100 Magnificent Coca-Cola Marketing Moments

A look back at the soft drink brand’s incred­i­ble mar­ket­ing his­to­ry over the last cen­tu­ry.

Pat Hong By Pat Hong from Linkdex. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Coca-Cola is not just a soft drink. The com­pa­ny are by all accounts one of the the most rec­og­niz­able brands in the world. Seen to cham­pi­on a uni­ver­sal set of val­ues — inspi­ra­tional ideas such as equal­i­ty and hap­pi­ness — the brand have a place in the hearts of con­sumers every­where. It’s a rep­u­ta­tion built by sev­er­al decades of adver­tis­ing, con­tent, and cre­ative ideas, con­sis­tent moments that instil a sense of brand val­ues in the minds of con­sumers. To cel­e­brate the 100th anniver­sary of Coca-Cola’s icon­ic curved bot­tle, momen­tol­ogy have col­lect­ed 100 exam­ples of bril­liant mar­ket­ing moments from the glob­al super-brand.


2015 marks a momen­tous year for Coca-Cola. This year, the brand is cel­e­brat­ing the 100th anniver­sary of its icon­ic curved bot­tle. The curves were first intro­duced in 1915, after a brief from the com­pa­ny ask­ing bot­tle man­u­fac­tur­ers to “to sub­mit designs for a bot­tle for Coca‑Cola that was so dis­tinc­tive that it could be rec­og­nized by feel in the dark or iden­ti­fied lying bro­ken on the ground.”

It was the Root Glass Com­pa­ny who con­cep­tu­al­ized, sketched, and even­tu­al­ly put through a patent for the icon­ic curves in 2015.

coke-curves

The bot­tle has been described as the “per­fect liq­uid wrap­per” by the notable indus­tri­al design­er Ray­mond Loewy, and has been an inspi­ra­tion to artists includ­ing Andy Warhol, and the design­ers of the Volk­swa­gen Bee­tle.

#CokeBottle100

To cel­e­brate, Coke released an inspir­ing video telling the sto­ry of the bottle’s his­to­ry:

There’s also a beau­ti­ful ani­mat­ed sto­ry detail­ing the “Tale of Con­tour”, show­ing the bot­tle tru­ly does have a life of its own:

100 Magnificent Coca-Cola Marketing Moments

The videos are the lat­est in an aston­ish­ing his­to­ry of mem­o­rable adver­tise­ments, thrilling TV spots, and catchy slo­gans; a cen­tu­ry of inspir­ing mes­sages that have made Coca-Cola the brand it is today. Such is the ubiq­ui­ty of the brand around the world that ‘Coca-Cola’ itself is report­ed­ly one of the most rec­og­niz­able terms in the world, sec­ond only to the uni­ver­sal ‘OK’.

To illus­trate how Coca-Cola have reached such great heights, Momen­tol­ogy has col­lat­ed 100 mag­nif­i­cent mar­ket­ing moments from the soft drink giant. In no spe­cif­ic order, here’s the best of an entire cen­tu­ry of the brand’s endeav­ors – a tru­ly incred­i­ble list of cam­paigns, adver­tise­ments, and slo­gans from the glob­al super-brand. Many of the exam­ples have played their part in defin­ing the nature of adver­tis­ing, brand­ing, and mar­ket­ing best prac­tice.

In addi­tion to all the exam­ples below, we’ve put togeth­er a full playlist on YouTube.


1. ‘Open Happiness’

Uncom­pli­cat­ed, effec­tive, re-iter­at­ed all over the world, and run­ning to this day – the beau­ti­ful sim­plic­i­ty of the slo­gan (devised by Wieden+Kennedy) is a ver­i­ta­ble endorse­ment of the brand’s val­ues: uni­ver­sal­i­ty, equal­i­ty, and per­haps, what con­sti­tutes the brand’s real val­ue propo­si­tion: a moment of hap­pi­ness. (2009 — present)


