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Related shill: PepsiCo setup an eCommerce business unit about 3 years ago that is forward thinking on technology and rapidly growing. During the pandemic we launched snacks.com and pantryshop.com. Our group’s leadership has some very experienced folks with experience in big brands and successful startups.

We’ve got a lot of python and elixir in use on the teams, folks working remotely, and generally solid team of good engineers. If you’re looking for a new opportunity check out the eCommerce jobs on PepsiCo.com, comp, benefits, and work-life balance are a great mix.

"Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world?"

"Well, actually, we also sell salty snacks."

Plenty of other things too as the product catalog is quite large, but yes.

To each their own, I find using my skills to help make/sell food that gives people some simple joy and a bit of sustenance satisfying.

> simple joy and a bit of sustenance

I appreciate you providing a different perspective, and being open about affiliation. But this marketing-speak is hilarious!

"simple joy and a bit of sustenance" read food chemically engineered to be as addicting as possible with any nutrition long since processed out
please do not work for pepsi. they do not appreciate talent. i have a company award from the ceo Ramon and was paid s&$t. they do not care about their people. i worked there for almost 4 years, literally saving them 100s of millions with process engineering inventions and was paid like an intern. so happy i left. i saw coworkers get passed up for someone outside the org. do not work for pepsi.
What is so special about snacks.com? Looks like a standard shopify site.
This was an entertaining read. It's also a lesson on how important it is for global trade and commerce to have a reserve currency.
And yet, they didn't win the cola wars.
When I was on a tour in the Soviet Union in 1990, Pepsi and the fruit soda brand Fanta were everywhere.

I hadn't seen Fanta soda since the 1970s in the United States, but then the hotels and the automobiles looked like the 70s to me, too.

There was television in the hotel rooms, and after figuring out how to flush the toilet, we'd get the TV on, and I would try to soak up as much Russian as I could manage before dinner. There was no advertising as such, not self-contained 30-second video. For there was as yet no widespread, rabid retail domestic market...

But there was product placement. The game show host would read the question, contestants would try to answer, then they would all toss back the refreshing, bubbly delight that was Pepsi Cola. The newscaster would present the lead story, a bottle of Pepsi ready at hand. The ecstatic race car driver and his crew would chug some Pepsi as they celebrated thier victory.

It was a different time. It really happened.

That sounds like the level of product placement that happens on Chinese TV shows these days (especially game shows/reality shows.)