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History & Origin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 
Early Evolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 
Global Expansion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 
Modern Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 
Company Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 
Recent Efforts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 
Company DNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 
Social Media Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . 17 
2
 Founded by Franklin Clarence Mars and his son, Forrest Edward Mars. 
 In 1902, Frank ran a wholesale candy firm in the Minneapolis/St Paul area but 
it was not a success. 
 By 1910, he moved to Seattle to set up again but within a year he lost 
everything. 
 In 1914, his third candy business in Tacoma, Washington went bankrupt. 
 He landed back in Minneapolis, where he sunk his last $400 into yet another 
candy-making venture, the Mar-O-Bar Co. and hit on a winner with Victorian 
Butter Creams. 
 In 1924, they produced a chocolate bar named Milky Way and their business 
grossed a staggering $800,000 
3
4 
 By 1928, Mar-O-Bar Co. was relocated to Chicago and a year after, they had a 
much bigger factory crammed with new equipment in which they could 
produce twenty million Milky Way bars a year. 
 In 1930, Frank invented the Snickers bar and in 1932, Three Musketeers, 
pushing company sales to $25 million. 
 Mars was substantially big at this point and the relationship between father 
and son eroded, Frank kicked Forrest out and gave him $50,000 and the 
foreign rights to Milky Way. Fifteen months later Frank was dead from a heart 
attack.
5 
 In 1933, Forrest moved his family to Switzerland and took hourly jobs on the 
factory floors of Jean Tobler and then Nestlé to learn for himself the secrets 
of Swiss chocolate-making. 
 Come August 1933, Forrest made a deal with Cadbury’s industrial sales 
department to supply him with their chocolate and the first Mars Bars 
appeared on the shelves 
 In 1934, Forrest bought Chapple Brothers, a struggling British dog food 
company, the second leg of the future Mars Empire 
 In 1939, Mars Ltd was Britain’s third-largest chocolate company behind 
Cadbury and Rowntree’s 
 That same year, the Second World War intervened and Forrest returned to 
the US
6 
 By 1940, a joint venture between Frank and Hershey’s president’s son was 
sealed, creating M&M’s - Mars & Murrie, M&Ms Ltd. 
 In 1944, Uncle Ben’s Rice was launched with the help of advertising guru Leo 
Burnett 
 By 1954, M&M’s tagline “Melts in your mouth, not in your hands” was 
hammered into the nation’s brains by the M&M’s cartoon characters 
 By 1956, M&M’s was the best-selling chocolate product in America, grossing 
$40 million a year
7 
UK 
 The US’ best-sellers, Snickers and M&M’s, were launched in United Kingdom 
under the names of Marathon and Treets, and were joined by Topic, Twix, 
Spangles, Tunes and Lockets. 
 In 1979, they launched the two-piece canned pet food and by late 1990’s 
they switched to pouches. 
Western Europe 
 In 1951, the first Mars Bar hit France followed by imports of dog and cat food 
brands in 1959. 
 In 1961, the West German sales office for chocolate products opened 
 In 1993, exports of pet foods in New Zealand had gone so well that Mars 
purchased a pet food factory there to ramp up production 
 Mars is by far the dominant pet food manufacturer in Australia and New 
Zealand, with around 50% market share
8 
Australia/New Zealand 
 In 1954, Mars signed a deal with MacRobertson’s, Cadbury’s main competitor 
in Australia 
 In 1965, they launched Pal and Whiskas in Australia and build a pet food 
factory the next year. 
 Purchased Masterfoods a local maker of herbs and spices 
Eastern Europe 
 Mars chocolate products appeared in Hungary in 1989 
 In 1991, food and pet products were added to the distribution network 
 A chocolate factory opened in the summer of 1995 for the cost of $140 
million and produced nine different products. A pet food factory opened the 
same year. 
 By 2012, the company had nine factories supplying Russia and the rest of the 
CIS.
9 
China 
 In 1990, the company opened its first sales office and decided to focus on 
M&M’s. 
