Acquired - Coca-Cola
Episode Date: November 24, 2025Coca-Cola is… sugar water. And somehow it’s also America, Christmas, summertime, friendship and happiness. Today we tell the story of how The Coca-Cola Company amazingly transmogrified a ...beverage into emotion in all of our collective psyches, and ALSO built one of the most incredible scale economy businesses of all-time. And oh yeah, there’s also cocaine, WW2, Mad Men, Warren Buffett, James Dean, Bill Cosby, Michael Jackson, Michael Ovitz, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, McDonald’s and Monsanto. So cozy up to the fire with your favorite images of Santa Claus and Polar Bears and enjoy an ice-cold episode of Acquired — always delicious, always refreshing.Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Fall ‘25 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsWorkOSShopifySentry — Link to ACQ Cassette Players, use code “audiophile”Links:Sign up for email updates and vote on future episodes!The Hilltop ad / Mad Men finalePepsi Challenge commercialsPepsi’s Michael Jackson commercialsCoke’s Bill Cosby commercialsTwo liter bottles inflatingWorldly Partners’ Multi-Decade Coca-Cola StudyFor God, Country, and Coca-ColaSecret FormulaAll episode sourcesCarve Outs:SkiErgSuper Smash Bros. UltimateClaudeNike Vomero PlusHermanos GutiérrezMore Acquired:Get email updates and vote on future episodes!Join the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
David, I cannot believe we're about to do a four-hour podcast on syrup, sugar, and water.
I mean, that's the entire business, is just syrup, sugar, and water combined, and it's a $300 billion company.
Well, Ben, you know what I'm going to say to you in response to that.
Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world?
Ooh, save it, David. Save it.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Welcome to the truth now, is it you, is it you, is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight, another story on the way you got the truth.
Welcome to the fall 2025 season of Acquired, the podcast about great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
Charlie Munger has a famous thought experiment.
It's the 1880s.
You want to build a company from scratch that eventually you,
becomes worth $2 trillion, starting with just $2 million. So you're looking for a $1 million
X return, or as Charlie puts it, a Lollapalooza outcome. Of course he does. Very Charlie.
Very Charlie. The constraint is it must be a non-alcoholic beverage business.
Okay. And another constraint, it must throw off many billions of dollars in dividends along the
way to your shareholders. Okay. This sounds almost impossible, but what ideas could you possibly
dream up to give it your best shot? Well, I think the first question I would have is whether I could
include any now illegal drugs in my product. That certainly helps. So to build this giant
valuable company, the first thing you need to know is you're not going to get there with something
generic. So you have to build a brand that grows into a strong, protected trademark. And to reach
that scale, it must be global. So it has to have a taste that's, you know,
universal in all countries. Now, conveniently for you, all humans do require large amounts of water
every day to live. So it is a giant market. Yes. But you're not going to fully replace water.
It's just going to be kind of a small fraction of the time. So onto the beverage itself,
you're going to want to optimize it to maximize the rewards of ingesting it. As refreshing as
possible in any climate. Now, you're going to want to do a bunch of other stuff, too. You want to fill
it with calories to give energy. You want the flavor, texture, and aroma that makes it pleasurable to
consume. And you should throw in some brain stimulants like caffeine and sugar. That's sort of the
ideal product mix. Among other things, yeah. Now, you don't want competitors to swoop in for a free
ride on the market you just created. So you should make sure your product, the real thing, is available
everywhere. Anytime someone asks for it.
I see what you did there.
At a very low price. So there's really not an opportunity for competitors to ever fill the vacuum.
There's never a reason for anyone to reach for anything other than your product.
Always.
Always, David.
And since everyone is not thinking about beverages all the time like you probably are as the
proprietor of this business, you're going to want to associate your beverage with all the things
that they are thinking about.
The good life, family, your sports heroes.
Beautiful people. Christmas. I mean, happiness generally, you are going to want to have a Pavlovian
association between your drink and happiness. And you're going to want to spend huge amounts of money
blanketing the entire world with this messaging. Now, to build something this valuable,
you also can't have a big expensive bottling and distribution operation. So you're going to need
to figure out some clever way to get someone else's capital and employees for that while still
maintaining the control that your brand requires. I mean, ideally, it would be great if you could
serve the entire world with just a few of your own production facilities. That would be pretty
great. Yes. And the last thing, you must never, under any circumstances, change the formula or
flavor. Ooh. We were doing great there. We were doing great. But, you know, this might be why
Coca-Cola is not a two trillion-dollar company today. Well, we'll debate that at the end of the
episode. Listeners, of course, this playbook is almost exactly what the Coca-Cola company has done.
And they've done it over the course of 140 years. It has its roots all the way back in the
Civil War. It grew up through the rise of the automobile, through the Great Depression,
through two world wars. It seamlessly and shamelessly integrated into the hippie culture of the 70s.
And then, of course, it had the epic cola wars of the 80s and onward.
And David, I would say this episode, perhaps more than any other that we've covered, is about America.
Well, it's about America and then America inserting itself everywhere else in the rest of the world.
Can't wait to dive into it.
Well, listeners, this episode was selected by you.
Last month, we asked our email subscribers to vote on what company we should cover next,
and Coca-Cola was the overwhelming favorite.
So thank you to all of you who participated.
You can join that email list at Acquired.fm slash email to get in on the next round of voting.
And that same email list is getting a lot better.
We just did a big overhaul.
So each monthly email will now have episode summaries, our big takeaways from the company after studying it,
and exclusive photos from our research process.
So never miss an episode drop by signing up at Acquired.fm slash email or clicking the link in the show notes.
Before we dive in, we want to briefly thank our presenting partner, J.P. Morgan Payments.
Yes, just like how we say every company has a story. Every company's story is powered by payments.
And J.P. Morgan Payments is a part of so many of their journeys from Seed to IPO and beyond.
So with that, this show is not investment advice. David and I may have investments in the companies we discuss.
And this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only. David, where do we start our story?
Well, Ben, as you so aptly set up there, the story of the birth of Coca-Cola starts arguably with the birth of America, as we know it today, in a newly reunified United States of America following the Civil War.
Mark Pendergrast, in his great book for God, country, and Coca-Cola that was a main source for this episode, has a great quote.
He says, Coca-Cola remains emblematic of the best and worst of America.
It is a microcosm of American history.
Coca-Cola grew up with the country, shaping and shaped by the times.
The drink helped to alter not only consumption patterns, but attitudes towards leisure, work, advertising, sex, family, life, and patriotism.
You know, just a few small things.
So if you remember back to our Standard Oil series a couple years ago, one of the biggest industries,
in post-Civil War America
was oil
of a certain kind,
but it wasn't the same kind of oil as standard oil.
It was snake oil.
Ah, good hook.
Yeah. Or, as it came to be known
after the war, patent medicines.
Before this industry,
there were no national brands in America
or anywhere else.
There were railroads and there were big
national industrial companies,
but there weren't
any national consumer product companies. Everything was local. There weren't any CPG companies. There
weren't any supermarkets. There weren't any car companies. There weren't gas stations. And there
weren't advertising agencies to go along with them. Patent medicines were sort of like this
seed crystal that created the modern American consumer business. And what were patent medicines?
So going back again to our Standard Oil series, John D. Rockefeller's dad, if you were
remember, was a traveling snake oil salesman. Yeah. Yeah. In his days, back before the Civil War,
these were medicines that promised like a cure to all sorts of ailments. Nausea, indigestion, headaches,
cancer, tuberculosis, skull fractures, paralysis, and impotence. All based on zero research,
zero studies. Zero science, nothing. The Civil War changed all that.
not necessarily for the better.
So after the war, there were so many wounded soldiers in America that were in such chronic pain
that the market for medicines like this from these snake oil salesmen just exploded.
A huge, huge percentage of veterans from the Civil War developed what is called Army disease,
quote unquote, i.e. they were addicted to morphine for the rest of.
of their lives as a painkiller.
Which actually did work.
Yes, that actually did work.
Very well.
At killing pain.
And it wasn't just physical injuries from the war and the soldiers who fought in it.
The Civil War ripped America apart.
I mean, these guys and their families had just gone through this devastating trauma.
I mean, there were so many deaths, so many wounded.
It was families fighting against one another.
It was truly arguably the worst moment in our nation's history.
Yeah.
So naturally, whenever there's a, uh,
Big problem. American capitalism sees a big opportunity. So some of these enterprising traveling
snake oil salesmen started scaling up the medicines that they were making to meet all this
new demand. And as they scale up and they start to standardize the products that they're offering,
this industry comes to be known as patent medicines. Now, most of these medicines were not actually
patented, but as the producer of them, you wanted customers and would be competitors to think
that they were, that there was some sort of barrier to entry. Yes. So pretty quickly,
these newly scaling patent medicine guys discover that the best way to reinforce that message
with consumers and to stimulate demand was advertising, especially in newspapers. And this
is the birth of the advertising industry in America. Really? It's these patent
medicines that start spending the first real scale dollars in newspapers, which are also coming
up and industrializing post-Civil War, and building the business model of the media industry
as we know it today. Because just like you were talking about in your great Charlie thought
experiment from the intro, what are these patent medicines? It's just commodity. It's like leaves and
nuts and water and stuff that go into these things. I mean, it's extracts, David. Extracts. Right. Okay. It's
super cheap commodities that are very easy to obtain in great quantities, very easy to then produce
into your product and transform, and then pretty small relative to other products, easy to transport
around the country, you do start to get some of these patent medicines that scale up and build
early national brands in this day. So you might think that all this is like ancient history.
a whole bunch of products that we still buy today started as patent medicines.
Ludens cough drops, Vicks vapor rub, Vaseline, Listerine, the Mouthwatch, all patent medicines.
Those are patent medicines that are still used for sort of a health purpose today.
Plenty of products that we still use and consume today started as patent medicines but are no longer marketed as medicines.
gram crackers started as a patent medicine.
Really?
Grape nuts, the cereal.
Neither grape nor nuts.
Angostura bitters.
You know the bitters that you get in like old-fashioned and stuff?
That was a patent medicine.
Okay, that makes sense.
That's squarely what I believe a patent medicine is.
Yep.
And then, a couple things you might be familiar with, Dr. Pepper.
Really?
I didn't know Dr. Pepper was that old.
Yeah.
Dr. Pepper predates Coca-Cola.
Huh.
And, of course, Coca-Cola.
Coca-Cola started just the same way as a patent medicine, which brings us to Dr. John
Pemberton, a Confederate war veteran who had not only been stabbed, he had also been shot during
the war and got army disease, just like all these other soldiers, and was addicted to morphine
for the rest of his life. So after the war, he moves to Atlanta, and as part of his sort of
entrepreneurial aspirations in this new patent medicine consumer economy, and also to probably solve
his own problem, he starts casting about for other drugs that could cure him and others of
army disease. And that is how in the mid-1880s, he learns about a new miracle drug, sweeping
America, promising to cure all ills, including army disease. Cocaine was really
really in in America in the 1880s, perhaps foreshadowing a little bit the 1980s in America,
as we will get to later in the episode.
Except in the 1880s, it's really legal and really broadly encouraged.
Certainly there's no FDA or anything to make it illegal, but society's posture toward cocaine wasn't bad.
It was like caffeine today.
Right. They did not really discover the addictive nature of it or demonize the addictive nature of it yet.
Yeah. Or the side effects.
et cetera, et cetera. So pretty quickly, cocaine becomes the most popular patent medicine ingredient out
there. It's probably the only ingredient that actually did anything. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And there is a product
on the market, an imported product from France. You can't make this up. That quickly becomes the most
popular delivery vehicle for cocaine. A cocaine fortified wine from Bordeaux in France called Vin Mariani.
It's like the most extreme for loco you could ever dream up.
Exactly, exactly, yes.
So this sounds utterly ridiculous today.
But let me read you the list of public endorsers of Vin Mariani,
the testimonies in the Rolex parlance,
Thomas Edison, Buffalo Bill Cody,
United States President William McKinley,
gets even better,
Queen Victoria of England,
and not one
but three consecutive
popes in the Vatican
all swore
by Vin Mariani.
Feels like a thing I would be swearing by
and endorsing too. I imagine once you start,
it's the best thing ever.
So entrepreneurial Pemberton in Atlanta
sees Vin Mariani's success
and it's like, hmm, well, I wonder if there's a way
that I could copy and improve on that.
And the way he comes up to improve upon it
is to add caffeine to the mix.
Why not?
Yeah, why not?
He decides that he's going to get the caffeine
from African cola nuts,
K-O-L-A-Cola-Nuts.
Which we should say is the first introduction
of the word cola period
in the American lexicon.
Cola drinks were not a thing.
Yep, and it's very bitter.
But the reason he chooses it
is it has an even greater caffeine concentration
than coffee bean.
He really wants this product to work.
So Pemberton starts selling Pemberton's French wine, Coca, which is still wine, but is now infused both with coca leaves for the cocaine and cola nuts for the caffeine.
And it's a hit.
This could not have tasted good.
No, I can't imagine what it tasted like.
President Ulysses S. Grant becomes a fan, and Pemberton starts selling like thousands and thousands of bottles.
in and around Atlanta.
Which makes sense.
People are drinking it for its drug-like medicinal qualities,
not that it's in any way refreshing.
Yep.
Now, I say bottles.
Keep that in mind here.
Bottling technology in the 1880s
is not what it is today.
Not very good at preserving liquids or foods.
Certainly not good at preserving carbonation.
However, because this is a wine at this point in time,
wine has natural preservatives in it, so it's self-stable so you can sell bottles of wine.
People have been selling bottles of wine for centuries at this point in time.
So then prohibition hits. Parties over.
Yep. Fall of 1885, Atlanta, I think might have been the first major city in America
that institutes prohibition and becomes a dry town. No alcohol.
So Pemberton's now like, well, shoot, I've got this hit product. I need to scramble and come up with a soft version of a soft
drink. And this is the origin of soft drinks. They're not hard, as in alcoholic drinks. They're
soft. There you go. So he starts madly experimenting with all sorts of flavors and ingredients,
and after six months or so in April of 1886, he nails a formula. Yes. And so the question is,
how does he arrive at this formula? The book I was reading, which is called Secret Formula,
it's a great book on the history of Coca-Cola that had access to all the corporate archives,
really describes Pemberton in this phase as finding his capitalist streak, as sort of
realizing, okay, take a step back. Patent medicines are sold for 75 cents, a dollar.
It serves a crowd of people when they're looking to recover from some ailment, or really at this
point, probably serve an addiction. We're now 20 years from the Civil War, so a new generation
is coming up. Yes. Yeah, that doesn't have Army disease.
Is there a product that I can make that people can afford any time they want that's not a medicine, that's just a refreshment, and has all these other great properties using some of the ingredients that we've been using?
So he kind of comes up with this idea of a five cent, again, because the ingredients cost so little, these extracts, it's a super high margin product, a five cent thing that anybody can have just to have a little pick me up, a little treat when they're at the soda fountain.
pick me up.
when they're sitting down
in the social gathering space
because drug stores at that time
were sort of the Starbucks of this time.
It really was this gathering place
to go and spend time.
And so he says,
I'm going to serve this other market
of any time refreshment.
And so he's playing around
with these ingredients.
And he's got the cola seed
that's got this natural caffeine in it.
Fun story, in the original Coca-Cola
for the first, I don't know,
a couple decades,
it actually had four times
the amount of caffeine
that Coke does.
today. So it's effectively an energy drink, even leaving the cocaine aside. However, the cola seed,
it tastes really bitter. It's absolutely horrible, which was not a big deal previously because
he was mixing it with wine. People were drinking it for medicinal purposes, just kind of slugging it
down. But he's trying to create a refreshing beverage here. And so I did not know that this was
possible way back in 1886, but what he does is he uses synthetic caffeine. Mirk, the pharmaceutical
company had already been extracting pure caffeine from cola seeds. So Pemberton just got a
hold of Merck and bought a bunch of the powder. And so the first version of Coca-Cola is a little
tiny bit of the cola seed, just kind of to say that it's in there. He's going to call this
thing Coca-Cola. But the caffeine actually comes from a synthetic extract. Yeah, interesting. It's
always been synthetic. Huh. That's right. I didn't know that. That's amazing. So there's a great
excerpt from the book's secret formula.
At last he stood on the verge of inventing Coca-Cola.
Down in the basement, Pemberton filled his 40-gallon kettle with plain water,
which he then heated to a boil over an open fire.
Using a wooden paddle to stir the solution, he melted in sugar and caffeine.
Right, sugar because of the extreme bitterness of the cola nut.
Yes. And actually, the coca plant was also bitter, so sugar was to offset it.
Yeah, yeah.
Next, he added caramel for coloring, giving the syrup its dark, distinctive, port wine color.
To balance the sweetness of the sugar and give the syrup its tang, he added lime juice, citric acid, and phosphoric acid.
Then, as the basic blend-cooled, Pemberton turned to the question of flavor.
Into the mix went vanilla extract, elixir of orange, and several pungent oils refined from various fruits, herbs, and trees.
Lemon, nutmeg, spice brush, coriander, and noroli.
ingredient in perfumes distilled from a flower of the orange tree. The most exotic was
oil of cassia, also known as Chinese cinnamon made from the bark of a tree found in the
tropical regions of Asia. And of course, Pemberton added this brew to the fluid extract
of coca leaves. Exactly how much cocaine went into the inaugural batch of Doc Pemberton's new
soft drink syrup is impossible to calculate more than a century later, but with even a touch
of the drug, in combination with the sugar and caffeine, four times the amount in today's Coke
made Pemberton's concoction quite a stimulating beverage.
Yes, yes, indeed. As best as I was able to read from a few different sources, I think
roughly once Coca-Cola starts being produced in that first decade, call it four or five
glasses of Coca-Cola would be about the equivalent of a line of cocaine today.
Okay, so it would take a lot of Coca-Cola. If you're drinking that,
much of that formula, you're having the equivalent of 16 Coke's worth of caffeine. It's an
absolute crap ton of caffeine and sugar. By that description, the cocaine probably would affect you
less than the sugar and caffeine in the mix. That's a good point. Regardless, you're getting
get hype when you drink this. And this amount of cocaine really was only a part of the formula
for those early first few years. Yes. But it lends the first half of the name.
Which, Pemberton's business partner at the time, a guy named Frank Robinson, comes up with a simple, descriptive, perfect name for this new brew, Coca-Cola.
Which is funny, because it neither contains much cola, since the caffeine is actually an extract, and it's just a tiny little drop from the cola seed.
And very soon, they would strip out almost all the cocaine.
And so you have a product that for the next 140 years would be called Coca-Cola that contains really, really,
not very much coca and really not very much cola. Yes, indeed. So they go about getting the new
product installed and distributed in drugstore soda fountains around Atlanta. Ben, you were saying
a minute ago about, oh, drugstores were this gathering place at the time. Remember I said about
bottling technology, if you weren't selling alcohol, which had natural preservatives, the only
way that you could buy and consume a drink that really wasn't like water or milk or something.
It was fresh. And so that's how soda fountains come to be installed in these drugstores. They're
selling the patent medicines, many of which are liquids. And that's also how carbonated water
comes to the drugstores because mineral water, carbonated water is thought to be a health
tonic. And so it all mixes together. And then over the years, these morph into social places,
thanks in large part to Coca-Cola.
sense. And I'm pretty sure what actually happens is Pemberton lets his formula settle, and it's
kind of this thick syrupy thing, brings it down the street to the first drugstore, and that
druggist, that proprietor is the one who actually combines that syrup with the carbonated water
and makes the choice, which I think could have gone either way, is it a still or a sparkling
beverage to give it that champagne sparkle to create the Coca-Cola that would endure from there.
Well, thank goodness they do use the carbonated water.
could you imagine coke if it were still? That wouldn't be very good. No, well, it wouldn't be
successful. I mean, there was probably hundreds of things like Coke that were still that did not
succeed. So pretty quickly, Coca-Cola gets into market with these drugstores and soda fountains
and people love it. This is great. It's a dual benefit product. It has all the medicinal
benefits of cocaine and caffeine, the cola that they've been marketing. And it's actually
really enjoyable to drink and it tastes great. So the next thing,
next year in 1887, Frank Robinson, the business partner, who also named the drink,
he also introduces the script logo. He writes out the Coca-Cola script logo that we still use to
this day. This is unbelievable. I read that this guy was Pemberton's bookkeeper, and yet he's the one
who came up with the name Coca-Cola and the Spencerian script, the logo Coca-Cola, which has been
unchanged other than just tightening it up a little bit since he created it in 1887. Yes. It is true that
he was his bookkeeper, but he was also his business partner. It's like, I'm your bookkeeper
type thing. Yeah. Exactly. So the two of them come up with a pretty ingenious advertising and
distribution method, because in the early days, they don't yet have a ton of capital to start
spending on advertisements like all the other patent medicines out there. They decide that they are
going to offer tickets to consumers redeemable at their local.
Atlanta soda fountains for free glasses of Coke. And they start mailing out these free
Coke tickets or coupons, you might say, to every address in the Atlanta City Directory. And then
they also give them to traveling door-to-door salesmen to go hand out on their roots, not Coca-Cola
salesmen, but salesmen that are selling a variety of different products. And this is the very first
manufacturer's coupon redeemable at a retailer.
Yes.
There's an image on Wikipedia of one of these tickets from 1888
that is the oldest known coupon used in America.
And it is actually beautiful.
It kind of looks like a dollar bill.
We'll put a photo of it in the email.
It's incredible.
This becomes absolutely huge for Coca-Cola.
and integral to its success.
Well, yeah, it's a high gross margin product
where you can give out giant amounts
where if you mail someone a little ticket
that says you can come and redeem
a free drink that tastes good
that's full of sugar, caffeine, and cocaine,
I'm pretty sure they're going to buy more from you.
It's a high gross margin product,
so you have lots of dollars to play with.
And on top of all this,
this is kind of a new product category,
this notion of a soft drink
that's not a patent medicine
that's much cheaper than traditional patent medicines.
And so you do actually need to do some category creation marketing
where you make people aware that this cool new thing exists.
Yep. All of that is true.
And even more so, this couponing strategy aligns incentives
for everybody in the value chain in a way that had never been done before.
Consumers, they love it.
They get free drinks of this great tasting beverage.
Drugstores and soda fountains, they super love it because now they're getting more foot traffic.
And then once consumers come back and start buying their second, third, fourth, you know, 400th drinks,
this is a highly profitable drink for them to sell.
They have gross retail margins on this.
And then three, the traveling salesman who Pemberton and his associates are giving these tickets out to,
Well, they love it too. This is like, oh, wow, now a great new free benefit I can offer my customers. Why wouldn't I want to do this? It's this incredible invention that completely incentivizes rapid extreme growth in distribution of the product. So to further illustrate how awesome this is for the soda fountains, Coke, when they were selling gallons of syrup to the soda fountains, they sold them for a
a dollar and 30 cents per gallon. The soda fountains then sold drinks to customers at five cents
a drink. They're 120 drinks per gallon. They're making $6.40 of revenue for a product that cost
them a buck 30 to buy. Yeah, I'm not a retailer, but I'm pretty sure those are good margins.
