Coca-Cola Share a Coke: how 150 names on bottles reversed a long consumption decline
In summer 2011, Coca-Cola Australia replaced the iconic logo on 150 million bottles with 150 of the most common Australian first names. The campaign reversed a multi-year decline in young-adult consumption and rolled out globally to 70-plus countries over the following three years. It's one of the most-studied CPG personalization campaigns of the modern era — and one of the few examples of a global brand willingly temporarily removing its own logo from product packaging.
- Story: In 2011 Coca-Cola Australia replaced its iconic logo on 150M bottles with 150 of the most-common Australian first names. Reversed a multi-year teen/young-adult consumption decline. Rolled out globally to 70+ countries in 2012-2014 with localized name sets.
- Why it matters: The well-known example of mass personalization in CPG. Demonstrated that personalization at scale — in physical packaging, not just digital touchpoints — can deliver measurable category-share growth.
- Takeaway: Even minimal personalization (a first name on a bottle) produces outsized emotional engagement at CPG scale.
- Takeaway: Test in one market with measurable success criteria, then roll out globally with local content adaptation.
- Takeaway: Iconic logos can be temporarily replaced — brand equity tolerates more risk than brand managers usually believe.
Share a Coke — the four-step story
Share a Coke at a glance
Quick facts
Where Coca-Cola was in 2010
By 2010, Coca-Cola Australia was facing a multi-year decline in young-adult (teen and 20-something) consumption. The category was being eaten by water, juice, energy drinks, and a general cultural shift away from soda among health-conscious younger consumers. Coca-Cola’s response options were limited — reformulating the product changed what Coca-Cola was, lowering price destroyed margins, and traditional advertising had been running for decades without halting the decline.
The Australia marketing team, working with Ogilvy, looked for a fundamentally different mechanic. The category trend wasn't reversible through volume marketing. What was potentially reversible was the emotional connection — if young Australians could be given a reason to want a Coca-Cola moment specifically, even briefly, the brand could re-enter their consideration set. The question was what mechanic could produce that kind of moment at the scale Coca-Cola needed.
The mechanic
Ogilvy and Coca-Cola Australia decided to do something nobody had done at CPG scale before: temporarily replace the Coca-Cola wordmark on 150 million bottles with 150 of the most common Australian first names. Each bottle showed the Coca-Cola script in the brand’s normal red, but where the brand name normally sat, there was a first name instead — “Share a Coke with Sarah,” “Share a Coke with Mike.”
A few choices made the campaign work at scale:
- Real consumer search behavior. Australians went into stores looking for their own names, their friends' names, family members' names. The product became a search-and-find game in a way it had never been before.
- Local name lists. The 150 names were chosen specifically for Australia — common Australian first names, not a global list. Each subsequent country in the rollout used localized name sets that reflected the local population.
- Sharing was built into the mechanic. “Share a Coke with X” encouraged people to buy a second bottle for someone whose name was on it. The mechanic produced multi-bottle purchase behavior that traditional Coke marketing couldn't.
- The iconic logo was temporarily replaced. The willingness to temporarily remove the Coca-Cola wordmark from product packaging signaled something internally: the company was willing to bet that the brand was strong enough that the script alone (without the wordmark) would still read as Coke. The internal courage to make that call is part of why the campaign worked.
What grew, and what came with it
The Australian summer 2011 launch reversed the multi-year decline in young-adult consumption (+7% in the launch summer per Coca-Cola Australia’s own reporting). Sales rose. The campaign generated enormous social-media activity as Australians shared photos of bottles with their names. The brand-equity work was as valuable as the volume lift.
Coca-Cola rolled the campaign out globally between 2012 and 2014, eventually reaching about 70 countries. Each country used localized name sets. The US launch in 2014 included 250+ names and added a web-based custom-name tool that let people order bottles with names not on the standard list. The campaign ran for multiple summers in most markets and became a recurring summer marketing platform rather than a one-off launch.
