Why PepsiCo is sweet on artificial intelligence – Axios

Pepsi sodas displayed on shelves at a Walmart Supercenter on December 06, 2022 in Austin, Texas. Photo: Brandon Bell/Getty Images

If your local grocery or corner mart is keeping Diet Pepsi, Gatorade or Fritos in stock, you may be able to thank artificial intelligence.

Driving the news: PepsiCo, the multinational maker of name-brand soda, chips and sports drinks, may not be a technology company, but it has gone all-in on AI in the past few years, spending "hundreds of millions" of dollars to do so, Athina Kanioura, the company's chief strategy and transformation officer, told Axios.

Why it matters: PepsiCo is one example of a major corporation embracing AI fully in daily processes, as other companies in non-tech industries begin to grapple with advancements like generative AI.

The big picture: PepsiCo, one of the largest food and beverage companies in the world, believes AI can help with improved efficiency, lowered costs and better response to customer demand.

What they're saying: Kanioura, who came to PepsiCo in 2020 after a long tenure at Accenture, started implementing AI processes and standards right away, calling it her "biggest passion" for the job.

Between the lines: Kanioura said she's been talking to lawmakers on Capitol Hill interested in AI policy who told her they are "extremely impressed by the level of maturity" of AI deployment at PepsiCo "which they haven't seen from any other company" beyond tech.

How it works: Some of PepsiCo's uses of AI include helping create new product lines and flavors, determining which stores are selling the most of which products and getting new stock out, analyzing sales and optimizing product placement and visibility.

Of note: Kanioura said PepsiCo has its own responsible AI framework which guides how it deploys AI in different parts of the company.

Kanioura said generative AI which has sparked a craze since the advent of ChatGPT is useful for knowledge management, but not the right tool for, say, organizing pallets in a warehouse.

On regulation: Kanioura said the federal government needs to be doing more: "Regulation is important. How much regulation is another discussion."

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Why PepsiCo is sweet on artificial intelligence - Axios

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