ColgateEssay Preview: ColgateReport this essayCorporate BackgroundColgate began in 1806, when William Colgate, an English immigrant, set up a starch, soap and candle business on Dutch Street in New York City. In 1807, Frances Smith was made a partner and the firm became Smith and Colgate. In 1813, Colgate bought out his partner, and the name was changed to William Colgate and Company, (

The first Colgate advertisement for soap, mould, and dipt candles appeared in 1817. A few years later, Colgate and his brother-in-law, John Gilbert, built a starch factory in Jersey City, New Jersey. In 1947, the Dutch Street factory was moved there, yet the business office remained on Dutch Street. At that time, the principal products were Windsor Toilet Soaps and Pearl Starch. In 1857, Colgate died, and the company name changed to Colgate & Company.

The company introduced perfumed soap and began manufacturing of perfumes and essences in 1866. Six years later, the first milled perfumed toilet soap, Cashmere Bouquet, was registered as a trademark. Almost 70 years after the companys founding, Colgate & Company produced its first toothpaste, an aromatic dental cream that was sold in jars.

In 1896, the company introduced the first collapsible toothpaste tube, making toothpaste much more convenient to use.In 1864, B.J Johnson Soap Company was founded. In 1898, the company introduced Palmolive Soap, a product that was so successful it prompted B.J Johnson to change its name to the Palmolive Company 1916.

By the time Colgate & Company celebrated its 100th anniversary, they were manufacturing dental care products, laundry soaps, 160 different kinds of toilet soap and 625 varieties of perfume. In 1906, the company launched a plant expansion at its Jersey City site, where a new 8-story factory opened. A few years later, the entire Colgate organization left the original buildings on Dutch and John Streets and moved to Jersey City.

The U.S. Palmolive Company was also rapidly expanding. It merged with soap manufacturers Peet Brothers in Kansas City to form the Palmolive-Peet Company in 1926. Palmolive-Peet Company then merged with Colgate & Company two years later, and the new entity was known as the Colgate Palmolive-Peet Company. Colgate Palmolive-Peet, a consumer product powerhouse, boasted sales of $100 million by 1939.

Colgate-Palmolive Company (CP) is a consumer products company whose products are marketed in over 200 countries and territories throughout the world. The Company has two distinct business segments, Oral, Personal, Household Surface and Fabric Care, and Pet Nutrition. Oral, Personal, Household Surface and Fabric Care products include toothpaste, oral rinses and toothbrushes, bar and liquid hand soaps, shower gels, shampoos, conditioners, deodorants and antiperspirants, shave products, laundry and dishwashing detergents, fabric conditioners, cleansers and cleaners, bleaches and other similar items. These products are sold primarily to wholesale and retail distributors worldwide. Pet Nutrition products include pet food products manufactured and marketed by Hills Pet Nutrition. The principal customers for Pet Nutrition products are veterinarians and specialty pet retailers.

Colgate-Palmolives success is founded on the Companys core values of caring, continuous improvement and global teamwork. These values are the driving force behind everything they do. They prove this by providing safe, high quality products, which enhance our consumers lives around the world.

In 1991, Colgate-Palmolive Company was a global leader in household and personal care products with sales of $6.06 billion. The company spent $243 million to upgrade 25 of their 91 manufacturing facilities, introduced 275 new products worldwide, completed several strategic acquisitions, and began manufacturing in China and Eastern Europe. Forty-three percent of the world toothpaste market and 16% of the world toothbrush market belonged to CP.

Within the U.S. market, CP launched Colgate Baking Soda toothpaste, the Colgate Angle toothbrush, and Wild Ones toothbrush. Colgate-Palmolive offered two lines of toothbrushes. On the “value” end was the Colgate Classic, and on the “professional” end was the Colgate Plus.

Colgate-Palmolive cares about people, Colgate people, customers, shareholders and business partners. They are committed to act with compassion, integrity and honesty in all situations, to listen with respect to others and to value differences. The company is committed to getting better every day in all it does, as individuals and as teams. By better understanding consumers and customers expectations and continuously working to innovate and improve products, services and processes, Colgate will “become the best,” (

The Chronology of Toothbrush Innovations in the U.S.New Product IntroductionsMain Feature1950sOral-B ClassicTraditional Square HeadJohnson & Johnson ReachFirst Angled HandleColgate PlusFirst Diamond-Shaped HeadLever Bros. AimSlightly Longer HandleJohnson & Johnson PreventAids Brushing at 45o AngleColgate Plus Sensitive GumsSofter BristlesPepsodent“Commodity” BrushOral-B UltraImproved HandleJohnson & Johnson Neon ReachNeon-Colored HandleOral-B Art SeriesCosmetic FeatureColgate Plus Angle HandleDiamond-Shaped & Angle HandleColgate Plus Wild OnesCosmetic FeatureJohnson & Johnson Advanced Reach DesignRubber-Ridged, Non-Slip HandleOral-B IndicatorBristles Change ColorAquafresh FlexFlexible Handle NeckPfizer PlaxGroove for ThumbCrest CompleteRippled BristlesColgate PrecisionTriple Action BristlesSource: Company

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John M. Thompson, Ph.D., Author Formerly Editor-in-Chief of American Renaissance magazine.
He founded the Museum of the Sacred Heart of Saint Francis of Assisi, who is one of the world’s most prominent Catholic historians.

Robert C. Hennig Jr., Ph.D., Former Deputy Secretary of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Formerly C.E.–Historically, he was a professor of English at the University of California at Berkeley, where he worked at the American Historical Association prior to joining American Renaissance. For more information, visit www.usra.org and www.americanra.org on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Vimeo. P.M.