Accounting Customer service Hiring & human resources Legal Management Raising money Sales & marketing Selling a business Startup Technology Small & Global How We Got Started Biz Books Innovators Owner Tested Tech Edge Best Bosses Next Little Thing Startup Showdown Current Issue Archive
Complete Coverage FORTUNE SMALL BUSINESS Innovators

Behind Coors' color-changing beer cans

An ink-stained entrepreneur revamps beer labels and CD cases.

EMAIL  |   PRINT  |   SHARE  |   RSS
 
google my aol my msn my yahoo! netvibes
Paste this link into your favorite RSS desktop reader
See all CNNMoney.com RSS FEEDS (close)

coors_cans.03.jpg
CTI's ink turns the mountains blue on cold cans of Coors.
cd.jpg
On Chickenfoot's debut CD, song titles and images appear when the cover is exposed to heat or light.
What's most important to you when choosing where to live?
  • Good jobs
  • Affordable homes
  • Top schools
  • Low crime
  • Things to do
Photos
Startups defying the downturn
Think you have what it takes to start a business during a recession? These 8 entrepreneurs are giving it a shot, with mixed results.

(Fortune Small Business) -- As an undergraduate at Cornell University, Lyle Small annoyed his housemates by spending days on end painting their Ping-Pong table in rainbow shades of ink. He brewed chemicals to create inks that changed hue when exposed to light and heat.

"I got obsessed," says Small, now 41. "I thought all printing inks should change color."

Two decades later his passion is paying dividends. Small's Colorado Springs company, Chromatic Technologies Inc. (CTI), is booming while rivals in the ink industry are cutting back. Music distributors, foodmakers and the beer giant MillerCoors are using Small's color-changing ink to make their packaging stand out. CTI landed 120 new customers in 2008. Small expects sales to double this year, to $10 million.

Thanks to CTI's ink, the mountains on Coors Light cans turn blue when the beer reaches optimal drinking temperature (roughly 43°-50°F). Coors (TAP, Fortune 500) already used color-changing ink on paper labels for bottles, but the brewer had struggled to find a contractor that could create the same effect on cans. "CTI is the only one that delivered," says Ray Toms, a MillerCoors scientist who worked on the project. MillerCoors signed a two-year contract to buy all of its ink for cans from CTI. The beer company will account for 40% of Small's revenue this year.

The deal took persistence. When CTI first approached Coors in 2001, Small couldn't guarantee that the ink would work in high-volume production. Coors printed 20 million cans of Coors Light every day; any downtime would be costly. So Small arranged painstaking tests in canning factories in eight countries. Three years later he was ready to ink a deal.

The brewer's faith has paid off. Amid flat beer industry sales, Coors Light saw 3% growth this year. The color-changing artwork is prominently featured in the company's TV ads.

"It's resonating with consumers," says Benj Steinman, publisher of Beer Marketer's Insight.

In May, CTI announced another high-profile deal, this time in the music industry. Chickenfoot -- a rock supergroup fronted by Sammy Hagar -- signed with CTI to use its ink on the band's debut CD. Song titles and images of the band members appear on the cover when it's exposed to heat or light -- or merely touched.

"The band is just loving it," says Todd Gallopo, who designed the cover and owns Los Angeles design firm Meat and Potatoes. "Specialty packaging is where it's at" -- especially in an industry with slipping CD sales.

CTI also produces inks that glow in the dark, change color in the sun or transform when tilted in the light. For a recent sweepstakes, Dairy Queen used CTI's ink on its Blizzard cups; when placed in sunlight the cups revealed whether they were winners.

More recently CTI signed deals with Hite beer in Korea, Carlsberg beer in Hong Kong, Skol beer in Brazil and Pizza Hut in New Zealand and Mexico. This year's mission: Expand international operations to 50% of the company's business by tackling customers in India, Japan, Malaysia and Russia. Small says his six-person sales staff has been able to close deals with foreign brewers in six months -- half the time it takes in the U.S.

The MillerCoors deal seems to have opened a lot of doors, and the color-changing sunlight is shining in.  To top of page

To write a note to the editor about this article, click here.

  • charles_ellis.04.jpg
    Detroit's churches are plowing millions into redeveloping local housing and businesses. More
  • bplaunch_2009.04.jpg
    These 50 metro areas have all the features entrepreneurs need to thrive. More
  • cozy_with_customer.ju.04.jpg
    Follow our road map to generate game-changing ideas for your business. More
  • winepod_1.04.jpg
    Winepod attracted a wait list of eager buyers and millions from investors. Then came the recession. More
  • wells_fargo__sf.04.jpg
    As other major banks withdrew, Wells Fargo stepped up its small business lending. More
  • lcorona_motorcycle.04.jpg
    Designer Chuck Comeau set up his manufacturing in Plainville -- 240 miles away from a major airport.  More
  • diego_son_printing.04.jpg
    As staffs shrink, business owners are taking on support duties they haven't had to handle in years. More



QWe've run a dinner theater for three decades. We've been operating at a loss for the last couple of years, and are unable to get a bank loan. We own the land and the theater building, and have put them up for sale with no success. We even closed the theater for two months this summer to save money. We don't know what to do. More
Get Answer
- Kyle, Sarasota, Fla.

Sponsors
More Galleries
What I bought with my $8,000 tax credit These 7 new homeowners stepped up their house-hunting to take advantage of the first-time buyer tax credit. More
Then and now: 'The worst slum in America' Charlotte Street in New York City's South Bronx was once world famous for its blight. Now it's a slice of suburbia in the inner city - complete with Beemers and boats. More
Hope for homeowners Critics thought homeownership would never work in the South Bronx. They were wrong. Tour the one house currently for sale on Charlotte Street. More

© 2009 Cable News Network. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2009 BigCharts.com Inc. All rights reserved. Please see our Terms of Use.
MarketWatch, the MarketWatch logo, and BigCharts are registered trademarks of MarketWatch, Inc.
Intraday data provided by Interactive Data Real-Time Services and subject to the Terms of Use.
Intraday data is at least 20-minutes delayed. All times are ET.
Historical, current end-of-day data, and splits data provided by Interactive Data Pricing and Reference Data.
Fundamental data provided by Morningstar, Inc..
SEC Filings data provided by Edgar Online Inc..
Earnings data provided by FactSet CallStreet, LLC.