
Bob Vlasic understood that advertising works when competitors didn't. Spent more on marketing than all pickle rivals combined. Built a premium brand from a commodity — hit 26% market share and $100M in sales by 1977.
Campbell spun out Vlasic with $500M in debt to pay themselves a dividend, installing a first-time CEO into a turnaround. Desperate for growth to service debt and please shareholders, Vlasic launched a $2.97 gallon jar promotion with Walmart. It torched margins, eroded the premium brand, and made them entirely dependent on one buyer.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January 2001, just 3 years after the Walmart deal. Sold to rival Heinz for $195M — pennies on the dollar. Brand survives today but as a cautionary tale.