Coca-Cola: The Power of a Brand
There are few images as recognizable throughout the world as
the Coca-Cola brand. Travel to the furthest reaches of the globe
and you will probably encounter it on a clock or a sign, if not
on the drink itself. Marketers today look to the Coca-Cola brand
as a model of marketing power. Its image has transcended
national borders and cultural barriers to reach almost everyone
on earth. How did the Coca-Cola symbol become such an
omnipresent image?
Beginning in 1886, Coca-Cola president John Pemberton began
traveling the country introducing pharmacists to the drink. At
that time it was considered a medicinal substance that could
relieve headaches and other minor woes. Candler distributed
clocks, calendars and other items laden with the Coca-Cola logo
as he toured the country, spreading the brand and selling his
product.
>From there the brand continued to penetrate further around the
world. The bottling rights to Coca-Cola were sold in 1899 and in
1915 the Root family submitted a standard size bottle for
distribution, but it was too fat in the middle. The Coca-Cola
Company liked the bottle so much they thinned it down and has
been used ever since and is called a Hobbleskirt Bottle. By
1920, with new bottlers springing up all the time, the brand had
expanded into Cuba, France, Puerto Rico and other territories.
Its world dominance would increase further with World War II,
when Coca-Cola promised that "every man in uniform gets a bottle
of Coca-Cola for 5 cents, wherever he is, and whatever it costs
the company." Suddenly Coca-Cola could be found throughout
Europe as American GIs carried it with them, and by 1960 the
number of countries with Coke bottling plants had doubled.
Today Coke remains a powerful brand with over a century of
history behind it. As a result, items featuring previous
incarnations of the Coke image have become classic pieces of
Americana. The success of the Coca-Cola brand has made it an
icon not just in the world of brand marketing but of American
history. It symbolizes the popularity of a soft drink as well as
the dominance of American entrepreneurialism in the twentieth
century and beyond.