77Signal
Score
F
FastCompanyby Associated PressApril 16, 2026

Gatorade, the inventor of the sports drink, is making a surprising pivot to reach non-athletes

Gatorade is shifting its brand strategy from a focus solely on athletes to appealing to a broader audience of non-athletes seeking hydration solutions. This pivot reflects a growing consumer interest in health-oriented beverages, prompting Gatorade to emphasize the scientific benefits of its products and introduce new offerings that cater to everyday hydration needs.

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FastCompany: Sixty years after it invented sports drinks , Gatorade is making a surprising pivot: It’s no longer focusing primarily on athletes. PepsiCo, Gatorade’s parent company , said Thursday that the brand wants to broaden its reach to non-athletes who are looking for ways to hydrate, whether they’re on a long flight, going for a walk or nursing a hangover. New packaging highlights the specific ways Gatorade’s various drinks and powders work and the research behind them. The change reflects U.S. consumers’ booming interest in beverages with perceived health benefits.

Jack Doggett, a food and drink analyst with the consulting firm Mintel, said his research indicates 60% of consumers who buy sports drinks aren’t athletes but want the functional ingredients those drinks provide, like electrolytes for hydration and carbohydrates for energy. “People are using these drinks more for wellness and daily maintenance,” Doggett said.

“It’s easy to say that the wellness consumer is the young consumer, but older generations are also drinking these drinks for hydration.” Unit sales of sports drink mixes, like powders from Liquid I.V., Skratch Labs and Gatorade, rose nearly 20% in the year ending March 22, according to Circana, a market research company. Bottled water sales were flat in the same period. Crowded shelves Sensing that growth potential, new sports and hydration brands are crowding store shelves. Mike Del Pozzo, president of U.S. beverages at PepsiCo, said 150 new brands have entered the space in the last few years.

“That puts a lot of risk on the category and pressure from a credibility perspective,” Del Pozzo said. “Some that are coming in are building on the science that we created. And we’re like, ‘Well, geez, we should be doing that. We should be talking more overtly about the science and the business and why we believe we’re future-forward.” Del Pozzo said Gatorade will now clearly label products that it says can hydrate better or faster than water. A new drink, Gatorade Longer Lasting, which will go on sale next year, blends glycerin and electrolytes to help the body stay hydrated for longer than water alone.

PepsiCo’s approach with Gatorade echoes moves made by some of its rivals. Powerade, a sports drink owned by Coca-Cola Co., received brighter, clearer packaging in 2023 that promoted an increase in electrolytes. Last fall, Powerade began selling Power Water, a zero-sugar, electrolyte-enhanced drink aimed at non-athletes. Liquid I.V., which was founded as a sports drink mix in 2012, was acquired by Unilever in 2020 and has remade itself into a wellness and hydration brand. LMNT also had non-athletes in mind last fall when it introduced a smaller, 12-ounce version of its sparkling electrolyte drink.

Sean Harapko, a beverage sector leader with Ernst & Young Americas, said consumers have so many beverage choices that companies must clearly define their products and explain why people should choose one over another. Americans are trying to live healthier lives, he said, but they’re collecting information from many different sources and defining for themselves what that looks like. Gatorade’s origins Gatorade was born in 1965, when the football coach at the University of Florida asked Dr. Robert Cade, a physician and professor at the school, why his players were losing so much weight during games but not urinating.

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Intelligence PanelSignal score: 77 / 100
Primary Signal
Rising
Signal confirmed across multiple sources — high conviction
Brand Impact
High
Impact score: 75/100 — broad strategic implications for brand positioning
Novelty
Moderate
Novelty: 70/100 — iterative development of an existing theme
Action Priority
Urgent
Respond within 30 days — category leaders already moving
Scoring Rationale

Gatorade's pivot to target non-athletes is significant for the brand industry as it reflects changing consumer trends and expands market opportunities, while also providing actionable insights for brand strategy professionals.

75
Impact
weight 35%
70
Novelty
weight 30%
85
Relevance
weight 35%
Brands Mentioned
GGatoradePPepsiCoPPoweradeLLiquid I.V.SSkratch LabsLLMNTCCoca-ColaUUnilever
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