McWhorter polled consumers, who indicated that theyâd prefer contour bottles over straight-walled ones by a margin of five to one.
Younger consumers saw the bottle as modern and different, while older people who remembered the shape associated it with quality. Consumer interest confirmed, Ivester wanted not just a plastic replica of the glass bottle, but a much larger version. Over the years, Coke had steadily increased the sizes of its fountain drinks. A large soda now stood at 20 ounces, a full 4 ounces bigger than the previous iteration. âWe were really training consumers at that time to drink more and more,â says McWhorter.
Coke didnât have to charge consumers much more because the profit margin on fountain soda was so much higher than on bottles and cans. The huge fountain sodas paved the way for the company to slowly but surely reshape consumer expectations, creating a thirst among Americans for larger amounts of soda, across every packaging type.
âThe consumers just ordered a large,â explains McWhorter. âThey didnât know whether it had 16 ounces or 20 ounces in it. For us, the thinking was, âWe sell more, we make more, so letâs size up.ââ
Ivester instructed McWhorter to find a way to make a 20-ounce plastic bottle that looked like the original 6.5-ounce glass one without compromising the designâs integrity.
But sizing up was looking expensive. For one thing, the bottle manufacturers needed to use extra plastic to give the curvy bottle added reinforcement. Curvy bottles also couldnât be blown as quickly as straight ones. The bottles wobbled on filling lines. Bottlers trialling them pumped in just 10 percent of the liquid they usually filled in a day. Modifying the filling equipment could cost a bottler between $1 million and $2 million. Yet the payoffs were uncertain, and Cokeâs recent track record was anything but reassuring.
Ivester had only recently pushed bottlers to get behind a clear, sugar-free soda intended to compete with a clear, colorless Pepsi. Coke called it Tab Clear and Ivester told reporters the product would be âmarketed for what it is: a study in contradictions.â But the marketing confused people. They didnât recall the ads. The key messageâthat Tab Clear had a âmysterious flavorââdidnât resonate. Tab Clearâs many critics said it looked like lemonade but tasted like weak cola. By late 1993, about a year after Tab Clearâs launch, Goizueta was hinting that the product was dead.
âWe were going into an environment where bottlers said, âYeah, weâve seen all this research from the company on how great things are going to be. Weâve done all this work, but it doesnât pay off,ââ says McWhorter.
To win over the bottlers, Ivester knew he needed to put his money where his mouth was. âCoke will loan you the money for the conversion of your lines,â he told them. âIf you execute the marketing plan Susan and her team give you and donât meet the target numbers, Iâll forgive those loans.â
Ivester was taking a gamble. Coca-Cola was ploughing tens of millions of dollars into modifying the bottlersâ lines, which meant the amount of soda it sold needed to jump significantly to cover the added costs.
In January 1993, Coke launched the plastic contour bottle in test markets in Alabama and Tennessee. Sales jumped 25 percent. âFor more than 75 years, our contour bottle design has been the unparalleled symbol of quality,â Ivester said when announcing the launch. âThe new 20-ounce package preserves that heritage while offering the convenience of a recyclable plastic package to todayâs consumer.â The plastic contour bottle, the company told investors, will âinvite consumers to drink more Coca-Cola, more often and in larger sizes.â
The Wall Street Journal dismissed the bottle as a âmarketing gimmick,â in an article titled âNew 20-Ounce, Plastic Version Is Trying to Be Nostalgic and Hip at the Same Time.â Unsurprisingly, Pepsi denigrated the bottle, telling the Journal: âThe more nostalgic Coke gets, the more Pepsi looks progressive, from an image standpoint.â