
The world’s first 100 percent biodegradable chip packet attracted a lot of noise last week, but not the buzz that SunChips’ maker FritoLay had been hoping for.
Nearly 40,000 people have signed up to a Facebook group criticizing the packaging material, plant-based polylactic acid (PLA), for being too loud. It is said to biodegrade in as little as 14 weeks, while conventional chip packets typically take over 100 years.
Can there really be 40,000 people who would prefer to add to our ever-growing mountain of waste than buy an extra-crispy chip packet? Are we really that shallow?
Sadly, it seems so.
“The loudest, most annoying bag on the planet.” That’s how one Facebook user describes the new compostable SunChips bag – and she’s not alone. But its makers are doing a great job of rejecting the ruckus.
Backed into a corner, the company has incorporated the reaction into its marketing strategy, attaching signs to store shelves that read: “Yes, the bag is loud. That’s what change sounds like.”
Nicely played, I say.
“Worst chip bag for stoners”
Among the more common complaints, fans of the SORRY BUT I CAN’T HEAR YOU OVER THIS SUNCHIPS BAG Facebook page claim that the bag does not allow them to indulge in midnight snacking without waking others in the house; the bag scares their pets; and a fair number of marijuana smokers say that the noise is freaking them out, man.
Albeit in a depressing way, it’s a funny story, so the anti-crunch crusade has been helped on by the media, with the Today Show mocking the bags for being louder than a New York subway train.
The sound of change
But there are lessons to be learned here. Despite the fracas from froth-mouthed Facebook fanatics, most of us would welcome more biodegradable packaging.
Market research organization Mintel recently found that 43 percent of consumers said they were likely to buy SunChips on the back of their strong eco-friendly positioning.
However, the question Mintel didn’t ask is how many would still buy SunChips if the package is eco-friendly and annoying. FritoLay should have asked that question earlier.
One posting typical of those on the Facebook group reads: “1 week after the change I stopped buying SunChips. Used to eat 2-4 bags a week. No more! I want silence to sit and enjoy my snack, not an evil bag that makes horrible noise even sitting still!!!!!”
That’s a hardcore chip-eater, and he’s angry.
Time to listen up
This is not the first time a social network has spoken up about their dislike of a product and companies are beginning to realize that they need to listen.
PepsiCo (incidentally FritoLay’s parent company) had a similar experience with its Tropicana juice packaging, which drew such heavy criticism via Twitter that the company withdrew the new design just weeks after it was introduced. Talk about an expensive gaffe.
This is not just a repeat of that blunder – this time the stakes are higher.
Compostable packaging is an important innovation. FritoLay cannot withdraw the packaging without upsetting the (hopefully many) people who actually care that it has developed a product to help deal with our mountainous waste problem. Its challenge now is to ensure that doing the right thing remains profitable.
Bravo to FritoLay for its reaction so far. The company now says it is actively trying to address the issue, and is currently working on quieter packaging.
As its researchers look for a solution I, for one, applaud their work. Please join me so they can hear over this SunChips bag.
Caroline Scott-Thomas is a journalist specializing in the food industry. Prior to completing a Masters degree in journalism at Edinburgh's Napier University, she had spent five years working as a chef.





8 comments (Comments are now closed)
Bag noise
Thanks to these bags I was kicked out of the library for rest of my life.I will never eat these chips again.
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Posted by fred
21 September 2010 | 22h01
95+ Decibels Isn't Whining
Being "Earth Friendly" shouldn't "Harm Human Hearing". I'm all for Green Products but they need to work and make sense. Marketing a bag as loud as a Subway doesn't make sense. Talk to the people at Boulder Canyon Foods about non-offensive biodegradable packaging. As whining about whining...when people complained about slow computers, companies made them faster.
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Posted by Owww My Ears Hurt
07 September 2010 | 21h51
Compostable isn't an improvement
The missed point here is that the packaging is compostable and requires a minimum of 145 degrees F. to decompose in 14 weeks. This doesn't happen in a back yard compost pile and certainly doesn't happen in a landfill. This packaging is an eco improvement.
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Posted by JW Sutton
02 September 2010 | 18h50
The Whining is Too Loud
OK, so the Sun Chips bag IS loud. Boo-hoo! Give Frito Lay credit for spending the money and manpower to do the right thing, while you've been lounging around, feeling sorry for yourself and looking for something to complain about while you're high.
If you want to know why companies hesitate to innovate, it's partly because they're worried about getting slammed by self-righteous whiners if they don't meet your inflated expectations on the first try.
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Posted by Bunny
28 August 2010 | 02h37
Is there no hope for the future?
Really? C'mon America! Your chip bag is too noisy??? I guess asking you to turn your AC down a couple of notches in the summer, or to put on a sweater instead of cranking the heat in the winter would be out of the question if it comes at the sacrifice of your comfort. And the concept of Reduce/Reuse/Recycle is just ludicrous since there's obviously nothing in it for you. Would it be too much to ask for you to pick up some Kleenex for me as you climb into your 10 mpg SUV for groceries packed in non-recyclable plastic so I can weep for our future?
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Posted by Jam Master A
26 August 2010 | 18h15
America - Think Please...
1. Dump some chips in bowl or paper napkin.
2. Close bag with left chips and put in cupboard.
3. Eat chips as usual.
4. Noise is from chomping chips, instead of bag, which you're all used to — problem solved.
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Posted by Virginia
24 August 2010 | 05h17
Narcissism at its Finest
I cannot believe how juvenile certain consumers are acting about all this. You're making a mountain out of a mole hill, and you ought to be ashamed of yourselves. Narcissism can be defined as a psychological condition characterized by self-preoccupation, lack of empathy, and/or a regression to an infantile stage of development. Putting one's slight improvement in personal comfort ahead of an improved environment seems to fit that definition. I echo the previous comment: well done, Frito Lay!
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Posted by Bill
23 August 2010 | 22h20
Noise
It sounds to me like sour grapes from the opposition? I still think its a GOOD change and commend them for it! WELL DONE!!
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Posted by John Fox
23 August 2010 | 20h08
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