 By 1996, M&M’s were not driving enough profit so they switched to the 
Dove chocolate bar 
 By 2005, Snickers and M&M’s took a more prominent position and Mars was 
the clear market leader 
 The company now has four factories in China, two for pet foods and two for 
chocolate, supplying the ever-growing Chinese market and also exporting to 
other Asian countries 
Middle East 
 In 1998, Mars opened their first chocolate factory in Dubai to service the 
entire Middle East 
 By 2013, a new factory in Saudi Arabia was opened
10 
Latin America 
 In 1995, the first factory in Mexico was opened 
 In 2002, they bought Lucas World, another candy manufacturer 
 Mars is now market leader in both pet food and confectionery in Mexico
11 
 By the end of the 1950s, the Chicago plant had been expanded 
 Forrest bought Thomas’s, a firm that made all manner of pet accessories: dog 
leads, fish and budgerigar food amongst them 
 In 1955, he set up a British drinks vending company, Four Square. 
 In 1959, they launched Whiskas. 
 In 1966, Mars bought the Kal Kan firm 
 In the mid-1970s, Hershey was finally overtaken, whilst in the UK, Mars would 
soon be on the verge of overhauling both Cadbury and Rowntree’s 
 The US pet business moved to adopt UK recipes and brand names such as 
Pedigree and Whiskas. 
 Mars sponsored the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles and this was a success in 
US businesses 
 Outside the US, Snickers was known as Marathon and M&M’s as Treets
12 
 Changing brand names that had been around for decades was a bold and 
forward-thinking move, but in other areas the business had become a lot 
more cautious under the new regime. 
 In 1982, Mars had passed up the chance to have M&M’s feature in the film 
ET 
 Mars had been offered first refusal on the Cadbury deal but had declined. 
 In 1986, they purchased Dove Bar International Inc., makers of a hand-dipped 
ice cream bar. 
 In 1989, Mars Inc. switched track on new product development on differently 
flavored brand extensions. The same year their Dove subsidiary launched ice 
cream versions of 3Musketeers, Snickers and Milky Way. 
 In 1997, Mars purchased Seeds of Change, an organic seed company.
13 
 The global head office has always been a tiny affair with fewer than 100 staff 
 There are only six levels of management between the factory floor and the 
family members themselves. 
 In the early 1990s, management experimented with combining the various 
product sectors into single organisations by country, but it was not a success 
and was quietly abandoned in the larger markets. 
 In 2001, Mars created a formal Board of Directors – all family members 
together with a small number of outside advisers 
 The original four divisions - Petcare, Chocolate, Food and Drinks - have more 
recently been joined by Wrigley.
14 
2002 
 Wrigley’s bid of $12.5 billion 
2006 
 Doane Petcare company, a largely private label company but with excellent 
manufacturing and distribution set-up that could be immediately deployed 
to improve the Kal Kan operation 
2007 
 Added Nutro Products Inc., a manufacturer of high-nutrition, high-performance 
natural dog and cat foods 
 Mars’ pet foods major product recall 
2009 
 Another major product recall by the quality-obsessed Mars management 
2013 
 Mars has committed to shipping no chocolate products that exceed 250 
calories per portion
15 
The Five Principles of Mars 
Quality 
The consumer is our boss, quality is our work and value for money is our goal. 
Responsibility 
As individuals, we demand total responsibility from ourselves; as associates, we 
support the responsibilities of others. 
Mutuality 
A mutual benefit is a shared benefit; a shared benefit will endure. 
Efficiency 
We only use resources to the full, waste nothing and do only what we can do 
best. 
Freedom 
We need freedom to shape our future; we need profit to remain free.
16 
 Mars Inc. has annual sales of over $30 billion, operates 401 factories and 
offices in 73 countries and employs over 70,000 associates. 
 The company has eleven brands with annual sales revenues of over $1 billion 
(Pedigree $4.7bn, Snickers $3.6bn, M&M’s $3.5bn, Whiskas $2.8bn, Dove 
$2.6bn, Orbit $2.5bn, Milky Way/Mars Bar $2.4bn, Extra $2.2bn, Uncle Ben’s 
$1.6bn, Royal Canin $1.5bn, Twix $1.5bn). 
 Over 90% of company sales come from three categories: Pet Care, 
Confectionery and Gum. It is the world’s largest confectionery company, 
Snickers and M&M’s are the world’s best-selling confectionery products. 
 It is probably fair to say that the business model developed by Forrest Mars 
Senior and the brands developed by successors Frank and Forrest have been 
resounding successes.
