A Stone-Cold Success: GoodPop’s Refresh Ties Good Design to Stronger Sales

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All creatives know that effective design is the lifeblood of any brand, but its value is notoriously difficult to quantify.

The Designalytics Effectiveness Award, included in this year’s Dieline Awards, takes on the challenge of directly linking meaningful design to brand growth. This award is unique because it’s entirely data-driven; retail sales performance and quantitative consumer testing determine the winner.

This year, the redesign for GoodPop, led by Boulder-based branding agency Interact Brands, was awarded the grand prize.

So how exactly did GoodPop claim first place?

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Before (left) and after (right).

Most American adults fondly recall snarfing down Push-Up Pops, King Cones, Bomb Pops, and crumb-coated Good Humor bars on sweltering summer afternoons. Of course, those were the golden days—before consumers scanned nutrition labels for unconscionably-long ingredient lists containing “high fructose corn syrup,” “hydrogenated oils,” and a slew of vaguely scientific and unpronounceable words. Needless to say, times have changed: The past several years have brought about a clean-label revolution, with 69% of consumers claiming that simple, recognizable ingredients influence their purchasing decisions.*

Rather than viewing these desires—nostalgic indulgence and good, clean eating—as two worlds apart, one brand saw an opportunity to blend the best of both worlds. In 2009, Daniel Goetz—an Austin native frustrated by the lack of healthy, refreshing summer treats on offer—founded GoodPop. The young brand launched a line of fruity, frozen novelties positioned as “cleaned-up classics,” using only real, organic, responsibly-sourced ingredients.

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Over the next decade, GoodPop gained traction at natural retailers, including Sprouts and Whole Foods, and its line of products grew. Today, GoodPop offers a wide range of goodies—everything from orange-and-cream bars and oat-milk-based ice cream sandwiches to fruit pops in exotic flavors like “hibiscus mint,” “watermelon agave,” and “mango chile.”

In addition to expanding its list of offerings, GoodPop was making its debut in mainstream retail channels like Publix and Costco circa 2019, having already secured its foothold at big-name natural chains. These two causes of growing pains—expanding one’s portfolio and distribution channels—are common catalysts for revisiting one’s package design.

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“When we began launching new products and lines, we realized we didn’t have a design system that could accommodate that. Our logo was small, and there were some design inconsistencies. We needed consumers to be able to grab one box and then know the next box was also a GoodPop item,” explained Clara Tomlin, marketing director at GoodPop.

In early 2020, GoodPop engaged Interact Brands, an agency with deep expertise in the food and beverage industries—and in helping fast-growing challenger brands look like the sure-footed elites they’ve become.

The agency conducted a thorough audit within the category and GoodPop’s existing equities, determining that the brand’s white box was the only “must-keep” asset. The white coloring presented a challenge and an opportunity, given that GoodPop was getting distributed in two retail environments with vastly different competitive sets.

“Colors are hyper-saturated in conventional retail stores, so white was an awesome signal to those consumers that this is a better-for-you brand. The challenge in maintaining the white box then became: How do we make sure it doesn’t make us feel generic in our birthplace—the natural channel—where white is really common?” said Fred Hart, partner and creative director at Interact.

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The answer? Pack a lot of personality into the elements that you can change. Interact’s initial exploration included dozens of design concepts, which experimented with different ways to integrate color (from blocking to monotone doodles), typefaces (from chunky and geometric to handwritten), and food imagery (from upside-down popsicles to fruit slices bursting out of the bars themselves).

The team settled on a vibrant teal color for the holding shape around the wordmark, thus establishing a consistent, recognizable brand color that provided some pop and became an ownable asset across all flavor varieties. Interact added a slight curve to the “GoodPop” lettering within to communicate playfulness.

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They also experimented broadly with popsicle and flavor imagery—another avenue for differentiation. Should the popsicle be standing up or lying flat? Where should it be positioned on the box? How should the fruit slices coexist with the popsicle?

“We made the flavor imagery part of the scene by adding depth and standing the popsicle up, which gives it a little character and personality. The styling of our photography became our calling card,” said Hart.

The punched-up photography did more than differentiate the brand—it skyrocketed taste appeal. When asked which design best communicates “tastes great,” category buyers were three times more likely to select the new design over the old, according to an evaluation by Designalytics.

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Interact engaged photographer Mike Wepplo for the painstaking work of capturing frozen novelties at peak deliciousness. “Mike is a Photoshop magician. The flavor imagery, like the fruit slices, was all composited in. That helped us get the ideal look. Trying to shoot everything perfectly would’ve been an absolute nightmare,” said Hart, scrolling through a lengthy art direction document complete with examples of optimal lighting, depth, frost, moisture, and how not to style a bite mark (“too shallow,” “not melted enough,” and “looks like an animal got to it”).

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The next challenge was to prioritize claims on the front of the package. GoodPop is in the enviable position of possessing too many virtues to display them all prominently: organic, dairy-free, gluten-free, low calorie, fair trade, fresh ingredients—the list goes on.

Hart likened the importance of prioritizing textual content to playing “catch” with consumers. “If I throw five tennis balls at the consumer, they’ll catch none of them. If I throw one, they’ll definitely catch it; two, probably; and every additional tennis ball makes success less likely. A brand that throws everything they’ve got is essentially saying, ‘We don’t know what’s important.’ Choosing only the most critical messages shows confidence, and that attracts people naturally,” he explained.

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The team decided to prioritize no more than three claims—which vary depending on the product—leveraging the back of the package to discuss any remaining virtues. That includes GoodPop’s status as a B-corporation and its mission to do good.

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“Consumers’ eyes get drawn to our package for the mouth-watering flavors, but they stay for the mission,” said Tomlin. “There’s a page on our site where you can pledge to do a good deed. At the most basic level, this is about spreading kindness, especially when there’s a lot of animosity in the world. With every good deed that’s pledged, we’ll donate a dollar to a charitable partner that fits with one of our pillars—supporting social equity or ending hunger or cleaning up the environment, for example,” she explained.

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The back of the package also sports Hart’s favorite feature—the stick from a completely-consumed popsicle, in the exact same position as on the front of the box. “It’s the kind of thing a designer would notice, a fun little moment,” he said.

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In early 2021, GoodPop’s new design launched, proving to be a stone-cold success. In the year following, sales increased by 40% compared to the prior year.** The results of a consumer evaluation by Designalytics echo this outcome: 75% of category buyers preferred the new design over the old one.

The revamped design had far-reaching effects, bolstering the brand’s advertising efforts and boosting recall at the moment of truth. “The packaging is the hero in any advertisement we’re putting out there. We want people to take notice of us when we appear on their social channels and then be able to walk into a store and easily recall the item they saw. The new design certainly did that,” said Tomlin.

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Before (left) and after (right).

When asked what advice Hart would give to challenger brands, he said: “There’s a quote I like: ‘The opposite of bravery isn’t cowardice; it’s conformity.’ Some of our clients are afraid to take the risk, and I tell them, ’look, you’re a $10 million business now, and you want to be a $50 million business—at which point you’ll want to take even less risk. As an entrepreneur, you’ve already taken massive amounts of risk, so why are you stopping when it comes to creative?’”

Hart’s sentiment is something often shared by the masterminds behind effective packaging design and is worth highlighting in a discipline so often preoccupied with mitigating risks over maximizing opportunities. GoodPop reminds us that timely, carefully-considered redesigns can deliver seriously sweet results.

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*ADM Outside Voice research.

**Nielsen xAOC, latest 52 weeks ending 3/19/22 vs. prior year.

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