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    6
    Dec
    2012
    8:18am, EST

    Eau de Pizza Hut? Company bakes up idea for perfume

    By A. Pawlowski, TODAY contributor

    Courtesy Pizza Hut Canada

    Pizza Hut Canada has produced a limited-edition of a fragrance that smells like "freshly baked, hand-tossed dough."

    At last, a perfume option for those who want nothing more than to be surrounded by the heavenly aroma of fresh pizza.

    In what promises to be a viral marketing bonanza and the inspiration for late-night comedians everywhere, Pizza Hut Canada has produced a limited-edition of “Eau de Pizza Hut.” The fragrance boasts “top notes of freshly baked, hand-tossed dough,” the company said in a news release.

    “It’s amazing how such a simple idea can intrigue people,” said Beverley D'Cruz, marketing and product development director of Pizza Hut Canada, adding that she has heard from contacts all over the world curious about the perfume.

    “People have fun eating pizza, so we had some fun doing this.”

    The project began several months ago when Pizza Hut Canada asked fans on its Facebook page whether they loved the smell of a box of pizza being opened and what it might be called if it were perfume.

    There were dozens of cheesy suggestions, including “Eau de Pepperoni,” “Devour by Pizza Hut,” and “Pizzaz.” The post has received more than 270 comments in all.

    It was the highest user engagement the company has ever seen, so it began brainstorming what to do next.

    “Somebody said, ‘What if we actually made a perfume?’ So we said, let’s try it,” D'Cruz recalled.

    Pizza Hut Canada then tasked a perfume maker to create a fragrance that smelled like freshly baked bread. Some of the initial samples smelled more like cheese, others more like pepperoni, but eventually the perfect product emerged.

    The company doesn’t envision that people will spray themselves with it, but rather use it as a room fragrance, D'Cruz said.

    Only 110 bottles were produced – each featuring the familiar red Pizza Hut logo -- and distributed to the first Facebook fans to ask for the perfume. Since the creation has gotten so much attention, Pizza Hut Canada is planning to produce another batch of bottles to send out as gifts. There are no plans at the moment to retail the product.

    Branding expert Karen Post called the project an excellent marketing strategy.

    “The viral potential is huge because it’s so off the wall,” Post said.

    “Brands like Pizza Hut have the latitude to get quirky because their target audience is highly concentrated in the younger folks and comedy is a great way to be relevant to that audience. If they were selling banking services, it’s maybe a little different.”

    Smart PR firms now add top comedians to their distribution lists precisely because they want popular late-night hosts to mention a brand name to their huge audiences, Post said.

    Another smart move on Pizza Hut’s part? Creating demand by producing only 110 bottles of the quirky perfume. People always want things that they can’t get their hands on, Post said.

    Going on Facebook also allows a company to do a viral marketing campaign “organically and fairly low-cost,” she added.

    This isn’t the first time a fast-food company has cooked up a fragrance. You may remember “Flame by BK,” a meat-scented body spray introduced as part of a marketing stunt by Burger King in 2008.

    The anchors chat about the topics making headlines today and play a round of "Pizza or perfume?" as they blindfold Al Roker and Willie Geist to see if they can distinguish Pizza Hut's new pizza-scented perfume from a slice of the real thing.

     

    More money news:

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    20 comments

    That may be the only way for them to beat their competition, it may sell better than their pizza...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, pizza-hut, world-business
  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    8:00am, EST

    Notable women who made the 2012 Forbes billionaire list

    The Forbes billionaires list isn’t quite a He-Man Woman Haters Club, but it’s not exactly a picture of gender parity either. The list has far more men than women, even though a record 104 women made the list this time.

    Of note about the women involved in the Forbes ranking:

    Christy Walton of Wal-Mart family fame was the richest at $25.3 billion. She pulled down almost $200 million in dividends from the world’s largest retailer this year.

    Europe's richest woman, France’s Liliane Bettencourt, made her money from L’Oreal. Bettencourt is worth $24 billion.

    Jacqueline Mars is is worth $13.8 billion. She and her brothers own the world’s largest candy company.

    Savitri Jindal, of India, is the richest Asian on the list at $10.9 billion. Her fortune took a big hit as the steel business in her family’s conglomerate was forced to cut production after a court decree against iron ore mining in the southern part of the country.

    Laurene Powell Jobs was added to the list after her husband, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, died last year. The inheritance made her worth $9 billion.

    Miuccia Prada, who runs the fashion empire her grandfather Mario Prada founded, is worth $6.8 billion.

    Yang Huiyan, China’s richest person in 2007 at $16.2 billion, has seen her net worth crumble to a paltry $4.7 billion this year. Most of her money has come from the family’s Hong Kong real estate business. Don’t worry about her too much. At 30, she’s among the youngest on the billionaires list and has a few years to earn it all back.

    Chinese gambling mogul Pansy Ho is a newcomer to the list at $4.5 billion. One of 16 children of the mogul that developed the island of Macau into China’s version of Las Vegas, she runs her own company.

    The chair of French advertising giant Publicis Groupe, Elisabeth Badinter, is another newcomer to the list at $1.1 billion.

    Sara Blakely was 29 when she invested her then-life savings, $5,000, in an underwear venture. Spanx ended up becoming one of Oprah’s Favorite Things. She is another newcomer at $1 billion.

    Complete list of Forbes billionaires 2012
    Forbes.com: The world’s billionaire women
    Forbes.com: The world’s billionaire newcomers
    Forbes.com: The world’s youngest billionaires

    7 comments

    MSNBC, it is time to hire an editor who can spell (or at least run a spell check program).

    Show more
    Explore related topics: wal-mart, featured, world-business

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