Pretty sweet deal if you can get it then and pretty sweet deal to be McDonald's today
offering my large Coke with a meal.
Yeah, man.
Pretty sweet deal, indeed.
Okay, so all of this happens
within the first year, year and a half
of Coca-Cola being on the market.
Pretty quickly, Pemberton,
who wasn't really doing much anyway
after inventing the drink,
as we said, Frank Robinson named it,
made the logo, is doing a lot of the distribution work.
Pemberton becomes convinced that he's dying.
Which he generally was slowly over all these years.
Yes. And he secretly decides that he is going to sell off the rights to the formula.
Without telling Robinson.
Without telling Robinson, without really telling anybody.
This kicks off a whole mess of very questionably legitimate transactions that results by mid-18,
1888, early 1889, in Frank Robinson discovering what's going on and seeking out a wealthy Atlanta
businessman named Asa Candler to come in and be his new partner to reunite all these various
claims to ownership of the formula and the company that they can then grow and scale and manifest
its destiny across America and the world. And Asa Candler is really the person who creates
the modern Coca-Cola Company
with Frank Robinson's help in 1892,
which he incorporates as the
definitive Coca-Cola Company.
But before we tell the story
of the Coca-Cola Company,
now is a great time
to thank our presenting partner,
J.P. Morgan Payments.
Yes. Who wants to wish all of you
a happy holidays?
Happy holidays.
And to share some stats
on how their infrastructure
kicks off its holiday season.
last year, they processed over $53 billion during Thanksgiving week. That is insane scale. At one point on Black Friday last year, they were processing over 6,000 transactions per second, and that is actually 17% higher than the previous year.
Wow. Yes, that is insane scale. On our history of credit cards a few years ago, we told the story of how in the early 90s customers behind you in line used to get mad if you pulled out a credit card because it was actually slower than cash. It's hard to fathom today that,
payment processing was measured in seconds and in minutes, not in milliseconds like today.
Oh, yeah. I won't even do any holiday shopping in person anymore. Like, it's just not worth
the hassle. I do everything online. Well, that's where I was going. Our friends at J.P. Morgan
told us that 50% of the top 10 online transaction days now occurred during the Black Friday to
Cyber Monday period. But that means that the payment landscape has gotten enormously more
complicated with all the different ways to pay. This is awesome for consumers like
you, David, but it creates a ton of data for merchants that causes complexity, especially with
holiday shopping. Enter JP Morgan Payments Commerce Solutions. They manage the complexity for you,
and they've built a customer insights platform to turn payment data into actionable insights.
You can make custom reports of things like revenue in different geographies each day,
demographic shifts in your customers, benchmark against peers, or even purchase patterns for
repeat customers. And this is huge for businesses during the holiday season, because while I
do my shopping online, JPMorgan actually found that the next generation of shoppers are going back
to stores, which is wild. Over 55% of Gen Z's holiday spend is through Omni Channel experiences,
far surpassing other age groups. So listeners, if you're looking to do more with your payments data
with invaluable customer insights and meet your customers where they are, visit jpmorgan.com
slash acquired to learn how commerce solutions can grow your business.
All right. So, David, this is the first professionally run version of the Coca-Cola company.
Yes. But to give you a sense of just how much of a hit this product becomes how quickly,
even in the couple of years before the professionalization and the founding of the Coca-Cola company,
in 1887, so the first year that Coke the product is on the market. Pemberton and Robinson sell 600
gallons of Coca-Cola syrup to soda fountains, which equates to about 75,000 glasses of
Coke served. By 1889, two years later, that is quadrupled to over 2,000 gallons. And by
1890, it's almost 10,000 gallons. So what's that? Three years into the business with no
professional management, they grow the business 10x without even really trying.
It's amazing. And in that next year, 1891, when Asa Candler buys
the last piece to fully own Coca-Cola, he got an incredible deal. Even with all that growth,
having already happened, he only paid $2,300 to buy it all. That is the base of the company that
he builds. And that's just buying all the various rights and claims from the people that
Pemberton sold it off to. No capital needs to be invested in this business, ever. Unbelievable.
It is a cash flow bonanza since like day one. It's crazy. So in 1890s,
The first official year of operation of the Coca-Cola company.
We have the books.
We know just how profitable they were.
They spent just over $20,000 on ingredients and production costs.
And I think that includes all, like, operations and stuff.
There's only like three people working into business here.
They spend just over $10,000 on advertising.
Okay.
And with those costs, they sell 35,360 gallons of syrup
at an average price of a buck 30 a gallon.
So that is $46,000 in revenue
and $12,000 in profit.
Now, for reference,
the average household income in 1892
was about $500.
There are three people working in this business,
including Candler, the owner.
They made $12,000 in annual profit
in the first year of the business.
So they are crushing it.
So that's each person at the company,
if they were paid equally is making 8x
the average household income.
They are in a promising business.
And that's just for the Coca-Cola company.
Remember, the soda fountains
are selling to consumers
at $6.40 a gallon.
So the actual gross revenue
of Coca-Cola in the marketplace
in that first year
is close to a quarter-million dollars.
That's a quarter-million dollars
on, what'd you say, a little over $20,000
of ingredients in manufacturing?
Yes.
And then another $10,000 in advertising.
So that's crazy.
It's only a tenth of the ultimate sale price of the beverages
is there in the costs of the ingredients,
the manufacturing, and the advertising when you fully load it.
Yes.
So there's a lot of margin to go around.
So speaking of advertising costs,
in the next few years,
they invest heavily into
advertising and of course the Coca-Cola company does still right up through to this day. The advertising
they were doing on the one hand is very different than Coca-Cola advertising today. And specifically
it's different in that it's all purely intrinsic advertising. It's about the nature of the product
itself. Remember, they're still sort of positioning Coca-Cola as this dual-use, refreshing
beverage, non-alcoholic social drink, but also patent medicine. So here's some of the
early ad copy during this period. Coca-Cola is the ideal brain tonic and sovereign remedy for
headache and nervousness. It makes the sad, glad, and the weak strong. Yeah, it feels patent
medicine-y. It feels patent medicine-y. Not a pause that is refreshing just yet. But what Robinson
and Candler do do that is very much still on brand for Coke today is they are all about
outdoor and point of sale signage and presence. So they put the script Coca-Cola logo everywhere
across Atlanta. They make oil cloth signs. They paint murals on walls of buildings. They do billboards.
They put it in street cars. They print posters for all the soda fountains to display. Then they're
like, why stop at posters? Let's make calendars. Let's make cabinets. Let's make serving trays. Let's make
glasses, let's make clocks, all with the big Coca-Cola logo. They would go on to paint 20,000
murals on the signs of barns and walls across the countryside starting in 1894. Unbelievable.
Incredible. What you're talking about, David, is this great use of all these extra margin
dollars. They would do all this for free for drugstores, and they would say, hey, don't you wish you
had like a big, bright, beautiful sign to bring customers into their store?
And Coca-Cola would design, pay for, fabricate, and deliver signs for drugstores that had the store name in big letters, and Coca-Cola's name just as big.
And they did this for thousands of drug stores across the South.
And so you see all these great old pictures of these stores that effectively look like Coca-Cola stores.
Oh, they're beautiful, yeah.
It almost looks like they're franchising Coca-Cola, rather than Coca-Cola just being a thing that's sold at the drugstores.
It's so beautiful because, like you said, it seems like they're franchising Coca-Cola with no capital investment, and the drugstores freaking love it because they're making 80% retail margins on this Coca-Cola.
Of course they want it to be their number one product.
They want a big advertisement and says, we have Coke.
Yes.
So by 1898, Coca-Cola is distributing over one million branded promotional items per year.
This is before the year 1900.
Yeah.
Nuts.
They also start expanding geographically because we talked about syrup earlier.
All the Coca-Cola company is doing here is selling this concentrated syrup.
It's the drugstore soda fountains that are then mixing it with carbonated water and making it a drink.
The syrup is small, compact, it's shelf stable, it's easy to transport.
Combined with the couponing strategy.
they've got this killer national growth strategy.
So by 1895, Coca-Cola is being sold in at least one soda fountain
in every single state and territory in the United States at this time.
Wild.
Wow.
Yeah.
And if you look at old pictures of this time, they had landed on what you were talking about,
the intrinsic advertising, a slogan that most people will know,
delicious and refreshing, that you see on all the old Coca-Cola memorabilia.
that's coming into view. They're not yet talking about the lifestyle you could have if you associate with Coke. They're talking about quality, and they're also talking about price. They're advertising as many places as they can, hey, this is five cents. They also start for the first time working with celebrities and athletes in some of these advertisements that they're doing. And of course, as you would expect, in 1895, they trademark the Coca-Cola script for the first time. They are granted that unbelievably valuable trademark.
Yes. The delicious and refreshing slogan, that actually evolves during these years. And it's Frank Robinson who starts to lean more towards delicious and refreshing and the social benefits and away from the patent medicine brain tonic slogans. There's actually a great quote on this from him in For God Country and Coca-Cola. He said, we found that we were advertising to the few, i.e., people who needed a brain tonic, when we ought to advertise to the mass.
And so he starts dropping all this, oh, sovereign remedy for headaches and nervousness stuff,
and then starts really emphasizing the drink Coca-Cola, delicious, refreshing.
This is really important because he's hitting on, like, hey, Coca-Cola is for everyone.
It's not only for people who have something wrong with them that they need a medicine to fix.
It's not a niche. It's not a demographic. It's for everybody.
And two, just instinctually, he understood, hey, we don't want to associate our product with,
negative things, with problems, headaches, nervousness, those are problems. We want to associate
our product only with positive things, delicious, refreshing, friendship, etc., etc. Yep, which is so
funny. At this point, all the cocaine is not gone yet. We still have, it's being marketed as
this unabated good. Well, at the same time, the company's like, we should probably do our best to
start moving away from cocaine because it doesn't actually seem to be the value proposition that people
are here for. Yes. And the anti-cocaine sentiment is coming. Yep. Before they fix the cocaine issue,
though, Candler in 1890 makes what is maybe simultaneously the best and the worst business deal
in history. He gives away the right to bottle and sell Coca-Cola for free. Yes, definitely one of
the dumbest deals ever if you just look at it as it was in that moment, but would be sort of
Coca-Cola's second great business model innovation after couponing. So in 1889, two guys from
Chattanooga, Tennessee named Benjamin Thomas and Joseph Whitehead come to Candler with a proposal.
They want to bottle Coca-Cola. They're convinced that bottling technology has matured enough at this
point, that they can now bottle fully mixed Coca-Cola beverages, and not only will they
not go bad, it'll keep the carbonated fizz. It will still be delicious when opened and
consumed at a later date. And Candler's like very anti-bottling, right? Yes, he is extremely
skeptical. He's like, yeah, we've tried this before. I really don't think the technology's
there. I'm not sure about this. Thomas and Whitehead, though, they're very persistent. They
say, well, totally get that, understand that. What if we do it at no risk to you? You let us buy
Coca-Cola syrup from you, same as all the soda fountains are doing. We will bottle it and sell it at
our own expense. And if the product isn't up to your standards, you can just pull our license and
we'll stop selling it. Candler thinks it over and he's like, that's a pretty good deal. I've got
nothing to lose here. Why not? I'll let you two young bucks have a go at this. So in July of 1899,
the three of them sign a contract that includes the following terms for a token contract price of
$1, which Candler never collects, the Coca-Cola company will sell syrup to Thomas and Whitehead
at a volume discount price of $1 per gallon. So even less than they are selling to the individual
soda fountains out there because I think it's going to be a higher volume business. Thomas and Whitehead
will have the exclusive assignable right to market and sell bottled Coca-Cola for five cents per bottle,
same prices at the soda fountains, across practically the entire United States. But this five cents per
bottle, operating a bottler is a tougher business than operating the soda fountain in this respect
because there is one meaningful additional cost, the bottle itself.
Yeah, the bottle.
You can see why Candler was reluctant to get into this business.
Thomas and Whitehead must use only Coca-Cola syrup.
They can never use any substitutes or competitors
as the syrup for the products that they are selling.
They cannot sell to soda fountains.
That channel will remain directly sold by the Coca-Cola company.
And if they fail to supply enough product to meet the demand,
for bottled Coke in the territories that they have rights over,
the contract will be forfeit.
The Coca-Cola company will provide all advertising needs for the product
and maintain all control over advertising.
And that's it.
There is no term length on the contract.
And, gosh, there's got to be something in there
about how that $1 per gallon could change over time, right?
Nope.
No, there is not.
So the Coca-Cola company, as long as this bottler continues to satisfy the demand and doesn't violate any of the other terms, is obligated to keep selling syrup at $1 per gallon to the bottler.
Yes.
And the bottlers are obligated to keep selling bottles to the public at $0.5. Retail cost.
Fascinating.
So let it be written.
Obviously, there are so many things wrong with this.
But also, so many things right with this.
This lets the Coca-Cola company enter and scale the bottle business completely capital and investment-free.
They don't have to do anything besides advertising, which they are already doing for their growing national business.
In fact, they're not doing any different advertising.
They're just amortizing the cost of the same advertising against one more touchpoint that they
could have with the customer. They're still painting the same barns. They're still putting up the same
signs. Yep. So Thomas and Whitehead go back up to Chattanooga. They set up the Coca-Cola
bottling company, and they start selling bottled Coke for the first time to groceries,
stands, and saloons, as they put it. Obviously, all three of those are pretty big markets
for Coca-Cola today, especially the, you know, like groceries and stands, aka
gas stations, convenience stores, et cetera, et cetera.
And at this point in history in 1900,
the Coca-Cola company is still just 20 employees.
So they're about to get ridiculous leverage
on just a handful of people that work at the parent company.
And that includes making the syrup.
It's a small head office.
High margin product, baby.
Yep.
So pretty quickly, two things happen with young Thomas and Whitehead here.
One, they didn't actually know each other very well
before going into business together, they end up getting into a fight and splitting into two separate
companies. Remember, the contract is assignable. They can do whatever they want with it. So they split up
the territory across America and they say, great, we're going to assign the rights we have in this contract
with the Coca-Cola company to our two separate companies. And then they both independently decide,
you know, man, actually owning and operating these bottling operations and dealing with the capital
investment of both setting up the production lines and then buying the bottles and recycling them
and returning them and cleaning them, et cetera. It's a kind of low margin, very upfront capital
intensive thing to bottle Coca-Cola. And operationally very intensive too, of course.
We've realized we can just assign the rights that we have here. Well, why don't we keep assigning
the rights? They start subcontracting out little subterritories to other entrepreneurs and small
bottling operations across the country. And so basically overnight, first dozens and then
hundreds of local Coca-Cola bottling operations pop up in these entrepreneurial endeavors in
basically every town and countryside across America. That have no contractual relationship
with the Coca-Cola company. They have a relationship with this quote-unquote parent
bottler. Either Thomas or Whitehead.
Yes.
So Thomas and Whitehead's companies come to be known as the parent bottlers, and then all the guys doing the actual work come to be known as the actual bottlers or the first-line bottlers.
This is the ultimate rent seeker. I mean, Thomas and Whitehead just have like a little toll booth set up in between the Coca-Cola company that owns the intellectual property and makes the syrup and markets it and the bottlers who are actually doing the work.
and they're just clipping little coupons
as the money flies by on the way
over to the bottlers and the Coca-Cola
company. But hey, Candler and Robinson
were going to do this, so, like, more
power to them. Right. That is the
argument here is that there is economic value
from Thomas and Whitehead and actually
spurring bottling to happen at all.
Yes. And they need to go
find the local bottlers and set up
these entrepreneurs and teach them how to do it.
Eventually, they're doing nothing. But in
the early days, they're not doing nothing.
That's true. Within 10 years, they managed to
find 400
proprietors of
bottling operations, get them to stand it up,
and by 1925 there was
1,200. So it is a
busy, busy 25 years
finding all these child
modelers. So
basically this creates a
second wave of blitz
scaling, if you will, for the
Coca-Cola company across America,
because they'd already nationally expanded to soda
fountains, but soda fountains
are only in town
large enough to have a soda fountain? What about all the rural areas of the countryside? Not to
mention just the simple market expansion of letting people drink at home or wherever at restaurants
anywhere else. Huge deal. The net of this is that within a few years, basically every single
man, woman, and child in the United States becomes intimately aware of and familiar with Coca-Cola.
And the company doesn't have to lift a single finger to do it. Yep. This is a single finger to do it.
Yep. This reminds me a lot of our visa episode where we were talking about the difference between
if you're Visa and you're scaling as a network of networks versus if you're Amex as a closed-loop
system. And we were talking about how Visa achieved tremendous scale relative to their head office
size, their employee headcount, and they did it in a very short period of time. Coca-Cola is
sort of in the same thing here where they can scale so fast because of the bottlers where they're
not actually having to do all this work themselves. I don't think Coca-Cola is the ubiquitous international
product that it is today, where they just created and then won the market without this
bottler scale thing. No, absolutely not. If they had taken the AMX approach and Candler had decided,
ah, you know, we're going to enter the bottling business ourselves and we're going to go market by market
and invest the capital in the production lines and the bottles,
absolutely no way would they have reached the critical scale that they did in the country.
And then internationally, too, they use the same model to go around the world.
Yep.
And Coca-Cola would start referring to this as the Coca-Cola system.
I don't think we've ever studied a business before that has a system like this,
where you can look at the Coca-Cola company, which is ostensibly what we're doing on this episode,
But actually to understand the scale and impact and reach of the product, you sort of have to look at the system holistically, the sum of the Coca-Cola company and all the bottlers. The crazy thing is this is still the system today. Coca-Cola still doesn't bottle. I mean, we can talk about the exceptions to that. But in large part, and their desired end state is there's all these bottlers around the world that they just sell syrup to.
Yeah. It's kind of like Microsoft and Intel in the PC era.
except even more closely tied,
it'd be like if Microsoft had contracts with Intel
where they got to stipulate what the processors were going to look like
and what the machines were going to look like.
It's funny, the thing that it made me think of
was it's kind of like our Rolex episode,
where Rolex, you don't want to be in the authorized dealer business.
It's operationally expensive, the training's hard,
but you do want the control over the retail experience,
and Rolex managed to have their cake and eat it too,
like we talk about that on that episode,
where they can kind of say,
it's a privilege to be able to sell our watches. And so you're going to make your store conform to our exact standard. Coca-Cola does the exact same thing with the bottlers. And they say, hey, you have a license to print money. It's not as much money as we're going to print, but you can print some money and you know it's going to be a good business. More than some money, the local Coca-Cola bottleers usually become the wealthiest family in any given town across America. Very true. But just to make sure we're super clear, Coca-Cola versus their bottlers, the Coca-Cola
company has higher gross margins, much better returns on invested capital, requires less invested
capital. They get to focus on just making syrup and marketing. They don't have to do any of the
undifferentiated stuff. You'd much rather be Coca-Cola than the bottlers, but it's a good business
to be the bottler too. Especially if you're a small town entrepreneur and, you know, turn of
the century America, like, hell yeah. And if the Coca-Cola company is going to dictate terms to me
and tell me exactly how red my truck needs to be and that it must say Coca-Cola in this particular
way and the bottles must come off exactly like this, that is fine. I will agree to all of this
because I know. I'm going to make money. Yes. So once things turbocharge with the bottlers and
scaling across America, a lot of imitators and copycats start popping up, trying to make another
cola drink, use the same model, go to other bottlers or maybe other aspiring entrepreneurs who didn't
get the Coca-Cola franchise, might want to open a competitive franchise in their local town,
et cetera, et cetera. By the mid-1900s, there are hundreds of Coca-Cola competitors out there.
There's Afri-Cola, char-cola, carbocola, cocoa-cola, fig-cola, cawola, cawola,
king-cola, standard cola, on and on and on and on and on.
And by the way, a-cola, like what I'm holding up right now, David, this brown-flavored fizzy drink,
wasn't a thing before Coca-Cola. Coca-Cola was insistent that we aren't the COCA variant of
Cola. Coca-Cola is one thing that means our formula, our secret formula, with this mystery
merchandise 7X, which is the real crux of the formula. And there's no other things that can be
colas because we created the concept of Coca-Cola and we are end of one. So, in 1905, Congress passes
the Federal Trademark Act in the United States
and they federalize trademark protection in the country.
Previously, it was just done state by state,
which I think is probably how Coca-Cola trademarked the script logo
earlier than that might have just been in Georgia.
Yep.
Of course, the Coca-Cola company is one of the first registrants
for their trademark,
and they start using this new law to sue the crap
out of all the competitors out there.
And really winning on these grounds that, like,
Cola isn't a category. You can't be a something-Cola. It's not a general term. We own
Coca-Cola as a lock-up. Yes. And they succeed. So over the next like 15, 20 years by the mid-20s,
it's estimated that Coca-Cola sues and shuts down over 7,000 copycat cola brands in a very, very
busy legal department. And this becomes the next critically important pillar of building Coke. Only Coke is the
real thing. Coke is real. Everything else is an imitator. It is a copycat. It should not exist.
Yep. And there is a famous 1920 case that went all the way to the Supreme Court. There was a company called the
Coke Company, K-O-K-E, that was insisting, actually, it's worth an aside here to say, at this point in time,
Coca-Cola did not embrace the nickname Coke. One, because of the affiliation with the drug. And we should
say by 1905, cocaine is pretty much entirely gone. There's no more Coke in Coca-Cola.
Yeah, it's actually an amazing story. In 1903, they contract with a company called the Schaefer
Alcoloid Works of Maywood, New Jersey that has developed a process to decokaneize Coca-Leaves.
And this company, which still exists to today and is still the sole supplier of decokaneized
Coca-leaves to Coca-Cola today, is granted a federal existence.
exemption by the U.S. government from the DEA, they're the only commercial entity in the United
States that is allowed to import coca leaves. Because they import it with cocaine in it still,
right? Yes, and then they have a process to take the cocaine out of the coca leaves. They sell
the decokaneized coca leaves to Coca-Cola. And I'm pretty sure the way that this ended up happening
was the Hoover administration said, if federal agents are present on site and can supervise the
destruction of the cocaine byproduct, then you can do this.
this on American soil. You can import the coca leaves, do this, create a giant pile of cocaine,
and then we will watch you destroy it. And that's still how they produce Coca-Cola.
Yeah. Which is also another piece of protecting Coca-Cola. Nobody else has access to Coca-Leaves.
You want that taste? You ain't going to get it. Because the cocoa leaves, as much as the cocaine is
gone, the cocoa leaf is still an important part of the formula. So anyway, there's this 1920 case
where Coke-K-O-K-E is sort of tongue-in-cheek saying, what do you mean?
You guys aren't saying you're Coke, so certainly we can be Coke.
And the other point they were making is Coca-Cola, you guys can't actually even use your trademark.
It's unprotectable, since there's not really much coca in it, and all the cocaine's been removed.
So it's actually misleading.
False advertising.