Website: www.mars.com/global/index.aspx 
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/mars 
Facebook: www.facebook.com/Mars 
Twitter: twitter.com/Marsglobal 
Instagram: instagram.com/mmschocolate 
Youtube: www.youtube.com/user/Mars 
Google+: plus.google.com/112416986288845956470/posts 
17
Mars - History, Evolution, Present and the Future

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Mars - History, Evolution, Present and the Future

  • 1.
  • 2. History & Origin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Early Evolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Global Expansion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Modern Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Company Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Recent Efforts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Company DNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Social Media Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . 17 2
  • 3.  Founded by Franklin Clarence Mars and his son, Forrest Edward Mars.  In 1902, Frank ran a wholesale candy firm in the Minneapolis/St Paul area but it was not a success.  By 1910, he moved to Seattle to set up again but within a year he lost everything.  In 1914, his third candy business in Tacoma, Washington went bankrupt.  He landed back in Minneapolis, where he sunk his last $400 into yet another candy-making venture, the Mar-O-Bar Co. and hit on a winner with Victorian Butter Creams.  In 1924, they produced a chocolate bar named Milky Way and their business grossed a staggering $800,000 3
  • 4. 4  By 1928, Mar-O-Bar Co. was relocated to Chicago and a year after, they had a much bigger factory crammed with new equipment in which they could produce twenty million Milky Way bars a year.  In 1930, Frank invented the Snickers bar and in 1932, Three Musketeers, pushing company sales to $25 million.  Mars was substantially big at this point and the relationship between father and son eroded, Frank kicked Forrest out and gave him $50,000 and the foreign rights to Milky Way. Fifteen months later Frank was dead from a heart attack.
  • 5. 5  In 1933, Forrest moved his family to Switzerland and took hourly jobs on the factory floors of Jean Tobler and then Nestlé to learn for himself the secrets of Swiss chocolate-making.  Come August 1933, Forrest made a deal with Cadbury’s industrial sales department to supply him with their chocolate and the first Mars Bars appeared on the shelves  In 1934, Forrest bought Chapple Brothers, a struggling British dog food company, the second leg of the future Mars Empire  In 1939, Mars Ltd was Britain’s third-largest chocolate company behind Cadbury and Rowntree’s  That same year, the Second World War intervened and Forrest returned to the US
  • 6. 6  By 1940, a joint venture between Frank and Hershey’s president’s son was sealed, creating M&M’s - Mars & Murrie, M&Ms Ltd.  In 1944, Uncle Ben’s Rice was launched with the help of advertising guru Leo Burnett  By 1954, M&M’s tagline “Melts in your mouth, not in your hands” was hammered into the nation’s brains by the M&M’s cartoon characters  By 1956, M&M’s was the best-selling chocolate product in America, grossing $40 million a year
  • 7. 7 UK  The US’ best-sellers, Snickers and M&M’s, were launched in United Kingdom under the names of Marathon and Treets, and were joined by Topic, Twix, Spangles, Tunes and Lockets.  In 1979, they launched the two-piece canned pet food and by late 1990’s they switched to pouches. Western Europe  In 1951, the first Mars Bar hit France followed by imports of dog and cat food brands in 1959.  In 1961, the West German sales office for chocolate products opened  In 1993, exports of pet foods in New Zealand had gone so well that Mars purchased a pet food factory there to ramp up production  Mars is by far the dominant pet food manufacturer in Australia and New Zealand, with around 50% market share
  • 8. 8 Australia/New Zealand  In 1954, Mars signed a deal with MacRobertson’s, Cadbury’s main competitor in Australia  In 1965, they launched Pal and Whiskas in Australia and build a pet food factory the next year.  Purchased Masterfoods a local maker of herbs and spices Eastern Europe  Mars chocolate products appeared in Hungary in 1989  In 1991, food and pet products were added to the distribution network  A chocolate factory opened in the summer of 1995 for the cost of $140 million and produced nine different products. A pet food factory opened the same year.  By 2012, the company had nine factories supplying Russia and the rest of the CIS.
