Morton Salt proved you can brand a commodity by branding table salt under a trademark that goes back to the 1940s
“There is no such thing as a commodity,” Harvard Business School guru Ted Levitt once opined. “All goods and services can be differentiated.”Morton Salt proved that premise by branding table salt, under a trademark that goes back to the 1940s, and the tagline, “When it rains it pours.” But now, good old sodium chloride comes in a mouth-watering variety of brand names.
Check out a gourmet food shop or upscale restaurant, and you’ll find that once-humble salt has moved to the center of the table. As the owner of four-star restaurants in New York City and Yountville, California, told Time Magazine: “Salt is the most important seasoning ingredient there is.”
Which might account for the emergence of such brands as:
* Alderwood Smoked, a dark brown salt intended for burgers and salmon.
* Australian Pink, mild and snowflake shaped.
* Bolivian Rose, extracted by hand in the Andes mountains, colored by minerals in the earth.
* Cyprus Black, white sea salt from the Mediterranean, mixed with charcoal.
* Fleur de Sel, a pricey option from Williams-Sonoma ($10.50 for 8.8 ounces).
* Hawaiian Red, intensely flavored, colored by natural clay.
Thanks to Naming Guru Steve Rivkin. Click Here for Steve's link. Back to Insights