You're misleading the public by saying that you are Coca or Cola, you're not.
And the Supreme Court says, uh-uh, we are ruling in favor of Coca-Cola.
it is a phrase that has transcended being a descriptive name
and it is now just a brand
and the official ruling which is the stuff of legend
contains this phrase
Coca-Cola means a single thing
coming from a single source
and well-known to the community
and that is the new description
of what the Coca-Cola brand is
and why it is a trademarkable thing
that has nothing to do with Coca or Cola.
So this is the first,
biggest front of the war that Coca-Cola wages on the imitators through the courts.
It goes to the Supreme Court.
To the Supreme Court.
Amazing.
The second most important front of the battle against the imitators is the bottle.
So Coca-Cola realizes, hey, we're not actually in the bottling business ourselves, but we have full control over it.
If we really want to drive home to consumers that Coca-Cola is the real thing and have it be immediately identifiable what the real thing is, we actually can force our bottlers to develop and invest in a proprietary bottle that will become instantly visually known to all consumers in America and then around the world.
And this results in 1916 in the famous proprietary bottle that you all know today, the Ben, you are drinking out of right now, the contour bottle, as it is officially called, or as it is then known in the vernacular, the May West bottle.
Yes.
Because its proportions look like the famous actress, May West.
Yes.
And the story of how the contour bottle came to be is awesome.
But first, we want to tell you about a friend of the show.
that we are very excited about.
Work OS.
And if we've learned anything from Coca-Cola,
it is that if you have a great marketing message,
you should just keep reinforcing it.
So I called the founder of WorkOS and said,
what are we going with?
We're happy to brainstorm.
Let's figure out the right message.
And his comment back to me was,
we've got the right message.
Yes, we've gotten some insane feedback
on WorkOS from our last episode.
Somebody even called the read that we did
that you really mastermind had been.
the best podcast ad they've ever heard.
So we're rolling with it again.
If you're building software that's used in enterprises,
you've probably felt the pain of integrating things like SSO,
skim, permissions, audit logs,
and other features required by big customers.
WorkOS turns those potential deal blockers
into simple drop-in APIs,
letting you scale revenue earlier in the life of your company
or simplify your internal code base
if you're already a larger company.
Yep. The founder, Michael Greenwich,
pointed out to us that it's not just about scaling revenue.
it's about landing a customer so your competitors don't. It's like Coca-Cola here. Enterprise readiness
has become table stakes for companies no matter what their stage, and WorkOS is the go-to choice
for the best software companies to shortcut this process and get back to focusing on what makes
their beer taste better, building the product itself. So interestingly, this has accelerated
in the AI era. There are hundreds of AI companies that rely on Work OS as their OTH solution,
including OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor, perplexing.
Sierra, Replit, Versel, the list goes on. So why have all of them jumped on the WorkOS train?
What we learned from Michael is it's basically two things. One, AI companies are just scaling so much
faster that they need things like authorization, authentication, and SSO to quickly become
enterprise ready early on. And two, unlike the old world of bring your own SaaS product for your
little team, these AI products reach really deep into your customer's systems and data to be the
most effective. So IT departments are scrutinizing more than ever to make sure new products are
compliant before they can adopt them. So if you're ready to get started with just a few lines of code
for Sammel, Skim, Rback, SSO, authorization, authentication, and everything else to please IT
admins and their checklists. Check out WorkOS. That's WorkOS.com or click the link in the show notes
and just tell them that Ben and David sent you. Okay, David. So the bottle. The May West
bottle. So in 1912, the Coca-Cola bottling company sent a note to all of its members that
Coca-Cola company has this great distinctive logo, it's highly protected in the courts, we've got the
trademark on it, but we don't have a way to protect our business as the bottlers. So the proposal is
that the members all joined together to create a distinctive package for the products. And so in April of
1915, trustees of Coca-Cola Bottling Association vote to develop such a distinctive bottle.
Yes, and this is great. At the convention of the bottlers, where I think they approve this,
the Coca-Cola company's head of legal, a guy named Howard Hirsch, who is doing all these lawsuits of the
imitators across the country, he comes with the mission of trying to convince these bottlers that
spending this great capital expenditure is going to be in their interest. And this is what he says to them.
We are not building Coca-Cola alone for today.
We are building Coca-Cola forever.
And it is our hope that Coca-Cola will remain the national drink to the end of time.
The heads of your companies are doing everything in their power,
a considerable expense, to bring about a bottle that we can adopt and call our own child.
And when that bottle is adopted, I ask each and every member of this convention
to not consider the immediate expense that would be involved with change.
your bottle, but to remember this, that in bringing about that bottle, the parent companies
are bringing about an establishment of your own rights. It's exactly what you're saying,
Ben. Wow. Isn't that amazing? What an orator. Help us, help you. Wow. So they create this
design brief, and they send it around to 10 different glass companies around the country that says,
we want to develop a bottle so distinct that you would recognize it by feel in the dark
or lying broken on the ground. So simple. It's like what do you really want the product to be?
And so the root glass company of Terry Hote, Indiana, designs the bottle that goes on to win the
contest. You all know what it looks like, the contour bottle. Interestingly, so it's got this
sort of wide top and then sort of a, as one of the books put it, a snatched waste.
which is why they call it the May West bottle.
It's this Georgia green color.
That's right.
But hilariously, the first version of it was actually much more round.
Yeah, it was almost like a cartoon version of the bottle, you know, today.
And you might wonder why this sort of like striated, striped, super round pod,
something got lost in translation, and the bottle was designed to look like the cocoa plant.
The cocoa pod that you smash open to get out cocoa beans.
This is a whole different thing called the coca plant, not the cocoa plant, C-O-C-A versus C-O-C-O-A.
Yeah, I read about this too.
But ultimately, it satisfied the design brief.
You definitely recognize it.
It's super distinct.
It's kind of beautiful with the sort of rounded, we'll put it in the email, all based on a misinterpretation of what the plant actually is.
but very distinctive.
Ultimately, in 1915, the patent for the contour bottle gets granted.
Actually, not referencing Coca-Cola at all
because they wanted the whole thing to be a surprise when it hits the market.
They would then, this is some classic Coca-Cola lawyering,
get additional patents for iterations on the design
that effectively renewed the patent all the way from 1915
until the final one expired in 1951.
The company then went to the patent office and made the case that the bottle shape was so distinctive and so well known in 1951 that it should be granted trademark status, which they got.
It is highly unusual for packaging to be granted a trademark, and their rationale was, look, in 1949, we conducted a study that showed that less than 1% of Americans could not identify the bottle of Coke by shape alone.
It's an integral part of the product
in the brain. There you go.
Talk about a successful accomplishment
of that creative brief
that all those years later,
99% of America could look at it
and say, that's a Coke bottle.
Amazing.
So by the next year, one year after,
everybody in the extended Coca-Cola family system
is prospering.
And nobody more so than
the Coca-Cola company at the top.
Yes.
they had gotten a variety of monkeys off their back at this point. The cocaine is gone. They've
really started defending the trademark. They've got this bottle thing. They had another issue where there
was a federal regulator who thought caffeine was evil. So they appeased him by cutting the caffeine
content down by two-thirds. Yep. And by this point in time, the Coca-Cola brand and what it stands
for and the beverage, delicious, refreshing. It's such an integral part of America that taking out
the cocaine, cutting the caffeine by two-thirds or by three-quarters, doesn't really impact
things. The country is still hooked on Coca-Cola. In fact, it probably helps. It probably
helps, yes. Makes it more of a wholesome beverage. It makes it so you consume a lot more
Coca-Cola. Okay. So 1916, everybody's doing great. Nobody's doing better than the Coca-Cola
company. Asa-Candler is a big man about town in Atlanta, probably the most important person in town,
so much so that a group of other Atlanta citizens convince him to run for mayor, which he does,
and he wins and becomes the mayor of Atlanta in 1916.
And so he retires from Coca-Cola and gives his Coke shares to all of his children.
And then a couple years later, in 1919, a local banker named Ernest Woodruff puts together an investor syndicate.
and basically stages a takeover of the company
and buys out the family members for $25 million.
This also effectively serves as the IPO of the company
because it's a syndicate of investors
and shares start trading hands
and the company becomes publicly traded.
And certainly they didn't need to raise capital
by going public.
Right.
And it was a complicated little period
because some of the kids did want to have this happen,
other ones didn't want to have it happen. They're sort of family infighting. But ultimately,
after a few years, Ernest Woodruff and his syndicate of investors do own and control the company.
In fact, there was some clever financial engineering that had to happen to buy this company.
Like, $25 million in 1919 is a huge amount of money. And so as a result, this is actually the first time the secret formula for Coca-Cola gets written down.
It had been sort of this cool secret before, but as collateral for the loan that Woodruff took out to complete this transaction, they wrote down the formula and placed it in a vault at the Guarantee Bank of New York.
Because that's where they got the capital from, and so they get to hold the formula as collateral. Prior to this, it had always been verbal.
The system, Asa Candler set up, was insane. So this is from the book Secret.
formula about Asa and his son Howard Candler.
Asa made his son memorize the contents of the various containers that were stored carefully
in a locked room with their labels peeled or scratched off.
For days, with his father standing watch over his shoulder, Howard practiced making the
ultra-secret flavoring compound, merchandise number 7X, learning to recognize the pungent fruit
and vegetable oils by sight, smell, and remembering each was put on the shelf when it
came in from the supplier until he knew by heart the proper amounts and the exact order
in which to mix them. This is crazy. The way in which this giant mass-produced thing is
created, it's like only stored, I believe, in two people's head at any given time. And they
deliberately kept this a trade secret and didn't patent it, because if you patent something,
eventually it does become the property of the public and anyone can use it to
further renovate. But Coca-Cola has kept this secret all these years. Yeah. And it's still part of the lore
at the company to this day that, oh, there's two people that know the formula and they can't travel
together. Well, the formula is out there. Like, you can find it on the internet. Really? The Coca-Cola
company would maintain that is absolutely not true. Well, the original formula is in the appendix of
For God Country and Coca-Cola. Which I think they also maintain is not the right formula. I mean,
I would swear up and down, too, but yes, this is like,
the best example ever, though, of someone electing to use a trade secret instead of a patent and then
creating all this lore and secrecy and myth around it. But for six years, as collateral, the first
written version of the formula was in the Guarantee Bank of New York Vault. So Ernest, when he takes
over, he's a banker. He's an investor. This was like a crown jewel investment that he could get his
hands on in Atlanta. He doesn't really have any interest in running it. So the company
plods along for a couple of years with the existing management team. Ernest really doesn't
like this perpetual contract thing with the parent bottlers. He's like, what are you two guys
doing? As far as I can tell, you're not doing anything. He tries to get rid of that. This leads to all
sorts of lawsuits. The parent bottlers win. Ernest is frustrated. Finally, in 1923, he's had enough.
he decides that he's going to recruit a new company president to come in.
This is just four years after he buys it.
And almost against his will, he has to consider his son Robert as a candidate.
And Ernest barely approves of this wayward son, Robert.
Who is this Robert Woodruff character?
He's the protagonist of this story.
I mean, for all the John Pemberton lore and all the Asa Candler lore,
Coca-Cola, as we know it today, is Robert Woodruff's Coca-Cola.
The boss, as he would come to be known.
Yes.
So, Robert is 33 at this point in time.
He has left Atlanta to seek his fortune away from his father's influence,
and he has become the vice president of the White Motor Company in Ohio,
in Cleveland, Ohio.
Yep.
Which I think was one of, if not the largest truck manufacturer in the U.S.
at the time. Yep. And Robert is a star there. He's widely regarded as one of the most talented
young executives in new burgeoning corporate America here in the 20s. He's best friends with the
Major League Baseball star Thai Cobb. They go hunting together. He's like a man about town. And
Standard Oil of New Jersey is trying to hire him as an heir apparent to come in and potentially be the
next CEO of standard oil of New Jersey. And David, do you know what standard oil of New Jersey
is today? Uh, SO, right? Exxon. It's Exxon mobile. Oh, Exxon. That's right. That's right.
I can never keep track of which breakup company became which. So yeah, there's an alternative future
where instead of CEO of Coke, Robert Woodruff became CEO of Exxon. Exxon, yeah. And Robert,
through his own devices, again, almost against his father's will, had been an original
investor in the syndicate that bought out Coke from the candlers. So the board of Coke
makes Ernest consider his son. Ernest finally says, all right, fine. His first offer to Robert
to come be the new president of Coca-Cola is a salary less than half of what he's making at
White Motor Company. Robert rejects that. They negotiate back and forth. And finally, they reach a deal
with Robert saying one condition that I absolutely must have
is you, dad, you are out. You are going to fully exit the business.
Everything gets handed over to me, and I am going to have full control and run this company.
Ernest is frustrated enough. He says, okay, so in 1923, Robert takes over
as president of the Coca-Cola company, becoming the youngest president of any major corporation
in America at that time. He would run the company
for the next 32 years as president
and then control the company as chairman of the board
for another 30 years after that
until his death in 1985.
Wild.
So one of the first moves that Robert makes when he comes in
is to become close with the head ad man
at Coke's ad agency at the time,
a firm in St. Louis called the Darcy Ad Agency.
And Coca-Cola's main creative account man there,
It's a guy named Archie Lee.
Lee had already created a hit slogan for Coca-Cola in Christmas of 1922
with his Thirst, No, No Season campaign, which is a great phrase with a great ring to it.
But it was particularly good because Coke had a legacy of primarily being enjoyed in the summer.
Yeah, you drink it in the hot southern summers of Georgia.
Yeah. So wintertime is a big opportunity for us.
And this was part of moving in on Christmas.
More to come on Christmas in a sec.
And together, Archie Lee and Robert Woodruff
make a pretty massive leap forward
for Coca-Cola advertising.
And it's really the last critical piece of the brand.
They embrace, maybe I might even say,
create lifestyle advertising.
This is everything that we talked about
in the Rolex episode,
but that was much later when Rolex did that
in the 50s and 60s.
This is in the 1920s.
Coca-Cola is inventing this idea that through advertising, we can associate our products with feelings.
Oh, yes.
This is the sort of opposite of the intrinsic advertising that we were talking about earlier.
This is extrinsic advertising.
Advertising that really has nothing to do with the features of the product.
It's about the life you will live if you associate with our brand.
Yes.
Coca-Cola isn't a carbonated, sweet and soft drink with unique flavor manufactured by the Coca-Cola
Company. Coca-Cola is happiness. Coca-Cola is friendship. It's romance. It brings you closer with the
people you love. Coca-Cola is summertime. Coca-Cola is holidays. Coca-Cola is Christmas.
And whether you are in America or not in America, Coca-Cola is America.
Yes. And boy, do the two of them just...
turn out some bangers.
So Archie eliminates basically all verbiage from Coca-Cola advertising, except for one simple
slogan.
So this is radical.
Think back to those original ad copies that we were reading a minute ago.
So many words.
In this day and age in the 20s, there's so many words.
Everything is so descriptive.
In 1923, when Robert takes the helm of the company, they come out with Coca-Cola.
Always delightful, period. Four words. That's the campaign. The next year in 1924, they do better.
Refresh yourself. That's it. You don't need to say anything more. And that was simplified from Archie Lee's original idea for the theme that your pause and refresh yourself.
He would come back to that a couple years later in 1929 with the Grand Slam, Mother of the Mall, the pause.
that refreshes
Coca-Cola.
Which is so funny,
because I know this is the winner.
The pause that refreshes
is the most successful campaign
of this era.
I actually didn't hear about that
at all until doing this research.
I associate all these other campaigns
delicious, refreshing,
or always delightful.
But God, did that take off?
I mean, this idea that in your life,
you just need a pause,
and everybody experiences that problem
of needing a pause,
and we are the thing that you do during that pause.
Yeah, genius.
But by today's standards of language, it's a little bit clujy, I think.
I think there was an element of the context of the time.
That came out in 1929, same year as the stock market crash.
And so all through the 30s of the Depression, this idea that Coke is a pause away from the harsh realities of your day-to-day existence in the Depression, a simple luxury that you can take a pause and refresh.
with for only five cents
when everything around you is
going to shit. I think it really
resonated. Yeah. So
the slogans are
revolutionary, cutting out all
the verbiage, all the descriptive language.
The other half
of what Archie Lee and Bob
Woodruff do with the brand
is the imagery. So
Lee goes out and he contracts
with all these famous
American artists and illustrators
of the day to create these like
American lifestyle tabloes for the visual aspects of the Coke ads.
Yeah, it should be like a Coca-Cola advertisement that says...
Idyllic as a Norman Rockwell painting, you might say.
Yes, yes.
Because they actually go get Norman Rockwell.
Along with NC Wyatt and Haddon Sunbloom and like some of the greatest American artists of the day
to create what you think of as the idyllic Americana family life.
It's all coming out of the Coca-Cola ad department.
And they're partnering with the most looked up to athletes and celebrities.
You know, these athletes promoting health that must be part of why they're so great at athletics.
They have Kerry Grant, Gene Harlow, just associating with wholesomeness in Americana.
Archie Lee would describe the function of the imagery aspect of the campaigns.
He says, the idea in an illustration must hit the viewer like a shot.
It ought to force the exclamation from them, what a peach of an idea.
Not only that, but they must remember that it was Coca-Cola that was refreshing and good to drink in the image.
And so he and the Darcy Agency come up with a list of commandments for the Coca-Cola account.
Some of them are never split the trademark Coca-Cola on two lines.
Coca-Cola must always be together on one line.
The circular sign should always carry the phrase,
delicious and refreshing.
You should never refer to Coca-Cola as it.
It is not an impersonal pronoun.
It is Coca-Cola.
And you should never use Coca-Cola in the personal sense,
such as Coca-Cola invites you to lunch,
or Coca-Cola invites you to enjoy.
Coca-Cola is above that.
The other thing that happens in this era is billboards.
By 1930, there are now 29 million cars on the road.
So billboards sort of became this really valuable way
to promote the brand and lifestyle of Coca-Cola.
And Woodruff, his lieutenants,
would often go around saying that
what Woodruff wants to do
is make Coca-Cola the most American thing in America.
Well, speaking of the most American of things,
how about the commercialization of Christmas
and Santa Claus?
Because in 1931,
Lee and Woodruff and the Coca-Cola crew
create what I think is unquestionably the greatest lifestyle advertising success in human history,
where they manage to associate Santa Claus with Coca-Cola.
It's amazing and really bring the modern Santa Claus into existence, period.
They sort of standardized the concept of Santa, the one that we see today, is pretty much Coca-Cola's Santa.
Yes, okay, so what happens?
Coke does not invent Santa as a, you know, common urban legend.
Right. First, let's bust that myth.
The concept of Santa Claus existed long before 1931 in Coke.
The famous Night Before Christmas poem was written in 1823, so it's been around for a long time.
And, of course, there was St. Nicholas.
It goes back many, many hundreds of years.
And there was a very popular Santa, which was Thomas Nast's Santa, who was this sort of
shorter, elf-like Santa.
We'll link to it in the email that is on its way to becoming Santa,
but is not the big, smiley, approachable,
sort of red-faced, cheery, jolly Santa.
Big fat dude, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing.
You read the night before Christmas poem.
Santa's an elf.
He's little.
Yes.
Or he was before Coca-Cola.
So in 1931, Coke commissions the artist Haddon Sunbloom
to create Christmas ad imagery for Coca-Cola featuring
Santa Claus. And so this being a Coke ad, some bloom is like, well, I'm going to make Santa as
red as possible in Coca-Cola Red. And then I'm going to make him as big as possible to get as much
Coca-Cola Red in the picture. So he creates the first of his Coca-Cola Santa campaigns that he would
make for the next 33 years until 1964. And it debuts at Christi-Colica. And it debuts at
Christmas time in a full color advertisement in the Saturday evening post. And people absolutely
love it. You got to remember it. This is 1931. So this is before television and magazines
had only just started to be commonly printed in color. So before this point in time,
you couldn't really get mass produced color images out to the public. So San Francisco,
didn't have a color. Like, nobody really thought about what color Santa was. That's right, because
sometimes Santa was red, sometimes Santa was green. Yep, blue, yellow. The point is, there was no
standardization. All of a sudden now, Coke's got this huge industrial imagery machine of not only
advertisements in the Saturday Evening Post, but all the billboards and the signs and the point-of-sale
merchandise, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And they're just plastering America with this big, beautiful
color version of Santa.
Which is funny, because Pepsi also did do some Santa illustrations, but Coke kind of ran away
with it, and it became clear pretty early.
Coke is just going to own Santa.
Yep.
David, do you know who Haddon Sunblum also created, or created the most famous illustration
of?
I don't.
I should know.
There's two.
One is Quaker Oates, the Quaker Oats Man.
Oh, yes, I did read that.
Which interestingly is owned by Pepsi today.
Oh, we will get into Quaker Oates.
And the other is Aunt Jemima.
Aha, I did not know that.
As discussed on our Mars episode.
And this was really the Dale in the Coffin for Coke being a summer drink.
I've heard that the most Coke is now sold during the holidays,
which is amazing since it was a refreshing thing served for the hot Atlanta summers, yeah.
Unbelievable.
They also, during this time period, get into partnerships,
Big, giant landmark brand partnerships, the first of which is the Olympics.
Coca-Cola was a sponsor of the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam, which makes them the longest-running Olympic sponsor, and at the L.A. 28 games, that will make 100 years of Coca-Cola partnering with the Olympics.
Yeah, I was going to say the 1928 games in Amsterdam, were there any other sponsors?
Like, the Olympics probably weren't a commercial thing yet.
I think that's right.
I think it was really innovative.
Yeah, man, no Coca-Cola, no visa.
Right, and this predates all the stuff that Coca-Cola did with the World's Fair and with World Cup
and with all these other big sort of global brand stage events.
Interesting.
The other big pillar in the ground that Woodruff puts in in these first 10 years is around
standardization.
This is when he really throws his arms up and says, we're going to stop changing the formula.
And my understanding is from that point on, in 1920-ish, all the way until 1985, there was no changes to the Coca-Cola formula.
Woodruff's Coca-Cola was that 65-year unchanged formula.
Oh, geez, what happened in 1985 besides Robert Woodruff dying, which is directly related to what else happened in 1985?
We will get there.
But it's this notion of everything should be standardized.
It should be the formula.
It should be the marketing.
It should be the packaging.
They were already in this ballpark, but it was his idea that wherever you are when you reach for a Coke, it should feel the same.
It should taste the same.
It should have the same temperature.
And so the spiritual thing that he does to sort of illustrate this is he goes to the bank in New York and says, we are repaying the loan.
We are taking our formula, the canonical one-of-one formula.
We are moving it to our bank, the trust company bank.
in Atlanta, which would become SunTrust, and it would sit there for the next 86 years.
And is now in the World of Coca-Cola, right?
Yes. And the reason it is there, they made this whole big parade of we're taking it out of
the bank and we're putting it in World of Coca-Cola. Theme Park, for lack of a better phrase.
The Coca-Cola version of Hershey Park.
