For decades there was only one way to use the humble ketchup packet, and it was messy. Now, fast-food lovers have a choice: the traditional squeeze play – or the option to dunk.

You want fries with that, in the minivan? No problem.

The new ketchup pack, unveiled Thursday by H.J. Heinz Co., is shaped like a shallow cup. The top can be peeled back for dipping, or the end can be torn off for squeezing. It holds three times as much ketchup as a traditional packet.

Customers at a McDonald's in Covington, Ky., said they would welcome a redesign.

"You use up a lot of ketchup now with the packets, I always get extra ones," said Skyler McDermott, 29. "Maybe now you won't have to use your teeth to open them."

Heinz struggled for years to develop a container that lets diners dip or squeeze, and to produce it at a cost acceptable to its restaurant customers.

"The packet has long been the bane of our consumers," said Dave Ciesinski, vice president of Heinz Ketchup. "The biggest complaint is there is no way to dip and eat it on-the-go."

Designers found that what worked at a table didn't work where many people use ketchup packets: in the car. So two years ago, Heinz bought a used minivan for the design team members so they could give their ideas a real road test.

The team studied what each passenger needed. The driver wanted something that could sit on the armrest. Passengers wanted the choice of squeezing or dunking. Moms everywhere wanted a packet that held enough ketchup for the meal and didn't squirt onto clothes so easily.

Heinz is rolling out the new packs this fall at select fast-food restaurants nationwide. It will continue to sell the traditional packets.

Whether restaurants buy the new packets will depend on cost, experts say.

"One of the top uses of ketchup in this country is on french fries," said Harry Balzer, vice president of the research firm NPD Group. "One of the patterns of behavior in this difficult climate that continues to do OK is ordering and eating in your car."

The company said it is still working out prices with its customers. But the new packet should cost only a little more, even though it holds much more ketchup.

Heinz is by far the biggest ketchup maker. About half of its ketchup is sold in stores and the other half is sold to the food service industry through its exclusive contracts with chains like Burger King and Wendy's.

McDonald's, the nation's largest burger chain, does only limited business with Heinz.

Heinz sells more than 11 billion ketchup packets every year. But neither the ketchup maker nor the major chains would say who plans to carry the new design.

Morningstar restaurant analyst R.J. Hottovy said if restaurants do adopt the design, the transition will likely be gradual.

"It has to be proven that this is something that saves money on the behalf of restaurants or cuts down on waste," he said. "It looks interesting, but ultimately you have to provide something of value to the restaurants."

Customers may force the issue.

Rants about the messy packs have helped spawn hundreds of anti-ketchup-packet groups on Facebook.

Matt Kurtz, a 22-year-old student in New York, has drawn 269 members to the group he started after he ripped open a packet too quickly and spilled it on his jeans while on a road trip two years ago.

"That's when I said 'There has to be a better way.'"

These issues come as no surprise to Heinz's Ciesinski. "We created the packet in 1968," he said. "Consumer complaints started around 1969."

___

AP Business Writer Dan Sewell in Cincinnati contributed to this report.

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For decades there was only one way to use the humble ketchup packet, and it was messy. Now, fast-food lovers have a choice: the traditional squeeze play – or the option to dunk. You want fries ...
For decades there was only one way to use the humble ketchup packet, and it was messy. Now, fast-food lovers have a choice: the traditional squeeze play – or the option to dunk. You want fries ...
Filed by Craig Kanalley  | 
 
 
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:46 AM on 02/08/2010
The Associated Press: Now you can have your news AND advertisements in the same article!

"Tired of getting messy using regular ketchup containers?

*cut to mother spilling gobs of ketchup liberally*

Hate the annoying amount they give you?

*cut to mother looking exasperated holding bottles and bottles of ketchup*

Introducing Heinz ketchup packets!"

The AP never ceases to amaze me.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:46 PM on 02/07/2010
Just think what use Bluto could have made of this!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
09:59 PM on 02/07/2010
I read in the New York Times this new packet is "three times bigger" than the old. I cannot approve of it if there is more to throw away.
09:48 AM on 02/07/2010
Good Job Heinz... ketchup packets were getting old... just don't charge extra for them.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
10:46 PM on 02/06/2010
It is a cool design. Personally I don't' do ketchup but I have a kid that could drink it.
08:26 PM on 02/06/2010
This will change the lives of more people than the iPod did.

Okay, well, almost exactly the same number of people. Maybe even the exact same people. I dunno.

But it will sure make catching some quick food on a 1,000 mile road trip with the kids a bit easier for us moms, in a very tiny way.

I welcome our new ketchup packet. Well done, Heinz.
04:00 PM on 02/06/2010
For some of us, this is big news. Ketchup makes almost anything better, and now to be able to dunk or squeeze......what will they think of next????
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02:07 PM on 02/06/2010
They'll never top that brilliant idea of putting their product in a plastic bottle and attaching the label upside-down . . .
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
10:38 PM on 02/06/2010
The real genius was making the lid big enough so it could stand like that.
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deepintheheartoftejas
Middle o/t Road = Yellow stripes & dead armadillos
01:56 PM on 02/06/2010
Can I get that in Fancy Ketchup as well?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GerryS
I WANT to pay $1 million per year in taxes, or mor
01:36 AM on 02/06/2010
Jebus,

looks like teresa heinz hired a GOP company to marketing research---------
08:19 PM on 02/05/2010
looks like who ever is doing the 'container supplying' is going to be able to charge more for the bigger, sturdier package.

just what we needed
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ykk9
I eat lots of beans
11:53 PM on 02/07/2010
Yes, but you will need 1/3 as many. net benefit? possibly.
08:13 PM on 02/05/2010
I guess we can expect a health-care bill now that the country's best minds are done re-designing Heinz Ketchup packets.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Natalee
09:28 PM on 02/05/2010
...And it took them 40 years to do it.
10:31 PM on 02/05/2010
America can now rest easy knowing its fries will be dipped.
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02:19 PM on 02/05/2010
I love this story.
It is so USA!
when our best minds are not working on the next big financial derivative due to unemployment, they go right to work on the most pressing problem that we've had for 40 years- catsup packets!
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02:08 PM on 02/06/2010
. . . yes, but when you open it, will it still squirt out onto your nice linen shirt? Like Yoplait yogurt containers do?