PepsiCo's problem isn't who's running it — it's the math of the industry it sits in. Packaged food and beverage is a mature, low-growth business: organic revenue creeps along at low-single digits while the S&P 500 compounds at roughly 10% a year, which by definition makes the company a laggard inside any portfolio built for growth. And the capital allocation is engineered to protect the dividend, not to reinvest in the business or its people.
PepsiCo is a "Dividend King" that has raised its payout for 50-plus straight years, and that streak is effectively a corporate promise that shareholders get paid first, every year, before anything internal. When the dividend is sacred, the flex line becomes raises, headcount, route investment, and innovation — everything that would actually compound growth. That's a structural choice baked into the company's identity, not a temporary round of belt-tightening.
On top of slow growth, the demand base is eroding from several directions at once. GLP-1 dr-gs are quietly carving a measurable slice of calories out of the market, and appetite suppression is a direct hit to a company whose whole model is selling people more snacks and sweet drinks. Frito-Lay, long the profit engine, is slowing as private-label and generic chips close the quality gap and win the price-sensitive shopper. And carbonated soft drinks — still the richest part of the mix, running roughly double the margin of the "growth" categories like water, sports drinks, and better-for-you snacks — are in a slow secular decline. That combination is the real ki-ler: even when the company grows revenue, it's growing the low-margin stuff while the high-margin stuff shrinks, so profit gets squeezed even in a "good" year. None of that is a management whiff — it's the category mix moving against them.
The squeeze lands hardest at the front line. Merchandising and DSD work keeps getting harder — SKU counts have exploded, mass retailers pile on compliance and service demands, and the physical job is more complex than it's ever been — yet the pay has slipped behind, to where plenty of fast-food jobs now pay better for far less wear on your body. Put it together and the takeaway is simple: because the pressure is industry-structural — slow growth, eroding demand, an adverse margin mix, and a dividend that always eats first — no amount of good leadership can engineer its way out. That's why the layoffs won't stop and why bonuses will always read thin next to higher-growth sectors: leadership isn't underperforming the industry, the industry itself is the ceiling. If you're optimizing a career for growth, you want to be in the sectors pulling that 10%+, not in the one structurally built to fund a dividend