When people study Coca-Cola video production, they are not just studying one brand. They are studying the entire arc of commercial storytelling. Coca-Cola has been at the center of advertising innovation for well over a century, and its video output continues to shape how agencies, production companies, and in-house creative teams think about what a brand film can accomplish. We follow this space closely because the decisions Coca-Cola makes ripple outward across the entire industry. What they prioritize today, mid-market brands will be doing in 18 months.
This post is not a retrospective. It is a forward-looking look at where Coca-Cola’s approach to video is heading, what structural and technological shifts are driving those changes, and what any ambitious brand can take away from watching one of the most well-resourced creative operations in the world evolve in real time.
Why Coca-Cola’s Video Strategy Is Worth Watching Right Now
Most major brands are navigating a genuine inflection point. The distribution channels that defined advertising from 2010 to 2022 are fracturing. Linear television is shrinking. Short-form social has matured and is becoming crowded. Connected TV is rising but still fragmented. Influencer content is being held to higher authenticity standards than ever before.
Coca-Cola sits at the center of all of this simultaneously. Their annual media spend puts them in a position to experiment at scale, which means they are effectively running live stress tests on formats that smaller brands will eventually adopt. When Coca-Cola commits significant resources to, say, AI-assisted content personalization or co-created brand films with creators from specific regions, that is a signal worth paying attention to.
Our team watches brand video strategy the way some people watch financial markets. Coca-Cola is a bellwether. The company’s creative direction under their current marketing leadership has been deliberately more culturally embedded, less product-forward, and more emotionally complex than the simple happiness messaging that defined their output for decades. That shift in creative philosophy has enormous implications for how video production services need to evolve to serve brands of this ambition.
The Shift from Campaign Thinking to Content System Thinking
One of the most important changes in how Coca-Cola approaches video production is the move away from discrete campaign cycles toward something closer to a content system. Rather than producing a hero TV spot and then building assets around it, the approach increasingly starts with a broader content architecture that includes long-form, short-form, social-native, experiential, and even user-generated components simultaneously.
This is a fundamental production challenge. You cannot run a content system off the same linear production model that was built for quarterly campaigns. You need modular workflows, flexible crew structures, and post-production pipelines that can produce assets at different specifications without rebuilding from scratch every time.
For example, a single shoot day might need to yield a 60-second broadcast spot, three 15-second pre-roll variants, a series of vertical edits for Instagram and TikTok, a behind-the-scenes cut for YouTube, and a set of still frames for OOH. That is not a campaign. That is a content operation. The post-production services required to support that kind of output need to be genuinely integrated into pre-production planning, not bolted on afterward.
We have been building toward this model for years across our Fort Lauderdale facility and our offices in Los Angeles and New York. The brands that call us for large-scale work are increasingly thinking this way, and the conversation has shifted from “what is the deliverable” to “what is the system.”
AI Integration in Beverage Brand Video Production
No conversation about where Coca-Cola video production is heading can avoid the subject of artificial intelligence. Coca-Cola has been unusually public about their AI experiments, including a widely discussed holiday campaign that used generative AI tools to reimagine their classic 1995 holiday truck commercial. That project generated enormous coverage and no shortage of industry debate.
The response from creative professionals was divided. Some viewed it as a cost-cutting exercise dressed up as innovation. Others saw it as a legitimate creative experiment from a brand willing to take a public risk. Both readings contain some truth. But the more important takeaway is structural: Coca-Cola used that project to surface real questions about what AI-assisted production can and cannot do at scale, and to signal to the industry that they are willing to integrate these tools into their workflow even at the risk of mixed public reception.
What AI is genuinely good at right now in a production context includes localization at scale, asset variation, preliminary storyboarding and animatic work, and certain categories of motion graphics. What it is not good at is replacing the judgment, taste, and relational intelligence that drives great creative decisions. The advertising services that will win in this environment are the ones that integrate AI tools intelligently without mistaking automation for creativity.
Coca-Cola’s AI experiments are less a template to follow and more a pressure test that the entire industry is now processing. Brands that watched that holiday campaign controversy will be making more deliberate, more considered decisions about where and how they use these tools.

Localization as a Core Production Discipline
One of the areas where Coca-Cola video production has become genuinely sophisticated is localization. The brand operates in over 200 countries, and their content strategy has moved decisively away from the “global master with local subtitles” model. What they are producing now involves genuine creative adaptation at the regional level, with local directors, local talent, and local cultural references that go well beyond language.
This is a significant production investment. True localization requires more than translation. It requires culturally specific casting, location work, music licensing in local markets, color grading adjustments for different display environments, and often entirely different narrative structures that reflect how stories are told in a given culture. The film production services infrastructure required to support this at scale is considerable.
