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'Pork: Be Inspired': Pork Board Retires 'Other White Meat' Slogan

MICHAEL J. CRUMB   03/ 4/11 07:19 AM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa — "The Other White Meat" has another slogan.

The National Pork Board on Friday replaced the decades-old ad campaign with a new message: "Pork: Be Inspired."

Board officials said after nearly 25 years, it was time to move on from the old message that compared pork to chicken and instead try to increase sales by focusing on the estimated 82 million Americans who already eat pork.

"The overall goal is to move sales of our product," said Ceci Snyder, the Des Moines, Iowa-based board's vice president of marketing. "We want to increase pork sales by 10 percent by 2014. To do that, we needed to make a stronger connection, a more emotional connection to our product."

Pork sales totaled about $117 per person in 2010. Pork consumption averages about 50 pounds per person per year, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Snyder said research done by the Pork Board shows 28 percent of U.S. households make up nearly 70 percent of the nation's at-home consumption of fresh pork. The new campaign is aimed at getting existing pork consumers to think more about how they can incorporate it into their meal planning.

"We want to move that needle, go after that core group of consumers," she said. "These people love pork, know how to prepare it and are eager to share recipes."

The new marketing effort marks the end to a ubiquitous advertising slogan launched in 1987 to convince consumers that pork was healthy and had fewer calories than most people thought. The campaign stemmed a decline in pork consumption, Snyder said.

Times have changed and with consumption continuing to be flat, Snyder said it's time to take pork in a new direction.

Pork remains behind beef and chicken in consumption, according to the USDA. Americans ate about 61 pounds of beef per capita last year and about 80 pounds of chicken. While beef consumption has been gradually declining and pork consumption has remained flat, chicken consumption has increased in the past two decades, the USDA data shows.

More than 31 billion pounds of pork was produced in the U.S. in 2010, according to the Pork Board. Iowa is the nation's top pork producer followed by North Carolina and Minnesota.

The old slogan will remain on the Pork Board's website and on apparel sold by the board, but Internet searches for "Pork: The Other White Meat" will direct people to the new campaign, Snyder said.

Gail Carter, a partner at Schafer Condon Carter, the Chicago-based ad agency that helped develop the new campaign, said "Pork: The Other White Meat" succeeded in creating awareness of pork as an option to chicken, and now it's time to update the message.

"There is no need to rely on comparisons for this audience," she said. "We know more about who the target is and how to talk to them in more relevant terms."

The board will spend more than $11 million to roll out the campaign in March and April. It will include national print and broadcast advertising, public relations, social media and foodservice marketing. Online advertising will begin March 7, and national television ads will begin April 11. Print ads will also begin running in food and lifestyle publications in April.

John Mabry, the director of the Iowa Pork Industry Center at Iowa State University, said the "Pork: The Other White Meat" campaign helped pork overcome an image that it was fatty and has helped increase the ways in which pork is used.

"I can see them trying to expand on the market," he said. "We are exporting 25 percent of the product now and we need to maintain the export market but also need to ramp up consumption here in the U.S."

He said targeting a specific audience may give the Pork Board the "biggest bang for its buck."

Through the national Pork Checkoff program, pork producers invest 40 cents per $100 value of hogs sold to fund research and promotion of pork.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fuddgate
Some assembly required
11:12 PM on 03/10/2011
Pigs are bred and raised in nasty conditions in the US period. I still like my ground pork and recognize no conventional religion. Who did they think they were fooling when calling it a white meat? Not even chicken is white meat excluding the breast portions. I love me some chicken thighs!
barbra1971
Sherry Hunt my hero
11:21 AM on 03/09/2011
Pork 50, beef 60, chicken 80, that is 190# of meat a year for every person even baby. Where is fish and all vegetarians? Are they counting the feathers, skin, feet, tails to? Weird math.
07:05 AM on 03/08/2011
There are several reasons why pork now days tastes so bad. The crowded factory farm conditions, terrible diet, and how young pigs are when slaughtered. My husband and I operate a 15 acre farm in western NC and have raised pastured pork for several years now. Our pigs eat sweet feed, a lot of green stuff and nuts they get from the woods, and milk. They have acres of woods to graze in. We let our pigs get to be at least 400 lbs before butcher generally. In factory farms they are slaughtering at 180-220 lbs because your feed to weight gain ratio goes up after that. To the folks that miss fattier pork: Unfortunately fat has gotten a bad rep over the last few years and hogs are not raised up large enough to get much fat off them. It takes a long time to raise a pig right and still get a good amount of fat. Our pigs turn out pretty lean because they are on pasture. However if we let them get them get really large than we get a good amount of high quality fat back anyway. We got two 600 pound pigs out in the pasture right now happily rooting and laying around in their woods and eating as much antibiotic and hormone free food as they want. There is no excuse for pig abuse. Either companies should produce it right or not at all.
02:52 PM on 03/09/2011
The FDA does not allow for pigs to ingest hormones at all.

