The Snapple Story: From Brooklyn Side Hustle to Long Island Icon

Before it was sitting in deli coolers across Long Island, Snapple started as a side hustle run by three Brooklyn entrepreneurs with no experience in the beverage business. What began as a small operation selling natural drinks to health food stores turned into one of the most recognizable brands of the 1990s with a few unexpected twists along the way.

History

  • Snapple was established in 1972 by Leonard Marsh, Hyman Golden, and Arnold Greenberg
  • A fourth early backer reportedly exited the business under disputed circumstances before it took off
  • The company’s original name was Unadulterated Food Products, Inc.
  • In its early days, the business operated as a side project for its founders
  • None of the founders had prior experience producing juice
  • Marsh once joked he knew as much about juice-making as he did about building an atomic bomb
  • Marsh and Golden were brothers-in-law who also ran a window-cleaning business
  • Greenberg owned a health food store in Manhattan’s East Village
  • The original goal was to supply natural beverages to health food stores in New York City
  • The name “Snapple” came later, borrowed from an unsuccessful drink flavor
  • The word “Snapple” combines “snappy” and “apple”
  • The brand name had already been registered by a small Texas company
  • The founders purchased the rights to the name for $500
  • One early product was a carbonated apple drink called Snapple
  • Fermentation caused pressure buildup in the bottles, sometimes forcing the caps off
  • The same fermentation process led to slight alcohol formation in the drink
  • Golden later remarked, “We’d made Champagne.”
  • During the 1980s, the company experienced rapid expansion, with sales more than doubling annually
  • A key factor in that growth was the launch of brewed iced tea products
  • Snapple introduced its Lemon Iced Tea in 1987
  • Greenberg described it as one of the first fully brewed teas rather than a powdered mix
  • In 1989, revenue from noncarbonated beverages jumped 600% in the first half of the year
  • The company relocated its headquarters from Brooklyn to Long Island in 1991
  • Snapple gained exposure through radio ads featuring Howard Stern and Rush Limbaugh before their peak notoriety
  • In the early 1990s, the company dealt with damaging false rumors, including claims tying it to extremist groups
  • The brand slogan became “Made from the Best Stuff on Earth.”
  • Snapple went public in 1992, pricing shares at $20
  • Four million shares were sold, with the price rising to $33
  • In 1994, Quaker Oats Company acquired Snapple for $1.7 billion in cash
  • At the time, Snapple generated roughly $700 million in annual sales
  • Quaker sold the brand in 1997 for $300 million to Triarc Companies
  • All three original founders have since died

Wendy the Snapple Lady

  • In the early 1990s, Snapple commercials prominently featured the “Snapple Lady”
  • The role was played by real employee Wendy Kaufman
  • Kaufman read and responded to letters sent in by customers
  • She originally worked in the order department and took it upon herself to answer fan mail
  • Her efforts caught the attention of the company’s advertising agency
  • She was promoted to on-camera spokesperson
  • Her job title at one point included “Order Department Administrator, Marketing Associate, original Letter-Opener and official Snapple Lady”
  • She appeared in 36 television commercials
  • Kaufman attended Lawrence High School in Cedarhurst
  • She has said that being ignored after writing to the actor who played Greg Brady inspired her to respond to every Snapple fan letter
  • At its peak, Snapple received about 500 letters per day
  • The company eventually hired another employee with the same name to help manage the volume
  • In 2016, Kaufman revealed she had struggled with a drug addiction prior to her rise as the brand’s spokesperson

Flavors

  • At one stage, the company offered 59 different beverage varieties
  • Peach Tea has consistently ranked as Snapple’s most popular flavor
  • Discontinued flavors have included Papaya Colada and Lime Green Tea
  • Developing a new flavor typically took between six months and one year
  • The Guava Mania flavor nearly launched under alternate names like Guava Vavoom or Guava Nagila

Snapple Facts

  • The idea for Snapple’s famous bottle cap trivia reportedly emerged during a routine marketing meeting
  • In 2002, the company began printing “Real Facts” beneath bottle caps
  • The concept was designed to use the unused space under the cap for short, engaging trivia
  • The first printed fact stated that a goldfish’s attention span is three seconds
  • That original fact has since been retired
  • Nearly 1,100 different facts have been created, with about 256 circulating at any given time
  • The company introduces roughly 75 to 100 new facts each year
  • Many facts have been revised or removed following updated research and customer feedback
  • A full list of facts is available on Snapple’s website
  • Sample facts have included:
    • Mosquitoes are more attracted to people who have recently eaten bananas
    • The average woman consumes about six pounds of lipstick over her lifetime
    • Americans collectively eat the equivalent of 18 acres of pizza each day
    • Licking a stamp burns approximately 10 calories
  • Some of these facts have been criticized as outdated, exaggerated, or incorrect
  • Various media outlets have conducted independent fact-checks on Snapple’s trivia
  • Consumers can text “REALFACT” to 762-775 to receive daily facts by phone

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