Yes. That is a vault that is very meant to be gazed upon. Because when they did move it
there about a decade and a half ago, they kind of realized for a long time,
to many generations, we made a big deal of we have this secret formula and you need to know
about it. We're going to be really loud about it, but it's super secret. So you can't see it. And that
worked and it really lived in the public's consciousness. And it had sort of fallen out. It was an effort
in 2011 to kind of shake the public and especially the younger generations and say we are
Coca-Cola and we have the one secret formula and we want to bring it back to your attention
that we have something that is super secret and worth protecting. The other thing Woodruff does in these
early years is he creates the company's first statistical department to do market research
and to study the business and customers sort of quantitatively. They realized that by this point,
they've basically saturated the market of every man, woman, child in America.
Population growth is only going to get them so far in terms of growth to the business.
So what they need to do is they need to find ways for existing Coca-Cola drinkers to access
and drink Coca-Cola more often.
Now, remember, what was Woodruff doing before he negotiated with his dad to come to Coca-Cola?
He was at the white motor company, and he was being recruited by Standard Oil of New Jersey.
He's like, guys, we need to get Coca-Cola into gas stations.
So he decrees that gas stations is the next major growth opportunity for the company.
We need to take that opportunity to put a Coke in their hands.
So they contract out a design for a cooler, because if you're going to keep Coke's ice cold at 34 degrees in gas stations, they need to be in a cooler.
They get a company to manufacture it, and they go around the country and install 32,000 Coca-Cola coolers in gas stations around the country just in the first year.
And giant signs, right, that's a Coca-Cola sold here, or drink Coca-Cola or Coca-Cola always refreshing.
Yep, in the gas stations. This is the precursor to coin operated bending machines, which they introduce in 1937. And Coke is the first company to do that.
And someone told me in the research that the gas station owners absolutely loved this because, A, the signs told people, you can come get a Coke here, which was a value proposition for people. But B, just like we're talking about, there's so much margin to go around being the retailer of.
soft drinks, especially at this time, that they were making more money on Coke than gas.
Yep.
So, of course, you want this. The gas is a pure commodity. You're selling against other gas
stations in the area. This is where you can actually make some real margin dollars.
Totally. You don't make money on the gas. You make money on the convenience store.
Starting with Coke. So the other big change in operations that Robert brings to the company
is the relationship with the bottlers.
This is part of his standardization push.
A whole bunch of bottlers are great,
and a whole bunch are not.
You know, there's 1,200 independent businesses out there.
And so he goes around,
and at first he starts trying to, like, bully and intimidate
the, shall we say, less standardized bottlers
into, you know, meeting his maniacal quality standards.
After a while, he realizes, wait a minute,
why am I wasting my time trying to convince these small town entrepreneurs
to do what I want, I'll just buy them out. And so he changes course for the Coca-Cola company
and says, I'm now willing to buy and own and operate bottlers. Oh. Not because I want to,
but as a way to like force standardization and clean up underperforming bottlers, I'll buy them out,
fix them up, and then I'll resell them to local entrepreneurs. I didn't realize that started that
early. Yeah, he started that in the 20s. Wow. He also realizes, wait a minute, this bottling,
franchising operation works pretty well here in America. Pretty sure we can do it overseas, too.
So during the 20s and 30s, he goes to Europe, he goes to South America, starts setting up international
bottlers there. Same model, local entrepreneurs, locally owned businesses with every incentive in the
world to push Coca-Cola. Yep. Now, there is still that one term of the deal that was we will always
sell a gallon for a dollar. That starts to become problematic with inflation. You want the ability
to change the price at some point over several decades. And so it's pretty interesting to think about
the two sides of the coin of having to sell it at $1 in perpetuity. The con is obviously,
well, inflation's going to happen, and so our margins are going to get squeezed, where it's just
going to cost more and more and more to make Coca-Cola. The bet that they basically were making
is, well, since we can't raise prices at all, we need to scale to amortize all of our fixed costs
and get greater and greater economies of scale on manufacturing. And so it sort of forced them
into this massive scale mentality that they were already sort of in. They wanted to be the one
Coca-Cola for the world. But this really backed them into that strategy as you don't have another
strategy. Your economy is a scale in manufacturing need to outpace inflation. So get going.
Yep. And the flip side of it is it was also in the contract that the bottlers had to sell to
retailers at the enforced retail price of five cents a Coke. Right. And as we get into the
depression, that becomes a huge lever against potential competitors. How's that? Because all the other
competitors who are at much smaller scale than Coke, as the depression hits and inflation starts
running rampant, they need to raise their prices. But here's Coke, which is arguably a superior
product. It's certainly superior in that its brand recognition is much wider than any competing
cola. And Coke is cheaper. So it's this amazing leverage that they have over the market. So between the
trademark litigation, the proprietary bottle, and now the pricing power across the market.
Coke is just steamrolling all existing and potential competition out there.
Which is so funny you say pricing power, because it's not more expensive.
In fact, it's most often far less expensive than the competition.
Yes, but I think the competition was having to hit the nickel price to try and compete with Coke
and their margins because they were sub-scale would be much, much, much worse.
Yep. Coke can be profitable at way lower and consumer prices than the other subscale companies.
Yes.
It's like they actually have pricing power that they're not using.
Yes, they have latent pricing power.
It's like more strategic to them to not raise prices.
Yes.
So not good news for any competitors out there.
And they basically all except for a small handful get steamrolled.
Except for one, Pepsi.
which amazingly started way back when Coca-Cola started.
Yep, 1894.
And for many years, it was just one of the other colas out there, you know, would-be competitors.
Actually, I had no idea about this until doing the research.
Pepsi tried to sell itself to Coca-Cola, like sell its operations to Coca-Cola three separate times over the years.
Three? I didn't know that.
Three times.
Wow.
and Coca-Cola, you know, the various owners over the years, turned it down three times.
Amazing.
Until the Depression.
And that is what changes Pepsi's fortunes.
So Coke, like we've just been saying, is selling for a nickel, and it's super hard for anybody else to match it.
But they had one weak spot that they didn't quite think through.
And it was actually the proprietary
May West Contour bottle.
It was six and a half ounces.
That's not a lot of drink in that bottle,
especially by today's standards.
It's smaller than a minicam.
I think the minicans are seven and a half ounces today.
Let's see.
I got one right here.
The minicans, very popular today.
That's been a shift.
Seven and a half.
Yeah, it's crazy.
The original bottles were smaller than this.
Six and a half ounces.
Very small.
So even though they were a nickel,
you weren't getting a lot of refreshment in that bottle.
In 1934, Pepsi, in almost a last-ditch effort to try and just do something to stay alive
and save the company, tests using recycled beer bottles, which are 12-ounce bottles
to sell Pepsi, also for a nickel.
And when you say save the company, just before you go on, this is not new.
to Pepsi. The Pepsi that exists today is like four Pepsi's later from the Pepsi that was started
around the same time Coca-Cola was. Coca-Cola has been approximately one company all the way through.
Pepsi's been bankrupt two, three times and sold the new owners and completely new companies started
with the word Pepsi in it. This has been a rocky road for them. Yes, but this is when it's
fortune's turn. So 1934, they start selling Pepsi in
in 12-ounce recycled beer bottles.
Now, they still have the same pricing pressure, you know,
and margin pressure from Coke selling it a nickel.
But it turns out if you look at the unit drivers of margins on beverages...
Oh, there's two expenses.
There's sugar and there's the bottle,
and then everything else is approximately free.
So the amount of liquid in the bottle, like you said, Ben, is approximately free.
Whether you're serving six ounces of liquid per bottle
or 12 ounces of liquid per bottle or later...
64 ounces of liquid per bottle.
Yeah.
Not going to impact your margins that much.
And hey, oh, by the way, there's a lot of existing 12-ounce beer bottles out there
that we can buy up super cheap and put our Pepsi in.
Pepsi starts selling 12-ounce bottles also for a nickel.
Their cost structure just declined because they can get the recycled beer bottles.
Didn't impact their margins by putting more liquid in there.
And now they've got a really compelling.
consumer value proposition during the Depression, twice as much cola for the same price.
Yep. And that is the first real punch that anyone's been able to land on Coca-Cola.
Yep. This is textbook counter-positioning. Coca-Cola cannot respond because they and their bottlers
have just invested all of this capital and all of this IP into the six-and-a-half-ounce contour bottle.
they can't react.
Yeah.
Genius.
Truly genius.
I mean, it was like back against the wall genius, but genius.
Now, it doesn't do much for Pepsi's brand.
They're very obviously saying, like, pick us because of quantity, not because we are the more
delicious or better or more prestigious beverage.
And I think this decision, while it kept them alive, was sort of a hangover that they would
have for the next 80 years of this, like, yeah, we're not as good.
We're not the best flavor, but, like,
We're also here, and you can get a lot of us for cheap.
Well, are they the best flavor? Are they not?
We'll come back to that.
That's all subjective.
There's a discount promise to the brand.
Yes.
Which in 1934 is kind of all that matters with consumers.
Went over real well, yeah.
So Coke can't fight them on the amount of liquid in the bottle
because they're locked into the six and a half ounce.
And they don't want to cheap in their brand.
So instead, they pull out another arrow in their quiver to fire against competitors.
they sue Pepsi for trademark infringement.
Pepsi Cola, you can't use the word cola.
We have trademarked the word cola.
So in this court process,
the president of Pepsi at the time,
a guy named Walter Mack,
ends up discovering that Coca-Cola
had illegally bribed and intimidated
another cola competitor out there
into shutting down.
They paid a bribe to the company owner
to just shut down rather than going through a litigation.
Mack brings this evidence to the court where Coca-Cola is suing Pepsi for trademark infringement.
Bob Woodruff immediately calls him up and requests a meeting.
Bob comes up to New York, sits down with Mac, and he's like, hey, this is all a big misunderstanding.
I'm a good Southern gentleman.
I don't know anything about this.
But you know what?
Why don't we just settle all of this trademark stuff?
You can still use the word cola?
Is that what he's offering him?
Yeah.
The outcome of this is that Pepsi Cola becomes the only Coke competitor
that is allowed to use the word cola legally at this point in time.
Which destroys any precedent of Coca-Cola protecting cola.
It means they are forever giving up their argument in the courts that we own cola as a part of our trademark.
Woodruff, apparently, despite this conciliation, hadn't learned his lesson and was still not
above trying to bribe his competitors. He tries to bribe Mac by saying, like, you know,
do you really want to be running this Pepsi thing? I'm still great buddies with the white motor,
folks. I think you would make a great president of white motors. I would really love to
recommend you for that job. And Walter Mac's like, absolutely not. I'm keeping Pepsi. Thank you
for settling the trademark litigation.
And doesn't Coca-Cola's general counsel quit over this, too?
Yes, yes, that's right.
I think the idea is like, come on, we've got to fight this.
We can't just be giving up our trademarks.
Yes.
But Woodruff, this is one of the few times where I feel like he put an idealistic approach aside
and said, we've got to be pragmatic here.
We've got to settle with these guys.
So the result of this is that Pepsi becomes Coke's first real, legitimate competitor.
And by August 1941, so it's at six, seven years later,
later, colas that are not Coca-Cola have 14% of the U.S. soft drink market share,
and the majority of which is Pepsi.
It's a major chick in the armor.
It's basically 100% Coke before this happened.
And Pepsi establishes a pretty meaningful foothold.
Yep.
So, you know, on the one hand, this is a real bad thing for the Coca-Cola company.
they went from having essentially a monopoly on the market to letting a real legitimate competitor get established in the U.S.
But a really, really good thing is also about to happen to the Coca-Cola company that makes the U.S. market itself one of many, shall we say.
And that is World War II.
But before we tell that story, now is a great time to thank you.
think, one of our favorite partners, Shopify.
Boom.
Okay, so last time, David, I took you on a tour of my house and all the brands I own that
have built their businesses on Shopify.
Today, I'm going to take you on a tour of all the places or all the channels that you can
sell with Shopify.
Great.
I love it.
Let's do it.
All right.
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So brands like Allbirds and Parachute and Allo, when you buy in store, you're often checking out on Shopify hardware with Shopify software.
Hmm, interesting, got it.
Okay.
Then there's social commerce, so Instagram, TikTok, Pinterest, YouTube, and even Roblox, brands can connect their Shopify store and enable shopping directly where the customers are.
And all the selling and fulfillment actually happens on Shopify behind the scenes.
Another big one that surprises people, get this, David, Amazon.
Whoa, Amazon.
Yeah, Walmart. Target Plus.
Shopify makes it easy to expand into these marketplaces so merchants can sync their products
and manage sales all from one unified platform.
And of course, there's the shop app, which now has over 100 million users.
Lastly, the big recent one, AI.
Toby has talked about how all in the company is on AI.
I'm sure you saw recently, David, that OpenAI launched instant checkout.
So when you see buy links in ChatGPT, there's a good chance Shopify is powering those.
And on top of that, Shopify just launched what they call an AI co-founder called Sidekick,
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Get started at Shopify.com slash acquired, and be sure to tell them that Ben and David sent you.
Okay, David, World War II.
All right.
Gee, how did Coke end up all over the world?
Hmm.
So remember we said a minute ago that Woodruff had set up international bottlers in the 20th.
and thirties before World War II. But none of it was very big yet. By the time America enters
World War II in 1941, Coke at this point has already been around for 55 years and has already
established itself as like a quintessential part of America. So the military and the U.S. government
realize, hey, Coke may actually be one of America's best weapons in this war. I mean, one, it's a symbol of
home and something for the troops' morale. They can keep fighting for abroad all across the world.
And two, what greater symbol of American prosperity to bring and plant seeds of all around the world
than Coca-Cola? It's our perfect, you know, cultural ambassador product here.
Yeah, whether the rest of the world looked at it that way, TBD, but I'm sure the U.S.
government looked at it as like a great ambassador of our values.
And however people around the world saw it at the time, one way or another, they ended up
drinking Coca-Cola.
Yep.
So first, at the outset of the war, the U.S. introduces sugar rationing.
Coca-Cola immediately lobbies the government for an exemption, and they produce supporting
evidence like this letter from a military supply officer.
Very few people have ever stopped to consider the great part that Coca-Cola plays in the
building and maintaining of morale among military personnel.
Frankly speaking, we would be at a loss to find anything as satisfied
and refreshing a beverage to replace Coca-Cola.
In our opinion, Coca-Cola could be classified
as one of the essential morale-building products
for the boys in the service.
Which is interesting, because what Coke doesn't win
is an exemption on the sugar rationing.
What they do win is they get to supply Coca-Cola
free of rations to the military,
and they just get to take a really broad lens
on what to the military means.
I believe the way it ends up,
coming down, is technically, yes, what you said, Ben, but it applies to any bottler that serves
retailers that are located near a military base, regardless of whether that bottler also serves
civilian customers. So for large portions of the U.S., yeah, they can still get full-sugar
Coca-Cola during the war. Wow. None of Coca-Cola's competitors, including Pepsi, get anything
like this. This was a big legal battle. Pepsi was basically saying, hey, you can't just say this supplier
gets an exemption by name. You have to say, like, cola's due. And the response back from the government
was basically like, sorry, Coca-Cola is about as American as it gets. And that's what we need right now.
And that's what our boys are requesting, including General, soon-to-be president Eisenhower.
Oh, yeah, he's a Coke man. So the military, under Eisenhower, grants Coca-Cola employees
quote-unquote, technical observer status,
meaning that they can participate
in the supply and infrastructure build-out
of the military around the world
just the same as military infrastructure people.
This is unbelievable.
So as the American military is like advancing
in the global theater all around the world,
Coca-Cola is right there with them,
setting up bottling plants and production lines
to supply the troops.
And documenting of the airs,
absolute crap out of it to use in their advertising. Yes. So Robert Woodruff, 1941,
comes right out and pledges that anywhere where an American soldier is fighting the war,
they will be able to get a Coca-Cola, and they'll be able to get that for five cents.
Yep. There are these just unbelievable quotes from American GIs during the war that are in
For God Country and Coca-Cola. There's two of them I picked out here. One, I always thought Coca-Cola was
wonderful drink. But on an island where few Americans have ever set foot, it is a godsend.
I can truthfully say that I haven't seen smiles spread over a bunch of boys' faces as they did
when they saw Coca-Cola in this godforsaken place. Wow. And then if anyone were to ask us what
we are fighting for, we think half of us would answer the right to buy Coca-Cola again. These are
actual quotes from letters from American GIs during the war. It's unbelievable. And so,
Supply them, they did.
1941 to 1945, 64 portable bottling plants were sent to Asia, Europe, and North Africa.
And the best estimates are that more than 5 billion bottles were distributed to troops during the war.
Wow. I saw an estimate that it was 10 billion. Wow.
Which, of course, the U.S. government loves just as much as it loved it during the war,
because what better symbol of America to have left behind in all these countries around the world
than Coca-Cola.
So Coca-Cola internally ends up calling the war effort, quote, the greatest sampling
program in the history of the world.
And they estimate that the war effort opened up markets abroad for Coca-Cola that otherwise
would have taken 25 years and untold millions of dollars of investment to open.
Wow.
To say it accelerated Coke's international rollout is like understatement of the century.
That's international, but then back home, it really cemented Coke as, this is an apple pie in a bottle.
All the servicemen coming home, Coke was the treat that you could get when you were at war.
You better believe they're Coke drinkers for life now.
They're not switching brands.
So after the war in 1950, a third of Coke's profits are already coming from abroad from all these brokers that they got set up.
And Time magazine features Coca-Cola on the cover of Time magazine.
seen this? Oh, wasn't it the first product ever on the cover of the magazine? It might be. I'm not
sure about that, but have you seen what the image is? No. It's a painting, like an oil painting,
of an anthropomorphized red Coca-Cola disc with arms and a face, and it is larger than the
earth, and it is sitting behind the earth, reaching around and feeding the smiling Earth a bottle
of Coca-Cola. And the caption on the cover of Time magazine says,
World and friend.
The implication being that Coca-Cola is a friend to the world.
Wow.
Crazy, right?
So it's funny, before World War II, there was a presence for Coca-Cola in pre-Nazi Germany.
Oh, yes, I know what story you're about to tell.
As you can imagine, it became difficult to supply Nazi Germany with American Coca-Cola during the war,
since those factories, German Coca-Cola factories lost touch with the market.
mother ship and all the ingredients that they would need to source, they found alternate ingredients
and made kind of like a crappier knockoff drink that they could make with the supplies
they had. Yep. That drink is Fanta. Yep. Yeah. Fanta owned by Coca-Cola was the brainchild of
Nazi Germany Coca-Cola bottling entrepreneurs. Who lost access temporarily to the real
thing and did that instead. They would change the formula and they would launch it in the U.S.
later in 1960, but Fanta has its origins as we can't get real Coca-Cola in Germany during
World War II. So this is what we're making. Name and all, Fanta is the name that came up with.
Yeah. Parts of history that most people don't know. Don't you want a Fanta Fanta?
Yeah. The thing that happens post-war, just because we've planted this seat elsewhere,
to follow it through. 1945 is the year that Coca-Cola officially embraces
Coke and trademarks it. And from here on out, they actually do start referring to it as
Coke in the advertising. Yep. So coming out of the war, Coca-Cola's business, at least,
had never been better. The brand domestically has regained any of the ground that it lost
to Pepsi during the Depression. Internationally, they've just accelerated 25 years worth of
market development into four and are basically like,
part of U.S. government policy during the Cold War to keep Coca-Cola flowing into countries around
the world. For Pepsi, things are not as bright after the war. They didn't have any of the benefits
that Coke had. And so once again, they find themselves in a position of backs against the wall
need to do something different here. So right at the end of the 1940s, they poach a Coca-Cola executive
named Alfred Steele.
He does the unthinkable for a Coke man.
He defects to Pepsi,
the inferior imitator.
That's how they refer to it in internal communications.
They don't write Pepsi.
They say the imitator.
The imitator.
So Steele had been an ad man at the Darcy agency,
and then he moved to Coke and joined Coke in-house.
Basically, as soon as he gets to Pepsi,
Steele stages a coup and kicks out Walter Mack
who had been running Pepsi for like the last 20 years
He shoves him out and Steele becomes the new president of Pepsi
He's quite the maverick, shall we say
There are just some hilarious quotes from him about his management philosophy
One example, quote,
The whole trick in hiring executives
Is to find a good man and turn him into a prick
A good man will be able to stand the course
But if the guy was a prick to begin with, he'll crumble along the way.
And then I don't care if the consumer wants carbonated sweat in a goat skin pouch.
If so, this side of the room go looking for goats and that side start running fiercely in place.
This is Alfred Steele.
And not only does he turn around Pepsi's fortunes.
I think Pepsi really becomes the more interesting company than Coke for at least the next, call it, 30, 40 years here after World War II.
Coke has had this incredible success on the back of the war, but they're also pretty fat and happy.
They're not interested in rocking the boat, shall we say.
Steel clearly doesn't give a crap about tradition or history or anything.
Nothing to lose.
So Steele, when he gets to Pepsi, says, all right, we're going to do three radical things.
So, one, this was started by Walter Mac before Steele got there, but he continues it.
We are going to market our product to black Americans.
This was radical probably for any major consumer industry at the time.
We are going to hire an all-black sales team that is going to target black.
retail outlets for Pepsi. We are going to run marketing campaigns, specifically targeted at the
black community with black celebrities. Not only was this radical for any brand at the time,
it was especially radical for the soft drink industry because Coke was not doing anything close to
this. In fact, Robert Woodruff was openly supporting segregationist politicians during this time.
So this is a huge opportunity for Pepsi. And Woodruff would later radically flip on that, right?
Yes.
Wasn't he a big part with Mayor Hart's field of desegregating a lot of stuff in Atlanta?
I mean, he eventually really came around, but...
During the 40s, definitely not.
This was a big area for Pepsi to make inroads.
There's also an element of geography here, too.
I mean, Coca-Cola is Atlanta's biggest company as traditional southern company, whereas Pepsi's based in New York.
Okay, so that's one.
two steel decides, we're going to start appealing to this early trend that I see happening
in post-war 1950s America of diet fats. We're going to position Pepsi as the lighter drink
versus Coca-Cola. It will refresh without filling. Now, how much of this is actually true in
terms of calories? Which is funny because I think it's actually even sweeter, may have even more
sugar than Coke does. Well, this is back in the days before sugar is vilified. You know, sugar is
okay. Fat is bad. Calories are bad. But, I mean, the only calories in soda come from the
carbohydrate macronutrient and specifically from sugar. And so there's a direct relationship
between sugar and calories. You're assuming that consumers back in the 40s and 50s were
thoughtful about such things. That's true. That's a great point.
Yeah. Regardless of any veracity to it, they start directly trying to appeal to the
light market. And then third, and maybe most importantly, we are going to wholeheartedly
embrace a revolutionary new advertising medium and technology television. And we're going to
use it to target the youth of America. So this is crazy. Pepsi.
discovers James Dean.
You know, like the actor, James Dean?
Really?
Yep.
