Starr Ranch Growers partners with emoji company for fruit branding

Oneonta Starr Ranch Growers is partnering with the German-based emoji company to use the brand icons on the company’s apples, pears, and cherries.

DCC3AAE1-7787-413D-B38FC0E3D5F57E85.png
DCC3AAE1-7787-413D-B38FC0E3D5F57E85.png
(Starr Ranch Growers)

Oneonta Starr Ranch Growers is partnering with the German-based emoji company to use the brand icons on the company’s apples, pears, and cherries.

Starting this summer, a deal brokered by the emoji company and its North American licensing agent, Retail Monster, will allow the Wenatchee-based tree fruit marketer to include emoji brand icons on fresh fruit, according to a news release.

For example, the release said emoji icons will be used on packages of top-selling varieties such as gala, Honeycrisp and fuji in an “apple snaq” pouch bag.

“The powerful and expressive emoji brand icons are known by everyone,” Brett Reasor, CEO of Starr Ranch Growers, said in the release. “They encourage real-time engagement and add a personal element to our marketing strategy. We are thrilled to use the official Emoji brand icons on packaging to speak to younger demographics and foster two-way communication.”

Krista Beckstead, marketing and brand specialist for the company, said in the release that emoji brand icons hike engagement for social media marketers.

Facebook posts that use icons receive 57% more likes and 33% more comments and shares than those without them, and tweets with icons have a 25% higher engagement rate, Beckstead said in the release.

Marco Huesges, CEO and founder of the emoji company, said the company is happy to support Starr Ranch in the work to make healthy eating fun. “This is a great partnership that will reach shoppers across the United States,” he said in the release.

Related articles

Mexico dominates Northwest pear export business

Organic apples continue growth in certain production regions

Apple marketers continue to target ‘local’ buyers

The Packer logo (567x120)
Related Stories
By eliminating the manual blind spots of traditional tracking, real-time wireless automation is helping retailers protect fresh food quality and slash spoilage.
After intense social media backlash over microscopic stock and confusing digital checkout lines, Aldi is attempting to make amends by dropping 5,000 additional “Encore” Blind Boxes on Friday.
The company says it’s leveraging its more than 25 years of supply chain expertise to help grower-packer-shippers, retailers, foodservice operators and distributors simplify the supply chain, reduce food waste, optimize inventory levels, mitigate compliance risk and increase profitably.
Read Next
Driven by a consumer desire for health, sustainability and transparency, the sector is experiencing remarkable market growth, which growers are meeting through third-party certifications, supply chain management and high-volume, reliable retail programs.
Get Daily News
GET MARKET ALERTS
Get News & Markets App