  • 9. 9 China  In 1990, the company opened its first sales office and decided to focus on M&M’s.  By 1996, M&M’s were not driving enough profit so they switched to the Dove chocolate bar  By 2005, Snickers and M&M’s took a more prominent position and Mars was the clear market leader  The company now has four factories in China, two for pet foods and two for chocolate, supplying the ever-growing Chinese market and also exporting to other Asian countries Middle East  In 1998, Mars opened their first chocolate factory in Dubai to service the entire Middle East  By 2013, a new factory in Saudi Arabia was opened
  • 10. 10 Latin America  In 1995, the first factory in Mexico was opened  In 2002, they bought Lucas World, another candy manufacturer  Mars is now market leader in both pet food and confectionery in Mexico
  • 11. 11  By the end of the 1950s, the Chicago plant had been expanded  Forrest bought Thomas’s, a firm that made all manner of pet accessories: dog leads, fish and budgerigar food amongst them  In 1955, he set up a British drinks vending company, Four Square.  In 1959, they launched Whiskas.  In 1966, Mars bought the Kal Kan firm  In the mid-1970s, Hershey was finally overtaken, whilst in the UK, Mars would soon be on the verge of overhauling both Cadbury and Rowntree’s  The US pet business moved to adopt UK recipes and brand names such as Pedigree and Whiskas.  Mars sponsored the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles and this was a success in US businesses  Outside the US, Snickers was known as Marathon and M&M’s as Treets
  • 12. 12  Changing brand names that had been around for decades was a bold and forward-thinking move, but in other areas the business had become a lot more cautious under the new regime.  In 1982, Mars had passed up the chance to have M&M’s feature in the film ET  Mars had been offered first refusal on the Cadbury deal but had declined.  In 1986, they purchased Dove Bar International Inc., makers of a hand-dipped ice cream bar.  In 1989, Mars Inc. switched track on new product development on differently flavored brand extensions. The same year their Dove subsidiary launched ice cream versions of 3Musketeers, Snickers and Milky Way.  In 1997, Mars purchased Seeds of Change, an organic seed company.
  • 13. 13  The global head office has always been a tiny affair with fewer than 100 staff  There are only six levels of management between the factory floor and the family members themselves.  In the early 1990s, management experimented with combining the various product sectors into single organisations by country, but it was not a success and was quietly abandoned in the larger markets.  In 2001, Mars created a formal Board of Directors – all family members together with a small number of outside advisers  The original four divisions - Petcare, Chocolate, Food and Drinks - have more recently been joined by Wrigley.
  • 14. 14 2002  Wrigley’s bid of $12.5 billion 2006  Doane Petcare company, a largely private label company but with excellent manufacturing and distribution set-up that could be immediately deployed to improve the Kal Kan operation 2007  Added Nutro Products Inc., a manufacturer of high-nutrition, high-performance natural dog and cat foods  Mars’ pet foods major product recall 2009  Another major product recall by the quality-obsessed Mars management 2013  Mars has committed to shipping no chocolate products that exceed 250 calories per portion
  • 15. 15 The Five Principles of Mars Quality The consumer is our boss, quality is our work and value for money is our goal. Responsibility As individuals, we demand total responsibility from ourselves; as associates, we support the responsibilities of others. Mutuality A mutual benefit is a shared benefit; a shared benefit will endure. Efficiency We only use resources to the full, waste nothing and do only what we can do best. Freedom We need freedom to shape our future; we need profit to remain free.
  • 16. 16  Mars Inc. has annual sales of over $30 billion, operates 401 factories and offices in 73 countries and employs over 70,000 associates.  The company has eleven brands with annual sales revenues of over $1 billion (Pedigree $4.7bn, Snickers $3.6bn, M&M’s $3.5bn, Whiskas $2.8bn, Dove $2.6bn, Orbit $2.5bn, Milky Way/Mars Bar $2.4bn, Extra $2.2bn, Uncle Ben’s $1.6bn, Royal Canin $1.5bn, Twix $1.5bn).  Over 90% of company sales come from three categories: Pet Care, Confectionery and Gum. It is the world’s largest confectionery company, Snickers and M&M’s are the world’s best-selling confectionery products.  It is probably fair to say that the business model developed by Forrest Mars Senior and the brands developed by successors Frank and Forrest have been resounding successes.
  • 17. Website: www.mars.com/global/index.aspx LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/mars Facebook: www.facebook.com/Mars Twitter: twitter.com/Marsglobal Instagram: instagram.com/mmschocolate Youtube: www.youtube.com/user/Mars Google+: plus.google.com/112416986288845956470/posts 17