Why Heinz Ketchup Bottles Feature the Numbe
Most people think they know what it means.
They stare at the ketchup bottle, assume it’s about ingredients, recipes, history.
But the truth behind Heinz’s “57 Varieties” is nothing like what you’ve been told.
Long before “57 Varieties” became a cultural fixture, Henry J. Heinz understood something most brands still overlook: people cling to simple, specific ideas.
On that 1896 train ride, the “21 styles” shoe ad didn’t impress him because of footwear, but because a concrete number made the message unforgettable.
Heinz already sold more than 57 products, yet he deliberately chose a number that sounded distinctive, almost poetic.
Five was his lucky number, seven was his wife’s favorite, and together they formed a symbol that felt personal, rhythmic, and easy to print, say, and remember.
By stamping “57 Varieties” everywhere, Heinz turned a small fiction into a powerful truth: this was a brand of abundance, reliability, and tradition.
Over time, people stopped caring whether 57 was accurate and started treating it as part of Heinz’s identity.
The number became a story, the story became trust, and trust became generations of loyalty sealed in glass.