He lied, and the world loved him for it.
Henry J. Heinz had far more than 57 products, yet he etched that number into history. Why did no one care it wasn’t true? Why did “57 Varieties” feel so right, so honest, so unforgettable? This is not just about ketchup. It’s about how your mind is quietl…
Henry J. Heinz understood something most modern brands still miss: people don’t fall in love with accuracy, they fall in love with meaning. On that train in 1896, the “21 styles” ad didn’t impress him because of shoes, but because a specific number made a vague promise feel concrete. Heinz already sold more than 57 products, yet he knew the exact count was irrelevant. What mattered was how “57 Varieties” sounded: balanced, rhythmic, oddly trustworthy.
The number carried private significance—five for him, seven for his wife—but it became public shorthand for abundance and reliability. No consumer stopped to audit the catalog; they accepted the symbol because it felt right. That quiet psychological trick still shapes marketing today. The Heinz story is a reminder that the ideas we remember are rarely the most precise, but the ones distilled into a single, unforgettable hook.