We've established a portfolio of drinks that are best positioned to grow in an ever-changing marketplace.
From trademark Coca‑Cola to Sports, Juice & Dairy Drinks, Alcohol Ready-to-Drink Beverages and more, discover some of our most popular brands in North America and from around the world.
Our purpose is to refresh the world and make a difference. See how our company and system employees make this possible every day and learn more about our areas of focus in sustainability.
Since its birth at a soda fountain in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, in 1886, Coca‑Cola has been a catalyst for social interaction and inspired innovation.
On May 8, 1886, Dr. John Pemberton brought his perfected syrup to Jacobs' Pharmacy in downtown Atlanta where the first glass of Coca‑Cola was poured. Serving about nine drinks per day in its first year, Coca‑Cola was an exciting new drink in the beginning. See the story here of how it all began.
Since 1917, our sustainability efforts have covered a wide range of topics including: water, women empowerment, community well-being, packaging, emissions, human and workplace rights, and agriculture.
Read the story about one of the most famous commercials that saw Coke not as it was originally designed to be—a liquid refresher—but as a tiny bit of commonality between all peoples, a universally liked formula that would help to keep them company for a few minutes. Learn about the background of “I’d like to buy the world a Coke.”
The contour bottle has been celebrated in art, music and advertising. Read the story of the collaboration that began in 1915 and turned into one of the most famous shapes in the world.
May 8. Coca‑Cola is created and served at Jacobs’ Pharmacy. Nine drinks a day are sold during this year.
The Coca‑Cola Company accountant names the drink “Coca‑Cola,” and thinking the two Cs would look well in advertising, pens the famous Spencerian script logo.
1887
Coupons are first used to promote Coca‑Cola.
“Coca‑Cola Syrup and Extract” label is registered as a copyright with the U.S. Patent Office.
Asa Candler, who began to acquire The Coca‑Cola Company in 1888, finalizes the purchase and incorporates The Coca‑Cola Company as a Georgia Corporation.
1895
Asa Candler declares in the Annual Report that Coca‑Cola is sold and drunk in every state and territory in the United States.
1898
The first building is erected for the sole purpose of housing The Coca‑Cola Company. It is quickly outgrown as the Company moves to larger quarters five times in the next 12 years.
1899
The rights to bottle Coca‑Cola in most of the United States are sold by Asa Candler to Benjamin F. Thomas and Joseph B. Whitehead of Chattanooga, Tennessee, for $1. Chattanooga becomes the first city to bottle Coca‑Cola under the contract.
The annual advertising budget for The Coca‑Cola Company surpasses $1 million for the first time.
1912
Bottling operations are started in the Philippines, the Company’s first expansion into Asia.
1915
Answering the call of The Coca‑Cola Company, the contour bottle prototype is designed by Alexander Samuelson and patented by the Root Glass Company. It is approved by the Bottlers’ Association and becomes the standard bottle.
1916
Asa Candler retires from the Company to successfully run for mayor of Atlanta.
1919
The first bottling plants are opened in Europe in Paris and Bordeaux.
The Coca‑Cola Company is purchased by a group of investors led by Ernest Woodruff for $25 million.
Seeking to create an advertising program that links Coca‑Cola with Christmas, artist Haddon Sundblom creates his first illustration showing Santa Claus pausing for a Coke. For the next three decades, from 1931 to 1964, Sundblom paints images of Santa that help to create the modern interpretation of St. Nick.
1935
Lettie Pate Evans joins the Board of Directors of The Coca‑Cola Company. She is the first woman to serve on the board of a major corporation, a position she holds until 1953.
The first in a series of posters depicting American fighter planes is issued for use in schools, restaurants and retail stores. Additional series are issued in 1943, 1944 and 1945.
1943
The U.S. government requests that Coca‑Cola be made available to the troops. Robert Woodruff pledges to provide Coke to the military for a nickel regardless of what it costs the Company to produce the product. During the war, 64 portable bottling plants are sent to Asia, Europe and North Africa. More than 5 billion bottles of Coca‑Cola are distributed.
1945
“Coke” becomes a registered trademark of The Coca‑Cola Company.
1946
The “Yes” poster with artwork by Haddon Sundblom is released. The poster wins multiple design awards.
Coca‑Cola becomes the first product to appear on the cover of Time magazine. The magazine wants to have a photo of Robert Woodruff on the cover, but he refuses stating that the product is the only important element in the Company.
The first television commercial for Coca‑Cola is broadcast on Thanksgiving Day on a CBS half-hour special featuring Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy.
1955
The Coca‑Cola Company begins featuring African-Americans in marketing with the Harlem Globetrotters in 1951 and Olympic Games athletes Jesse Owens and Alice Coachman in 1953. Clark University student Mary Alexander becomes one of the first African-American women to appear in print advertising when she is featured in 1955.
Fanta Orange is introduced in Naples, Italy, the first new product to be distributed by the Company. The Fanta line of flavored beverages comes to the United States in 1960.
Steel 12-ounce cans are introduced to help make Coca‑Cola more portable.
The Coca‑Cola Company acquires The Minute Maid Corporation, adding a line of juice products to its portfolio.
1963
TaB, the first diet drink produced by the Company, is launched. Its name is selected from a computer-generated search that yields more than 300,000 options.
1969
A new graphic look for the Coca‑Cola system is introduced, featuring a red-and-white color scheme and logo.
Coca‑Cola introduces its first sports drink when Olympade is test marketed in the United States. The packaging features a logo for the U.S. Olympic Committee.
1971
First introduced as a radio ad and later produced as a television commercial, “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke” becomes an international hit and remains one of the most popular ads for Coca‑Cola.
1976
The Coca‑Cola Company and the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) agree to the first-ever sponsorship between a company and an international sports governing body.
1978
The 2-liter polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottle is introduced, beginning the Company’s use of PET packaging.
1979
The North Avenue Tower headquarters building is first occupied.
Coca‑Cola begins worldwide sponsorship of Special Olympics.
Diet Coke is introduced in a celebrity-filled ceremony in New York, becoming the first extension of the trademarks Coca‑Cola and Coke.
1985
The formula for Coca‑Cola is changed for the first time in 99 years. The product, popularly dubbed “New Coke,” generated consumer protest nationwide. Product made with the original formula, renamed “Coca‑Cola Classic,” is returned to the market 79 days later.
Coca‑Cola becomes the first soft drink consumed in space when the astronauts aboard the space shuttle Challenger tested the space can on a mission.
1986
May 8. Coca‑Cola marks its hundredth anniversary with a worldwide celebration in Atlanta.
The Coca‑Cola Scholars Foundation is created as a joint program between the Company and The Coca‑Cola Bottlers’ Association.
Company-owned bottlers and several independent bottler groups combine to form Coca‑Cola Enterprises (CCE) as an independent bottler and publicly traded company.
The Coca‑Cola Company joins the fight against AIDS in Africa with the joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS.
The Coca‑Cola Foundation and Coca‑Cola bottlers contribute $12 million in disaster relief following the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.
2005
Coca‑Cola Zero, a zero-calorie cola, makes its debut.
2006
The Bottling Investments Group is established. This organization manages the operations of Company-owned bottling plants around the world.
2009
Coca‑Cola Freestyle, an innovative fountain dispenser that allows consumers to select from more than 100 beverages, is unveiled.