For brands below Coca-Cola’s scale, the lesson is not to replicate this globally but to take localization seriously within whatever geographic scope is relevant to them. A regional beverage brand expanding from the Southeast to the West Coast faces a real localization challenge. What works visually and tonally in Miami may read very differently in Los Angeles. We see this constantly in our own work across our Fort Lauderdale, Los Angeles, and New York City operations. The cultural register of a spot that plays perfectly in South Florida often needs genuine reworking for a New York audience, and vice versa.
The Rise of Long-Form Brand Documentary Content
Something interesting is happening at the intersection of brand content and documentary filmmaking, and Coca-Cola is among the brands that have leaned into it. Long-form content, in the 10 to 40-minute range, produced with genuine documentary craft, has become a legitimate part of major brand content strategies. This is not branded entertainment in the traditional sense. It is closer to actual documentary filmmaking with brand sponsorship embedded in a transparent, non-interruptive way.
The viewing data supports this. Audiences are spending more time with long-form video on YouTube, streaming platforms, and social channels than the short-attention-span narrative suggested they would. When a brand like Coca-Cola funds a genuine documentary about a community, a cultural moment, or a person of significance, the production values and storytelling standards need to match what documentary audiences expect. That is not a job for a commercial production crew thinking in 30-second increments.
C&I Studios has a dedicated practice in documentary film production, and we have seen growing demand from brands that want the credibility and depth that real documentary storytelling provides. The challenge is that genuine documentary work requires a different mindset, different production rhythms, and different editorial standards than traditional advertising. Brands that try to shortcut this end up with something that looks like an advertisement pretending to be a documentary, which audiences detect immediately.
According to a Think with Google study on video consumption trends, viewers who engage with long-form brand content show significantly higher brand recall and purchase intent than those exposed only to traditional pre-roll formats. This is the data point that is quietly reshaping how brands like Coca-Cola allocate their content production budgets.
Sound Design and Audio as Brand Infrastructure
Coca-Cola understands sonic identity in a way that most brands do not. The sound of a Coke bottle opening is one of the most recognized audio cues in the world. That is not an accident. It is the product of decades of deliberate attention to audio as a brand asset. What is changing now is how that sonic intelligence is being applied to video content across platforms.
As more video consumption happens without sound, and as more audio consumption happens without a screen, brands need to think about how their video content functions in both modes simultaneously. A well-produced brand video should be meaningful in silence and equally meaningful through audio alone. That requires a level of intentionality in both the visual and audio layers that is genuinely difficult to execute.
Our audio engineering services are integrated directly into our production workflow precisely because we believe sound is not a post-production afterthought. The decisions made in pre-production about music, voiceover, ambient sound, and sonic branding need to be made alongside visual decisions, not after them. Brands that treat audio as a finishing detail consistently produce video content that underperforms against content where sound was a primary consideration from day one.
Coca-Cola’s investment in sonic branding, including their long-running work with audio identity firms, reflects an understanding that brand recognition is not just visual. Any brand that is serious about video production at scale should be asking hard questions about their sonic identity and how it translates across the formats their content lives in.

Social-Native Production and Platform-First Thinking
One of the clearest trends in Coca-Cola video production is the growing commitment to content that is designed for specific platforms rather than adapted from a primary format. This distinction matters enormously in production terms. A vertical video designed for TikTok from the ground up is a fundamentally different production than a horizontal broadcast spot cropped to vertical. The framing, pacing, text placement, hook structure, and audio design are all different.
Coca-Cola has invested in building creator partnerships that produce genuinely platform-native content, particularly on TikTok and Instagram Reels. Some of this content is produced by the brand’s in-house team. Some of it comes from creator partnerships. Some of it is produced by agency partners and production companies. The mix reflects a real understanding that different content goals require different production models.
The implication for production companies is significant. We need to staff and equip for vertical formats with the same professionalism we bring to broadcast. That means camera configurations, monitor setups, and editorial workflows that are genuinely optimized for vertical output, not just capable of producing it as a secondary deliverable. Our social media marketing services are built around this platform-first production philosophy, and we are seeing more brands arrive at this understanding organically as they analyze their engagement data.
The brands that still treat social video as a repurposing exercise, where a broadcast spot gets cut down and reformatted for social, are consistently underperforming against brands that invest in platform-native production. The data on this is not ambiguous.
Sustainability Messaging and the Production Ethics Question
Coca-Cola has faced significant scrutiny around sustainability, and their video content increasingly has to navigate a landscape where audiences are sophisticated about the difference between genuine environmental commitment and greenwashing. This is a creative and strategic challenge that has real production implications.