His very first acting job is in a 19, either 49 or 50, Pepsi commercial.
Wow, I had no idea.
This ultimately would morph into like the Pepsi Generation ads later
and then the choice of a new generation generation next.
All the Pepsi marketing for the next 30, 40, 50 years of like,
we are for the young people, we're for the next generation.
It all starts with TV and Alfred Steele.
in the 1950s.
So all three of these things work pretty fantastically well.
In addition to Steele also bringing over just generally better operational practices to Pepsi
from Coke, he knows what a real professional operation is like.
He brings standardization and tighter controls over the bottlers.
Because Pepsi had a similar, or today even still has a similar bottling system, right,
where they have bottlers outside the company?
Yes, but Pepsi, at least until,
this point in time, never had anywhere near the same kind of operational excellence you would
call it today as Coca-Cola. I mean, remember back to the 12-ounce bottles, they were using
recycled beer bottles. They're putting Pepsi in beer bottles. That's what Steel's working with here
when he gets to Pepsi. So on the back of this, Pepsi's U.S. market share jumps pretty astronomically.
It's in the low 20s in the early 1950s.
By 1955, it's 35% of domestic market share in America.
And basically, all of that is coming at the expense of Coke.
I mean, Coke is still this beloved American brand.
But with these three things that Steel is doing, like, he starts getting a significant amount of the market.
I mean, Coke's not targeting black people.
Coke hasn't embraced television yet.
And Coke hasn't even thought hasn't.
even crossed their minds about anything diet yet.
It's true.
And they're starting to be thought of a little bit.
I mean, this would happen much more in the 70s and 80s,
but they're starting to be thought of a little bit as the soda for your parents,
not our soda, the cool new soda.
Not the choice of a new generation bet.
That's right.
So by the mid-50s, Woodruff, back at Coke, is finally like, all right, got to respond,
we need to make a radical move of our own.
He switches Coke's ad agency from Darcy.
you know, Archie Lee, the whole legacy
of everything that they built
from the 20s, 30s, through the war
to McCann Erickson.
The most premium ad agency in America.
Yep. And one of the first things
is incredible I found in the research
that McCann does when it comes on board
with the Coke account
is it starts conducting
scientific market research.
And one of the first things they do
is they run a blind
taste test between Coke and Pepsi.
No way. Coke runs this first, internally.
Coke runs this first in the late 1950s, or McCandah's, for Coke.
And guess what they find?
That people prefer Pepsi?
Consumers, when presented with the two drinks, Coke and Pepsi, in a blind taste test,
a statistically significant number of people prefer the taste of Pepsi.
Wow.
I'm pretty sure Pepsi doesn't even know this.
yet. So McCann comes in. They've just won the account. They think this is, oh, we found this
really, really important thing. They come. They present it to Woodruff. They present the findings.
And his response is, do not ever share this with anyone and do not ever run this test again.
for Coke and Bob Woodruff
would that that would have stayed the case
It's crazy that it really doesn't bite them for 30 years
Yeah another well 20 years after this
For the moment McCann does a bunch of things
One right away they respond to Pepsi in television
They say hey we got to take TV way more seriously
This is not just the future
this is the present. Is this
things go bad or with Coke?
Yep, they start doing
TV campaigns, jingles.
Coke starts sponsoring the Mickey Mouse Club show
starting in 1955.
Ultimately, what McCann
decides, they say,
we need to unify
our marketing, collateral,
and messaging across all of Coca-Cola's channels.
We can't be having
different messaging and different imagery
for TV and for
for a point of sale, and for newspapers and magazines, or for our radio ads.
The idea is we need to have one Coca-Cola site, sound, and sell.
It's all the same.
Integrated campaigns.
The first of which is the things go better with Coke campaign in the early 60s.
I see.
And then two, as we get into the back half of the 50s and the early 60s, we're now in the
civil rights movement.
They convince Woodruff and the company like, hey, you can't ignore the Black America
market.
you need to market to black Americans too.
So they start running ads with prominent black athletes
like Jesse Owens and Satchel Page.
And this is fun.
Remember, we learned from Jesse Cole
in our Savannah Bananas conversation
that the Harlem Globetrotters
should have become the NBA.
At this point in time,
they were like the big basketball product in America.
So yeah, Coke sponsors, the Globetrotters.
And they had started a little bit before that
with Willie Mays in 1952 too.
And then the last thing McCann convinces Woodruff of
is, hey, we need to take this.
diet thing seriously. So in 1962, they finally appealed to the diet market by launching Tab,
which is their new diet drink product that they had considered naming Diet Coke, but Bob Woodrow
rejected it. Now, the given reason is supposedly he says, if God had wanted Coca-Cola to have
saccharine in it, he would have made it that way in the first place. There is one Coke.
You don't want to mess with the one and only Coca-Cola.
That is the stated reason.
I heard rumors in the research.
I couldn't confirm this, but I heard rumors that apparently the Thomas Company,
which is one of the two parent-bottler organizations,
remember back to the perpetual contract and the parent-bottlers and all that,
supposedly they ended up with the rights to have a 10-cent royalty per beverage.
on any other products that the Coca-Cola company launched
that carried the Coca-Cola name.
And supposedly that is actually the real reason
why they didn't call Tab Diet Coke.
Whatever the reason, they launched Tab in 1962.
They want to dip their toe in the while.
They're not willing to go all in yet.
They're not willing to lend the brand
that's been built over the last 80 years
to a fad diet product.
Yes, exactly.
Meanwhile, by that point in time,
Pepsi had launched,
diet Pepsi and was doing quite well with that. Also, I got it. Listeners, we'll put a link in the show
notes to this. There is an astonishing ad for Tab. Oh man, you said this to me this morning and I was
like, I cannot believe this is for real. The entire ad is a man sort of like leering down kind of
creepily at this woman practicing tennis in a tennis skirt. And it's this jolly sort of almost
haunting jingle and the words are have a shape he can't forget tab is a taste to remember for a shape he
can't forget when you can't be with him be in his mind be a mind sticker don't you want to have a good
shape he wants you to have a good shape why don't you keep your shape in shape it's great to have a good
shape enjoy tab and keep your shape in shape the 1960s yeah but dude they knew in the 19th
60s, 40 years before obesity sort of started becoming a conversation, that full sugar sodas
were not good for your shape.
Well, leave it at that.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, you know, they do enter the diet market.
But the diet market becomes real and enduring from this point forward.
Tab quickly becomes the best-selling diet soda in America, I think, in the world and stays
that way all the way up until they release Diet Coke, which we'll talk about in a little bit.
Yep.
Tab.
Recently killed, actually.
Yeah.
It was one of the brands that they sunset a couple years ago.
Oh, did they only kill it in 2020?
I thought it was before then.
Yeah.
When they winnowed from like 600 brands to 200 in 2020, that was one of the ones that caught the axe.
Interesting.
There's one more thing, though, that Coca-Cola does in response to this insurgent Pepsi challenge,
shall we say, in the 50s and 60s?
McDonald's.
Yes.
I know you have the story on this one.
Yeah.
So this is actually something more that McDonald's does
and less something that Coca-Cola does.
But boy, does it become important to Coca-Cola fast.
To illustrate it, if we flash all the way forward to today,
there's a Coca-Cola executive on the website
whose entire job is the McDonald's division of the Coca-Cola company.
There is no other division dedicated to a company.
like this. So what happens is Ray Crock, in 1955, one of the first things he does when he gets
the expansion rights to expand McDonald's is to look for a beverage supplier for this new
Illinois location that he is opening. And he calls up Coca-Cola and does a handshake deal,
and meets in person and does a handshake deal with Wadi Pratt, who ran Coke's Fountain Division.
And from that point forward, for like 40 years, they built this deeply entrenched relationship purely on a handshake deal.
Wow.
There's no contract, no term.
No.
And I'm sure there is today.
But for a long time, it was McDonald's isn't going to bid it out like everyone else always does.
And they're going to get like amazing preferential treatment.
And here's some of the preferential treatment that they get.
Have you ever heard, David, that Coke-Tay.
taste better when you get it from McDonald's?
No, but I would believe it.
This is like a big thing.
People like insist that I prefer to swing by McDonald's to get a Coke versus getting
it somewhere else.
And if you press, it's just that it's a fountain and you like fountain versus bottle
or they're like, no, it's actually better at McDonald's.
It is better at McDonald's.
No way.
Here are a variety of things that I've heard from somewhat credible sources and that show
up in articles that may contribute to the taste actually being better. The thing that is definitely
true is Coca-Cola ships the formula to McDonald's in stainless steel tanks instead of being delivered
in bags. Normally, it's bags wrapped in cardboard, and it's actually delivered through the
bottlers. Even though the bottlers have nothing to do with it, they are the delivery arm.
Oh, yeah, because this is the fountain business. Yeah. Coke doesn't,
actually deliver the syrups to all these restaurants, the bottlers do it on behalf of them,
even there's no, there's no bottles involved. So Coke is quote unquote selling directly when they
sell syrup to fountain owners. But the bottlers are doing the delivery. Yes. With McDonald's is
different. It comes in these stainless steel tanks. McDonald's does some stuff. They pre-chill the water
and they make sure that the hoses are chilled all the way up in the dispenser. McDonald's apparently
actually has a different
syrup to water ratio
that accounts for ice melt.
They add a little bit more syrup
than the standard recipe,
which sounds like it would be heresy.
Wow. And Coca-Cola lets them do it
because Coca-Cola wouldn't let anybody else
change the mixture.
Yes. They developed
custom straws that are a little bit wider
to let a little bit more Coca-Cola
hit the taste buds on your mouth.
And this is sort of just incidental,
but because of the volume that's done at McDonald's of selling Coke products,
the syrup's a little bit fresher because the syrup actually does kind of get worse over time
if you leave it in the back room.
Wow.
Well, it is a beautiful partnership for both sides, shall we say?
Here's something crazy.
I think a lot of people associate McDonald's and Coca-Cola,
both big American companies, both historically American, a lot of Americana in each.
Until listening to this episode, I didn't really think about the fact that
Coke has a 60-year head start on McDonald's in going global. And so I read in a couple
places that when McDonald's was opening in new countries, the employees would camp in
Coca-Cola offices and use Coca-Cola's relationships to get a foothold in the country when they
were opening. It's like this unofficial partnership that they have. Well, it's good for both
sides. Yeah. And lastly, Coke sales teams are prohibited from selling syrup to restaurants
for less than McDonald's pays, even if it means they're going to lose the business to Pepsi.
It is sort of this rule at Coca-Cola that no one gets a lower price per unit volume than McDonald's.
Wow. Big customer. So back to the 60s. In 1960, a few other things happen. The first 12-ounce
aluminum cans are introduced of Coca-Cola in the United States. They also buy Minutemade, right? Coca-Cola
buys Minutemate? Yes, a little precursor to what was to come four decades later with non-soda
drinks, but this is sort of weirdly the only thing that they have other than soda for a long time.
Yep. Speaking of acquisitions, in 1965, Pepsi buys the Frito-Lay company. Famously, where there's
still one company today at PepsiCo. Yep. Ben, you found out Coke had the chance to buy it, right?
Yes, they did.
made a giant mistake not buying it. The company's headquarters, I think the original
Lay Company, is an Atlanta company. So in many ways, Coca-Cola is sort of the preferred buyer,
and Coke turns it down. Wow. The wild thing is today, if you look at the health of Pepsi's
beverages business and their food business with Frito-Lay products, Frito-Lay is a much, much better
business. While the revenues are a little bit smaller than the Pepsi business by revenue,
Frito Lay generates twice as much profit inside the parent company, PepsiCo.
That's a good one to own.
Yeah.
Big miss from Coke.
Yep.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, toward the end of the 60s,
McCann and Coke really start hitting their stride.
Ben, you mentioned in the intro about co-opting the hippie and counterculture movement.
Oh, yeah.
In 1968, McCann and Coke
launch their latest unified marketing campaign,
The Real Thing, which is an enormous success.
And at first, subtly tries to co-op the counterculture moment.
It's real, the hippies.
Right.
I mean, it doesn't have high fruit-dose corn syrup yet,
so ostensibly it is the real thing.
If Coke is a real American thing, then it's the real thing.
This is capped off in 1971 by the series'
finale of Mad Men.
Yes.
And Don Draper's greatest work.
I was so funny.
I know this ad from Mad Men.
Yes.
Even though it's considered one of, if not the greatest television commercial of all time.
Yes.
I didn't know anything about it until the Mad Men series finale.
So listeners, if you don't know.
The Hilltop Ad.
Yes.
The Hilltop Add to the song I'd like to buy The World A Coke is fictionally created
or alluded to be created by Don Draper.
the finale of Mad Men, but of course is a real ad 40 years before Mad Men came out.
It's so cool.
Doing the research for this episode, I always thought that Mad Men was one of the greatest
works of media ever created.
I have even more appreciation.
They set the whole thing up all the way back in the first season of the show by introducing
McCann Erickson.
Like McCann Erickson comes in as the foil to Sterling Cooper in the beginning.
And they're running throughout the whole series.
I didn't realize that McCann Erickson, the reason they're so big and the reason that it's such a big thing is the Coke account.
Pretty amazing.
And then it all pays off in the Hilltop ad.
I think it's giving them a little bit too much credit.
If you're going to do a show about advertising in this era, you kind of have to do McCann Erickson.
But I didn't realize the deep connection between McCann and Coke and how, like, integral that was.
And so now understanding this makes me appreciate the series finale, just even more.
I think it's so great.
For sure.
So the story behind this ad is awesome.
So Bill Backer at McCann Erickson, who was sort of the big partner of Coca-Cola's there.
The Archie Lee of his day.
Yes, for a long time.
Said that he was on a flight that was grounded at an airport in Ireland, and he noticed a diverse crowd of passengers.
And everyone's upset that this flight isn't happening.
And they're chatting and they're joking with each other.
And it's over bottles of Coca-Cola.
And he's like, man, Coca-Cola.
really brings people together across borders, across languages, and he jots down on a napkin,
I'd like to buy the world of Coke. And they conceptualize this ad, and there's this whole
great story of finding the songwriters and the musicians who performed it and all the stuff,
and they want to film it at the cliffs of Dover in the UK. They got the budget greenlit from
the head of advertising of Coca-Cola to do the most expensive ad of all time, a hundred thousand
budget. How quaint. And they're going to film it over the course of three days. And they got there
with the full cast who were going to stand on the hillside and sing. They wanted to have 200 people
from all countries around the world. And the point is that Coca-Cola brings everybody together.
It's a hard cast to assemble because you need people representing all these different
ethnicities and nationalities. And they have three straight days of rain. I was going to say,
like cliffs of Dover, it rains a lot there.
They burn through the entire budget.
And so they're like, where are we going to go?
They won't rain.
Let's go to Rome.
And so they get approval to go all the way up to $250,000.
It rains in Rome.
No.
In the hills outside of Rome.
And so they actually have no usable footage from everything they shot because by the time
they actually caught the actors, they were also covered in rain and looked like crap
and no one looked happy.
and so it's this hilariously cobbled together thing
where the third time's the charm
they have to go wander around Rome
looking for new actors
they find a new leading lady
that woman that the commercial opens on
they actually have to film it in two separate locations
the hillside is different from the close-ups
but they ultimately release it
it becomes absolutely beloved
it's the catchiest tune
I've had it in my head the entire time doing research
they start getting calls at radio stations
to play the Coca-Cola ad song.
So then the band goes and re-recorded
it as a real song to release on an album
that has different lyrics
than I'd like to buy the World of Coke.
And it turns out to become a best-selling song also.
So great.
The lyrics are just great.
They're great.
And it's so 1971 in Coca-Cola.
It's the real thing.
Yep.
I'd like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony.
I'd like to buy the World of Coke
and keep it company.
That's the real thing.
what the world wants today,
is it the real thing?
And you're watching it,
and it does actually stir up emotions.
You're like, this is really beautiful.
Look at this.
There's all these people
that are all here together.
They're all getting along.
And then you realize,
this is a giant corporation
selling sugar water,
and they manage to borrow
the hippie movement
to create one of the most successful commercials
of all time.
It's bad men.
Unbelievable.
Don Draper,
baby yeah so great well so the end of the 60s and the early 70s going pretty well for
coca-cola and then in 1975 that deep dark deeply embarrassing secret that mccan had discovered 20 years
earlier in 1955 and robert woodruff had tried to bury as far down as he was a
possibly could, comes out. The Pepsi Challenge. But before we tell that story, now is a great time
to thank one of our favorite partners, Century. Yes, that's S-E-N-T-R-Y, like someone's standing
guard. So Century, as you know by now, does application performance monitoring, helping developers debug
everything from errors to latency to performance issues, basically any software problem, and they do it
Excellently. Over 150,000 teams use it every day from Disney to Anthropic to Epic Games.
Today, though, we want to talk about the Century Community, which is awesome. We just did an event with them last month in San Francisco, and it was so cool to see how many great folks use Century and how much they love this company.
Yep. Michael Truel, the CEO of Cursor, was there. He did a great fireside chat with Century's founder, David Kramer.
And mentioned to me that his favorite acquired episode is PowerPoint.
Michael, thank you for listening to the old stuff.
The only person we've ever met
who told us that their favorite episode is PowerPoint.
A bunch of our friends from Anthropic were there,
and Sierra and Vercel.
All of those are century customers, by the way.
And then my favorite part of the night
was we got to interview Jess Smith,
the president of the Golden State Valkyries,
the new WMBA team here in San Francisco,
which in just one season has gone from zero
to the most valuable women's sport franchise
in the world.
Jess and the Valkyries
are just awesome.
It was so fun.
Yeah.
And Claire Vow,
the founder of Chat PRD,
interviewed David and I
on stage.
The whole night was awesome
and just showed
how wide Century's world
really is,
from startups to AI giants
to pro sports teams
to indie developers.
Century just Rocks
were very happy
to be partners with them.
Speaking of rocks,
Century created
perhaps the most
awesome acquired swag
ever for this event.
These guys get it.
These guys totally get it.
They made custom 1980s walkman-style cassette players.
Throwback to our Sony episode.
Yep, that's right.
Acquired branded, complete with an actual cassette containing some of our favorite
acquired moments from the show over the years.
They made 100 extras just for the rest of the acquired community.
So go grab one right now from the link in the show.
notes. I think these are going to last about five minutes, but there's a link in the show notes
to go get one of these Walkman-style cassette players. They're awesome. Yeah. So our huge thanks to
Sentry for being such great partners and hosting really an incredible night, if you want to join
the 150,000 teams, including linear cloudflare GitHub, Instacart, and Atlassian, who rely on
Century to keep their software running smoothly, head on over to century.io slash acquired. That's
S-E-N-T-R-Y-O-S-Aquired.
and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right, David, the Pepsi Challenge.
I've been so stoked all episode just to get to this.
And, to start it off...
Are you about to do a Pepsi Challenge?
I am going to do a Pepsi Challenge right here on air.
Of course, it's not really a challenge because I didn't hide the containers
and I would administer it to myself, so it wouldn't work.
What temperature are they, though?
Because I hear that plays a big role.
It does, but they are the same temperature.
I took both of them out of the fridge.
right after like World War II or so,
so however long ago that was.
Because at warmer temperatures,
the Coke people will insist that Pepsi has the edge
because sweeter tastes better at warmer temperatures.
But Coke at that just above freezing perfect temperature
is, you know, the best.
Well, let's see.
All right, that's the real thing, seeing right now.
All right, the real thing, it's good.
Oh, Pepsi, oh, it's got that lemony little zest too.
Pepsi's a little lemony, a little sweeter.
I think I'm with the majority on this one.
That Pepsi's better?
I think Pepsi tastes a little better.
Wow.
David Rosenthal, right here on the Coca-Cola episode,
declaring that Pepsi is your pick.
Well, over Coca-Cola classic.
But I'm mostly a Diet Coke guy these days,
but we'll get to that in a minute.
Which, one could argue, was formulated to better compete with Pepsi.
Indeed.
All right. The Pepsi Challenge. So back in 1967, a young Wharton MBA graduate joins Pepsi after a few years of working at IPG, the big ad agency, which owned, and I believe still owns McCann Erickson, parent company of McKin.
Yep, they do. Interpublic group.
Now, Ben, I know you know who we're talking about here, but listeners, you all are in for a real fun surprise when we reveal who this person is in a minute.
So Pepsi, as we've discussed, up until Alfred Steele came in, had always been kind of a seat of the pants school of hard knocks management type company.
This person who joins, I think, might have been the first MBA to join the company.
and he was one of the very few even, like, college graduates.
So he comes in as the director of new product development.
And the first new product that he develops and hits the market isn't a new drink,
but rather a new bottle, a really, really big bottle.
64 ounces.
He realizes in doing market research that, hey, supermarkets are becoming more and more of a thing.
We're now in the late 60s, early 70s here.
there's a really underserved part of the soft drink market, which is large families and parties
for at-home consumption, buying a whole bunch of pretty heavy, breakable glass bottles and
lugging them home for your large family or a party that you're throwing.
Or even cans. Who wants to open a single can for each person around the dinner table?
Totally. And again, remember who we talked about, the cost scaling element of
soda is not volume of soda. So it doesn't actually cost that much to go from six and a half ounces
to 12 ounces to, you know, a whole lot of ounces. This is why basically anyone is willing to
sell you free refills on your fountain drink. Yep. So he and Pepsi start working on a big bottle
and they pretty quickly realize like, oh, glass is not going to work. It would be a really
heavy bottle and really breakable as you're porting around this big bottle. So they go to
DuPont. Hmm, I had no idea. And say, hey, can you guys engineer us something that would work here?
And DuPont says, oh, well, actually, you have found us at the perfect point in time. We have a new
type of plastic that we have engineered polyethylene terapitholate or P-E-T that we think would be great for this
application. It's lightweight. It's super strong. It's really cheap to produce. And here's the kicker
for Pepsi. We can send it pre-molded to all of your bottlers. And so rather than your bottleers having
to set up really expensive new production lines for these new bottles, all they have to do is
just inflate the molds with air and then fill them up. Have you ever seen them inflate? It's like
the coolest thing ever watching a two-liter bottle inflate. The 64 ounce or now two-liter
bottle is born.
Pepsi gets a big jump on this against Coke.
It takes Coke another three and a half years to come out with their own big party bottle.
So on the back of this success for this young executive.
And you talk to him, right, this person you're talking about?
Oh, yes.
All these stories are firsthand.
Okay.
So on the back of this success, Don Kendall, the then CEO of Pepsi, is like, all right, kid, you pass the test.
You're ready for your next big job.
And this is the first time that plastic is used.
right in soft drinks.
Oh, yes.
I missed the punchline there.
This is the first plastic bottle.
That's crazy.
And good for Pepsi to log this win.
Pretty bad for the world to start this single-use plastics treadmill that we're all on now.
Like, just to get that out of the way, I was looking up studies recently.
And the Coca-Cola company is the number one polluter globally of crap in the ocean.
Pepsi's very close behind, all the big drink companies.
