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1 History  





2 Products  





3 References  














Tymbark (company)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Tymbark
HeadquartersWarsaw, Poland

Tymbark SA, is a Polish fruit- juice beverage company. Its products are mainly available in all of 16 Polish voivodeships as well as in most of Germany. Tymbark is also a fruit and vegetable processing plant (launched in 1936 as a cooperative Owocarska, nationalized in 1950, and in 1995 was turned into a shareholder company of the State Treasury, now known as Podhale Company Food Industry "Tymbark" SA). Tymbark is a major producer of fruit and vegetable juices as well as jams, marmalades and fruit wines. In 1999, the company became part of Grupa Maspex Wadowice.[1] The Tymbark brand was listed as Poland's 15th most popular brand in a survey by Wprost magazine.[2] It is known as TopjoyinHungaryorRelaxinCzechia and Slovakia.

History[edit]

In 1936, Joseph Marek first established the Tymbark Fruit Growers Cooperative in Podhale, Poland. Formal registration of the Cooperative Act was made in the Circuit Hall in Nowy Sącz, on May 1937. Then the file was included in Podhalanska Fruit Growers Cooperative in Tymbark. In the year 1949 the company had bought the first car in Tymbark. In 1967, Rogozinski Augustine had developed the first black currant recipe in Poland. Before the year 1990, Tymbark's logo was a logo of two cockerels, it was not recognised, so in 1991 there was a new logo design featuring an apple. In 1993 Tymbark began its iconic[peacock prose] inscription on the cap; at the beginning there were only eight, such as Ears Up, Hold Up, Smile, Will, Forever Together, I got you, How are you?. Now there are 490 different inscriptions in the caps, and many people such as children collect different ones as a game.[3]

In 2003, Tymbark introduced its Fruit of the World, the new flavours gave its consumers a taste of exotic tastes such as kiwi, cactus, currant and many others. In 2004, Tymbark was the first company in Poland to introduce the aseptic bottling of juices and beverages into plastic bottles without artificial colours and preservatives. In the same year 2004, Tymbark saw a rise in customers of its Fruit of the World and introduced its new Premium range of nectars of different fruit.

In 2007, the company started its active educational program on healthy eating based on the Eat Five A Day of servings of vegetables and fruit and Tymbark also conducted research by asking customers questions about their tastes. This attracted responses from several hundred thousand children in Poland. In 2007, Tymbark started its From the Backyard to the Stadium program which trained children for the Tymbark Cup where boys and girls in the under ten category play football in an official children's cup. The Tymbark Cup is the largest children cup in Poland. In the year 2011, 85,000 children across Poland were involved. In 2008, Tymbark promoted "Desire". In 2009, Tymbark introduced its new product "Lemonade", which has its own slogan, "Ideal For a Hot Summer".

In 2010, Tymbark's new program began called, "I know what I drink" (Wiem co piję). This was clearly placed on each of Tymbark's products to make the customer sure the Tymbark product had no added sugar, preservatives or artificial colours. The products also included the GDA index value. Today one popular flavour is apple-mint.

Products[edit]

The first Tymbark product was the apple flavour which was the only flavour from 1936 to 1967. Tymbark now has many different product ranges, listed below:

Tymbark also launched its Tymbark Box products designed in Winnie The Pooh characters for children, with the following flavours:

Tymbark has made its own Jam and Dressing products which are:

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Tymbark".
  • ^ Kirpalani, V. H.; Lechoslaw Garbarski; Erdener Kaynak (2012). Successfully Doing Business/Marketing In Eastern Europe. Routledge. p. 169. ISBN 9781135696306.
  • ^ "75 Years". Tymbark. Retrieved 21 April 2013.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tymbark_(company)&oldid=1226104465"

    Categories: 
    Condiment companies
    Cooperatives in Poland
    Drink companies of Poland
    Fruit preserve companies
    Polish brands
    Soft drinks manufacturers
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles lacking reliable references from April 2013
    All articles lacking reliable references
    Articles needing additional references from April 2013
    All articles needing additional references
    All articles with peacock terms
    Articles with peacock terms from December 2023
    Wikipedia articles needing clarification from December 2023
     



    This page was last edited on 28 May 2024, at 15:44 (UTC).

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