Milka is a Swiss
brand of
chocolate confectionery. Originally made in
Switzerland in 1901 by
Suchard, it has been produced in
Lörrach, Germany, from 1901.[3][4] Since 2012 it has been owned by US-based company
Mondelez International, when it started following the steps of its predecessor
Kraft Foods Inc., which had taken over the brand in 1990.[5][6] It is sold in bars and a number of novelty shapes for
Easter and
Christmas.[7] Products with the Milka brand also include chocolate-covered
cookies and
biscuits.[8]
The brand's name is a
portmanteau of the product's two main ingredients: "Milch" (milk) and "Kakao" (cocoa).[9]
History
On November 17, 1825, Swiss
chocolatierPhilippe Suchard (1797–1884) established a
pâtisserie in
Neuchâtel where he sold a hand-made
dessert, chocolat fin de sa fabrique.[10] The following year, Suchard founded
Chocolat Suchard and moved production to nearby Serrières, where he produced 25–30 kg of chocolate daily in a rented former water mill. During the 1890s, milk was added to Suchard's chocolate,[11] closely following the launch of the Gala Peter brand, founded by
Daniel Peter, another Swiss chocolatier.
Carl Russ-Suchard, Philippe Suchard's son-in-law, invented the Milka brand in 1901.[12] The first "Milka" chocolate was packaged in the distinctive
lilac-colored packaging.[13] Their products were introduced in Austria in the 1910s in order to spread popularity, and by 1913 the company was producing 18 times more chocolate than they did when at the original plant in 1880.[13] By the 1920s Milka had introduced limited edition themed chocolates. Themes were related around holidays such as Christmas and Easter and had chocolate cast into the shape of Santa Claus, Christmas ornaments, Easter bunnies and various sizes of Easter eggs.[13] By the 1960s the Milka script logo and its lilac packaging was trademarked, quickly becoming Germany’s number one chocolate. Over the next few decades, Milka chocolate enlarged in bigger portions and improved their selection of chocolate products.
In 1970, Suchard merged with
Tobler to become Interfood.[14] Interfood merged with the
Jacobs coffee company in 1982, becoming Jacobs Suchard.[15] Kraft Foods acquired Jacobs Suchard, including Milka, in 1990.[5][6] In 1995 Milka officially became a ski sponsor and would later become one of the most famous sport sponsors after the FIS Alpine Cup that was held in Lienz.[13] In October 2012, Kraft spun off its snack food division, which was renamed Mondelēz International.[16] In 2016, they further expanded their market into China.[9]
Milka has put focus on "tenderness" being their main advertising theme since the 1960s.[9] In 1972, the Milka cow named Lila[9] ("Lila" being German for lilac, purple, violet.) became the face of their advertising campaigns and has remained so to the current day. Milka has sponsored many alpine skiing stars since 1995, including five World and Olympic champions.[9] In 2015, Milka used a lilac-colored boat with Lila the mascot on it to tour the rivers of Germany and Austria during the summer. This boat was dubbed the "Muhboot" (pronounced Moo-boat),[9] a pun on "U-Boot" (German for submarine).
Products
Milka is sold in a number of packages and flavors, according to where it is purchased:[21][22]
^
abcdEconimist Intelligence (1998). "Marketing in Europe". Marketing in Europe. Group 3, Chemists' Goods, Household Goods, Domestic Appliances. London: The Unit: 103.
ISSN0025-3723.
Hollis, Nigel (2008). The Global Brand: How to Create and Develop Lasting Brand Value in the World (1st ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
ISBN9780230606227.