PepsiCo, Inc., American food and beverage company
that is one of the largest in the world, with products available in more than
200 countries. It took its name in 1965 when the Pepsi-Cola Company merged with
Frito-Lay, Inc. The company’s headquarters are in Purchase, New York.
The first Pepsi-Cola was created by Caleb D.
Bradham (1866–1934), a pharmacist in New Bern, North Carolina.
Hoping to
duplicate the recent success of Coca-Cola, Bradham named his sweet
cola-flavoured carbonated beverage Pepsi-Cola in 1898. The drink proved so
popular that in 1902 Bradham incorporated the Pepsi-Cola Company. After many
years of moderate prosperity, the company fell on hard times after World War I
and was reorganized and reincorporated on several occasions in the 1920s.
In 1931 the company’s trademark and assets were
picked up by Charles G. Guth (1876–1948), founder of the modern Pepsi-Cola. He
established a new Pepsi-Cola Company, had a chemist formulate a better drink,
set up new bottling operations, and began merchandising a hugely successful
12-ounce bottle for five cents. Guth was also president of Loft, Incorporated,
a candy manufacturer and soda-fountain chain (founded 1919), and in legal
battles in 1936–39 he lost a controlling interest in the Pepsi-Cola Company to
the new management of Loft. When in 1941 the Pepsi-Cola Company was merged into
Loft, the name Loft, Inc., was changed to Pepsi-Cola Company.
In 1950 Alfred N. Steele (1901–59), a former vice
president of Coca-Cola Company, became chief executive officer. His emphasis on
giant advertising campaigns and sales promotions increased Pepsi-Cola’s net
earnings 11-fold during the 1950s and made it the chief competitor of
Coca-Cola. (After Steele’s death, his wife, actress Joan Crawford, became an
active director of the company.) In 1965 Pepsi-Cola merged with Frito-Lay,
Inc., the maker of snack foods such as Fritos, Doritos, Lay’s potato chips, and
Rold Gold pretzels. The newly enlarged company diversified further with the purchase
of three restaurant chains—Pizza Hut, Inc. (1977), Taco Bell Inc. (1978), and
Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp. (1986; now called KFC)—and Seven-Up International
(1986), but in 1997 the restaurant chains were spun off into a new, separate
company called Tricon Global Restaurants, Inc. Looking to add more products
that were considered healthier, PepsiCo acquired the Tropicana and Dole juice
brands from the Seagram Company in 1998, and in 2001 it merged with the Quaker
Oats company to form a new division, Quaker Foods and Beverages. With the
merger, PepsiCo’s popular brands included Pepsi cola, Frito-Lay snack products,
Lipton Tea, Tropicana juices, Gatorade sports drinks, Quaker Oats cereals, and
Rold Gold pretzels.
In the early 21st century, PepsiCo focused on
expanding its operations in other countries, notably Russia, which was its
second largest market. In 2008 it bought a controlling interest in JSC
Lebedyansky, Russia’s largest juice manufacturer, and three years later it
completed its acquisition of Wimm-Bill-Dann Foods. Those investments helped
make PepsiCo the largest food and beverage company in Russia.
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