How you shoot a sustainability narrative matters. The locations you choose, the talent you cast, the claims you make, and the visual language you deploy all communicate something about authenticity. A sustainability brand film shot with diesel generators in a location that required flying a crew across the country undermines itself before it is even edited. The most credible sustainability content tends to be produced with genuine attention to production footprint, local crew hiring, and honest rather than aspirational claims.
This is an area where the industry is still working out norms. According to the Interactive Advertising Bureau’s sustainability research, consumer skepticism about environmental claims in advertising has increased significantly over the past three years, with younger audiences showing particularly high sensitivity to authenticity gaps. Brands like Coca-Cola are navigating this in real time, and the video production choices they make are inseparable from the credibility of the message.
We think about this in our own production work. Sustainable production practices are not just a marketing point for us. They affect real decisions about crew travel, location selection, energy use on set, and post-production workflows. Brands that want to communicate genuine environmental values need production partners who take the same values seriously on set.
What Mid-Size Brands Can Take From Coca-Cola’s Approach
It is tempting to look at Coca-Cola’s production scale and conclude that none of it applies to brands working with more modest budgets. That is the wrong conclusion. The principles that drive Coca-Cola’s evolving approach to video are not primarily about budget. They are about philosophy, process, and priorities.
A regional food and beverage brand, a direct-to-consumer lifestyle brand, or a growing service company can adopt content system thinking without Coca-Cola’s resources. They can commit to genuine localization within their geographic footprint. They can invest in platform-native production rather than repurposing. They can treat sound design as a strategic asset. They can pursue long-form storytelling where it serves their audience.
The difference is intentionality. Coca-Cola’s video production is effective not because of its scale but because of the deliberateness with which creative, strategic, and production decisions are made. That deliberateness is available to any brand willing to work with partners who share it.
C&I Studios works with brands across a wide spectrum of scale and industry. Some of our clients have budgets that rival major consumer goods companies. Others are building something from the ground up. What the best projects at every level share is a clarity of purpose and a willingness to make production decisions that serve the creative goal rather than the path of least resistance. You can see examples of what that looks like across our portfolio.
The Production Infrastructure Question
Producing video content at the level Coca-Cola operates requires serious infrastructure. Our 30,000 square foot facility in Fort Lauderdale exists because serious production work requires serious physical capacity: sound stages, control rooms, dedicated post-production suites, equipment that does not need to be rented and assembled from scratch for every project. When a brand needs to produce at volume across multiple formats simultaneously, that infrastructure is not optional. It is the difference between a production that runs smoothly and one that is constantly fighting logistics.
The brands that have studied Coca-Cola’s production model carefully understand that the efficiency and consistency of their output is partly a function of the production infrastructure they have access to. For most brands, that means choosing production partners with the right physical and technical capacity rather than trying to build it themselves.
Regardless of whether you are producing a single brand film or building a full content system, the quality of the facility and equipment your production partner brings to the work is visible in the final product. It affects everything from lighting flexibility to color grading precision to the acoustic quality of dialogue recording. These are not technical footnotes. They are creative inputs.
If you are thinking seriously about elevating your brand’s video production, whether you are inspired by what Coca-Cola is doing or simply ready to take your content to the next level, we would welcome the conversation. Reach out to our team and let us talk about what the right production approach looks like for where your brand is headed.
Looking Ahead: Where Coca-Cola Video Production Points
The trajectory is clear. Coca-Cola video production is moving toward greater cultural specificity, greater platform intentionality, more sophisticated integration of AI tools in specific workflow stages, and a deeper commitment to long-form storytelling alongside high-volume short-form content. The brand is investing in production models that are genuinely modular and scalable, with post-production pipelines that can serve a global content system without rebuilding for every market or format.
For the broader industry, these shifts represent both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge is that the bar for what constitutes quality brand video is rising across every format and platform. The opportunity is that brands willing to invest in genuine creative and production excellence are more differentiated than ever in an environment full of forgettable content.
We are optimistic about where this goes. The brands that are thinking seriously about video production right now, that are asking hard questions about their content systems, their sonic identity, their localization strategy, and their platform-native capabilities, are building something that will compound over time. The ones that are still treating video as a commodity task to be executed at minimum cost are going to find themselves increasingly invisible.
Coca-Cola is not perfect, and their experiments do not always land. But they are asking the right questions, and they are willing to do it publicly. That matters. The industry learns when major brands take risks in public, and the current period of Coca-Cola video production is full of lessons worth studying closely.
















