Nutrisoda (formerly known as airforce Nutrisoda) was the brand name of a nutrient-enhanced soda sold in the United States by the Ardea Beverage Company.

Nutrisoda
Company typePrivate
IndustryBeverage/CSD
Founded2002
FounderJoe and Lesley Heron
Headquarters,
USA
ProductsNutrient-enhanced sodas
ParentPepsiAmericas
Websitenutrisoda.com

Nutrisoda contained zero sugar, zero sodium, zero aspartame, and zero to ten calories. It was sweetened with Sucralose, an artificial sweetener made by chlorinating sucrose.[1]

Origins edit

Nutrisoda was created in 2002 by Joe Heron, previously the Senior Vice President of Novartis Medical Nutrition, and his wife, Lesley Heron. Nutrisoda was a line of nutrient-enhanced sodas that claimed to provide specific wellness benefits.[2]

In January 2006, Ardea Beverage Co. was purchased by PepsiAmericas, the second largest Pepsi bottler in the world. [3]

Product development edit

[4]

Nutrisoda was reformulated in early 2009 to reduce price ahead of its May 2009 re-launch. The level of nutrients and fortification were reduced significantly, colors were removed from the beverage, and new 12oz(355ml) cans were introduced in order to allow the beverage to be produced in PepsiAmericas plants rather than by third party co-packers. During this reformulation Ardea decided to move forward with four SKUs, down from eight that were previously for sale until early 2009. Flex, Slender, Radiant, and Renew were the flavors no longer being produced, as of May 2009. Nutrisoda also officially dropped airforce from its brand name during this period. A new slogan was created. Rather than "The Good Soda" the slogan was changed to "Healthy / Bubbly" or "Hubbly", which is also the nickname for a hookah pipe. Consumer acceptance was poor and Nutrisoda was no longer sold within a year of the relaunch.

Flavors edit

There were ultimately four flavors of Nutrisoda containing different combinations of 11 vitamins and nutrients that are marketed as supporting separate aspects of wellness. None contained sugar, aspartame, or sodium, and had zero to five calories. [5]

References edit

  1. ^ "airforce Nutrisoda Lifts Off With New 4-Packs". www.beverageonline.com. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  2. ^ McCarthy, John. "How Copper & King's Joe Heron Made American Brandy More Than A Cheap Thrill". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  3. ^ "PepsiAmericas Buys Ardea Beverage Co" (Press release). PepsiAmericas. 2006-01-23. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  4. ^ Vomhof Jr., John (2008-11-21). "Hunt Adkins wins Ardea's Nutrisoda account". Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  5. ^ "Nutrisoda - Get Hubbly". Archived from the original on 2010-04-11. Retrieved 2022-07-14.