Interested in finding the next great investment idea? It might not be as complicated as you think. Consider Warren Buffett, the folksy Midwesterner who also happens to be the most successful long-term investor in American history. His holding company, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.B), built a fortune buying and holding shares of great American companies like Heinz and Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO), among other brands you and I encounter on a daily basis.

While Buffett's investing abilities are extraordinary, his rationale for Heinz and Coca-Cola was quite elementary: He identified a deep connection between the product and customer, based primarily on taste. The science behind this unique attraction is complex, but it's also one of one of the simplest investment ideas I've ever come across.

What's in a Coke and a condiment?

Any investor familiar with the Oracle of Omaha knows he has a soft spot for hamburgers and cherry Cokes, and he's not the only one. Hamburgers are about as American as apple pie (though no better for our waistlines), and a dab of Heinz ketchup and side of Coca-Cola improves the overall experience.

From Buffett's perspective, these products will resonate with customers for a century to come, and his optimism following a $28 billion takeover of Heinz in February was evident: "We hope to own Heinz 100 years from now. If you own great brands and you take care of them, they're terrific assets." Or, as his investing partner, Charlie Munger, says more colloquially, "[I]f you can buy a few great companies, then you can sit on your ass."

Buffett and Munger believe that time is on your side when you own a great business, but what is it that makes Heinz and Coca-Cola so compelling? Few specific brands have staying power of over a century, and we're talking about a vinegar-tomato concoction and coca-infused sugar water. Quite frankly, could these products be any easier to rip off?

Apparently not, as they share a secret attribute that has ensured their success over the years. It's not the only reason these companies have thrived, but it's perhaps the one that matters most.

Heinz's and Coke's secret sauce

For starters, Buffett's familiarity level with the food and beverage industry is higher than many investors realize. One of his first jobs as a young boy in Omaha was selling bottles of Coca-Cola door-to-door in his neighborhood. Since then, Buffett's dabbled in the food industry quite frequently throughout his investing career. Today, Berkshire has built a deep roster of familiar brands, including ownership stakes in Kraft Foods, Mondelez, See's Candies, and Dairy Queen in addition to Coke and Heinz.

With the latter two, however, Buffett identified something special. He realized that the early success of Coke and Heinz back in the 1900s depended entirely on their signature product's near-perfect recipes. Lacking well-established brand names, Coke and Heinz attracted new customers based on taste, and the secret to their success was an optimal "flavor amplitude."

In 2004, Malcolm Gladwell dissected the concept of amplitude in great detail in his article, "The Ketchup Conundrum." Gladwell discovered that amplitude was "the word sensory experts use to describe flavors that are well blended and balanced, that 'bloom' in the mouth." No single element of the product's flavor outweighs the rest; instead, they work together in perfect harmony with our taste buds.

As it turns out, Coca-Cola-brand sodas and Heinz ketchup have incredibly high levels of amplitude. Coke's close competitor, PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP), also achieves high marks in this category. As taste expert Judy Heylmun pointed out to Gladwell, "The thing about Coke and Pepsi is that they are absolutely gorgeous. They have beautiful notes -- all flavors are in balance. It's very hard to do that well." In fact, very few cola competitors even come close, which is one reason that the top three colas in terms of American market share are Coke at 17%, Diet Coke at 9.4%, and Pepsi at 8.9%, according to Beverage Digest.

ConAgra's Hunt's ketchup, controls less than 20%. Heinz vaulted to the top of the industry with a formula for success that's quite similar to Coke's. Heinz delivers an array of perfectly balanced flavors in its ketchup, making it a condiment that can be irresistible on many levels. The market share figure for Heinz is even more impressive, as it controls 60% of sales for the U.S. ketchup industry. Its nearest competitor,'s Hunt's ketchup, controls less than 20%. Heinz vaulted to the top of the industry with a formula for success that's quite similar to Coke's. Heinz delivers an array of perfectly balanced flavors in its ketchup, making it a condiment that can be irresistible on many levels.

