I remember a time in 2009 when MDF was still in its nascent stage in India. I was working with an MDF company, tasked with helping the category gain early traction in the market. To accelerate adoption, we came up with an idea focused on education—introducing MDF to final-year B.Arch students who would soon shape real-world design decisions.
The initiative was aptly named “Catch them Young.” Sharing a similar story about Japan.
For nearly thirty years, from 1945 to 1975, Nestlé tried and failed to sell coffee in Japan. The company ran advertisements, offered discounts, and distributed free samples, yet coffee remained a marginal product. Japan was not just choosing tea over coffee. Tea was deeply woven into daily life, family rituals, and cultural identity. Coffee felt foreign, bitter, and emotionally disconnected from how people had grown up.

After decades of frustration, Nestlé made an unusual decision. Instead of hiring another marketing expert, it hired a child psychologist. His insight was deceptively simple but profoundly powerful. Adult taste preferences are largely formed in childhood. Japanese consumers did not reject coffee because of rational choice or price. They rejected it because it had no place in their early memories. Their first experiences with warm drinks were tea served by parents, grandparents, and schools. Coffee never became part of that emotional foundation.
Based on this insight, Nestlé stopped trying to directly convert adults. The company shifted its focus to children, not by selling them coffee but by gently introducing coffee flavours in friendly forms. Coffee-flavoured candies, desserts, and milk-based drinks entered the market. These products were sweet, mild, and comforting. Coffee was no longer sharp or intimidating. It quietly became familiar, associated with pleasure rather than resistance.
Nestlé also played a patient game. There was no rush for immediate market share and no aggressive push to replace tea. The strategy relied on time and trust. As children grew up with these subtle coffee experiences, they developed a neutral and often positive association with the taste. When they later encountered coffee as adults at offices, cafes, or vending machines, it felt natural rather than alien.

Over time, the results became visible. Japan did not stop drinking tea, but coffee became a normal part of everyday life. Today, Japan is one of the most sophisticated coffee markets in the world, known for canned coffee innovation, precision brewing, and a rich cafe culture. Nestlé succeeded not by forcing a habit change but by reshaping emotional memory.
The real lesson here is bigger than coffee. Consumers rarely reject products outright. They reject unfamiliar meanings. The most powerful marketing does not always persuade loudly. Sometimes it waits quietly, shaping preferences long before a purchase decision is made. Nestlé did not win Japan with better advertising. It won by understanding how humans learn to like something in the first place.

Vikas Marwaha – Business Strategist


Well said sir
its very important to do the right thing instead of force some this strike at right place and right time will leads a big out comes