2. Haddon Sunblom’s Santa Claus

coke-santaclaus

Although San­ta Claus had been fea­tured in Coca-Cola’s adver­tis­ing since 1920, Had­don Sun­blom’s reimag­in­ing of the fig­ure in 1931 cement­ed the brand’s affil­i­a­tion with fes­tiv­i­ty and cel­e­bra­tion – a tra­di­tion that lasts to this day.  Sund­blom drew inspi­ra­tion from Clement Clark Moore’s 1822 poem “A Vis­it From St. Nicholas” (com­mon­ly called “ ‘Twas the Night Before Christ­mas”). (from 1931)


3. ‘I’d like to buy the world a Coke’

One of the most icon­ic tele­vi­sion ads of all time. The advert embod­ied spir­it of a gen­er­a­tion, cham­pi­oning a grow­ing sense of glob­al equal­i­ty. (1971)


4. Journey

coke-journey

Jour­ney is a rich dig­i­tal con­tent resource, built direct­ly into Coke’s core con­sumer web­site, and close­ly inter­twined with the brand’s val­ues and phi­los­o­phy.

Co-Man­ag­ing Edi­tor Jay Moye said:

At first, the vision for Jour­ney was to be a bit high­er brow, a bit more Har­vard Busi­ness Review, talk­ing about weighty issues that real­ly impact the world and where Coke has a voice. We cer­tain­ly do cov­er those issues still today, but the focus has shift­ed a bit more towards lifestyle and cul­ture. We real­ize that peo­ple expect fun, smart, hap­py sto­ries from Coke.”

(2012 — present)


5. Share a Coke

The land­mark cam­paign brought mass per­son­al­iza­tion into stun­ning real­i­ty, achieved stun­ning lev­els of par­tic­i­pa­tion on social media (almost 1 bil­lion Twit­ter impres­sions in the first year alone). Recent­ly, Coca-Cola report­ed that 96 per­cent of con­sumer sen­ti­ment toward the cam­paign is either pos­i­tive or neu­tral. (from 2013)


6. First Appearance of the Coca-Cola Loving Polar Bears

Show­ing that even those at the remotest reach­es of the globe love a Coke moment. (1993)


7. Diet Coke — ‘Gardener’

The viral refresh of an icon­ic ’90s ad, the adver­tise­ment is a per­fect exam­ple of being tuned into chang­ing social val­ues. One com­menter described the advert to have encap­su­lat­ed a new female arche­type “the impul­sista”. (2013)


8. Content Plan 2020

While the high-lev­el mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy doesn’t exact­ly tar­get the mass mar­ket, it does pro­vide an incred­i­ble vision of the brand’s future, and how a brand can look to cre­ate an inspi­ra­tional brand expe­ri­ence via con­tent.

Part 1:

Part 2:


9. Mean Joe Green

Anoth­er unfor­get­table ad, it sin­gle-hand­ed­ly changed “Mean” Joe Green’s rep­u­ta­tion in one day. A per­fect exam­ple of engag­ing, cre­ative, star endorse­ments. (1970)


10. ‘It’s the real thing. Drink Coke.’

The-Real-Thing-Coca-Cola-Ad As the doc­u­men­tary Hel­veti­ca explains, the brand’s bold over­haul of their type­face didn’t leave any ques­tions unan­swered. “The real thing”. Peri­od.  (1970)


11. ‘Three Million a Day’

Coca-Cola part­nered with the Red Cross dur­ing World War I, and the height­ened trans-Atlantic rela­tions meant increased expo­sure in Europe. Toward the end of the war, they were sell­ing 3 mil­lion drinks a day. (used as a slo­gan in 1917)


12. Happiness Machines

Coke’s Hap­pi­ness Machines build on the com­pa­nies core brand­ing mes­sage, and ful­fill a valu­able con­tent mar­ket­ing touch­point, too. You brand pub­lish­es videos show­ing the pub­lic’s reac­tions on  YouTube. (2009 — present)


13. More Happiness Machines

Coke snuck into a col­lege cam­pus to sur­prise stu­dents with a dose of hap­pi­ness. Watch the video here. (2009- present)


14. First appearance of the Christmas Trucks

No oth­er brand embraces the fes­tive sea­son quite like Coca-Cola. Watch how the brand deliv­ers joy by the truck­load. (1995)


