“Ketchup Fraud”: The Campaign That Called Out Dishonest Restaurants
Heinz’s “Ketchup Fraud” campaign, developed by Rethink, exposed a widespread but often overlooked practice: restaurants refilling the brand’s iconic bottles with lower-quality, cheaper sauces.
Heinz was the first to openly address this issue, doing so with a bold and highly conceptual idea. The campaign encouraged consumers to “report” these establishments while educating them to recognize the exact color of authentic Heinz ketchup—turning it into a “Label of Truth.” By using a precise, easily recognizable Pantone shade, the brand empowered consumers to verify authenticity at a glance.
Addressing the Problem
For decades, restaurants have sought cost-cutting strategies to maintain perceived quality. One of the most questionable practices has been refilling branded bottles with generic sauces, ultimately misleading consumers.
Heinz tackled the issue head-on. “Ketchup Fraud” brought visibility to a practice that had long gone unchallenged. At the heart of the campaign was “The Label of Truth,” a clever packaging redesign that added a strip featuring Heinz’s exact signature red Pantone. This allowed consumers to instantly compare the color of the ketchup inside the bottle—if it didn’t match, it wasn’t Heinz.
Once again, the campaign highlights the powerful role of packaging as a communication tool—capable of sparking conversation, building trust, and reinforcing brand authenticity.
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