The Coca-Cola Company (KO) is hitting the reset button on its leadership structure, and Wall Street noticed. Shares dipped Wednesday morning as the beverage giant unveiled a comprehensive executive overhaul designed to sharpen its consumer focus and accelerate its digital transformation.
The headline move: Henrique Braun will step into the CEO role on March 31, 2026, taking over from James Quincey, who's held the position since 2017. Quincey isn't going far though. He'll transition to Executive Chairman of the Board, keeping a hand on the wheel while Braun drives the day-to-day operations.
Digital Gets a Seat at the Table
Perhaps the more interesting development is Coca-Cola's decision to create an entirely new Chief Digital Officer position. This isn't just window dressing. The company wants someone coordinating digital strategy, data analytics, and operational excellence across the entire enterprise, bringing what's often scattered initiatives under one roof.
Sedef Salingan Sahin, currently running the Eurasia and Middle East operating unit, will take on this newly minted role and report directly to Braun. Her job will be aligning teams and making sure the company's digital efforts actually talk to each other, which is harder than it sounds at a company operating in over 200 countries.
Meanwhile, John Murphy stays put as President and CFO, though some of his responsibilities are shifting around. Manolo Arroyo is getting a bigger plate, adding customer and commercial leadership to his existing marketing duties. His new title, Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing and Customer Commercial Officer, is quite the mouthful.
Redrawing the Map
The reorganization extends to how Coca-Cola manages its global markets. Sanket Ray will oversee a sprawling territory covering India, Southwest Asia, Greater China, Mongolia, Japan, and South Korea, all while keeping his current operating unit responsibilities.
Claudia Lorenzo gets an equally hefty portfolio: Eurasia and the Middle East, ASEAN and South Pacific, plus Africa markets. She'll also serve as president of the Eurasia and Middle East operating unit.




