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Like it or not, here's what your next Pepsi can will look like

PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP) has joined the ranks of old, canned brands giving themselves brand new cans. As part of a $1.2 billion worldwide campaign designed to give its major soft drink flavors fresh new logos intended to recall "smiles," the new Pepsi packaging is being tactically leaked to influential marketing journalists.

Blogger Peter Shankman was treated to an elaborate series of courier deliveries that culminated in a sample of the new can: the same royal blue hue, but clean-looking, polished to a metallic sheen, and sporting the sort of lower-case lettering that was last popular during the disco craze.

A few people have already pointed out that the new logo slightly resembles the one used by Barack Obama's current campaign. I don't see it myself. Both are circles, and both are red, white, and blue. But if anything, the Pepsi logo looks a whole lot like, well, the old Pepsi logo. And even that soon-to-retire yin-yangy logo, which came online in 2002 but was based on a decades-old design, looks more like Obama's stamp than the swishier new one.

Continue reading Like it or not, here's what your next Pepsi can will look like

The latest, greatest BloggingStocks

Welcome to our first major redesign of BloggingStocks. We're relaunching the site today with a clean, sophisticated design and some new ways to highlight the best posts our team of world class investment bloggers has to offer.

Looking for information about a specific company? Use our new horizontal navigation bar to see posts about one of the 350 or so stocks we cover. You can also click there to see the latest stock picks, opinions on business news of the day, financial analysis or country-by-country research.

With this new design we also make it easier for you to check out what we consider the best crop of posts each day. On the left side of the page we're highlighting topics in the news today and the best of our in-depth features.

Most important, let us know what you think of the new design by leaving your comments. We are eager for feedback.

Wall Street Journal redesign is several years too late

Dow Jones (NYSE:DJ) has heard the clarion call of the Internet and responded with a sweeping redesign of the Wall Street Journal, about three years too late. Despite all of the talk in the Reader's Guide in today's paper about "excellence" and meeting the expectations of today's busy reader, the reasons for the changes have more to do with the shift of advertising to the internet and a desire to cut down on newsprint costs. Neither trend is new and Dow Jones probably should have reduced the size of the paper several years ago. The company shrunk the international edition of the Journal in 2005. Dow Jones estimates that it will save $18 million from the changes to the Journal.


The design itself will take some getting used to. The Journal is 20 percent narrower which will make it easier for commuters to handle. Dow Jones says it will be running "the same or more news articles than we do today." I like the look overall. The paper seems easier to read and the graphics are improved. It wouldn't surprise me if the New York Times (NYSE:NYT) made similar changes.

But for the long-suffering Dow Jones investors, the question remains whether this is going to make a difference in terms of advertising and circulation revenue. The jury will be out on that question for a while. Newspapers, as has been said ad nauseum, need to change in order to survive. Though internet revenue is growing by leaps and bounds, it remains a small slice of the pie for publishers. Dow Jones is trying to make the Journal more relevant and appealing to a broader set of advertisers. Still, about the only thing that seems to move the company's stock is rumors of a possible sale.

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-89.2312,801.23
NASDAQ-23.352,903.88
S&P 500-9.311,342.64

Last updated: February 11, 2012: 08:25 AM

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