15. #MakeItHappy

Coke con­tin­ued their his­to­ry of excep­tion­al adver­tis­ing around the Super Bowl with this poignant anti-cyber­bul­ly­ing ad, which also caused a wave of engage­ment on social media. (2015)


16. Sponsorship of Beijing Olympics

Reach­ing 1 bil­lion con­sumers with a healthy endorse­ment from mas­sive glob­al sports starts, and a mes­sage of uni­ty. (2008)


17. Tweet-a-Coke

Coke part­nered with Regal Cin­e­mas in its Tweet-a-Coke pro­gram, which allowed users to buy a Coke for their movie-goer friends via Twit­ter. (2014)


18. Personalized Billboards

Tak­ing per­son­al­ized adver­tis­ing and local­ized mar­ket­ing to the next lev­el. It may sound vague­ly dystopi­an, but what bet­ter way of get­ting a per­son­’s atten­tion than hav­ing their name pop up on a bill­board as the walk past? Watch how Coke made this a real­i­ty in Israel. (2013)


19. Coke introduces collectable mini-bottles for the World Cup

The intro­duc­tion of col­lec­table bot­tles for the World Cup helped raised the pro­file of the brand dur­ing the event. (2014)


20. ‘Yes’

yes-girl

Had­don Sund­blom’s poster won numer­ous design awards. (1946)


21. Coca-Cola Conversations

Coca-Cola Con­ver­sa­tions bring every­day brand sto­ries to life. (2009 — present)


21. Max Headroom

Anoth­er mem­o­rable ad embrac­ing the spir­it of tech­nol­o­gy and inno­va­tion in the ’80s. (1986)


22. American Idol Sponsorship

From the promi­nent red cups to the back­stage “red-room”, until last year, “Coke [were] such a key part of the show that its ubiq­ui­tous cups even went on tour as part of rov­ing bus/tour muse­um ded­i­cat­ed to the show called “Idol Across Amer­i­ca” along­side Randy Jack­son’s boots and Sea­son 7 win­ner David Cook’s gui­tar,” accord­ing to AdAge. (2002 — 2014)


23. Slurp

Coke’s video ad, shows that when you slurp dur­ing a film, you become part of the film. (2014)


24. Mini-Kiosks

Anoth­er video show­ing the brands humor­ous side. Are you start­ing to get a sense of the expan­sive­ness of Coke’s con­tent strat­e­gy? (2014)


25. Return of the Coke loving Polar Bears — ‘Catch’

Back by pop­u­lar demand. (2012)


26. ‘Six Million a Day’

It took Coke just eight years to dou­ble their sales to 6 mil­lion a day. (used as a slo­gan in 1925)


27. Warhol’s Coke Pop Art

Warhol report­ed­ly loved the ubiq­ui­ty and uni­ver­sal­i­ty of Coke’s icon­ic bot­tle, and his paint­ing would become a clas­sic exam­ple of pop art. (1962)


28. ‘Anywhere in the World’

The song cre­at­ed to accom­pa­ny the Lon­don 2012 Olympic Games was spon­sored by Coca-Cola. (2012)


29. Coca-Cola Second Lives

From Ogilvy Bei­jing. Hap­pi­ness can con­tin­ue even after you’ve fin­ished the refresh­ing drink. (2014)


30. FIFA World Cup Sponsorship, Japan Korea

Coca-Cola’s high-pro­file spon­sor­ship of the FIFA World Cup in Asia con­tin­ued a strong tra­di­tion spon­sor­ing major glob­al sport­ing events. (2002)


31. Happy Flags

A hap­py coin­ci­dence made a mem­o­rable moment for the peo­ple of Den­mark. (2014)


32. Emoticoke

After all, ‘Hap­pi­ness’ is a feel­ing summed up by a :D. (2015)


33. Taylor Swift’s Kittens

Tay­lor Swift gets more cute than she can han­dle in this adver­tise­ment. (2014)


34. N.C. Wyeth — ‘It’s the Refreshing Thing to Do’

wyeth_fishing_coke

Wyeth’s rela­tion­ship with Coca-Cola spawned anoth­er set of clas­sic adver­tise­ments. (1937)


35. Coca-Cola Creates Animated Film Using Fans’ T‑Shirts

A great exam­ple of cre­ativ­i­ty and crowd­sourc­ing from the brand.