There is a place for your farm and type of agriculture in the industry. I commend you for the way you raise your hogs. However modern pork production isn't evil, nor is it affecting the quality of the pork. Modern production has actually been seen as beneficial in many ways.

Visit www.fivewsoffood.wordpress.com for information on all forms of the current agriculture industry. I would be happy to discuss the modern pork industry with you further.
03:18 PM on 03/14/2011
Have you you ever seen a commercial hog operation? I live in North Carolina which produces a large amount of the pork consumed in this country. The lagoons where the waste go are atrocious and make it quite unpleasant for those that live near them. In addition commercial pig operations cram pigs into a confined space. This results in pigs that get such a small amount of exercise that the pork is soft. Pigs might not ingest hormones but they are fed a steady diet of antibiotics. I invite anyone to try commercial pork and then taste what I raise at home and tell me they cannot tell the difference. Older people that have had our pork say that it tastes like pork used to. Commercial operations often use farrowing crates as well which means the sow can barely move the entire time of her pregnancy. I never said said it was evil I said that commercial pigs are treated in an abusive manner.Might I ask your occupation? Do you work within the pork industry?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kintarius
If you don't like it, you are wrong.
12:36 PM on 03/07/2011
Just make Jim Gaffigan the spokesman.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kintarius
If you don't like it, you are wrong.
12:33 PM on 03/07/2011
Jules: Pigs are filthy animals. I don't eat filthy animals.
Vincent: Yeah, but bacon tastes good. Pork chops taste good.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lindsey Gregory
...there is no spoon.
10:50 PM on 03/06/2011
MMM...fatback.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Laurie Allen
06:29 PM on 03/06/2011
Pigs are more intelligent than our dogs. I can't eat anything as social, friendly and cute as my dog.
jaslyn
why can't we all just get along?
05:47 PM on 03/06/2011
Eat pork, you become pork, doesn't matter how 'good' it tastes. Be inspired? really? how dull are you to be inspired by pork?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AngelaQuattrano
I just like to write comments
03:43 AM on 03/07/2011
If you are what you eat, what does that say about people who eat strictly vegetable products?
04:40 PM on 03/06/2011
How about: Pork- It Used To Be a Filthy Animal...Yum!
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moose and squirrel
Very soon we would both be completely twisted...
03:02 PM on 03/06/2011
"Pork-- smells like politicians, tastes like heaven!"
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moose and squirrel
Very soon we would both be completely twisted...
03:01 PM on 03/06/2011
"Pork-- naturally anti-mus lim"
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12:36 PM on 03/06/2011
Pork: The expensive white meat.
09:47 PM on 03/06/2011
At my supermarket, pork shoulders are always $1.49/lb or less, about the same as whole chicken.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AngelaQuattrano
I just like to write comments
03:44 AM on 03/07/2011
Pork. The other dark meat.
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cybolt
This Space for Rent
12:30 PM on 03/06/2011
How about...

"Pork: Sumptuous as a noun. Exquisite as a verb."
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
11:38 AM on 03/07/2011
you sir are made of WIN. F&F
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cybolt
This Space for Rent
01:31 PM on 03/07/2011
Duh!

Thanks for the nod.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
12:20 PM on 03/06/2011
how about: "Pork -- the politicians keep it in the barrel".
11:07 AM on 03/06/2011
I wish the beef, lamb and goat people would latch onto the fact most poultry and pork are now controlled totally by corporations in vertically integrated systems, whereas nearly all the nations cowherd (along with sheep and goats) are owned by privately, and not part of some vertically integrated plan. I can still sell cattle at livestock auctions within 20 miles of my farm, and get a fair price, for one head or 1000. I can't do that with pigs or chickens.

How about "Pork, we spent over two decades trying to convince you it is white meat and in the process screwed over 90% of our independent producers using their own money"............I guess that isn't very inspiring, is it?
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cybolt
This Space for Rent
12:24 PM on 03/06/2011
I like your handle.