Why Heinz stands alone

Going further, experts have found that Heinz ketchup is one of the few foods that stimulates all five sensations within the mouth: salty, sweet, sour, bitter, and umami (for those unfamiliar with the latter, umami brings "body" to foods, and is commonly found in cured meats or aged cheeses). Gladwell describes H.J. Heinz's masterpiece -- which took years to perfect -- as follows:

What Heinz had done was come up with a condiment that pushed all five of these primal buttons. The taste of Heinz's ketchup began at the tip of the tongue, where our receptors for sweet and salty first appear, moved along the sides, where sour notes seem the strongest, then hit the back of the tongue, for umami and bitter, in one long crescendo. How many things in the supermarket run the sensory spectrum like this?

There seem to be few foods, in fact, that universally appeal to our taste buds like Heinz -- or Coke, for that matter. They introduce a desirable sensation in a way that competitors have difficulty replicating. For Buffett and Munger, this high amplitude characteristic was critical. They have discussed it at length in essays and speeches as a crucial component of their investment decision.

Creating a competitive advantage

In Coke and Heinz, Buffett found unique products with mass appeal that laid the foundation for a competitive advantage. While it is common for analysts to point to world-class supply chains or brilliant marketing techniques, these strengths play more of a supporting role.

An efficient bottling and distribution process, for example, makes a product more widely available, whereas effective advertising creates positive "association" with the product. Both of these serve to grow market share and enhance profit margins -- especially relative to competitors -- but consumer preference dictates whether the product is worth purchasing in the first place. This deep connection with the flavor and the brand boosts pricing power, and perhaps more important, determines whether a product is worth a repeat purchase. With products like cola and ketchup, sometimes one satisfying experience can mean a customer for life.

Buffett's epiphany

To be sure, Buffett's decision to invest in Coke and Heinz rested on impressive business models as well as flavor amplitude. However, it seems his confidence in their future success stems from the perfect chemistry between the products and their consumers.

With Coke, for example, Buffett has addressed numerous questions over the company's ability to thrive in volatile overseas markets or in the midst of declining domestic consumption. Without missing a beat, Buffett typically points out that more people around the world continue to drink Coke, and this trend will remain. At times, Buffett will provide even more detailed justifications for his confidence in Coke's future:

One thing that people don't understand... cola has no taste memory. You can drink one of these at 9 o'clock, 11 o'clock, 5 o'clock...You can't do that with cream soda, root beer, orange, grape... You get sick of them after a while... There is no taste memory to cola. The average person drinks about 64 ounces of liquid per day, and you can have all 64 ounces of that be Coke... If you do that with almost anything else -- with just one product -- you'll get sick of it. And that's a huge factor.

For Buffett, the emphasis is almost always on the product and the unique characteristic of repeat consumption. Whether it's healthy or not, more and more people outside of the U.S. are consuming Coke in ever-increasing quantities. He believes the same trend will play out with Heinz ketchup.

And what other products, if any, can even aspire to this consumption pattern? If you have one iPhone, for example, there's little reason to purchase another -- there are significant diminishing returns for the consumer. But this law holds less weight with Coke and Heinz.

As a result, Buffett expects that customers in other countries will enjoy Coke and Heinz as much as customers in North America, even with slight flavor modifications. As incomes rise in emerging markets, so will the consumption of these two products, creating a virtuous cycle for these two companies.

My colleague Ted Cooper recently summarized Buffett's thesis on Coke as follows: "Buffett saw that Coca-Cola was an exportable brand. It is something that all people in all countries can enjoy and the company has a massive distribution network that can deliver the product to all parts of the world." My fellow Fool also points out that average consumption worldwide is one-fourth the rate of that in the top 10 markets for Coca-Cola. On paper, that's a vast untapped market for this sweet, fizzy beverage.

A Foolish takeaway

In retrospect, it's quite easy to see why Buffett adores Coke and Heinz. Each present high-amplitude flavor in the form of an inexpensive product that customers could enjoy several times a week -- or even several times a day. Americans love Coke and Heinz ketchup, so there was little reason to believe these time-tested products could not thrive in an even larger global market. Executing on this plan might not be easy, but Buffett recognized that the probability of success seemed high given the risk.

As Buffett is fond of saying, oftentimes the best investing ideas are the simplest. And, as this case proves, sometimes they're the ones sitting right under your nose.