Everyone is always saying we're trying to do a better job.
this. We're trying to do a better job creating recyclable stuff, using recycling. But like,
the world is full of a crap ton of single-use plastics. A hundred percent, man. I had not
focused on this issue at all until doing the research. I am going to only buy can and glass bottles
going forward. Like, there's no reason not to buy cans and glass. They're actually recyclable.
It's funny. I've like accidentally started doing that anyway because whenever I travel now, I use those
path water bottles that they sell in airports and you can just refill them. I'm not like going out of
my way to be like, oh my gosh, I need the metal over the plastic, but like it, now it just feels weird
to buy plastic bottles. Now that I'm so much more attuned to microplastics, I'm also never
going to drink fluid that was sitting in a plastic bottle for a long time after I opened it or
like refill it. I used to refill plastic water bottles and now I'm like, ugh, who knows what's
degrading in my beverage. So, but yeah, this is the
start of the plastification. Yes. So back to the timeline, Don Kendall, the CEO, is like,
okay, you pass the test. You are now going to take over all of marketing for Pepsi. And I want
you to figure out how we're going to dethrone Coke. So the executive takes over marketing. He's
getting settled in. He's surveying the current state of things. And he notices that the local
Pepsi bottler down in Dallas, Texas is doing something really interesting.
The local ad agency for the bottler there
had accidentally discovered the secret
that Coke and McCann has known for 20 years
that consumers prefer Pepsi to Coke.
And the way they figure it out
is that they're doing research for 7-Eleven in Dallas.
No way!
And 7-Eleven is selling a generic cola at the time
and they run a taste test with both Coke and Pepsi
as the controls for the 7-Eleven generic cola.
And so this local agency happens to also be the agency of the Pepsi bottler in Dallas.
And so they go to the Pepsi bottle and they're like, hey, guess what we discovered.
Wow.
So locally in the Dallas market, they start running these commercials there of people taking the quote-unquote Pepsi Challenge.
They roll up to a supermarket in Dallas.
They plunk down a card table, and they have Coke and Pepsi behind like a cardboard screen.
Then they give the consumers a glass.
They say, which do you prefer?
And a statistically significant number of people say Pepsi.
And they did this at malls all across America.
They then really expanded this.
Well, we'll get to that.
Now, yeah, at first, this is just the local Dallas bottler that's doing it.
It's a huge success.
Pepsi's market share in Dallas jumps by 14% thanks to these ads.
Like, it really, really resonates with consumers.
So the new VP of marketing sees this, and he's like, oh, okay, we got to blow this out.
But we're not going to do what Coke would do.
We're not going to turn this into like a big corporate, one site, one sound, one cell, national campaign.
We got to keep this grassroots.
We've got to go market by market.
This is working so well in Dallas because it's grassroots
because it's real people who are living in Dallas taking this challenge.
And the technology that can enable this has just come out.
VCRs have come out and early home video camcorders
are just starting to hit the market.
So he says, okay, here's what we're going to do.
We're going to go buy a ton of home video camcorders.
quarters. Oh, that's awesome. And card tables. We're going to distribute them to all of Pepsi's
local bottlers all around the country. We're going to inform them about the Pepsi challenge,
and we're going to say, go run your own versions of the Pepsi Challenge. Oh, wow. Film them with the
camcorders of real people in your markets taking the Pepsi Challenge and put them on local
television. Like local ad spots on local TV channels. And this is like maybe the most successful
grassroots marketing campaign in history. I didn't even realize it was grassroots. I mean,
everyone knows. The Pepsi Challenge is almost like a descriptive way to describe a form of
marketing. Like do you remember when Microsoft did Bing it on? It was like, oh, I see the Pepsi
challenge for search. I had no idea until talking to him and doing the research. This was all shot
with camcorders. We'll link to YouTube footage of these old videos. It's all just malls and
supermarkets and beaches and fire stations around the country. And it's then local ads running on
local TVs. Incredible. Which is funny. Being our age, David, I knew what the Pepsi challenge was,
but of course I've never actually seen it. Right. I hadn't seen it either. And it's funny to now actually
go watch it and see how that meets my expectations of what I thought it was going to be.
Yes. Same as you. I had the same expectations of, oh, this must
have been like a BBDO national campaign, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah. Total opposite.
This is probably the first, quote, unquote, reality television commercial that's ever produced.
Like, nobody was doing this back in the day. So it just hits all these local markets around the country like a bomb.
And Coke is so poorly set up to react to this. Their whole marketing and ad strategy with McCann, they're all national.
One site, one sound, you know, one cell, they're not set up to go buy local TV ad slots.
It's good counter positioning.
But the punchline of the whole thing is it wouldn't have worked if it wasn't true, but it was true that people did prefer the taste of Pepsi.
And I think it also wouldn't have worked if it had been a big national, you know, sort of corporate rollout.
Because people wouldn't have believed that it's true.
I think it's really critical that it was real people that were doing the Pepsi too.
challenge instead of actors.
Yes. Oh, absolutely. I agree.
And I think it was also important it's happening in my community.
Right.
So they blow this out, like all across the country.
In 1977, Pepsi outspends Coke in advertising for the first time in history.
And Pepsi actually passes Coke in market share in the bottled market.
So Coke still has a overall market share lead in the country because of the fountain
business and like McDonald's. Right. Pepsi basically never was able to break into the fountain
business and the volumes that even today, Coke kind of ran away with the restaurant serving
soft drinks out of fountain's business. So it's interesting, in the late 70s, Pepsi does try to
break in. They buy Taco Bell and Pizza Hut and KFC and then install Pepsi, but yeah,
it never approaches Coke. Which actually kind of backfires because then Coke uses it to countersell
and they start going around to everyone else
that is considering Coke or Pepsi
and saying, Pepsi owns these restaurants
that are competing with you.
Why do you want to give them more profit dollars?
And so then Coke is able to win sales on that,
which is, I think it's part of why Pepsi then spun that all out
as Young Brands, but also just kind of because
I think it was a drag on their business.
Yep.
So on the back of this huge, nationally known,
obvious success with the Pepsi challenge,
the young marketing executive starts to be
come, you know, pretty known in the business community.
And David, we should say who it is now.
His name is John Scully.
Yep. And for some of you, that will mean a lot.
And for most of you, that will mean a lot in about 30 seconds.
John starts getting a bunch of CEO offers coming in from recruiters on the back of his success.
And, you know, he loves Pepsi. He's built his career there.
But finally, in 1983, he gets an offer that he can't refuse.
Steve Jobs comes to pitch him and says,
do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life?
Or do you want to come with me and change the world?
And he goes with Steve and joins Apple Computer as CEO in 1983.
Yeah.
And finish the story, David.
What would then happen after John became CEO of Apple?
Well, I think the narrative that a lot of people know
we'll have to save this for our Apple episode someday
is things did not go well.
Steve Jobs got kicked out of the company.
Apple floundered. Jobs had to come back.
Scully actually grew Apple's revenue
from under $1 billion when he joined
to almost $8 billion when he left.
Ah. Well, Tim Cook before Tim Cook.
And then there would be two more CEOs, I think,
before Jobs came back?
Yeah.
Gilamilio and Michael Spindler.
That's right.
But yeah, John is awesome, by the way.
He's 87 years old.
He's a huge Acquired fan.
He's listened to every single episode that we've done.
Also, thank you to Arvin Navaratna in front of the show for introducing us.
That was a fun email to get of like, wait, John Scully listens to Acquired.
Yeah, so cool.
He's currently on the board of three different companies that he's helped start over the last couple of years.
And he's responsible.
for the Pepsi Challenge.
So, obviously,
Coke eventually,
after years and years of bleeding,
thanks to the Pepsi Challenge,
decides that they need to respond.
And the response ends up happening
a full decade later.
The response comes in 1985,
and the Pepsi Challenge was in 75,
and Pepsi had already been taking share
from Coke starting in, like, 1970,
meaningful chunks.
Yep.
So why is Coke so slow to respond to the Pepsi challenge?
Well, in addition to just plain getting their ass kicked, they have another problem.
So Woodruff is still the ultimate decision maker and chairman of the board,
but he's getting pretty old at this point in time.
He's already in his 80s approaching his 90s.
He has strong opinions about what Coca-Cola is and isn't.
But there's also another management process.
problem at Coca-Cola, which is that the CEO, Paul Austin, has gotten Alzheimer's and
stays in the CEO position. And so Coke, for the back half of the 70s, is just paralyzed.
Like, basically no decisions can get through between Woodruff being said in his ways.
And it's hard for him to see, read, hear. I mean, it's hard to communicate.
with, in addition with having strong opinions and control of the company.
Yep. And then you have a CEO suffering from Alzheimer's, and Woodruff probably doesn't recognize
what's happening. It's a real mess. Yep. All of this finally resolves in May of 1980 when the
board appoints a young chemical engineer named Roberto Gosweta as CEO. So Gosweta was a Cuban immigrant
who had worked his way up to become head of technical research at age 35,
and he was one of the mythical two people who knew the secret formula.
That's right, because he was a chemical engineer.
I mean, he was on the product formulation side of things.
Yep.
And he had just had a huge win within the company
when he replaced sugar in the U.S. with high fructose corn syrup.
He's the one who brought corn syrup in.
So starting in 1980, he got 50%.
And then by 1984, they were replaced it 100%.
But basically because sugar kept getting more expensive and farm subsidies for corn kept making
half-fructose corn syrup less expensive, it became like, well, as long as customers are
willing to do it and it doesn't seem to be worse for people's health, economically it became
a no-brainer to do it.
Yep.
So he's a real dark course candidate to be CEO.
So the person who everybody thinks is going to get the job is Don Keio, the famous long-time president and COO of Coca-Cola.
And so what Roberto does when he becomes CEO is he says, Don, you are my partner in crime.
We are going to run this company as a team.
You'll be my president and COO.
You are great externally.
I'm great with the product and strategy internally.
We're going to be a dynamic duo here.
And ultimately, Gosweta got it because.
he was Woodruff's protege. I would say Gosweda, at least as it comes across in the book's
secret formula, did a very good job of sort of managing up and making sure that Woodruff felt
taken care of and informed. I could see that. Yeah. So they go on to have a great run. One of the
early things they do is they buy Columbia Pictures, the movie studio. Which I always thought
this was stupid. Like whenever you hear stories of, oh, and at one point,
in the coked out 1980s where everyone was doing crazy stuff,
Coke even went and bought Columbia Pictures.
A movie studio.
But financially, it actually was great for them,
even though no business is as good as Coca-Cola's core business.
Everything pales in comparison,
unless it's Visa or a software company or something like that.
Well, not only was it financially pretty good for them
when they ultimately sold the business to Sony a few years later.
It leads to a lot of really good stuff for Coca-Cola because this is how they get to know
Herb Allen Jr. and Allen & Company, who was one of the principal shareholders of Columbia Pictures
before Coke bought it. And so he ends up joining the board of Coca-Cola after the transaction.
And actually, this relationship continues right through to this day.
Herb Allen III, who in the early 2000s took over for Herb Jr. running Allen and Company,
is still on the board of Coca-Cola.
Amazing.
So this is how Coca-Cola executives start going to Sun Valley,
where Don Quio reconnects from his old neighbor,
from his early, young professional days when he was working in his first job
in Omaha, Nebraska.
This is insane.
Living on Farnham Street in Omaha, where he was neighbors,
with Warren Buffett.
Warren Buffett is like this real-life
Forrest Gump.
I mean, the number of things
that he invested in
that would become
these unbelievable bonanza investments,
like greatest of all-time investments,
oh, was a guy who lived in my street.
Oh, is the woman
that ran the furniture store
in my town growing up.
It happens over and over and over again.
Are you kidding me?
Don Keough was Warren Buffett's old neighbor?
Don's first job out of college, he worked for, I believe, a coffee company that ended up getting acquired by Coca-Cola.
And that's how he came into Coca-Cola.
But yeah, he was just living in Omaha on Farnham Street.
Crazy.
And so this is how the Berkshire Coca-Cola relationship starts.
Well, so Warren, at this point in time, as we covered on our Berkshire series, is a Pepsi guy.
He's part of the new generation.
He took the Pepsi challenge.
Keo converts him to Coke
by telling him about this new product
that they're going to launch cherry Coke
because Buffett loved cherry syrup in his Pepsi.
And so he converts Warren to a Coke guy
before Warren ever invests a dollar
in the Coca-Cola company.
And Warren reportedly drinks five cherry coax a day.
Yeah. He is perhaps single-handedly
supporting his investment these days.
later on at sun valley bill gates lets it slip on a panel with warren and roberto and don quio
that warren has always told bill that coca cola could be run by a ham sandwich
while roberto is sitting right there yeah roberto gets very offended and apparently never
talks to bill gates again now given what's about to happen here it's actually highly
debatable whether Roberto was a ham sandwich or not.
My opinion has always been that Coca-Cola is the type of business that can be run.
But maybe let's save this for the quintessence.
Like, we should finish the episode deciding if that is true about the Coca-Cola company or not.
Yes.
Well, Roberto is about to become responsible for both the company's greatest success since Coca-Cola
and its worst disaster of all time.
Yes.
Okay. So first, the success. Of course, we're talking about the most successful diet drink in the history of humankind. Basically the only soda that I drink today, Diet Coke.
You're a Diet Coke Man, not a Coke Zero man. I'm a Diet Coke. Yeah, I know Coke Zero was sort of marketed as the Diet Coke for men, but I like Diet Coke.
And not just for men, but also the one that's closer to the original Coca-Cola formula. Diet Coke is sort of,
of meant to be its own thing.
Yeah, they did those great ads of the taste infringement ads.
Do you remember those?
Oh, I don't remember them.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
When Coke Zero launched, they did all this series of ads of Coca-Cola lawyers going around
suing Coke Zero for taste infringement.
It's a great premise.
Great sort of self-reflective advertising from Coca-Cola there.
So Diet Coke is fascinating because they did start work on it earlier in the 70s.
it didn't come out until 1982, but they're kind of in the lab tinkering with the flavor
because the Pepsi challenge has basically thrown down the gauntlet that Americans prefer
the taste of Pepsi.
And they're starting to play with this idea of like, okay, obviously we're not going to replace
Coke, but like, is there a way that we can make something that does compete with Pepsi
that tastes a little bit more like Pepsi that tastes lighter or sweeter or they're in the
lab, they're working on it?
And eventually they do land on this formula that they think is great.
And it's artificially sweetened, as you're talking about.
It is a huge risk in two ways to release Diet Coke.
One is because of everything we talked about earlier.
You've got to be really careful with the Coca-Cola brand.
It's the sacred cow.
But two, Tab is currently in 1982 the best-selling diet drink in the world.
So why would you release another diet drink that risks dethroning the one that you have that is the clear winner?
And the answer is, you need a win.
A, you need a win.
B, it is so clear that diet is going to be a gigantic market, and that's the way the world is going.
And we're just holding ourselves back from competing with our best foot forward by not using our big brand.
Yep.
There was one other reason why they finally decided in the late seven.
to start work on Diet Coke.
In 1975, the Coca-Cola Company acquired the Thomas Company.
Oh.
So to the extent that the Thomas Company and the parent bottlers, if it is true that they had a
right to a 10-cent royalty on other Coca-Cola drinks, that is no longer a problem.
Fascinating.
So, David, do you know about how they announced Diet Coke?
Oh, I was going to ask you the same thing.
I thought I was going to get you.
Of course I do.
I'd be surprised if any listeners know, but listeners, you are going to delight in learning this with us.
They announced Diet Coke in the summer of 1982.
In July of 1982.
The same month!
That's right.
43 years before?
43 years before us.
A very special location in the acquired cinematic universe, Radio City Music Hall.
That's right. Diet Coke was announced on stage with the Rockettes performing to celebrate
the new beverage. That's right. To say it works is quite the understatement. By the end of
1983, the first full year on the market, Diet Coke is the number one diet drink in America.
And unlike Tab, which clearly from that commercial that you talked about earlier, was exclusively marketed to women,
30% of Diet Coke drinkers, even in the early days, are men.
And by 1984, Diet Coke becomes the third best-selling soft drink in America, period, behind Coke and Pepsi.
And Diet Coke costs significantly less for Coke to produce because it doesn't have sugar.
Yeah. You know what's not as expensive? Artificial sweeteners.
Yes.
So Diet Coke is GOSETA is like huge, huge Grand Slam win.
And the way they market it is not apologetic.
The campaign is just for the taste of it.
They are full-on marketing that this tastes great, and it also happens to have no calories.
This is Coca-Cola playing offense.
Win-win.
And it works incredibly well.
You can have your Coke and drink it too.
That's right.
And then Gossuetta decides to play defense.
Yeah.
With new Coke.
So despite all the success of Diet Coke, and it was a huge success, even in 1982,
83, 84, 10-ish years into the Pepsi Challenge, it's still kicking Coca-Cola's ass.
Coke in 1982 brought in Bill Cosby as their main celebrity endorser.
That's right.
And we'll also link to these in the show notes.
The spots that they have him do in 82, 83, 84 are directly addressing the Pepsi
challenge.
It's unbelievable.
Coca-Cola is a singular end-of-one product.
Coca-Cola does not exist in a universe with other competitors.
And here's Bill Cosby directly talking about Pepsi and the challenge.
It's the worst thing that Coca-Cola could possibly do.
They were in bad shape.
They are bleeding.
And Pepsi, of course, in typical Pepsi fashion, says,
oh, you just signed Bill Cosby and you're talking about the Pepsi Challenge in your spots.
We're going to sign Michael Jackson.
Just brutal.
Obviously, both of those men, the world would later find out or deeply problematic.
But at the time, I think they had among, if not,
not the highest curatings of any celebrity in the world,
a curating being a percentage of people surveyed
who are familiar with the person and think highly of them.
Hmm.
Yeah.
But from the time that Pepsi launched the Pepsi Challenge in 1975
until the New Coke disaster in 1985,
the share of Pepsi grew every single year in America
while the share of Coca-Cola declined every single year.
And so the question is, if you're Coca-Cola, what do you do here?
Yep.
What they decided to do was after 99 years with the same formula,
carefully building a brand around that logo, the taste, the secret formula,
and defining this cultural object to the world,
stupidity struck.
And, yes, we can't downplay how stupid this really was.
But somewhat in their defense,
if you're going to introduce a new taste
to try and counter the Pepsi taste,
which you believe is the reason
why you're losing market share,
it has to be a full replacement.
There actually is no logical path
to adding a new flavor.
So a bunch of people are like,
well, why didn't they just release Coke 2
or something like that?
Remember, Coke is a singular product.
There cannot be two Cokes.
It would destroy the brand.
I mean, this destroys the brand too, but...
I don't know, David. There's Coke Zero. There's Diet Coke.
Well, now there is. But you've got to put yourself in the mindset back then.
The other more practical problem was if they introduced a secondary flavor and kept original Coke on the market, they would bifurcate the base.
And Pepsi would become number one.
So they were paranoid about that, oh, we're pretty sure if we have multiple Coke's
on the market. But who cares? The base. Like, it's just pure bragging rights. Coca-Cola cared a lot.
Coca-Cola, it's number one. Pepsi's the imitator. How could they ever stand to let Pepsi become number one?
So what did they actually do? There's a lot of people that probably aren't terribly familiar with New Coke and what actually happened.
So Christmas of 1984, the executive team makes the decision. They're going to do it. They're going to replace the original Coca-Cola formula.
with new coke.
And they've all tasted it, as has 200,000 people.
Yep.
They've done tons of taste tests.
Not only does it beat Pepsi in taste tests, it beats original Coke.
People prefer the taste of new Coke.
Robert Woodruff is still alive at this point.
He's 95 years old.
So they're like, all right, before we do this,
somebody's got to go have a conversation with Robert.
and tell him what we're doing.
And Roberto, this one is on you.
So New Year's Day, 1985, Roberto goes to see Robert Woodruff at his home.
Robert can barely hear, barely speak.
And according to Roberto, who is the only other person present in the room with him,
it was just the two of them in the room, Woodruff gives his blessing to change the formula.
However, the very next morning, Woodruff stops eating.
He's hospitalized a few days later,
and he ends up passing away on March 7, 1985,
one month before the New Coke announcement.
So poetic.
The formula was never changed while Robert was alive.
Nope. No, it was not.
So six weeks later, Friday,
April 19th, Coca-Cola sends out a press invitation for the, quote, most significant development in the company's nearly 100-year history that they are going to hold the following Tuesday.
Well, news of what is about to happen leaks over the weekend, and Pepsi takes out a full-page ad in newspapers across the country on Monday morning.
with the announcement reading,
The Other Guy Just Blinked.
After 87 years of going at it, eyeball to eyeball,
the other guy just blinked.
And they gave all their employees the day off to celebrate.
Yep.
Which, by the way, this couldn't have been sequenced any worse
because Pepsi does that.
Pepsi starts giving interviews to everyone they can in the press
before the announcement actually happens.
And so the press all comes in,
no one's tried it yet. So the executives can't even get their message out about it because everyone's just preloaded with like, how bad are you losing that this is the case? Does it taste like Pepsi? Because Pepsi's sort of seeded, hey, you should ask them, like, is it meant to copy Pepsi? And the message that the Coke executives have is that they're trying not to say too much. They're trying not to describe the flavor. They're trying not to compare it to Pepsi. So they're up there just looking like complete idiots with,
no answers that are substantive, while everyone is just attacking them.
It is a unmitigated disaster.
So at one point, the questioning gets so tough that Don Quillo says, quote, there's a lot of
things I'd rather be doing than being here right now.
This is at a press conference.
At a new product launch.
Launching the biggest product of the company's history.
And then the final question of the day, a reporter asks whether assuming,
this new Coke thing is a success, if Diet Coke will also be reformulated. And Roberto responds,
no, and I don't assume that this is a success. It is a success. The two crazy quotes to double down
on that, Gosweta says, some choose to call this the boldest single marketing move in the history of the
packaged goods business. We simply call it the surest move ever made. Then, Don Quillo, follows up,
never been as confident about a decision as I am about the one we're announcing today.
Wow.
This is so bad.
Which I don't think either of those things are true.
That can't be true.
No.
Just based on how timid they were in the messaging.
So it turns out that in all the research that they conducted for New Coke, all 200,000 people that they did the taste test with, they never asked them
how they would feel if this new beverage
replaced the old
Coca-Cola. And Gosweta's response to this
in later years is you can't ask a question like that
because people don't know. Like, you can't get real data
on emotional questions like that. You can only actually test
do you like this taste better or not. And so, like,
sure, you can run that experiment, but ultimately how much faith
are you going to put in the data? They would have learned something
if they'd ask that question. Yeah.
So the company immediately starts getting thousands of letters and phone calls every single day.
One of my favorites is a letter that reads,
My dearest Coke, you have betrayed me.
We went out just last week, as we had so often.
And when we kissed, I knew our love affair was over.
I remember walks across campus with you discussing life and love and all that matters.
I remember the southern summer nights we shared with breathes,
is leaving beads of water hanging delicately from your body.
