Overheated shoppers just weren’t buying the company’s specialty sausages. Then, Wall had an epiphany: Selling ice cream could help counteract the seasonal sales slump.
The idea was set aside when World War I started a year later. But the arrival of a commercial freezer from the United States in 1922 catalyzed his ambitions. From a factory in west London, Wall’s ice cream was soon being hawked to Londoners via horse and cart, and then by salespeople on tricycles. By 1939, there were 8,500 of the company’s tricycles on Britain’s roads.
The Anglo-Dutch firm has gone on to acquire some two dozen other major ice cream brands, including Klondike and Ben & Jerry’s, while pioneering its own Magnum line. It sells ice cream in 63 countries around the world and commands almost a fifth of global ice cream sales, a bigger share than its next four competitors combined, according to market research firm Euromonitor.
Ice cream around every corner
It won’t have far to travel. Chances are, while reading this article you’re no more than a few hundred yards away from a Unilever ice cream.
The company owns five of the world’s 10 most valuable ice cream brands, including Breyers, Cornetto, Carte d’Or and Ben & Jerry’s. But its empire extends far beyond these familiar names.
There’s Frigo in Spain, Adityaa in India, Holanda in Mexico, Langnese in Germany, Selecta in the Philippines, Ola in South Africa and Pingüino in Ecuador. In recent years, Unilever has also built out its premium offering to fend off a growing number of innovative rivals, snapping up gelato and sorbet brands such as America’s Talenti, Italy’s Grom and Australia’s Weis.
Many of these may be unfamiliar, but you’ve probably come across the brand that more than any other heralded Unilever’s ice cream ambitions: Magnum.
Unilever “got serious” about ice cream when it launched Magnum in 1989, said Matt Close, the company’s executive vice president for global ice cream. Vanilla ice cream bars on sticks, dipped in chocolate that cracks on the first bite and then dissolves in your mouth, were a decadent new taste sensation.
“That really revolutionized the ice cream industry, but also our ice cream business,” Close told CNN Business. “Suddenly we moved from being a kind of kids seaside treat to something that people were eating in many more locations.”
Unilever’s approach has been to go after the whole market, rather than target any particular segment. Its 35 ice cream brands come at every price point, for all occasions and in just about every size, shape and packaging. There’s Breyers Natural Vanilla to eat with apple pie; cheap and cheerful Popsicles on sticks for youngsters; Magnum Bites in small portions to satisfy late-night cravings; and pints of Ben & Jerry’s or Talenti for something more extravagant.
How to make the good stuff
Making ice cream is tricky enough, without adding the logistics of getting it to people whenever they want before it melts.
The ice cream business has changed since Wall’s started factory production nearly 100 years ago. Now, companies have nearly limitless ways in which to combine milk, cream and sugar with other ingredients to come up with new flavors and formats. Unilever sells 431 different varieties of ice cream just in the United Kingdom and Ireland, while Magnum alone comes in about 35 flavors a year in standard sticks, mini sticks, pints and truffles.
Andrew Sztehlo, Unilever’s global vice president for ice cream research and development, likens the manufacturing process to a vehicle assembly line. Take the Cornetto, which combines Vanilla ice cream with chocolate coating and hazelnut pieces in a wafer cone.
“Making a Cornetto is the food equivalent of making a motor car,” he told CNN Business. “You’ve got hot things, cold things, things that are at funny angles, things that like water, things that hate water. And they’ve all got to come together to make this cone. It’s very complex and it goes at high speed.”
Even with all this precision and years of experience, technical challenges persist. According to Chris Veitch, a former senior process engineer at Unilever, there are projects every year to try and fix the problem of Cornetto cones occasionally going soggy within their use-by dates.
“Ice cream is an incredibly complex material that’s very difficult to model and work with, and there are several highly sensitive processing steps that affect quality,” Veitch said in a briefing earlier this year hosted by the London-based Institution of Chemical Engineers.
That means that whenever Unilever wants to launch a new ice cream or even tweak an existing product by, for example, injecting sauce a little differently, it more often than not has to come up with a new piece of equipment. Hence why there’s “a lot of stainless steel” and a lot of engineers in Unilever’s ice cream factories, according to Sztehlo, who described them as “Willy Wonka territory.”
“There’s lots of whirling things going up and down, in and out, and so on,” he added. “We make billions and billions of ice cream products every year in this way through our factories around the world.”
On a mission
Unilever executives say they haven’t strayed from Wall’s strategy of making ice cream as ubiquitous as possible. Beyond getting a Wall’s display case into every possible grocery store, that extends to eliminating the need for people to go out and find ice cream in the first place.
“I suppose as an ice cream gang we’re a bit messianic,” said Close. “We believe that people want it, we’ve just got to find a way to get it to them.”
Making ice cream available on demand is a key part of Unilever’s efforts to reduce its reliance on summer sales, which leaves it vulnerable to changing weather conditions and with a narrow window to earn the bulk of its revenue. “For Unilever, this has meant repositioning ice cream as an any time snack,” Euromonitor said in a report earlier this year.
A century after Wall’s tricycles first hit the roads, the need to make ice cream available at all times means Unilever is once again using workers on wheels to distribute its wares.
It helps that Unilever’s ice creams are already in several million freezers around the globe as part of its traditional business. It’s grown pickup points for on-demand ice cream to 11,000 globally, an almost four-fold increase since before the pandemic hit. And it’s adding more pickup points all the time to get ice cream to people as fast as possible — crucial for a product that starts to melt at anything above zero degrees Fahrenheit (-18 Celsius).
There’s room to grow. Euromonitor estimates that online sales of ice cream, including frozen yogurt, will reach around $1.7 billion this year — a small fraction of the $76.4 billion in overall ice cream sales to consumers.
For Unilever, the growth of ice cream at home, led by brands including Ben & Jerry’s and Magnum, is on track to more than offset the collapse in its out of home ice cream revenue this year, which includes sales to restaurants and catering companies.
The company has also benefited from some good luck. About two months before much of the world was thrust into coronavirus lockdowns, Ben & Jerry’s launched Netflix & Chilll’d, a new peanut butter ice cream flavor with near-perfect messaging for 2020.
Plans for 2021 are “a work in progress,” according to Sztehlo, who joined the ice cream business as an apprentice 35 years ago. He admits that it’s been more difficult to come up with the next big idea over video calls, particularly without afternoon office tastings. Those casual gatherings ordinarily take place around a table in New York where 20 kilograms (44 pounds) of different sorts of ice cream are passed around, but they’re on hold until further notice.
“We’ve been missing the social, creativity, interactive moment. That’s a bit more sterile,” he said. The good news, he added, “is that people want to be happy,” and they are looking for ways “to increase their moments of happiness at home.”
Netflix & Chilll’d anyone?
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