Why it's hard to find a Burger King in Australia

Authored by cbc.ca and submitted by Waluigi_Wah_God
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Companies often change valuable brand names when expanding to other countries. Sometimes the reason is a language issue. But other times, the reasons are far more interesting.

This week, we explore why companies change valuable brand names when expanding to other countries. Sometimes the reason is a language issue. But other times, the reasons are far more interesting. For example, Mr. Clean is called Meister Proper in Germany and Maestro Lindo in Italy. And the reason it’s hard to find a Burger King in Australia is the most curious story of all. Hope you’ll join us. 0:57

When Burger King was founded in 1954, it was originally called Insta-Burger King and grew quickly through franchising.

Simplifying the name to Burger King, the fast food restaurant created its flagship burger, the Whopper, in 1957.

Today Burger King has 17,700 locations around the world. You can walk into a Burger King anywhere and be assured of getting the Whopper — as you know it — the way you want it:

Except you won't find Burger King in Australia because it's the only place in the world where Burger Kings are called Hungry Jack's.

When Burger King got to Australia in 1971, it discovered there was already a local restaurant there called Burger King.

So the local Burger King franchisee — who was Canadian, by the way — chose to go with the name Hungry Jack's instead. And when you walked into a Hungry Jack's restaurant, it was virtually identical to Burger King locations in every way — except name.

Over the years, Hungry Jack's tried to purchase the trademark from the local Burger King, but failed. As Hungry Jack's became the largest Burger King franchisee outside of the U.S. — even though it didn't do business under the Burger King name — the relationship between Hungry Jack's and the Burger King Corporation became strained.

The Burger King of Australia. (Wikimedia Commons)

Then, in the mid-90s, the Burger King trademark in Australia expired.

Burger King's international head office immediately opened up dozens of locations in Australia. Hungry Jack's — aka Burger King — suddenly found itself competing with Burger King. Then Burger King tried to terminate its deal with Hungry Jack's. As a result, the two brands had a contentious relationship for more than a decade.

It all ended up in court in 2001, where Hungry Jack's finally won the Burger King rights to all of Australia.

But after all those years and all those attempts to acquire the name, the fast-food company made a surprising decision. Hungry Jack's decided to keep the Hungry Jack's name even though it finally had the right to name the entire Australian chain Burger King.

While Hungry Jack's had been trying for 40 years to get the Burger King name, it was building brand value in the Hungry Jack's name. The name was local, it was firmly established and it was purely Australian.

To switch after all that time would have been bad business.

The irony of a long, long fight.

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king_of_penguins on June 25th, 2020 at 18:04 UTC »

That's flat-out wrong.

It all ended up in court in 2001, where Hungry Jack's finally won the Burger King rights to all of Australia.

But after all those years and all those attempts to acquire the name, the fast-food company made a surprising decision. Hungry Jack's decided to keep the Hungry Jack's name even though it finally had the right to name the entire Australian chain Burger King.

Hungry Jack's won the court case in 2001, but that just meant Burger King failed in its attempt to terminate Hungry Jack's franchise agreement, and had to pay $71 million in compensation. It had nothing to do w/ the naming rights.

Hungry Jack's owner Jack Cowin tried and failed to buy out the Australian Burger Kings in 2002, then succeeded in 2003. At that time there were 210 Hungry Jack's; the 81 Burger King outlets were converted to Hungry Jack's.

scarnyard on June 25th, 2020 at 17:35 UTC »

The first Burger King in the US is in Mattoon, IL and was founded in 1952. It won a lawsuit that upheld the state trademark and there are no Burger King franchises in 20 miles of its location.

pm_ur_pigtails on June 25th, 2020 at 16:52 UTC »

TIL: that Hungry Jack isn’t a pancake brand in Australia.