Weight Watchers bets a brand overhaul can extend Oprah's rally

The health-and-wellness company is changing its name to WW, as chief executive Mindy Grossman tries to draw more consumers to the weight-loss program in a bid to extend the momentum fueled by Oprah Winfrey's embrace of the brand nearly three years ago.

Bloomberg News
September 25, 2018 at 3:13AM
FILE- In this Feb. 7, 2018, file image distributed for Weight Watchers, Weight Watchers President and Chief Executive Officer Mindy Grossman speaks at a global employee event in New York. Weight Watchers is trimming its name to just two letters: WW. The company says it is renaming itself to focus more on overall wellness and not just dieting. (Amy Sussman/AP Images for Weight Watchers, File)
“People will have to understand Weight Watchers re-imagined,” said CEO Mindy Grossman (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Weight Watchers is betting its future on two letters.

The health-and-wellness company is changing its name to WW, as chief executive Mindy Grossman tries to draw more consumers to the weight-loss program in a bid to extend the momentum fueled by Oprah Winfrey's embrace of the brand nearly three years ago.

Weight Watchers, which has been updating its technology and reshaping its diet plan, becomes the latest company to embrace its initials. And as Grossman puts her stamp on the brand, she's pulling from a playbook used at Home Shopping Network, where she mounted a turnaround at the company that had switched its corporate name to HSN.

"We will go through a period where people will have to understand Weight Watchers re-imagined," Grossman said.

As part of WW's move to focus on overall health, the company is launching a program in the U.S. next month where members earn rewards including products for tracking meals, activity and weight. The WW app will be improved, and starting in January 2019, WW products sold directly to consumers will have no artificial sweeteners or preservatives.

There's increasing pressure on Grossman to prove she can sustain the Oprah-fueled turnaround. The company's shares have gained nearly 60 percent this year, after surging almost 300 percent in 2017 as advertisements featuring the well-known media mogul helped bring customers back to the weight-loss program after a difficult stretch that saw the company's shares sink below $4 in 2015.

Shares of WW took a hit in August after the company posted second-quarter results, causing a 15 percent sell-off the next day. While WW reported profit that topped estimates, the full-year guidance and subscriber forecast drew concern from SunTrust analyst Michael Swartz.

Grossman stands proudly behind the quarter's results, noting the number of subscribers in the quarter increased by 1 million from the year-ago period. "I think its ultimately educating people that yeah, we have growth, but there is some cyclicality to the business," she said.

Winfrey took a stake in the company and agreed to pitch the brand in October 2015, sending the shares flying. At the time, Weight Watchers was heavily in debt, and suffering through subscriber losses amid the rise of fitness apps. Grossman succeeded Jim Chambers in July 2017.

Now, in her reshaping of the company, Grossman's changes include a new product look to reflect the updated design of WW. And she's taking a page from her time at HSN, where she turned the company from a staid shopping channel into a lifestyle brand, transforming its image from an outlet known for pushing products like the Suzanne Somers ThighMaster. The TV shopping network was acquired by QVC's parent company Liberty Interactive, in a $2.1 billion deal earlier this year.

"What Mindy has done with the brand has been nothing short of a phenomenon," said Morningstar analyst RJ Hottovy. "She turned Weight Watchers from being a liability to an asset."

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