If you ever wondered how orange juice can always taste so damn perfect every time you have it, it’s because of an algorithm. Believe it or not, Coca Cola has an algorithm called the “Black Book” which allows it to standardise Mother Nature. It’s crazy.
We knew the odd process that orange juice companies followed to create consistently delicious OJ: strip the oxygen which strips the flavour and then artificially flavour the juice with “flavour packs” made by flavour and fragrance companies. What we didn’t know was how amazingly detailed the algorithm used to figure everything out and how much it controlled of the OJ squeezing process.
Business Week’s fascinating report on big box OJ discovered how ridiculously impressive (and scary) the whole process is. The architect of Coke’s OJ model, Revenue Analytics consultant Bob Cross who also built an algorithm for Delta for airline efficiency told Business Week that the Black Book, “is definitely one of the most complex applications of business analytics. It requires analysing up to 1 quintillion decision variables to consistently deliver the optimal blend, despite the whims of Mother Nature.”
The Black Book has data on over 600 flavours that go into an orange, detailing the acidity, sweetness, etc. of each batch of juice. Once it profiles the raw juice, it spits out how to blend the juice to get into the perfectly consistent taste we’re all used to. Even deeper, Black Book can analyse weather patterns, crops, etc. to adjust any sort of juicing plans. Black Book even uses satellites to monitor crops and tells farmers the optimal time to pick the fruit. It’s considered every possible angle for orange juice, with maths.
Read more about how an algorithm dictates OJ at Business Week. [Business Week]