In retrospective analysis, Share a Coke is widely studied as one of the most successful CPG personalization campaigns ever executed. It demonstrated that mass personalization could work at CPG scale, that the iconic logo could be temporarily replaced without damaging brand equity (sometimes the opposite), and that a single-summer mechanic could compound into a multi-year platform when adapted across markets.
What other brands tried to copy
Many CPG brands have tried personalization campaigns since. Some have worked (M&M’s personalized candies, Nutella personalized jars, several others). Many haven't produced comparable results, for a few reasons:
- The brand asset wasn't strong enough. Coca-Cola can temporarily remove its wordmark because the script and bottle shape alone read as Coke. Brands with weaker visual systems can’t do the same move without losing recognition.
- The mechanic wasn't a social trigger. Share a Coke worked because people went looking for their names and the names of people they knew. Personalization mechanics that don't produce that search behavior don't produce the social-media flywheel.
- Supply-chain complexity wasn't solved. Printing 150 names across 150 million bottles requires real printing-and-distribution capability. Brands that announced personalization campaigns without the operational infrastructure couldn't execute them.
- Localization wasn't honored. Brands that ran the same name list globally without local adaptation produced inauthentic campaigns. Coca-Cola adapted name sets per market, which is part of why the global rollout sustained the launch’s emotional engagement.
How RGM thinks about mass personalization
When clients ask about applying mass personalization to physical products, the Share a Coke case is useful as both an example and a reality check. The example is that even minimal personalization on the physical product, at scale, can produce outsized emotional engagement. The reality check is that the supply-chain and printing capability to execute it takes real investment most brands don't have.
The honest framework: personalization that requires physical-product changes only makes sense for brands strong enough to absorb the supply-chain complexity and strong enough that the iconic visual system survives temporary modification. Coca-Cola checks both boxes. Most brands don't. We tell clients that the right answer for most brands is digital personalization (where the supply-chain complexity is near zero) rather than physical personalization (where it’s significant). The Coca-Cola playbook is real but it’s not universally applicable.
Frequently asked questions
Why 150 names specifically?
The number was driven by the printing-and-distribution practicality of the initial Australian launch. 150 names covered a substantial share of Australian first-name population without making the printing process unmanageable. Subsequent countries used different numbers based on local naming conventions and population — the US launch in 2014 used 250+ names plus a custom-name web tool.
Did the campaign really reverse the consumption decline?
In Australia in summer 2011, yes, per Coca-Cola Australia’s own reporting (+7% young-adult consumption in the launch summer). The sustained impact across subsequent summers and markets is harder to isolate from other variables, but the launch-summer figures are well documented and the campaign is widely credited with re-engaging young-adult drinkers in markets where it ran.
How did Coca-Cola handle names that weren't on the bottle?
Initially, the 150-name list covered the most common Australian names but unavoidably left many people without their own name. Coca-Cola adapted by adding more names in subsequent years and, in some markets, adding custom-name web tools (US 2014) that let people order bottles with personalized names not on the standard list. The friction of missing names was real but the social-media engagement around it (people complaining their name wasn't there) was itself useful marketing.
Has Coca-Cola continued the campaign?
Share a Coke has run in various forms across many summers and markets. The campaign has evolved (lyrics from songs replacing names, holiday-themed variations, region-specific extensions). The core mechanic of personalization on the product packaging has continued to appear in Coca-Cola marketing throughout the 2010s and into the 2020s.
Was the campaign expensive?
Yes — the printing-and-supply-chain complexity of producing 150 million personalized bottles is significant. Coca-Cola has not disclosed exact production costs, but the operational investment was substantial relative to a normal marketing campaign. The brand-equity and consumption-lift returns justified the investment in the markets where it ran.
Sources & references
- Coca-Cola Australia — Share a Coke — Coca-Cola Australia’s campaign page.
- Ogilvy Australia — Share a Coke case study — Agency case study with campaign metrics and global rollout detail.
- Coca-Cola US Share a Coke launch (2014) — Coca-Cola Company coverage of the US launch and global rollout.