Cheerio (company)

Cheerio Corporation (株式会社チェリオコーポレーション, Kabushiki Kaisha Cherio Kōporēshon) is a soft drink manufacturing company headquartered in Kyoto, Japan.

Headquarters

The main office was in Takatsuki, a suburb of Osaka. Their address is 3-7-13 Otsuka-machi, Takatsuki-shi, Osaka-fu 569-0034[1]

The president (selected by the board of directors) is Haruki Kan.

History

In August 1961, the 7-Up company headquarters for Japan was established in Takatsuki, with production facilities opening there in April 1963. The company changed its name to Kansai Cheerio (株式会社チェリオ関西, Kabushiki Kaisha Cherio Kansai) in April 1987, then consolidated with Tokyo Cheerio (株式会社チェリオ東京, Kabushiki Kaisha Cherio Tōkyō) and changed to its current name in February 1991.

In May 2001, Cheerio obtained a license to manufacture alcoholic beverages. In June that same year, Cheerio obtained certification for the growing and manufacturing of products labelled "organic."[2]

Products

  • Amino Safeguard
  • Cheerio (grape, orange, apple, melon)
  • For
  • Lifeguard
  • Lifeguard Jungleman X
  • Milkyway Coenzyme
  • Nihon no Cider
  • Safeguard
  • Sweet Kiss
  • Green tea, Black tea, Wholesome tea

Advertising slogan

The advertising slogan, 'Change it for Cheerio', can be found on vending machines, the sides of buildings, and in advertisements for Cheerio's products.[3]

gollark: Kind of. Not really. They seem to justify things a lot based on "god said so", which I don't consider sensible reasoning.
gollark: Deism?
gollark: Maybe? I don't really care.
gollark: That's basically the defining belief of most religions though? And the justification for believing in the religious book and such.
gollark: I, personally, consider myself tolerant of people who are tolerant of people who are tolerant of people who are tolerant of people to arbitrary depths of recursion.

References

  1. (in Japanese) See Company information Archived July 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed August 28, 2006.
  2. (in Japanese) See History of Cheerio Archived July 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed August 28, 2006.
  3. (in Japanese) See The Archive of Soft Drinks. Accessed August 28, 2006.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.