Star Tribune: To stand out in the dairy aisle, Land O’Lakes is hitting the runway.
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Land O’Lakes staged a “farmcore-to-table” runway show last month in rural Paris, Wis., as part of an ongoing farmcore ad campaign meant to appeal to younger consumers. (Provided by Land O’Lakes/Land O’Lakes)
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Star Tribune: To stand out in the dairy aisle, Land O’Lakes is hitting the runway.
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The national butter brand recently staged a fashion show in Paris, Wis., featuring models in field-worn jackets, jeans and overalls — sourced from the cooperative’s farmers — in an ad campaign meant to “bring the farmcore aesthetic to life,” said Chief Marketing Officer Heather Malenshek.
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“We have a very loyal customer base, but we also want to reach a younger audience,” she said. “Like everybody, we’re trying to find innovative ways to get people’s attention.”
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So Arden Hills-based Land O’Lakes is going all-in on farmcore, a social media trend that romanticizes rural life with chic workwear.
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“We’re having clothing be the star of the show so we can tell the stories of our farmer-owners in different ways,” Malenshek said.
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Fourth-generation Winona County farmer Becky Clark told the company she donated work gloves “because we do a lot of hard and dirty work with our hands.”
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Clark wore the gloves when rebuilding her blizzard-battered barn in 2019.
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“I also thought about what my grandpa would have donated, and I think he would’ve picked his shoes,” she said. “He wore those out so much they had a hole in them, but he just wore a sandwich bag over his socks instead of getting a new pair.”
All the donated items carry tags with short stories about their owners to connect the food to the farmer — a long-running theme in Land O’Lakes advertising.
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“Farmers are the backbone of our nation, but are not always thought of when you’re buying a pound of butter or a bag of shredded cheese,” Pat Dunneback, group brand director at ad agency Battery, said in a news release.
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Founded in 1902, the Land O’Lakes has more than 1,000 farmer-owners and last year had $16.8 billion in revenue.
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Flexible schedules for manufacturing employees are paying off for Land O’Lakes
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The farmcore campaign launched in September to coincide with Paris Fashion Week, and the results so far are promising, Malenshek said.
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Land O’Lakes’ “Eat it like you own it” campaign for Land O’Lakes has given a 26% “purchase intent lift” among younger consumers, according to Battery, the agency behind it.
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Malenshek said it’s hard to stand out “in what is essentially a commodity category” when the biggest differences among direct butter and cheese competitors might be the name on the label or the price.
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Growing dairy brands like Tillamook have quickly won favor with Gen Z and millennial shoppers, Malenshek said.
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As the “big guy” in the market, Land O’Lakes needs to keep telling its story to connect with more of those younger consumers, she said.
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“‘Eat it like you own it’ is helping to tell that story about farmer ownership,” she said. “These younger consumers really do care about brands making some difference in the world.”
Same buttery scenery, no “Mia, the Butter Maiden.” Land O’Lakes announced the change without mentioning her absence.Land O’Lakes
We wouldn’t blame you if you didn’t notice anything different about Land O’Lakes.
But something’s missing: “Mia,” Land O’Lakes’ braided, buckskin-wearing “Butter Maiden” mascot, depicted sitting and proffering dairy products for nearly a century. It’s as if one day she just stood up and walked away.
This “butter with olive oil” package from 2009 includes the company’s mascot, Mia.Land O’Lakes
Mia had appeared on the Arden Hills-based co-op’s packaging since 1928, when she was first dreamed up by a St. Paul advertising firm. In the 1950s, she got a redesign by Patrick DesJarlait, the same prolific Ojibwe artist from Red Lake who designed the Hamm’s Brewery bear.
In February, the Fortune 500 company announced the package redesign, highlighting its farmer-owned history with photos of actual Land O’Lakes farmers. It failed to mention where Mia had gone. Minnesota Reformer, which noticed the change earlier this week, also points out she’s been scrubbed from the company’s website.
Mia didn’t exist in a vacuum. Americana is saturated in portrayals of Native people, usually by corporations in an attempt to sell things to white people. Depending on how each image was deployed, they came to be industrial symbols of integrity, or oneness with nature, or at their skeeviest, sexual purity.
As Adrienne Keene, a professor at Brown University and the creator of the popular Native Appropriations Blog, told the Reformer, this is a “great move” for a lot of Native folks who have been forced to watch companies use cartoonish visions of their culture to sell butter, cigarettes, and motorcycles.
Meanwhile, Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, who is a citizen of the White Earth Nation of Ojibwe, praised the decision on Wednesday.
“Native people are not mascots or logos,” she tweeted. “We are very much still here.”
Thank you to Land O’Lakes for making this important and needed change. Native people are not mascots or logos. We are very much still here. https://minnesotareformer.com/2020/04/15/land-olakes-quietly-gets-rid-of-iconic-indian-maiden/ …
Land O’Lakes quietly gets rid of iconic Indian maiden mascot – Minnesota Reformer
For nearly a century, the Land O’Lakes Indian maiden has kneeled by the side of a blue lake holding out an offering of a 4-stick box of butter. No more. The Minnesota-based farmer cooperative…
minnesotareformer.com
That explains what Land O’Lakes is changing to, but without acknowledging what it’s changing from—arguably one of the more recognizable labels in the grocery store. To Keene, it’s a missed opportunity.
“It could have been a very strong and positive message to have publicly said, ‘We realized after a hundred years that our image was harmful and so we decided to remove it,” Keene said. “In our current cultural moment, that’s something people would really respond to.”