Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages Private Limited: An Internship Report
Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages Private Limited: An Internship Report
EDUCATION
APRIL 2007
_______________________________________________
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to thank my Mr. U Narendra Kini, General Manager, Coca-Cola India, without whom an internship
with, Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages Private Limited (HCCBPL) would not have been possible. I am grateful to
him for having taken time off his busy schedule and spoken to the concerned person to get me this internship. I
express my gratitude to the Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages Private Limited (HCCBPL) for having given me an
opportunity to work with them and make the best out of my internship. I thank my trainers, Miss Poornima and Miss
Neha Kashyap for having trained me and constantly guided and supported me throughout the training period. My
heartfelt gratitude also goes out to the staff and employees at HCCBPL for having co-operated with me and guided
me throughout the one and a half months of my internship period. I thank my school, Ohio University Christ College
Academy of Management Studies for having given me this opportunity to put to practice, the theoretical knowledge
that I imparted from the program. I thank the internship co-coordinators, Dr. Amalendu Jyotishi and Mr. Girish M
for having guided and supported me through the course of the internship. I take this opportunity to thank my parents
and friends who have been with me and offered emotional strength and moral support.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Coca-Cola, the product that has given the world its best-known taste was born in Atlanta, Georgia, on May 8, 1886.
Coca-Cola Company is the world’s leading manufacturer, marketer and distributor of non-alcoholic beverage
concentrates and syrups, used to produce nearly 400 beverage brands. It sells beverage concentrates and syrups to
bottling and canning operators, distributors, fountain retailers and fountain wholesalers. Coca-Cola was first introduced
by John Syth Pemberton, a pharmacist, in the year 1886 in Atlanta, Georgia when he concocted caramel-colored syrup
in a three- legged brass kettle in his backyard. He first “distributed” the product by carrying it in a jug down the street
to Jacob’s Pharmacy and customers bought the drink for five cents at the soda fountain. Carbonated water was teamed
with the new syrup, whether by accident or otherwise, producing a drink that was proclaimed “delicious and
refreshing”, a theme that continues to echo today wherever Coca-Cola is enjoyed. Coca-Cola originated as a soda
fountain beverage in 1886 selling for five cents a glass. Early growth was impressive, but it was only when a strong
bottling system developed that Coca-Cola became the world-famous brand it is today. Coca- Cola was the leading soft
drink brand in India until 1977, when it left rather than reveal its formula to the Government and reduce its equity stake
as required under the Foreign Regulation Act (FERA) which governed the operations of foreign companies in India. In
the new liberalized and deregulated environment in 1993, Coca-Cola made its re-entry into India through its 100%
owned subsidiary, HCCBPL, the Indian bottling arm of the Coca-Cola Company. The main objective of this study lies
in understanding the organization and studying and understanding the consumers’ perception and opinion about the
latest product, Minute Maid Pulpy Orange, introduced into India, by the Coca-Cola Company. A consumer sampling
involving 5.5 lakh people was conducted in a span of 30 days across major cities in order to give the product the
future. The methodology used in studying and understanding the perceived views of consumers towards the product
was ‘SAMPLING’. The findings of the activity have been drawn out in form of graphs and suggestions have been
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………
…71.1: A brief insight- The FMCG Industry in India…………………………
…………..8
1.2: A brief insight- The Beverage Industry in India……………………
………….10
Figure 1: Beverage Industry in India…………………………
……….10
CHAPTER 2: THE COCA-COLA COMPANY…………………………………
…13
2.1: History…………………………………………………………………………
……………..13
2.2: History of Bottling…………………………………………………………
……………..15
2.3: Manifesto for Growth………………………………………………………
……………18
2.3.1: Values…………………………………………………………………………
………………18
2.3.2: Mission………………………………………………………………………
………………..19
3.9.4: Threats………………………………………………………………
……………..36
3.10: Competitors to HCCBPL…………………………………………………
……………37
CHAPTER 4: PRODUCTS…………………………………………………………
38
5.1: Packaging details…………………………………………………………
………………40
CHAPTER 5: PROJECT: PERCEPTION OF CONSUMERS TOWARDS
MINUTE MAID PULPY ORANGE……………………………………………
…..41
5.1: Objective of the Study……………………………………………………
…………….42
5.2: About the Product…………………………………………………………
……………..42
5.3: Methodology…………………………………………………………………
…………….43
5.4: Procedure……………………………………………………………………
………………44
5.5: Findings………………………………………………………………………
………………45
5.5.1: Graph 1: Total number of Consumers based on Age
Group……45
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store's owner, Joseph A. Biedenharn. He began bottling Coca-Cola to sell, using a common glass bottle called a
Hutchinson. Biedenharn sent a case to Asa Griggs Candler, who owned the Company. Candler thanked him but took
no action. One of his nephews already had urged that Coca-Cola be bottled, but Candler focused on fountain sales.