But last week, I tasted betrayal on your lips.
You had the smooth, seductive, sweet taste of a lie.
You have become corrupted by money denying your ideals.
Oh, man, or this story, in Marietta, Georgia,
a woman assaulted a Coke delivery man with her umbrella
as he tried to stock a supermarket shelf with new Coke.
you bastard she screamed
you ruined it it tastes like shit
and I think
they just didn't realize that what they were taking away
was people's childhood
yes they're taking away America
it's not about what tastes better
it's what they were used to
and it's what they had built an entire
lifestyle brand around believing
that America meant to people
yes
so for a couple months from April to July
they stick with it.
Well, because here's the craziest thing is they were prepared for a vocal minority to be very
mad.
So you're sort of in denial about all the feedback at first.
You're like, yep, this is just what we thought.
And then, like, you get a couple months in and you're like, wait.
This isn't ending.
Does everyone hate this?
Yes.
The answer is yes.
So I thought this lasted a year or two.
And I asked family members, I asked people who were like, yeah, I think that was like a two
or three year period.
there was 79 days between when they released New Coke
and when Coca-Cola Classic made its return.
Yeah.
So when they finally decide they got to bring it back,
there's a question of what do they call it
and what do they do with New Coke?
And Coke and their lawyers ultimately decide
that if they keep New Coke on the market
as the official Coke,
and they call the old Coke Coca-Cola,
Classic, they can make an argument to all the bottlers. The Coca-Cola Classic is a new drink.
Really?
Yeah. This is part of why they bring it back in this way.
Because there was an opportunity to like renegotiate, hey, actually the rights that you own are to new Coke and then more advantageous deal that we're going to cut.
Is Coca-Cola Classic? Yeah.
Interesting. Huh.
So on July 10th, 1985, they announced that Old Coke is coming back as Coca-Cola Classic.
And New Coke will remain on the market.
And in the press conference, Don Quillo says,
some critics will say that Coca-Cola made a marketing mistake.
Some cynic will say that we planned the whole thing.
The truth is, we are not that dumb and we are not that smart.
I don't know.
It all seems pretty dumb to me.
The crazy thing is they thought when they introduced Coca-Cola Classic
that that would be the product for the diehards,
for this vocal minority that was really upset about it.
And in practice, what happened is everyone went back to Coca-Cola Classic and nobody stayed
on New Coke.
I mean, its market share was 3%.
Yeah, it plummeted.
And I think this completely surprised the executives of Coca-Cola who were like, it's better.
We were going to make small quantities of this Coca-Cola Classic just to appease the people
who need it.
But it's crazy.
People just went back to the worst tasting one.
So there's a delicious, one might say, CODA to this whole thing.
Well, wait, we didn't say the best part of how this ends.
Within a year, Coca-Cola Classic surged past the heights of where Coca-Cola was
before the whole debacle started.
So the whole thing worked as an accidental publicity stunt.
No advertising campaign could have ever gotten people to pay this much attention to Coke.
In many ways, this actually did save Coca-Cola.
After this, they started building back share.
What's the song?
You don't know what you got till it's gone.
This made people realize, oh, my God, I do love Coca-Cola.
Yes, you're right.
That is the most important takeaway from this.
This is what finally stopped the Pepsi challenge.
Is Pepsi won, and then after Pepsi winning and Coke losing, Coke was able to come back.
But yes, they had to literally kill Coca-Cola in order to resurrect.
from the ashes and survive the Pepsi challenge.
The little fun trivia is, David, do you know what New Coke became after they removed the name
New Coke but left the product on the market?
Oh, no, I don't.
They renamed it Coke 2.
Ah, ha, ha.
And it was not fully abandoned until 2002.
Wow.
That's how long they stuck with it.
Yep. So I don't know who the Coke 2 fans were, but it was available for you at some point for a while.
Somebody has hoarded a whole stash of Coke 2 somewhere. It's in some bunker somewhere.
All right. So the delicious coda to this whole thing.
Please.
Remember how I set up the Warren Buffett ham sandwich thing. And I think this whole episode is probably where he decides, Jesus, Coca-Cola could be run by a ham sandwich.
It would have been better off.
But actually not, right?
This whole thing was so stupid that it was actually amazing.
What's the Bernard Arnault quote?
Even when he loses, he wins?
Yes.
So after this whole New Coke disaster,
Coca-Cola company's stock is in the dumps,
and who comes in?
But Warren Buffett.
Perfect.
Berkshire Hathaway and buys a roughly $1.3 billion
dollar equity stake in the company over the next few years and joins the Coca-Cola board.
Turns out to be a, well, a debatable investment.
He owns about 9.5% of Coca-Cola today.
Yep, Berkshire owns about 9.5% of Coca-Cola today.
That stake is worth about $28 billion, which is a 22, 23x gross return on the $1.3 billion investment.
over the course of 40 years, which equates to only just over about an 8% IRA.
But Coca-Cola stock kicks off these days about a billion dollars a year in dividends to Berkshire.
So in total, Berkshire has received about $12 billion in Coca-Cola dividends.
So a $40 billion total return on $1.3 billion invested.
Good, but again, this is over 40 years, so that only bumps it up to about a 10% IRR on the investment.
Which I imagine he would have been better buying Berkshire Hathaway stock.
He would have been better off buying the S&P 500 over that same time period.
That's brutal.
Including dividends over that same time period, the S&P 500 is up about 11% annually.
So the famous Berkshire Hathaway Coca-Cola investment today is actually underperforming the market.
Crazy, right?
When I did some math on this, my first glance at it was this has been an unbelievable investment.
Because even though the equity value is, you know, it's gone up, would you say 20 something X, but over a long period of time, it's been fine.
22, 23, yep.
The dividend yield is insane.
They get $800 million to a billion out every year and their principal was $1.3 billion.
that's like 60 to 80% dividend yield on their original investment.
I'd love to park a dollar somewhere so that I could pull out 60, 70, 80 cents every single
year on that dollar. That's amazing. But when you frame it the way you did.
But 40 years is a long time.
Right. Over a long period of time, you better have insane multiples to justify locking capital
up for 40 years. Yep. And, you know, the thing about the S&P 500, right, is it's a rotating set.
Right. That's not really fair.
And over the last few years, of course, the tech companies have rotated in. And, yeah, the returns from, you know, the Magnificent Seven over the last 10 years dwarf anything else.
But I'm sure buying Berkshire in 1988 to 1994, which was the stretch that he bought Coca-Cola and holding it to today, it would have been a far better investment than buying Coca-Cola stock.
And that is a fair comparison, unlike an index, which has companies that rotate in and out.
Yep.
By the way, this is the fault of Coca-Cola over the last 20 years.
years. It had a ridiculous run right after Warren invested. We'll cover it at the very end of the
episode, but revenue and earnings growth over the last 20 years on a annualized basis has not been
great. Yeah. Well, speaking of the good initial few years of the run there, there's one more
fruit, shall we say, to be harvested of the Columbia Pictures acquisition that Gozetta and Keo did
in the early 80s.
The relationship with CAA.
Yes, and super agent Michael Ovitz.
Past acquired guest.
Indeed.
Part of the Acquired Cinematic Universe.
So when Coca-Cola sells Columbia to Sony,
Ovitz and CAA are official advisors on the deal.
That's right.
When Ovitz tried to take it from a talent agency and movie packaging
into also doing investment banking.
Yes.
And on the back of that success,
expanding CIA into investment banking,
Ovitz is like, why stop there?
Why don't we expand...
Become an ad agency.
Into ad agency land, too.
So he comes back to Cozetta and Keo
and says, hey, I want to pitch you guys
on taking over as your ad agency
from McCann Erickson.
Which is crazy. This is Coca-Cola.
But Ovitz's pitch is pretty good.
He's like, hey, McCann Erickson,
has been great for you guys. And of course, you know, there's the Hilltop ad and the real thing
and everything over the past set of years. But hey, this one site, one sound, one cell thing
is not going to work in the new media landscape. I mean, look at how badly you got your
butt kicked by the Pepsi Challenge in grassroots marketing. What you need are different messages
that are going to resonate on different mediums. You know, we've got the cable network
landscape these days. We've got ESPN. We've got sitcoms. We've got kids shows. We've got all this
different media. It's not just the whole family watching I Love Lucy anymore. You need a whole new
approach for the new media landscape. And so you shouldn't have just one television ad. You should
have a whole suite of different television ads for different audiences in different times of the
year. And there should be a democratic approach to this where it's not just one creative director
at one agency. You want the best ideas that can come from anywhere. And we have,
all the talent relationships with all these different writers, directors, actors,
you just give us a creative brief.
We'll come back with 30 great ideas for you from 30 different sources.
So he pitches Coke that CAA can make 40 ads a year for them
for the same cost that McCann Erickson is making seven.
And they can all stay unified under the new Coke slogan of always Coca-Cola.
So in 1992, CAA wins the business, D-thrones McCann Erickson.
And among the many ads that they create for Coke is a new Christmas Coca-Cola motif,
not featuring Santa Claus, but instead the polar bears.
Yep.
Ovitz makes the polar bears. Amazing.
Well.
Yeah, I mean, he didn't make the polar bears, but...
Ovitz found.
the talent through the CAA network
to make the polar bears. So
I think this is basically
the climax of our story.
New Coke, what happens afterwards,
the polar bears, these beloved ads.
The rest of the 90s and 2000s,
there's a lot of company building
that happens, but
it's just not that romantic
of a story as
much as Coca-Cola's first century
was. Well,
the thing that really
started to happen in the 90s and then accelerated in the 2000s is the beverage market
just moved away from colas and towards a whole variety of other drinks.
The first battleground for this is sports drinks and Gatorade.
Yep.
So in the 80s, Gatorade really came on the scene and established the market for sports drinks.
And Gatorade was part of Quakerotes.
That's right. I forgot Quaker Oats ended up owning it.
Yeah, way back in the day.
So Coca-Cola, in response to Gatorade's success,
launches Powerade in 1988.
Powerade is a homegrown product at Coca-Cola.
It never achieves anywhere near the same success as Gatorade.
I think it maxes out market share in, like, the teens or low 20s.
Finally, in the year 2000, this is crazy.
the then CEO of Coca-Cola,
Gozetta had tragically died of lung cancer in 1997.
In 2000, the CEO of Coke announces publicly
a $16 billion deal to acquire Quaker Oats and Gatorade.
This would have been a great deal for the company.
Whoa, yeah, that didn't happen.
So he announced it without board approval.
The board rejected it after the public announcement.
the deal falls through
and the next year
Pepsi ends up swooping in
buying Quaker Oats and Gatorade
and Gatorade is like a home run
for Pepsi ever since.
I had no idea. Wow.
Wild, right?
It's total echoes of the Frida L.A. disaster.
Coke could have owned
Frida Lays and Gatorade.
Wow.
Yeah.
And that is a little illustration
of the CEO.
the time. There have been five CEOs since Gosweta, 1998 onward, and the first three only
lasted three to four years each. Very different than the Woodruff dynasty and the long run
that Gosweta had also. The thing that is extremely clear that David, you touched on, is
they had to diversify into what they call a total beverage company really prompted by this backlash
against soft drinks. The world sort of lost interest in first full sugar colas and then
colas. And the thing that was kind of driving it, not really in the 90s, but in the 2000s and
certainly the 2010s, obesity. It was clear that America was only going in one direction and
sugar and processed foods coupled with the sedentary lifestyle that a lot of Americans live
is a giant culprit of obesity. And so Coke sort of trapped figuring out what to do about
this. The American Heart Association comes out and says the recommended daily limit of sugar
for men is 36 grams and women is 25 grams per day. That's the recommended limit per day.
A 12 ounce can of Coca-Cola contains 39 grams of sugar. Yep, 39 grams. So you've got this
sort of hard problem where Coca-Cola itself, just that one product, that one product line,
is this unbelievable business, super high margin, low capital investment, brand is built and established
all over the world, like, it's hard to want to invest to anything else when that's your current
business. And at the same time, they need to. It's existential. This product is probably going to
only go downhill from here. Maybe it's got a few more years, maybe another decade of success.
But 50 years from now, will this be your cash cow? No. And so how do you start diversifying
without admitting that your current main product
that is the company's namesake is bad for you.
It's just bad for you.
Yep.
Tough spot to be in.
Not an enviable position to be in,
and you can sort of see how that churns CEOs pretty quickly.
Now, the interesting thing, though, back to Pepsi.
They've managed this, at least from a business standpoint,
pretty well over the past set of decades.
You know, first with Frito-Lay,
then with Quaker Oats and Gatorade,
then in the bottled water market. So Pepsi launches Aquafina, Coke launches DeSani.
Yeah, they were pretty late to the game in waters. I mean, I think the story of the last 25 years is they sit there in a privileged position and look around and wait and see. And then when something really starts happening, then they go become active in it. And they just have to sort of hope that all the assets they have, including the Coke distribution system, makes it okay that they're not first to market on some of these things.
But I don't know. Sometimes it's really cost them.
And the biggest, most interesting one is Monster Energy.
Do you know the story behind Monster Energy?
Well, I know what happened, but I don't know the story.
I mean, they started acquiring and investing in a lot of other beverage companies through the 2000s.
There was Adwala, there was vitamin water, there was fuse.
And then I know Monster comes along.
Yep.
So Monster started.
Do you remember Hansen's juice?
yes that is monster oh i think i vaguely did know this this is a wild story i don't have the entire
story because this is the coke episode not the monster episode but at some point the hanson
leadership realized that they did want to get into energy drinks but their current brand was
not going to be effective in doing so and so they came up with this really crazy brand that felt
dark and dangerous to counterposition the cleaner aesthetic of red bull and ends up going great
better than they ever could have imagined so there were very very very very very
various times early in the transition from Hansen's Natural to Monster, where Coke could have
bought it. But it was subscale, and then there were sort of lulls and growth, and it was sort of
false starts in it becoming the big giant thing that it became. And also, energy drinks as a
category, people weren't sure how durable it was. You know, is this really going to be the thing
that it became, or is it a fad? So in 2012, Monster reached out to potential buyers, including
Coca-Cola and Pepsi, Buck Coke, decided against pursuing it because the price was high.
Monster's market cap was $11 billion at the time.
Oh, goodness. Wow. And what is Monster's Market Cap today?
$70 billion. Yeah. I'd say these energy drinks are not a fad.
Yeah. So what ended up actually happening, much later on, Coca-Cola was like, ah, crap, we should
have done that. They do sign a deal with them. So it was a pretty interesting.
deal. Coke decided we're going to walk away from being in the energy drink business. So as a part of this deal, we're going to do a business swap where Coke gives its energy drink brands, Nause, full throttle, burn, mother, and relentless to Monster. Monster transfers its non-energy business, including the original Hanson's natural sodas.
Amazing. Over to Coca-Cola. Coca-Cola becomes Monster's preferred global distribution partner.
And Monster becomes Coca-Cola's exclusive energy drink play.
And Coca-Cola gets a 20% stake in the company, right?
Well, yeah, but Coke had to buy it.
So Coke had the privilege of investing in Monster.
In 2015, Coke puts in over $2 billion.
At least they're getting on the train.
So Coke is the largest shareholder now in Monster Energy.
And, you know, that deal looks pretty good.
That two-ish billion that they put in is worth almost 12.
billion dollars today. So nice investment, but gosh, if you're the global total beverage company,
what has the trend been of the last 15 years in beverages? I bet they sure wish they owned Monster.
Yeah. It is funny, though, like I'm talking out of both sides of my mouth here. If you think that
Coca-Cola is bad for you, wait till you see the energy drinks. So it's not just the obesity thing.
There's a trend into energy drinks that has nothing to do with health.
Yeah, it's interesting.
The energy drinks are almost a callback to the original patent medicine of Coca-Cola.
It's like, yeah, this is really bad for you, but you're going in eyes wide open to that.
Yes, that's exactly right.
It is serving a function for you.
Yeah.
The other funny thing that happens is Coca-Cola buys glass-o, which makes vitamin water and smart water,
in sort of yet another,
oh, we should also be in water play.
They pay about $4 billion for that.
The founder then goes on to leave Coca-Cola
and starts Body Armor,
a sports drink that I think is coconut water-based,
a little bit more sugary,
turns around, sells that back to Coca-Cola
for $5 billion.
For a startup, Body Armor did great.
Gatorade still has 60% plus
of the market share of sports drinks.
doesn't make a dent in PepsiCo's number one position in sports drinks.
Yep.
If you're going to look at Coca-Cola as a total beverage company and say what beverages have really been killing it the last 20 years that you've managed to bet correctly on or incubate in-house, and the answer is Diet Coke and Coke Zero.
Yep.
Coke Zero, 2005.
Taste infringement.
For a few years, it was growing at 10% a year, which is really fast considering it launched like 20 years ago, and it was already very large.
Yeah, it is sort of ironic that the last 20 years have been about a metamorphosis into a total beverage company, and it's Coca-Cola, Diet Coke, and Coke Zero that are leading the way.
Yes. So that was a lot of stuff that happened in the 2000s. The 2010s, they did acquire more brands. They continue to go.
grow the total beverage company's portfolio. They did a whole bunch of stuff that we're not
going to spend too much time on in this episode rehabbing their bottler operations, bringing a lot of
it back in-house, making sure the quality and the efficiency was up to where they wanted to
have it, and then spinning it back out. And so a lot of these bottlers came on balance sheet,
then went back off balance sheet to new owners. They encouraged consolidation among their
bottlers. They finally got rid of the last little element of the parent bottlers. And so the story
for people who follow Coke as a company or a stock is a lot around how good of a job are they
doing, restructuring all the bottlers. And it seems like they're mostly through this whole
refranchising thing that they're doing. So that brings us to the business today. Yeah. And the business
today, the biggest piece
is a part of the story that we basically haven't talked about
since World War II is international.
Coke is a global company.
Most of the revenue and profits do not come
from the United States,
even though all the storylines that we've been talking about
are the United States.
But I think when people look at the Coca-Cola
that they're holding, they think about the United States.
Right.
Maybe that's not true.
Maybe I live here, and so I'm ethnocentric about that,
But I'd be curious if Coke feels like America to you, if you're a listener and you don't live here.
Yeah.
You know, the other part of it is Coca-Cola did set up the bottlers as independent, locally owned entrepreneurial businesses in all the countries that they went into.
Produces a lot of profits locally.
Yep.
So, yeah, it is a local business wherever it is.
All right.
So let's walk through that.
Here's Coca-Cola by the numbers today.
So first of all, brands.
For a long time, the thought was just build the total beverage company and more brands
is better. So let's just keep going. They got over 500. Around 2020, they did a big slimming
and went down to about 200. And ones that they got rid of were Tab, Zico, Adwala, Honesty, Vault.
Those are probably some of the ones you know that they got rid of. They do have 30 brands
that do over a billion dollars in revenue. It's kind of crazy. It's a house of brands. It's a house of
brands that has that many billion dollar brands. Fifteen of them were created organically like
Fanta and Sprite that we didn't talk about in this episode. That's right. Ah, we didn't talk about
Sprite. Do you know the history behind Sprite? Do you know what Sprite really is? No, not really.
So Sprite, as we all know it today, is not Sprite. Sprite is Fanta Clear Lemon from Germany.
Really?
Yep, that they brought over to America and rebranded it as Sprite.
No way. And they stole the name from, they had a character named Sprite Boy,
who was a part of the Coca-Cola Santa Claus universe.
Yep, that's right.
All right, those are two of the 15 that were created organically in-house.
Three of them they bought that were already doing over a billion at acquisition,
and then the remaining 12 of the $30 billion brands that they have were small
and Coke grew them to over a billion in revenue underneath their umbrella.
So think MinutMade, Fair Life, and Vitamin Water.
And just to share some of the other brands they do own PowerAid, MinutMaid, Disani,
vitamin water, Coke Zero, Schweps, Smart Water, CL, which is another water brand,
and Crystal, which is yet a third water brand.
They recently bought Topo Chico.
They're actually playing around in alcoholic beverages a little bit with Topo Chico,
with a hard seltzer.
And I think they're also doing a Jack and Coke.
and a sprite that is alcoholic.
So they're starting to dip their toe into that a little bit.
Mm, a fanta clear lemon, alcoholic.
All right.
That's a real ring to it.
Fresca, body armor, fair life, and core power, the dairy products.
And fuse tea.
And here's one that is a little bit of a head scratcher, Costa coffee.
Yes, that they bought for quite a few billion dollars a couple years ago, right?
And it's a physical retail. It's a coffee house in the UK. Yeah, it's like a Starbucks competitor.
Yeah. So that's interesting that they operate a coffee house. By the way, speaking of coffee,
someone told me that the relationship with McDonald's runs so deep that Coca-Cola sources the coffee beans for McDonald's.
Wow. And if it's actually the sole source of McDonald's, that is a giant number of coffee beans.
Well, it's interesting with both the cost of coffee and the McDonald's coffee, I'm pretty
sure we talked about with Howard on our Starbucks
episode, the Starbucks Pepsi
partnership with Frappuccino, right?
That's right, the Pepsi was the bottler that
made the CPG version of the Frappuccino.
Yep, huge success for both companies.
Yep. So, those are
the $30 billion brands that they have.
Coca-Cola serves
2.2 billion
servings of their beverages
to the world every day.
Wild.
That is, what, like a
quarter of the world's population?
if everybody were having just one.
Isn't that crazy?
Definitely not evenly spread.
Yes.
There are a lot of power users of Coke products out there.
Yes.
But Coca-Cola's estimate is that there are 65 billion servings of beverages consumed every day.
Does that include water or no?
Yeah.
The human race takes 65 billion drinks a day of something.
So what's that?
I guess that's eight drinks per person per day?
Yes.
So, you know, by that calculation,
that got a long way to go. Huge market ahead of them, even if they stayed just in beverages.
There you go. They have 200 bottling partners around the world with 950 unique facilities.
Pretty awesome that they don't have to own the vast majority of that.
From a revenue perspective, this is what you were starting to get into and how is the revenue breakdown.
The Coca-Cola company itself does $47 billion in revenue.
And how much is North America versus the rest of the world?
40% of revenue is in the U.S. and 60% is international.
Hmm.
That's actually bigger than I would have thought in the U.S.
Yeah.
Still very meaningful.
I bet for the Cora Cola products, it's less than 40% in the U.S.
Yep.
I bet that's totally right.
Okay, so the interesting thing is if you start to look at employees, so revenue,
$47 billion at Coca-Cola company out of $175 billion in total revenue by the system.
And this is as reported by Coca-Cola.
in their proxy statement. There are 70,000 employees of Coca-Cola, but again, if you look at the
system, there are 700,000 employees. So let's look at those last two numbers together, because that's
a 10x difference in employee account. A full 47 of the $175 billion in revenue goes to the Coca-Cola
company, 27% of the revenue, with just 10% of the total employees. I mean, the Coca-Cola company
gets a tremendous amount of leverage out of the bottling system.
This is just employees.
This doesn't even think about the margin profile.
