AB InBev to roll out Hoegaarden Rosee rebranding in Thailand amid success with female consumers

Hoegaarden Rosee was first created and launched in 2007, and this is the first time after 13 years that AB InBev has sought to upgrade the beer’s image.

“We’re doing this rebranding in Asia first as we’ve just seen a lot of growth in the Asia Pacific region and especially ASEAN,”​ AB InBev General Manager for Thailand, Philippines and Indonesia Dominic Kirk told FoodNavigator-Asia​.

“The aim is to accentuate the key ingredient we use which is raspberry, as we often find that consumers don’t actually know that the pinkness comes from raspberry [and it is often mistaken for other berries] – so we have really made the raspberry front and centre in the new packaging design, and also altered the colour gradient from the previous bright pink to a more raspberry colour.

“The idea is also for it to seem more hip, contemporary and up-to-date, given that this is the first time we’re doing a rebranding after so many years.”

Hoegaarden Rosee is a wheat beer infused with raspberry juice from Europe, with a sweeter taste than regular beer and a pink colouration that has drawn a primarily female audience. Thailand is the firm’s main market for this raspberry pink beer.

“Roughly 50% of the consumer base for Hoegaarden Rosee in Thailand is female, much higher than for the regular Hoegaarden White. Some 30% is male, and the remaining 20% or so is LGBT,”​ said Kirk.

“Apart from the pink colour and sweetness, this could also be because it is much easier on the palate and has a lower alcohol content (3% ABV) than Hoegaarden White (4.9% ABV).