Functional beverage
A functional beverage is a drink typically intended to convey a health benefit, usually as a panacea or a performance-enhancing substance. Some include ingredients like herbs, vitamins, minerals, nootropics, amino acids, or additional raw fruit or vegetables.
Examples of functional beverages include sports and performance drinks, energy drinks, ready to drink teas, smart drinks, enhanced fruit drinks, soy beverages, and enhanced water.
Popularity
Functional beverages have become popular among people who want specific health benefits from their foods and beverages. Both convenience and health have been identified as important factors in consumers' decision-making about food and beverage purchases. Functional drinks are advertised as having various health benefits. For example, some claim to improve heart health, immunity, digestion, and joint health, while others promote themselves as satiating and energy-boosting.Industry
The functional beverage industry is a subsector of the functional food and non-alcoholic beverage industry. It is the fastest-growing sector of the industry, partially due to the maturity of the carbonated soft drink sector and heavy investments by major food and beverage companies. Another reason for the industry's growth may be the consumer-oriented market scheme whereby innovative ideas come from consumers. By 2008, in the U.S., the market share of functional beverages accounted for 48.9% of the non-alcoholic industry, which is worth $118 billion.In 2006, functional beverage consumption per capita rose to 66.4 gallons, while the carbonated soft drink sector saw a decline in per-capita consumption to 50.4 gallons.
Functional beverage industry players are generally categorized into four types:
- Traditional non-alcoholic beverage companies, like PepsiCo, Fuze Beverage, and The Coca-Cola Company.
- Major food companies, such as Nestlé, Altria, Kraft Foods, General Mills, and the Campbell Soup Company.
- Smaller-scaled private companies, like SALOMED GmbH in Austria, and specialized companies like Traditional Medicinals and POM Wonderful.
- Agricultural cooperatives, such as Ocean Spray and Sunsweet Growers.
Product trends
A 2005 trend toward single-serve functional beverages was fueled by consumers' demands for convenience. According to Campbell's director of single-serve beverages, "People know they will be seen when they are drinking single-serving beverages, so the package is critical." Drinks marketed toward weight loss, health, and beauty account for a considerable market share. Lastly, "energy-boosting" functional beverage products, such as Red Bull and 5-Hour Energy, have been rated fastest in growth in the functional beverage market.
Market
The functional beverage industry generally competes using four primary strategies:- Promote their own products as healthy and unique, by clearly distinguishing their health claims from similar products, and by specifying naturally healthy ingredients.
- Consider extensions of existing brand lines. For example, Nestle extended their Boost product line by adding Kids Essentials to the line, thereby extending the adult-focused Boost line to a new market.
- Larger companies compete for market share by acquiring smaller companies that may own a particular market sector. For example, Coca-Cola purchased Glaceau from Energy Brands, and Odwalla and Fuze Beverage from their respective founders, in order to increase Coca-Cola's market share.
- Explore new functional brands by identifying new markets and demands.
Hydration
Recently, there has been an increase in the promotion of hydration drinks. Fowhich is marketed as an exclusive hydration drink, sold only in Neiman Marcus stores. Among the drink's ingredient list were antioxidant vitamins and fruit extracts, which the company claims "hydrate the inner and outer layer of the skin" and protect drinkers from free radicals.Gatorade has also created several drinks marketed as hydration beverages with various health benefits. Its "Thirst Quencher" drinks, according to advertisements, each contain an "excellent source" of various vitamins:
- 25% of the RDI of B vitamins ;
- 20% of the RDI of the antioxidant vitamin E; and,
- 20% of the RDI of vitamin C.
Gatorade's new products are a good example of the first major strategy of competition, listed in the "Market" section above. By reformulating its products, Gatorade's goals were to promote their own new products as healthier, and to emphasize the healthy ingredients in the drinks.
Energy and stimulation
Highly caffeinated, often highly sweetened "energy drinks" have become popular on the beverage market in the United States, as well as globally, in the past decade. Consumer demand has helped generate a new generation of "energy drink" brands containing similar amounts of caffeine, calories, and sugar.Various stimulants found in energy drinks include taurine, glucoronolactone, caffeine, B vitamins, guarana, ginseng, ginkgo biloba, L-carnitine, sugars, antioxidants, yerba maté, creatine, and milk thistle. Although these ingredients have been approved by the FDA, health experts still recommend that consumers read their energy drinks' labels, as these ingredients may not improve health.
Health and wellness
"Health-conscious" individuals are among the target consumers of many functional beverage companies. To target these individuals, many companies have introduced functional beverages which contain less sugar, and therefore less calories. For example, VitaminWater 10 contains only 10 calories per serving. An entire bottle also contains 250% of the RDI of vitamin C, and 25% of the RDI of vitamins B3, B5, B6, and B12. VitaminWater 10 lowered its calorie content by using an all-natural sweetener extracted from the Stevia rebaudiana plant. This also makes it possible for the company to advertise VitaminWater 10 as "natural".Weight management
With increased worries about obesity and its implications on health, combined with consumer demand for convenience goods, consumer demand has increased for easy weight loss methods that can be easily integrated into daily lifestyles. Functional beverages are striving to market themselves as such, by adding ingredients that are claimed to promote weight loss.For example:
- Nestlé and The Coca-Cola Company have partnered to produce Enviga, which they describe as a "calorie-burning beverage".
- Skinny Water and Nutrisoda's Slenderized have both used a polyphenol called epigallocatechin gallate in their products for their " effect".
- A tea extract called "Blue California", which has a 95% EGCG content, is now on the market.
Sales
As of 2008, based on dollar sales, the most popular functional beverages, in order, were:- Health and wellness drinks, with 62.2% of dollar sales
- Hydration drinks
- Energy/Rejuvenation drinks
- Weight Management drinks
Consumer demographic
Health concerns
Health experts are concerned about the increased consumption and popularity of functional beverages. Although these beverages may serve to hydrate the individual, they may not mitigate or even address today's major health issues, such as obesity, heart disease, and cancer. Most functional beverages are sweetened, and consumption of sweetened beverages is associated with higher levels of obesity and heart disease. Most of these drinks contain significant amounts of sugars and hence calories, which would add to discretionary and total caloric intake. As such, these ingredients pose health risks because of what they contain or what they replace in the diet.Another set of concerns is that some functional beverages contain ingredients that have not been sufficiently studied for health benefits, safety, and dosage. At the same time, many functional beverages have higher levels of a certain ingredient, like caffeine—which, when consumed in large amounts, is associated with heart disease and cancer.
Sugar content
Many functional drinks have high levels of sugar, even if they have other "healthy" ingredients. For example, a 20oz bottle of Glacéau's VitaminWater has been reported to contain approximately 33 g of sugar, which is similar to the sugar content of a can of Coca-Cola. This prompted The Coca-Cola Company to be sued for claiming that VitaminWater was a healthy beverage.Given their sugar content, many functional beverages may not be as healthy an alternative as other commonly consumed beverages. In addition, the sugar content of such beverages promotes dental cavities amongst frequent users.