36. ‘Tea-Break’

Tar­get­ing con­sumers in the UK, this 1979 ad pro­posed that Coke could be a great alter­na­tive to British tea-times.


37. Sponsorship of the 1932 Olympics

coke-1932

1932 was per­haps the ear­li­est exam­ple of Coca-Cola spon­sor­ing a high-pro­file glob­al sport­ing event.


38. Where Will Happiness Strike Next

A pow­er­ful, inspi­ra­tional mes­sage, affirm­ing brand val­ues in the Philip­pines. (2011)


39. Share a White Christmas

Shar­ing the mag­ic of a White Christ­mas, from Fin­land to Sin­ga­pore. (2014)


40. Diet Coke and Mentos

The effer­ves­cent reac­tion between Diet Coke and men­tos… quite sim­ply one of the most sig­nif­i­cant sci­en­tif­ic dis­cov­er­ies of the dig­i­tal age. The viral videos this 2006 video inspired, did­n’t exact­ly come out of a mar­ket­ing brain storm, but it pro­vid­ed the kind of brand engage­ment that mon­ey sim­ply can­not buy.


41. The Friendly Twist

This inge­nious video shows how col­lab­o­ra­tion and shar­ing can spread the smiles. (2014)


42. Coca‑Cola Freestyle

Coca-Cola encour­age mix­ing drinks, unit­ing their var­i­ous brands and fla­vors. (2009)


43. Ugly Holiday Sweater

Coke Zero’s #sweater­gen­er­a­tor com­bined user-gen­er­at­ed con­tent, give­aways, and a high lev­el of share­abil­i­ty result­ing in a great hol­i­day cam­paign. (2013)


44. ‘Always Coca-Cola’

This clas­sic slo­gan was first used by the com­pa­ny in 1993.


45. Diet Coke — ‘Sexy’

An icon­ic ad of the ’90s, the com­pa­ny demon­strates laser-like focus on the Diet Coke’s tar­get audi­ence.


46. Wouldn’t You Like A Coke Right Now?

hv-sports-bw-football-print-ad

An ear­ly exam­ple of mar­ket­ing around sports events. (1950)


47. East Germany celebrates the fall of the Berlin Wall

Coca-Cola had a sym­bol­ic role in the fall of the Berlin Wall. The soft drink was banned on the East­ern side, so among the pic­tures tak­en on the day the wall came down was one of two men throw­ing car­tons of Coca-Cola bot­tles over the wall – a sym­bol of lib­er­a­tion.


48. Valentine’s Day Billboard

coca-cola-valentines

Valen­tine’s Day was an impor­tant event even then.


49. ‘The cold, crisp taste of Coke’

This slo­gan, intro­duced in 1958 invokes the sen­sa­tion of refresh­ment.


50. Fairplay Machines

Anoth­er exam­ple of Coke’s mod­ern video con­tent, com­bin­ing an impor­tant social mes­sage with excel­lent sto­ry­telling and emo­tion­al con­text. The for­mu­la is also great at encour­ag­ing social media engage­ment (#sharetheder­by). (2014)


51. Things Go Better With Coke

A clas­sic TV com­mer­cial from the 1960s.


52. Coke Chase (2013 Super Bowl)

Tra­vers­ing the parched desert for that refresh­ing taste, for the 2013 Super Bowl, Coke asked fans to choose the end­ing of its ad in a cam­paign called Coke Chase.


53. America Is Beautiful (Super Bowl 2014)

At the time the ad was viewed as con­tro­ver­sial for it’s inclu­sion of sev­er­al lan­guages oth­er than Eng­lish for a tra­di­tion­al patri­ot­ic Amer­i­can song. How­ev­er, their inclu­sion fits in with Coca-Cola’s unspo­ken val­ues, cham­pi­oning equal­i­ty and uni­ver­sal­i­ty. (2014)


54. Coca-Cola for Myanmar

The emo­tion­al sto­ry of the brand’s re-enter­ing of the Myan­mar mar­ket after 60 years. (2013)


55. ‘Look Up America’

This slo­gan was intro­duced in 1975, tar­get­ing U.S. con­sumers.


