Allen's (confectionery)

Allen's is an Australian brand of confectionery products produced by Nestlé. It is best known for Minties, a soft chewable mint-flavored confectionery, and their varieties of 'Party Mix' lollies.

Allen's
Product typeConfectionery
OwnerNestlé
CountryAustralia
Introduced1891 (1891)
MarketsAustralia
Previous ownersMacRobertson's
Rothmans Holdings
Registered as a trademark inNestlé
Allen's
TaglineA little bit of fun since 1891
Websitenestle.com.au/brands/allens

History

Allen's was founded by Alfred Weaver Allen (1870–1925), a Melbourne confectioner. Originally employed by MacRobertson's, he commenced confectionery production in 1891 at his Fitzroy confectionery shop. By 1909, Allen's was the third largest confectionery business in Melbourne, after those of MacRobertson and Abel Hoadley. It launched as a public company in 1922 and erected a vast factory to the design of prominent Melbourne architect Joseph Plottel in South Melbourne on the banks of the Yarra River, where its animated neon sign was a local landmark up to its demise in 1987.[1]

Allen's abandoned chocolate production after World War II, however it became Australia's largest confectionery company.[2] Allen's was purchased by UK-based Rothmans Holdings in 1985,[3][4] and later sold to Nestlé. Allen's is the top brand of sugar confectionery in Australia.[5]

Products

Current

  • Bananas
  • Fantales
  • Jaffas
  • Classic Party Mix
  • Party Mix
  • Retro Party Mix
  • Jelly Beans
  • Killer Pythons
  • Sherbies
  • Kool Mints
  • Snakes Alive
  • Minties
  • Frogs Alive
  • Chicos
  • Strawberries & Cream
  • Pineapples
  • Milkos
  • Freckles
  • Jelly Tots
  • All About Red
  • Jungle Stretchies
  • Sea Stretchies
  • Peaches & Cream
  • Milk bottles
  • Ripe raspberries

Former

  • Bursting Bees
  • Spearmint Leaves - discontinued in 2015 due to poor sales
  • Green Frogs - discontinued in 2015 due to poor sales
  • Spearmint - similar to Red Skins and Milkos

Adjustments to product lines

In October 2014, Allen's reduced the size of the 'Killer Python' product in order to reduce its portion size. It shrunk from 47 grams (630kJ) to 24 grams (336kJ). The price of the snake was also adjusted accordingly.[6]

In June 2015 the 'Spearmint Leaves' and 'Green Frogs' product lines were discontinued as they were not selling. Spokesperson for Allen's parent company Nestlé, Margaret Stuart, has said that the 'Red Frogs' "outsell the green 10 to one".[7]

gollark: While sufficiently large/powerful organizations can probably get around whatever security measures you're using *somehow*, I think current security stuff can be good enough that this is impractical and won't really happen.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: Well, yes, probably.
gollark: As far as I can tell, basically every website supports HTTPS nowadays, but DNS over HTTPS is still rare partly because of governments and ISPs being annoying about it.
gollark: I mean generally. Look at DNS. They didn't even have DNS over HTTPS or DNSSEC until fairly recently, and they're still not widely used.

References

  1. , accessed 6 September 2015
  2. Allen Alfred Weaver. Australian Dictionary of Biography, accessed 7 October 2011.
  3. Confectionery. eMelbourne, accessed 7 October 2011.
  4. Sweet-talking foreigners corner lolly Market, The Age, 28 June 1985 (https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1300&dat=19850628&id=TTRVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ApUDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5632,5921314&safe=strict&hl=en)
  5. Keeping it sweet. Convenience and Impulse Retailing, Jan/Feb 2010.
  6. Evershed, Nick (October 10, 2014). "Killer python downsize: how the new and old lollies measure up". The Guardian. The Guardian. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
  7. "Spearmint Leaves, Green Frogs lollies on way out, but Sherbies and Oddfellows safe, Allen's says". ABC News. ABC (Australia). June 30, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
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