I was not in Germany for the fall of the Berlin Wall 20 years ago today. But I got a front seat to business history-in-the-making three months later, when I went to East Germany to report a story about Coca-Cola's (KO) aggressive ramp-up in Europe following the Communist collapse.
It seems like yesterday.
Talk about a capitalist invasion. I remember how euphoric--genuinely euphoric--East German consumers and shop-owners were to suddenly have access to not only Coca-Cola but "luxuries" like bananas. Bananas! East Germans were, until the Wall came down, practically as unfamiliar with bananas as they were with Fortune magazine.
The visit was surreal, in so many ways. I flew on the Coke plane (no shame in corporate jets back then) on a glorious sunny Sunday from Weimar, a gray city in East Germany, to Nice, in France. Polly Howes, the young and eager Coke PR woman, and I then helicoptered over the deep-blue Mediterranean to Monte Carlo. Coke's top brass was convening its senior managers and bottlers at Monaco's elegant Hotel de Paris.
Walking into the bustling lobby, I ran into Don Keough, Coke's president and Roberto Goizueta, the company's CEO, who was wearing canary-colored trousers. What a scene! It was stranger still since Goizueta, whom I had come to know, was a quiet, cerebral chemical engineer. Not the yellow pants type of guy. But he was celebrating that day. Here was a man who grew up in Havana and fled Cuba in 1960--now navigating Coca-Cola, the icon of global capitalism, into new markets, now free and open.
Coke's "speed and seat-of-the-pants decision-making," as I called it in my 1990 Fortune story, seemed to be just right at the time. Now, 20 years later, we can see how right Coke's aggressive response really was. Coke's market share of carbonated soft drinks in Germany stands at 39%. Pepsi's (PEP) share is 6%, according to Beverage Digest. Consumption of Coke products has risen significantly. And one fellow who was, back when the Wall fell, key to Coke's European expansion, has risen as well. He is Muhtar Kent, now Coke's chairman and CEO.
Here's an excerpt from my 1990 story, "Coke Gets Off its Can in Europe":
[Coke's bottling plan in] Dunkirk increased production in a flash after the Berlin Wall fell last November. ''If it hadn't been for this plant, we wouldn't have been able to move into East Germany so quickly,'' says Goizueta. Coca-Cola has left competitors in the dust in East Germany, and the chairman predicts that annual sales there should reach 100 million cases -- around $1 billion at retail -- in two years or so.
Coke's success in East Germany shows the increasing importance of speed and seat-of-the-pants decision-making. Heinz Wiezorek, 51, president of the German division, was traveling in Rochester, New York, last November when he saw the Wall fall on TV. He called his West Berlin bottler and said, ''Get Coke out there!'' Border crossers in their sputtering Wartburg and Trabant automobiles received free cases of Coke, while East Germans on foot got six-packs and single cans. At one checkpoint, delivery trucks dispensed over 70,000 cans in a few hours. To Wiezorek, diving in fast was crucial. ''There won't be two colas in restaurants and small outlets,'' he says. ''They'll choose the one that's first in the market.''
One day in January while strolling East Berlin's Alexanderplatz, Wiezorek and Coca-Cola senior vice president Doug Ivester (since promoted to head Coca-Cola USA) made a quick, risky decision to accept East German currency, even though they then couldn't convert it into Western money. Coke and other companies selling in soft-currency markets instead have almost always countertraded, exchanging their goods for local ones, then selling the local products in the West for hard cash. Coca-Cola plans to invest $140 million in East German bottlers, which will package and sell Coke locally.
Ivester, by the way, went onto great success, as Goizueta's No. 2. After Goizueta died of lung cancer in 1997, Ivester moved up to CEO--and lasted just two years before the board pushed him out. After a couple of poor CEOs and years of disappointing results, Coke finally got back on track under chief Neville Isdell. And now Kent is steering Coke aggressively again.

"Is it authentic? Money is not the issue...I don't want to do it if it doesn't feel authentic."
-- NBA star LeBron James in a 2007 Fortune cover story. Last night, James became the fastest player in NBA history to score 12,000 career points--at the ripe age of 24 years and 35 days. He eclipsed Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, who held the record at 25 years and 220 days. MORE
Jessica Shambora, Writer-Reporter - Feb 4, 2009 6:53 PM ET
I took a 7 a.m. Acela from New York to Washington, D.C. this morning to meet with D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee and then attend the Fortune 500 Forum, beginning this afternoon. My train was on time to the minute; Rhee's red-eye from the West Coast was delayed by D.C. fog, so she and I are now due to meet Wednesday. I'll share my thoughts later this week about Rhee, who MORE
Patricia Sellers - Dec 1, 2008 2:05 PM ET
This morning, I read about the potential merger of General Motors (GM) and Chrysler. Then I read about the benign rivalry of two divas of the blog world, Arianna Huffington and Tina Brown. Two stories that have nothing to do with each other? You would think. But actually, they do. They point to a new reality of the business world: Competition isn't what it used to be. Competition becomes coopetition. MORE
Patricia Sellers - Oct 27, 2008 5:14 PM ET
For the latest on the most influential women in business, philanthropy, government, and the arts, like us on Facebook.
In her first public interview since taking on the CEO gig at Yahoo, Marissa Mayer outlines her priorities both in and out of the company. Watch
Brenda Barnes famously quit a big job to be with her kids. Years later, a massive stroke nearly killed her--and her daughter returned the favor. Watch