This doesn't think about return on invested capital,
which, again, is all much better if you're the Coca-Cola company
versus if you're the bottlers.
Yep.
And then there's the fountain customers, the retail partners,
the McDonald's of the world.
Definitely Coca-Cola is at a better return on invested capital standpoint
than running restaurants.
The Coca-Cola company just needs to sell syrup and spend marketing dollars to sell the dream.
It's a beautiful position to be in.
Yes, it is.
Earnings on that $47 billion, they generate $10.6 billion of net income.
The net income margins tend to average around 23%.
Gross margins average about 60%.
Historically, it was as high as 70%.
So almost as good as a software business, but not quite.
but for a physical goods business,
it's kind of unbelievable that they have 60% gross margins.
Then when you look at the revenue mix on products,
this kind of gets to like, what is the company today?
69% of revenue comes from sparkling soft drinks.
So as much as they are in water and milk and tea and juice and sports drinks,
the bulk of this business is selling soda.
40% of all volume is trademark Coca-Cola,
which is just Coke Diet Coke, Coke Zero,
and the caffeine-free and flavored variants,
47% of the volume is the Coke family.
Wow.
So I kind of continue to maintain this mentality of
they keep trying to get into other stuff,
but then they're always a little bit like,
geez, I know we should be getting into this other stuff,
but it's not as good as our original thing,
It's not as good of a business. It's not as unique of a brand. And I also think they're kind of like limping in to a lot of these other categories. They're not making a giant early bet on things that become the next big beverage fad. They're trying to watch and see how it plays out and then jump in.
Yeah, whether it's sports drinks or energy drinks. Exactly. Market cap is $300 billion. So huge company, not by Mag 7 tech standards, but massive very large.
valuable company. You'll note, David, they did not achieve Charlie Munger's thought experiment of
$2 trillion, and they are very unlikely to get there by the 150th birthday in 2036, which is the
time frame that Charlie used. Indeed. Growth is only three or four percent a year. If you look
since 1998, in the post-Gosweta years, it averages out to about three to four percent growth. So
I think fair to say anemic when you're describing their growth in recent years. Yeah.
I think that's why we focused the bulk of the episode on the pre-1998 Coca-Cola,
because that's really where they built this unbelievable thing that, frankly, saturated the world.
Yeah, this incredible business with all these innovations and sort of pillars of what became
one of, if not the greatest brand in American history.
But yeah, as we said, back starting at the Pepsi Challenge days,
I think there's a strong argument that Pepsi was the more interesting company.
And over the last 50 years, soft drinks as a category have just gotten a lot more competitive.
The stat that I saw was back in 1948, Coca-Cola said that they had 60% market share of U.S. soft drinks.
60% in post-World War II America.
In soft drinks today, they have 21%.
Pepsi has 10%.
And I think there's a lot of things in soft drinks.
If you just look at carbonated, Coca-Cola does have 47% market share and Pepsi has 19%.
but in soft drinks, I mean, the category has just gotten a lot more competitive and Coke has lost share.
Yeah.
All right. Should we move into analysis?
Yes, let's do it.
All right. So instead of Playbook this time, because I had just something kind of funny written down for Playbook, which is this company really only does two things, manufacture syrup out of some unique intellectual property that they own and spend money on marketing.
Correct.
I think the more interesting playbook this time is a brief review.
of why Coca-Cola worked.
Yes.
Love it.
Let's do it.
Well, first, you were talking about it a minute ago
with the 64 billion daily thirst-quenching occasions around the globe.
Nice market to get to play in.
Yeah.
They're just in a giant market.
Everybody in the world gets thirsty,
and everybody in the world likes to have some variety
in what they drink besides just water.
Yep.
Full stop.
Full stop.
And in that category, they built something that for many years, the better part of a century, people felt was N of one.
Yes.
They were the original.
They were the real thing.
And it took a long time for that to get eroded.
And honestly, if I'm looking at sodas, it's still the real thing.
It's just that there's a lot of other things, too.
And that's due to both a multi-decade, 100-year-plus investment in building the brand and some of the greatest brand market.
of all time. Yep. Three, World War II, and having an unbelievably paved path for them to expand
globally and then also kind of shut the door behind them on global expansion. Yep. And I really do
think continuing the second party locally, entrepreneurally owned franchise bottling system
internationally was a huge contributor to that. Yeah, so much of Coke's success. I mean, I keep going
back to that moment earlier, where bottlers enabled them to scale so much faster than not
having bottlers. And even if you look at all the beautiful business dynamics of you don't
have to deal with that lower margin stuff, you don't have to deal with the high head count
stuff, the high complexity stuff, the high overhead, the lower returns on invested capital,
even if it's just about speed to market. Yes. They got to blanket America and then blanket
the world very quickly before anyone else. With the thing that people pick a supplier
once, whether the restaurant's picking the supplier or people are picking their favorite beverage,
they pick it and then it's over. And they sort of had this unbelievably fast way to saturate
in something that was a race. It turned out soft drinks were a category that was a race and who's
going to get to global scale first. Yes. And it was all figured out by accident because of the
worst business deal in history. As Steve Jobs always says, you can only connect the dots looking
backwards. That's right. The one dollar contract.
Of course, it is a highly addictive substance that is also super enjoyable to drink and triggers
every reward center you have, not nearly as much as when it had cocaine in it, but plenty
of reward centers from the bubbles, the sugar, the caffeine, the cold refreshment, everything
about it.
I've been fired up doing this episode.
The extrinsic marketing capability of associating it with everything good in your life,
with happiness, with Christmas, with your family, with your favorite athletes.
It's just amazing lifestyle marketing.
Yep.
And then lastly, I will say, new Coke.
It taught us to love again.
I mean, it made us fall back in love with Coca-Cola.
I think Coca-Cola would be worse off today
if they didn't go through the New Coke moment,
which is crazy to say,
but I guess we don't have the counterfactual,
but if you just look at the data on the resurgence in Coke afterwards,
you couldn't have come up with a better marketing stunt.
Totally agree.
I disagree with both.
sides of the Don Quio statement that we weren't that dumb and we weren't that smart.
They absolutely were that dumb and they absolutely were that smart.
Yep.
Yep.
I've got two more that I would add.
Great.
One, I think Pepsi was great for Coke.
I think neither Pepsi nor Coke would be what they are today or be as great a product
and company as they are today if it weren't for the other one.
Definitely.
I mean, the Pepsi challenge is what made Pepsi because there was a challenge.
challenge to Coke. And then all of Coke's response, they made each other better.
Yeah. And then the last one I would add is that other than software and technology products,
this is the first real physical product I think we've ever studied on Acquired,
where you can have both a low selling price and high margins.
Oh, that's interesting.
And that's super important when it's also a game of scale and global scale because it lets you sell this affordable luxury or pause that refreshes to everybody in the world, more or less everybody in the world can afford a Coca-Cola.
And also, the Coca-Cola company makes great margins on those selling prices.
It's a lot of volume.
And that's incredibly cheap ingredients.
That's the other.
Yes.
That's our why Coke worked.
That's our tableau of why Coke worked so well.
Yes.
All right, Powers.
For new listeners to the show, and there are many of you.
Thank you so much to all of you who shared the Trader Joe's episode with friends and family.
We saw tens of thousands of new listeners come and join us.
So welcome to the party.
This section, Power, is gleefully ripped from a book called Seven Powers by our friend Hamilton-Helmer.
And in it he examines what of these seven possible powers is it that enables a business to achieve persistent differential returns or put another way to become more profitable than their nearest competitor and do so on a durable, sustainable basis?
And the seven are counter positioning, scale economies, switching costs, network economies, process power, branding, and cornered resource.
Well, it definitely wasn't counter positioning because Coke is the real thing.
Was the first. Pepsi, master of counter positioning. Coke is the incumbent.
Yeah. Coke is mostly getting counterpositioned. Yes.
So this is a business of scale economies. Everything about this business is scale economies. The amount that they can amortize their advertising over, it's just an amortization scale economies business, period. They can manufacture and distribute things cheaper than you can to weigh more people.
than you can, and good luck catching up. And like, they're going to have another 100 years in
them because of that advantage that they've built up. Yep. All of the things. Yep. And perhaps
the most important might be the first thing you said of amortizing their advertising spend over the
life of the company. They can afford to just pour massive, massive, massive sums into marketing.
This is why it was such a big deal when in the 70s with the Pepsi Challenge, Pepsi started outspending
Coke in marketing. If you were really astutely paying attention to the dynamic, that should
have tipped you off of like, oh, Coke is in big trouble relative to Pepsi. If Pepsi can afford now
to make the investment to spend the same or more in marketing dollars, they're going to catch up.
All right. So while we're there, let's do branding. Because I think this is so interesting.
Normally brand power is measured by the amount. If you provide someone with two identical things,
how much more are they willing to pay you? And that delta, you know, the Tiffany over the generic
piece of jewelry is how you quantify their brand power. Coke doesn't sell things in general
that are more expensive. Pricing power isn't really a thing that's exercised in this industry
if it exists at all. Coke clearly has branding power, but rather than taking price,
they keep price low and use their latent brand power in other ways.
ways.
Yeah.
I mean, the funny thing is when they sell a Coke, they're selling a billboard.
And so there's this flywheel element, too, where they want to sell as much coke as possible,
not just to keep their manufacturing costs low because it's a economy's a scale thing,
but also because one more Coca-Cola floating around in the world just reinforces the brand.
Yeah.
I would say, not that I disagree with anything you're saying, this just reinforces for me.
This business is all about scaling.
economies. It's all the pursuit of scale. I think this is the best interplay we've ever seen
between branding power and scale economies, where the way that they've built a lot of the brand
that they have is through their scale economies, and they sort of go back and forth.
Yep. I'll tell you, you can't measure their brand power through how much more expensive
it is than Pepsi, because that doesn't exist. You can sure measure it, though, with the outcry
against new Coke.
Yes.
That was a one-time experiment
that most brands never run
with good reason.
Switching costs?
I don't think I have any real switching costs.
Sometimes I do have to drink a diet Pepsi or a Pepsi Max
and like it's fine.
It's not my preferred drink, but it's fine.
Yep.
Network economies, none.
No.
Process power, maybe,
but it's hard to discern from the outside.
And then the last one.
cornered resource. Okay, what's your opinion? Of course. It's the formula.
You really think, yes? But I'll tell you, it's not the formula itself. It is all of the meaning
imbued into the formula that is actually a part of their branding power. Yeah. But if Pepsi said
we broke into the vault and we got the Coca-Cola formula and we're releasing something called PepsiC and
that is identical to Coke, something would go with it. There would be some amount of value transferred
from Coke to Pepsi. Okay, yeah, some. The public gives meaning to the formula, even if you can
synthetically create something that tastes exactly the same as Coca-Cola. Yeah. Okay, so I'm going to
take the exact opposite position on this argument. I know. You've been texting me all week that you
think that the whole secret formula thing is a red herring. Yeah. I think there is today absolutely no value.
to the formula. There's a not just a thought exercise. There's an actual conversation in the appendix
of For God Country and Coca-Cola. Mark Pendergrast in his research found John Pemberton's
original formula from 1886 for Coca-Cola. He found it and he took it to his contacts at the Coca-Cola
company and said, I've got it. What do you guys think? And they said, well, okay, you publish it. Let's say
somebody gets a hold of this formula, what are they going to do with it? Make a drink? Okay, great.
How are you going to distribute it? Okay, well, let's say you can figure out distribution.
Well, what are you going to call it? Are you going to call it Coca-Cola? Well, of course,
we'll sue you for that. How are you going to brand it? How are you going to invest in marketing?
Basically, how are you going to get the scale economies to do what we do? And the answer is you're not going to.
And to your point about Pepsi, Pepsi's got a better formula.
Well, Pepsi has a better Formula One, but there actually was a case.
Somebody, a former Coca-Cola employee, stole the formula and tried to sell it to Pepsi.
This actually happened, and Pepsi turned them into the FBI.
What is Pepsi going to do with the formula?
Pepsi's not going to market the Coca-Cola formula.
These are big multinational corporations.
Yep.
You know, if anything, what you've convinced me of is that the bottlers are actually a cornered resource.
Those bottlers have great distribution.
and they're not bottling for anyone else.
Yep, great point.
Coke handed them a license to print money, and they're doing it.
Yep.
I actually, I'm very curious.
Can you switch teams as a bottler?
Probably not.
I guess it's probably legal, but I bet nobody does.
Yeah, fascinating.
All right, quintessence.
So, listeners, this is something we added earlier this year,
where we really try to come up with something to land the plane.
What is our takeaway from the episode?
And, you know, we already laid out why did Coca-Cola work.
is just David and my opportunity to kind of come up with a quippy sentence or three that is the
thing that's on our mind as we're leaving the episode. But first, David, we have to come back
to the question. Could Coca-Cola be run by a ham sandwich? I think after studying all this
history, I have to agree with Warren. Whoa, really? And Bill. I think it could be. Now,
Now, there have been great, incredible CEOs in Coca-Cola's history, Candler, Woodruff, Gossweta.
All of them have added on to what the Coca-Cola company is, I think.
But if you took just Coca-Cola, yeah, a ham sandwich could run it.
And in fact, it's proven by the new Coke debacle.
All right, so I disagree.
I think there were definitely periods in history, yes.
But in 1985, no. I mean, Coke had been losing share to Pepsi for 15 straight years. They did actually need active management to do something. And sort of the same thing with the obesity crisis in the 2000s. I mean, Coke effectively bumped up against the edge of the market of humans that it could possibly expand to. And they did actually need a different company strategy. Now, whether that has been executed well is a different thing. I mean, it's only grown 3, 4 percent over whatever, the last 20.
27 years. So if the criteria is run a high growth, successful, great place to put money
versus all the other places you could put money company, no, they haven't succeeded in doing
that. But, I mean, you do have to do something rather than just be flat to anemic growth or
decline. Those are very fair points. Points taken. I would still pose the question to you.
What is the single biggest revenue driver within the Coca-Cola company today?
Trademark Coca-Cola.
The real thing, baby.
Yep.
Okay, but on to quintessence.
I have two.
Great.
One is, it's a system, not a company.
Yep.
That's new for us.
I know franchises exist,
but this is sort of a different thing.
And I'm interested in studying more sort of systems
where it's multiple companies interrelated.
And two is, if you really boil it down,
the Coca-Cola company in a nutshell,
it is figuring out
how to incentivize partners
to sell your product
and everyone is incentivized
the bottlers are
massively incentivized the retailers
there's great margin there for you
the soda fountain operators
the restaurant
the billboard owners
we didn't talk about this but in the Great Depression
when no one was buying a billboard space
the billboard owners
didn't want empty blank sad
billboards so for free they put
Coca-Cola ads up on it. They were the preferred thing to a white wall to have there.
I mean, just everyone in the entire ecosystem is incentivized to sell Coca-Cola on behalf of
the Coca-Cola company, and that is durable. Yes, Robert Woodruff had a mantra, an official
motto within the company during his reign as company boss, that everyone who has anything to do
with Coca-Cola should make money.
And there you go.
That is a great quintessence.
Yep.
Mine that I would add, repetition works.
We've studied a lot of brands on Acquired.
It's become a core part of what we do, especially with the luxury industry.
But in the luxury industry, they're always looking for the new spin and changing and there are elements of repetition.
Hermes is always Hermes, but it's always whimsical.
It's always something new.
Pierre Alexi always has a new theme every year.
With Coke, it's a story of 150 years of always delicious, always refreshing.
And yes, they change it up, but it's the same core thing.
It's a core human need.
You want something delicious and refreshing no matter who you are or when you are.
Yep.
That's my quintessence.
It's great.
All right.
Well, cheers.
It's a sugar water company, David.
They make a drink of sugar water that's not good for you, and they built one of the most incredible brands of all time.
But it's always delicious and always refreshing.
It's not good for us.
It's not good for the planet.
And it's delicious and refreshing.
Are you trying to tell me that I could sell sugar water for the rest of my life, or I could come with you and change the world?
I promise no world changing.
But I do have some trivia.
Great.
A thing we didn't cover on the episode. In addition to rising to the Supreme Court and generals, soon-to-be presidents, you know, helping the success of the company, in 1980, the government passed an amendment to federal antitrust law that exempted the soft drink industry. So Coke and Pepsi could actually grant exclusive territories to their bottlers, which you might have been wondering, how do you get this local monopoly? Oh, yeah, how is this legal?
It's like, I get to serve all of New York and all of New Jersey or whatever.
Yeah, they actually have a federal exemption from antitrust law to be able to grant monopolies.
Wow.
Trivia number two, the Hartsfield Jackson Airport in Atlanta.
Yep.
Huge airport for anyone who's ever been there.
That land was once owned by the Coca-Cola Company.
Same actually with the Atlanta Zoo.
I mean, the Coca-Cola Company does a lot of international business, so they need a big airport there.
Yes, very true.
And here's my last fun piece of trivia.
Around 1930, when they were really freaked out about whether or not they'd have the ability to import the coca leaves to the United States to do the refining here, they actually leased a secret cocaine refining facility in Peru.
Yes, in Peru.
They spun the factory up.
It was working.
The employee manufactured Coca-Cola there and the extracted cocaine that came off as a byproduct, they had a big amount of it.
And they were trying to be a good employee to the company and earn some money with it.
So they sold 42 pounds of cocaine to a narcotics broker in Paris, and the sale proceeds went in the Coca-Cola bank account.
And so there's this crazy period where Coca-Cola is freaking out.
Like, we got to hide this.
This is not good.
So this employee wasn't trying to, like, steal cocaine and sell it on the black market and make money.
He was trying to be a good employee and increase profits for the company.
That's right.
And the Hoover administration would eventually grant that acceptance.
so they could refine the coca leaves here in the U.S.
But that was just before.
Wow.
I have one piece of trivia.
Do you know what other very large American company Coca-Cola helped put into business
and was their primary and I think sole customer for the first few years of their life?
No.
Monsanto.
Really?
So Monsanto started as a Sackerin manufacturer.
And Coca-Cola was their first major customer and bought their entire saccharin supply.
Was TAB saccharin sweetened?
No, this is way before.
I think it was just that Coca-Cola was probably experimenting with saccharin.
I don't know that they actually used it, which is odd.
But yeah, this is right around the turn of the century early 1900s.
Coca-Cola was Monsanto's very first customer.
We're trying to create some mine stickers out there.
Oh, God.
All right. Carvouts?
All right. Carvouts.
Great.
Oh, boy. Well, on that theme, I guess, of diets, I recently redid my home gym, and I got a new piece of workout gear that I'm really enjoying.
Have you ever heard of a skierg?
Oh, yeah.
This thing is great.
I'm neither a skier nor a rower, but it is a vertical rowing machine made by Concept 2,
which is the main like rowing erg machine manufacturer, but it's vertical, it's attached to your
wall. It takes up no space. And the movement that you do is like cross-country skiing. You reach
above you, you grab the handles, and then you pull down like your cross-country skiing.
It's great because my primary form of exercise these days is running. And on my off days,
I've been looking for like, okay, I want another thing I can do that's not my,
lower body. So I was looking at a rowing machine, but like, oh, it takes up a lot of space. I don't
have a lot of space down in my gym. I went with the ski rig. I'm very happy with it.
I'm with you for multiple days ahead of the Super Bowl. So I'll have to give it a shot when I'm
staying at your house. And then one more bonus carve out in my ongoing video gaming saga with my
older daughter. I downloaded Smash Brothers Ultimate to her switch. And so we've been playing that.
She really likes to be a princess, of course, and to quote unquote,
fight the bunny. She calls Pikachu the bunny. So she's always like, I want to fight the bunny.
Pikachu is bouncy. He kind of looks like a bunny. You know, I get it. Awesome. I've got three.
Friend of the show, Claude, for reading leases. Oh, nice. I just signed a lease on Acquired North,
moving out of the basement and getting a studio next year. And big news. It didn't warrant
real lawyers looking at it. And so I gave it a pass, and I asked Claude, is there anything that's
wrong in here? And it flagged a few things for me that I found quite helpful. So I don't know if
anyone's told you this yet, but I think AI is the future. And it was quite helpful for me.
Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life? Or do you want to...
That's right. Two is my current favorite running shoes are the Nike Vomerro Plus, which seems
to be the replacement for my previous favorite, the Invincible line. So big fan of the
Vomero Plus. And then the music I'm digging right now is an artist called Hermanos Gutierrez. My good friend Andy Sparks recently stayed at my house and put this on while we were hanging out one morning and it is a fantastic chill music. So I highly recommend it. Excellent. Well, with that, we've got some thank yous for folks who helped us with this episode. First, to our partners this season, J.P. Morgan Payments, trusted, reliable payments infrastructure for your business no matter the scale. That's J.P. Morgan.
dot com slash acquired. WorkOS, the best way to make your app enterprise ready, starting with single
sign on in just a few lines of code, workOS.com. Shopify, the best place to sell online, whether
you're a large enterprise or just a founder with a big idea. That's Shopify.com slash
acquired. And Century, the best way to monitor for issues in your software and fix them before
users get mad, sentry.io slash acquired. You can click the link in the show notes to learn more.
And as always, all sources for this episode are linked in the show notes.
David, I've got some thank yous.
So first, as always, to Arvin Navaratnam at Worldly Partners for his great write-up on Coca-Cola, which is linked in the show notes.
And actually, Arvind was very close with Charlie Munger when he was alive.
And so he is the one who brought out that thought experiment that I did not know about, or I guess remember from the first time I read Poor Charlie's Almanac.
Yeah, when you brought it up, I remembered it, but I had completely forgotten.
gotten. Same. To Bill Combs, who is the past president of the Coca-Cola Collectors Club, the
largest collectors club in the world. But it's great. I talked to Bill, and he had all this
amazing old Coca-Cola memorabilia on the wall behind him, drugstore signs and stuff.
To Simeon Segal from Guggenheim Partners, a retail and consumer brands analyst who helped me think
through the nuances of how brand power shows up in financials. And of course, to all the other
past Coca-Cola folks who spent time with us helping to make sure that we
got the story right. Yes. And one more big thank you from my end to John Skelly,
steward of the Pepsi Challenge. That's right. Thank you so much, John, for giving us those
wonderful stories. If you like this episode, go check out our episodes on Berkshire Hathaway,
Standard Oil, Rolex, or Trader Joe's. And as we head into the holiday season, feel free to share
this with anyone who wants to understand the origin behind the modern Santa Claus.
Of course.
After this episode, go check out ACQ2, our other podcast feed available in any podcast player if you're Jones and for more Acquired.
And if you're not already on it, seriously, join our email list.
This episode was selected by folks who are on our email list, and we can't wait to ask you to vote again for episodes in our spring season.
You can join at Acquired.fm slash email and see the new overhaul that we just did.
So each monthly email will now have episode summaries, our big takeaways, and exclusive photos from the research process.
Come join the Slack, Acquired.fm slash Slack, hang out, and discuss it with all the other smart people who listen to Acquired.
And with that, listeners, we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you? Who got the truth now?
You know,
