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PROCTER & GAMBLE-GILLETTE MERGER By: Christine Cruell Kamika Hemphill Antjuan Seawright Jonathan Toney
33

Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

Apr 28, 2015

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Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt
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Page 1: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

PROCTER & GAMBLE-GILLETTE MERGER

By: Christine Cruell

Kamika Hemphill

Antjuan Seawright

Jonathan Toney

Page 2: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Page 3: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

PRODUCTS

Three main product lines: household and personal care food consumer heath care products

Recent merge with Gillette Competitive advantage

Page 4: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

DOMINANT FIRMS

Procter and Gamble, Nestle, Unilever, L’Oreal, Colgate-Palmolive, Revlon, Bic, PepsiCo, Sara Lee, and Kimberly Clark.

Success factors: positive brand image availability of products the ease of access

Page 5: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

VISION AND MISSION

Vision“Be, and be recognized as, the best consumer

products and services in the world” Mission

“Procter and Gamble will continue to serve consumers by continuously innovating products that will allow us to be leaders in household and personal care, health care, and food products. To produce products with the utmost care to give nothing but quality to our communities. And to continue to grow so that we can maximize our shareholder’s wealth.”

Page 6: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

Page 7: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

Economic Factors Social Factors Technological Factors Political Factors Ecological Factors

Page 8: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

ECONOMIC FACTORS SOCIAL FACTORS

Concerned with nature and direction of economy in which the CP industry

Threat/Opportunity

Concerned with beliefs, values, opinions, and lifestyles of people

Threat/Opportunity

Page 9: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS

Focus on technological changes affecting the industry: New Products, improvement in existing products, manufacturing and marketing techniques

T hreat/Opportunity

Page 10: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

INDUSTRY ANALYSIS

Page 11: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

CONSUMER GOODS INDUSTRY5 FORCES MODEL Buyers: large impact on industry

Large retailers-Wal-Mart, Kmart, Target Rivalry: keeps industry thriving

Differentiation, advertising, promotions, price, customer service and quality

Threats to Entry: heavy impact on industry productivity Mergers and acquisitions

Page 12: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

CONSUMER GOODS INDUSTRY5 FORCES MODEL CONT… Substitutes: no huge impact

Competitive products replacement Private label brands and small label brands-only

real substitutes Suppliers: no threat to the industry

Raw materials can be obtained anywhere

Page 13: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

COMPANY PROFILE

Page 14: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

VALUE CHAIN ANALYSIS

Primary Activity Marketing and Sales=Brand Recognition

Support Activities Research Technology-RFID

Page 15: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS

Page 16: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS

Key Data from Bal. