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INNOBLOG

the insider's guide to innovation

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Cookies - Satisfying Emotional Jobs for Generations

Robyn Bolton

The holidays are here. Get within 500 feet of a mall and you will be bombarded with sales signs, overwhelmed with Christmas carols, and swallowed by crowds of seasonal shoppers. While all of this may be overwhelming, there is one very good thing that comes with the hustle and bustle of the holidays – cookies.

I love cookies and there is no time of year more cookie-centric than the holidays. I have many fond memories of baking cookies with my mom, gleefully squishing Hershey’s kisses into the center of peanut-butter cookies and carefully painting icing on sugar cookies. This is why I was so fascinated by Arrowhead Mills’ “Bake with Me,” a line of baking mixes designed to encourage interaction between children and their caregivers. In addition to the baking mix, each box contains a promotional item, such as a cookie cutter or decorating stencil, to carry the interactive element from the box to the baking sheet.

Like most other baking products, there are sumptuous shots of sugar cookies, brownies, or cupcakes on the packaging, but what makes this packaging stand out on the shelf is that it also features a photo of a child in a chef’s hat happily mixing a bowl of batter. “The idea behind the package design was to develop a look that would really stand out on shelf to deliver the unique proposition; a fun activity for mom to do with their kids...,” explains Martha Seidner, a vice president at Smith Design, the agency responsible for design of the “Bake with Me” packaging.

All baking companies target functional jobs around taste, attractiveness of the food, nutritional value, and preparation time required. Arrowhead Mills has nailed the emotional jobs of parents, such as:

  • Feel like a good parent
  • Establish/reinforce my relationship with my kids
  • Create lifelong memories with my kids

By targeting emotional jobs, “Bake with Me” effectively overcomes traditional resistance to baking mixes as less authentic (and lower quality) than baking from scratch by satisfying other (and arguably more important) jobs related to the parent-child relationship.

Well done! Now, let’s gather the family and friends and start baking some cookies.

 


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