56. Facebook Marketing

Coca-Cola are a lead­ing brand in the way of Face­book reach and engage­ment. Learn more in Momen­tol­ogy’s Face­book Mar­ket­ing Guide.

coca-cola-facebook-marketing


57. ‘Drink Coca-Cola’

This clas­sic slo­gan orig­i­nat­ed in 1886, but it’s utter sim­plic­i­ty and time­less­ness means is used often.


58. Fredrick Mizen ‘Clown’

mizen-coke

Hav­ing illus­trat­ed the first Coca-Cola bill­board in 1925, Fred­er­ick Mizen formed a rich career cre­at­ing bill­board adver­tise­ments for the com­pa­ny. ‘Clown’ and the accom­pa­ny­ing slo­gan debuted in 1940.


59. ‘Coke Adds Life’

Hint­ing at a sense of fun and vital­i­ty, this slo­gan was first used in 1976.


60. PlantBottles

Com­bin­ing inspi­ra­tional every­day sto­ries with an eco-friend­ly mes­sage. (2014)


61. Happiness Remix

Coke cel­e­brat­ed Inter­na­tion­al Hap­pi­ness Day in 2014 with this video fea­tur­ing 17 artists from around the globe.


62. ‘A Taste of Hospitality for Easter’ Billboard

Anoth­er exam­ple of sea­son­al cam­paign tar­get­ing. (1956)


63. London 2012 Limited Edition Cans

coca-cola-olympics

Clean, mod­ern, and effec­tive, the brand intro­duced a vari­ety of cans for dif­fer­ent com­pet­ing nations.


64. Door, Rug and Sousaphone

Watch this quirky lit­tle ad from 1965.


65. Reasons to Believe Hindi

This video tar­get the Indi­an mar­ket, but the great con­tent and avail­abil­i­ty means it could eas­i­ly appeal to con­sumers any­where. (2011)


66. When You Entertain

when-you-entertain-coke

A fan­tas­tic ear­ly exam­ple of “con­tent mar­ket­ing”. (1932)


67. ‘Red, White & You’

Anoth­er slo­gan induc­ing patri­o­tism intro­duced in 1986.


68. Frederic Stanley

frederic-stanley-coke

Fred­er­ic Stan­ley served as a sol­dier in World War I, and paint­ed this hap­py scene in 1952.


69.  The Dole Deluxe

dole-deluxe

As shown in the above oil paint­ing, the dole deluxe, designed by famous indus­tri­al design­er Ray­mond Loewy pre­sent­ed an inno­v­a­tive new way of dis­trib­ut­ing Coke. (1949)


70. First brand to reach 50 million Facebook ‘likes’

coca-cola-50million

Coca-Cola were the first brand to reach this momen­tous mile­stone.


71. ‘It’s the Real Thing’

This bold slo­gan affirm­ing the brand’s authen­tic­i­ty was first used by Coca-Cola in 1969.


72. Introduction of steel 12-ounce cans

The intro­duc­tion of the first domes­tic-sized can in 1960 marked a impor­tant moment in the his­to­ry of the brand.


73. Introducing Diet Coke

An high-ener­gy adver­tise­ment from 1982 to cel­e­brate the launch of Diet Coke.


74.  Sponsorship of the Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta

coke-atlanta-1996

Coca-Cola did­n’t miss out on the oppor­tu­ni­ty to act as offi­cial spon­sors of the momen­tous games held in 1996.


75. Partnership with the National Basketball Association

The Coca-Cola Com­pa­ny has been a mar­ket­ing part­ner with the NBA since 1986.


76. Fight against AIDS in Africa

The Coca‑Cola Com­pa­ny part­ners the Unit­ed Nations Pro­gram in an ongo­ing com­mit­ment to com­bat HIV/AIDS, and pro­vide human­i­tar­i­an sup­port in Africa.


