Keurig hangs growth on its new cold drink machine in Canada

New product serves soda and flavoured waters using K-cup technology
11/24/2015

You might be hard-pressed to remember the last time you cracked open a can of soda and thought to yourself: ``There's gotta be an easier way to drink this.''

Yet the problem that probably doesn't exist is now the project that Keurig is leaning its hopes on.

Nearly 18 years after the company revolutionized how coffee drinkers prepare their morning cup of joe, Keurig is searching for its next stage of growth amid dwindling sales of the Keurig brewer.

That's where Keurig Kold comes in.

The cheekily misspelled cold drink machine, which launched in Canada on Tuesday, promises to serve up ``fresh'' glasses of popular sodas and flavoured waters using a variation of the same K-cup technology from its coffee machines.

READ: Keurig turns to cold beverages with new machine

But there are several other distinct differences with the new cold drink-maker–in particular its lack of convenience and the price.

At a hulking 23.7 pounds, the Keurig Kold machine weighs almost as much as a small microwave oven and sells at more than twice the cost. Its suggested retail price is $399.99 in Canada.

Each K-cup makes 8 ounces of the beverage, a convenient serving, but that amounts to about $1.30 to $1.50 per glass. Simple math says that's more expensive than a 12-ounce can of soda.

"It's for the one that really wants to have a premium experience,'' said Keurig Canada president Stephane Glorieux when asked about the hefty costs that come with buying a Keurig Kold. "Although it seems very simple, there's a ton of technology behind this.''

READ: A Keurig machine for cocktails

The Keurig Kold is more complex than its predecessor, which boils up some water and shoots it through a plastic pod and into a cup.

Inside the Kold machine, an "aerospace-inspired'' contraption of thermoelectric conductors and a small propeller draw water from a reservoir up into the machine and help cool it to about four degrees Celsius, meaning ice is unnecessary.

Then the machine fires the liquid into a larger version of the K-cup, which stores both the flavour syrup and–in the case of some beverages–a new carbonated bead technology that adds the fizz.

The end result is a tasty and sweet treat that for a brief moment distracts from the reality that none of this process is really needed for a glass of soda or flavoured water.

Keurig built its reputation as a symbol of speed and convenience with machines that tucked into the corner of kitchen counters and eliminated the need to brew an entire pot of coffee just for one or two good cups.

The new machine is almost an antithesis to the company's early appeal. Aside from its large size, the Keurig Kold takes 90 seconds to make a beverage, which is a lot longer than it takes to pry open a can of Coke.

READ: Coffee pods: the new eco-villain

Keurig Kold launched in the U.S. earlier this fall, but in Canada it will only be available online through the Keurig website and a couple other retailers during the crucial holiday season. The company said it plans to be in Canadian retail stores next year.

The approach suggests that even the company's executives aren't entirely convinced the machine is going to be a hot seller.

"It's going to be a very structured approach to make sure that we build the install base,'' Glorieux said as he described the rollout. "This is not going to be a wild fire.''

Last week, Keurig Green Mountain Inc. chief executive Brian Kelley told investors the new machine is still in its infancy.

"We know that the first product we put out in a new technology is never going to be perfect,'' he said.

"Consumers want it to be smaller. They want it to be less expensive. They want to have more sizes of drinks available. They want a broader selection of drinks. They want all of the brands they are used to drinking, just like they have in Keurig hot.''

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