# New Coke Conspiracy
## Overview
When Coca-Cola introduced "New Coke" in 1985 and faced massive backlash, some believed it was all part of a marketing plan.
## Historical Background
- On April 23, 1985, Coca-Cola changed its 99-year-old formula
- Public backlash was immediate and intense
- "Coca-Cola Classic" was reintroduced 79 days later
- The incident is now studied in business schools
## Conspiracy Claims
- The company intentionally introduced an inferior product
- The goal was to:
- Generate massive publicity
- Drive up demand for the original
- Switch to cheaper high-fructose corn syrup in the "Classic"
## Reality
- Coca-Cola president Donald Keough explicitly denied the conspiracy
- He stated: "We're not that dumb, and we're not that smart"
- The company genuinely believed New Coke would succeed
- Taste tests had favored the new formula
## Status
Rebutted by company executives. While the switch to corn syrup did occur, the New Coke debacle was a genuine marketing mistake, not a planned conspiracy.
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New Coke Conspiracy
Theory that Coca-Cola intentionally changed to an inferior formula to drive up demand for the original.
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