77. Introduction of Aluminium Bottles

aluminium-coke

The next evo­lu­tion of the Coca-Cola bot­tle seeks to be “clean” and “mod­ern”. (2005)


78. Haiti Hope Project

Tying into the val­ues of the Coca-Cola sys­tem, the Haiti Hope Project seeks to “fos­ter long-term devel­op­ment and growth in Haiti by help­ing to build a sus­tain­able man­go juice indus­try.” (2010 — present)


79. Norman Rockwell — Fishin’

norman-rockwell-fishin

Anoth­er famous rela­tion­ship with a tal­ent­ed Amer­i­can painter; the prints have since become high­ly col­lectible. (1935)


80. Riedel Toasts Coca-Cola With Custom Glass

Not a cus­tom bot­tle this time, but a cus­tom glass invok­ing the brand’s icon­ic curves. (2014)


81. Stills from set of ‘Gentleman Prefer Blondes’

marilyn_monroe_drinks_coca_cola

The Coke bot­tle was one of the few lucky enough to have kissed Mar­i­lyn. (1953)


82. Can Opener

This 1965 adver­tise­ment was pro­duced to make con­sumers aware of the inno­v­a­tive new can-open­er.


83. Pull Tab

Just three years lat­er, Coke bot­tles with inno­v­a­tive “pull tabs” were released.


84. ‘Refresh Yourself’

Refresh Your­self” was first intro­duced as a slo­gan in 1924.


85. Gil Elvgren’s ‘Pin-up Girls’

gil-elvgren-coke

Elv­gren’s work has since become high­ly col­lectible. (1939–1980)


86. Coca-Cola’s Neon Spectacular in Downtown Atlanta

A small cel­e­bra­tion of the his­tor­i­cal link Coca-Cola have with the town of Atlanta.


87. OPI in Coca-Cola Colors

The brand teamed up with OPI to bring the Coca-Cola shades to mar­ket.

88. Vending Machines Illuminate Winter Nights in Japan

A stun­ning col­lec­tion of pho­tos shows that the brand main­tain a close rela­tion­ship with tal­ent­ed artists to this day. (2015)


89. Ekocenter

Eko­cen­ter is a social enter­prise ini­tia­tive that pro­vides every­thing from safe drink­ing water and vac­cines, to mobile charg­ing. (2015)


90. Rain water for Africa

The ini­tia­tive is one of the brand’s social enter­pris­es in devel­op­ing coun­tries. (2013)


91. World of Coca-Cola: Moments of Happiness

An excel­lent exam­ple of inspi­ra­tional mar­ket­ing moments. (2014)


92. ‘Life Tastes Good’

This clas­sic slo­gan was first intro­duced in 2001.


93. Coca-Cola Brings Happiness Home

Anoth­er fine exam­ple of an Coca-Cola’s inter­na­tion­al mar­ket­ing efforts. (2013)


94. FIFA World Cup Brazil Song — ‘The World is Ours’

Coca-Cola pro­vid­ed the offi­cial song of the 2014 World Cup.


95. ‘Sleepwalker’

This advert was Coca-Cola’s offer­ing for the 2010 Super Bowl.


96. Coca-Cola ‘Star Wars’ Posters

coca-cola-star-wars-1977

The posters are now huge­ly col­lectible. (1977)


97. ‘Have a Coke and a Smile’

This slo­gan accom­pa­nied the famous ‘Mean Joe Green’ ad (see num­ber 9), and was intro­duced in 1976.


98. Invisible Vending Machines

The invis­i­ble vend­ing machines, as seen in this video, were part of the #ShareaA­Coke cam­paign. (2014)


99. Thanksgiving Billboard

This Thanks­giv­ing ad was placed in car­tons of Coke dur­ing the hol­i­day sea­son. (1954)


100. ‘The Busiest Man in the World’

coca-cola-santa

This 1930 adver­tise­ment fea­tures a mall San­ta at he famous Barr depart­ment store, the world’s largest soda foun­tain in the world at the time. (1930)

Phew… I could use a refresh­ing break too after all that.


What are your favorite mar­ket­ing moments from Coca-Cola? Can you think of anoth­er brand with quite as com­pre­hen­sive an adver­tis­ing and con­tent strat­e­gy?

Pat Hong

Written by Pat Hong

Editor at Linkdex/Inked, Linkdex

Pat covers the SEO industry, digital marketing trends, and anything and everything around Linkdex. He also authors Linkdex's data analysis and reports, analysing the state of search in various industries.

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