Two young attorneys from Chattanooga, Tennessee believed they could build a business around bottling Coca-Cola.
In a meeting with Candler, Benjamin F. Thomas and Joseph B. Whitehead obtained exclusive rights to bottle Coca-
Cola across most of the United States for a sum of one dollar. A third Chattanooga lawyer, John T. Lupton, soon
The three pioneer bottlers divided the country into territories and sold bottling rights to local entrepreneurs. Their
efforts were boosted by major progress in bottling technology, which improved efficiency and product quality. By
1909, nearly 400 Coca-Cola bottling plants were operating, most of them family-owned businesses. Some were open
Bottlers worried that Coca-Cola's straight-sided bottle was easily confused with imitators. A group representing the
Company and bottlers asked glass manufacturers to offer ideas for a distinctive bottle. A design from the Root Glass
Company of Terre Haute, Indiana won enthusiastic approval. The Contour Bottle became one of the few packages
ever granted trademark status by the U.S. Patent Office. Today, it is one of the most recognized icons in the world.
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As the 1920s dawned; more than 1,000 Coca-Cola bottlers were operating in the U.S. Their ideas and zeal fueled
steady growth. Six-bottle cartons were a huge hit starting in 1923. A few years later, open-top metal coolers became
the forerunners of automated vending machines. By the end of the 1920s, bottle sales of Coca-Cola exceeded
fountain sales.
Led by Robert W. Woodruff, chief executive officer and chairman of the Board, the Company began a major push to
establish bottling operations outside the U.S. Plants were opened in France, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico,
Belgium, Italy and South Africa. By the time World War II began, Coca-Cola was being bottled in 44 countries.
During the war, 64 bottling plants were set up around the world to supply the troops. This followed an urgent
request for bottling equipment and materials from General Eisenhower's base in North Africa. Many of these war-
time plants were later converted to civilian use, permanently enlarging the bottling system and accelerating the
For the first time, consumers had choices of Coca-Cola package size and type-the traditional 6.5 ounce Contour
Bottle, or larger servings including 10, 12 and 26 ounce versions. Cans were also introduced, becoming generally
available in 1960.
Sprite, Fanta, Fresca and TAB joined brand Coca-Cola in the 1960s. Mr. Pibb and Mello Yello were added in the
1970s. The 1980s brought diet Coke and Cherry Coke, followed by PowerAde and Fruitopia in the 1990s. Today
scores of other brands are offered to meet consumer preferences in local markets around the world.
Advancement in technology led to global economy, retail customers of The Coca-Cola Company merged and
evolved into international mega chains. Such customers required a new approach. In response, many small and
medium-size bottlers consolidated to better serve giant international customers. The Company encouraged and
invested in a number of bottler consolidations to assure that its largest bottling partners would have capacity to lead
Political and economic changes opened vast markets that were closed or underdeveloped for decades. After the fall
of the Berlin Wall, the Company invested heavily to build plants in Eastern Europe. As the century closed, more
Unit4
Region Finance
Region Human
Resource
Region Customer
Service
Region External
Affairs
Region Legal
Region BSG
Region
Director/Manager
Region Capability
Management
Region Channel
FIGURE 5: ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE IN COCA-COLA, INDIA
3.4: ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE OF THE SALES DEPARTMENT
IN
HCCBPL:
30
AGM/AOD
Plant
Manager
Route to
Market
Human
Resource
Manager
Finance
Manager
General
Sales
Manager
Area
Sales
Manager
Channel
Manager
Area
Capabilit
y
Manager
Sales
Executive
Sales
Trainers
Market
Develope
r
Distributor
s
And
Salesmen
Marketin
g
Key
Accounts
owned by the company. The Plant has one PET line which has the capacity of yielding 209 bottles, per minute, two
RGB (Returnable glass bottles) lines which yields 600 bottles per minute each and one Juice line which yield 155
bottles per minute. It caters to the whole of South Karnataka through a network of more than 80 distributors. There
are three depots in Bangalore; North Depot, East Depot and Mega Depot.
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Coca Cola Report