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Monday, 6 March 2017

How a cooker developed a cult following



Robert Wang was hoping to make it easier for people to 
make a decent meal - he didn't expect to create a cult following.

Last summer on Amazon Prime Day, the online retailer's global 24-hour annual sale event, one of the top-selling products in the US was a multi-function electric cooker.

The item in question is called the Instant Pot, and more 
than 215,000 of them were snapped up in the US on that single day.

The fact that this countertop appliance was outselling
 TVs and tablets may come as a surprise to many people, 
but not to its legions of dedicated fans, who express unabashed adoration.

"If you look at the Amazon reviews, one common word is 'love'," says Mr Wang.

"Americans are very open with their emotions. Love is all
 over the place. Another one is that 'Instant Pot changed my life'.

"That's actually rewarding to us - understanding that we
 have created value for society."

First available to buy in 2010, the Instant Pot has become
 a veritable craze, a success built through social media
 word-of- mouth instead of traditional TV or print advertising.

Today, the official Instant Pot Facebook group is nearly 398,000- people strong, and there are thousands of other online enthusiasts. Fans share recipes online and tips for making everything from soups, stews and chilli, to poached eggs,popcorn and cheesecake in the appliance.

Mr Wang says that from the beginning the intention was
 to let the product speak for itself, and build up sales thanks
 to customer recommendations rather than pay for advertising.

He describes this as the "build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door" marketing strategy.

All-in-one

The Instant Pot is the brainchild of Mr Wang and his friend 
Yi Qin, who are both veterans of the Canadian technology sector. Mr Wang had worked for the now-defunct telecoms group Nortel, while Mr Qin had been employed by Blackberry.

They were brainstorming ideas for a new project in 2008
 and realised people were searching for the same solution they were -a way to cook healthy meals for a family quickly and affordably.

That was when their attention turned to kitchen appliances and rebooting the pressure cooker.

They came up with the idea for the Instant Pot, which is
 a pressure cooker, slow cooker, rice cooker, steamer, 
saute pan, yogurt maker, warming pot all-in-one unit.

Together with three other partners, they set up a business called Double Insight in Ottawa, the Canadian capital, and
 the first version of Instant Pot was born in 2010.

"We have tried to automate cooking as much as possible
 and tried to simplify the cooker," says Mr Qin, who is the
 firm's vice president of product management. "One press
 of the button can cook the meal for the family."

The product was, however, not an immediate success. Mr
 Qin says that one problem was the "stigma" surrounding 
one of the Instant Pot's main functions: the fact that it can
 be used as a pressure cooker, which had long since fallen
 out of favour in North American kitchens.

"Most people have some concept of urban legends of exploding pressure cookers in their grandmother's kitchens," says Mr Qin.

He says they addressed the issue by making product
 safety a design priority, and making the Instant Pot as foolproof to use as possible.

Thanks to word of mouth, sales were growing well by
 2013 when Amazon started to sell the product, and sales
 shot up further.

"Amazon is a very practical company," says Mr Qin.
 "They didn't approach us until they saw that the [upward sales] trend had already formed."

'Tell three friends'

The online buzz surrounding the Instant Pot has been 
helped by food bloggers enthusiastically talking about the product, and sharing recipes, with their followers.

Some of these bloggers buy their own Instant Pot, while Double Insight gives the cookers to others to test out.

Laura Pazzaglia, from website Hip Pressure Cooking,
 says that she is not surprised by the gadget's success.

"Everybody who has an Instant Pot, they tell three friends about it," she says. "If you keep going like that, obviously 
you can't help but succeed."

Today Double Insight remains a small business with just
 25 employees, contracting out the manufacture of the product to a factory in China.

While the Instant Pot is facing increasing competition from rival products made by much larger appliance companies such as Breville and Black & Decker, Ms Pazzaglia says 
that Instant Pot's early start and vast online following gives
 it an edge.

Zeynep Arsel, associate professor of marketing at
 Montreal's Concordia University, says that the Instant Pot resonates with the trend towards healthy but uncomplicated food, and is boosted by "a textbook perfect buzz marketing campaign".

She adds: "Cooking is a social and emotional practice that
creates a lot of meaning in our lives.

"So a product that takes centre stage in cooking practices
 also creates a sense of attachment by being an agent in
 our social and emotional lives."

With the Instant Pot now on to its fourth iteration, its
 design development has been led by feedback and ideas submitted by users. With prices starting from $80 (£65) for the most basic model, the top-of-the-range $180 version
 can be controlled remotely via your mobile phone.

"This is not so much an Instant Pot story per se, this is
 every user's story," says Mr Qin. "Whenever you have an Instant Pot product, you have a story to tell."

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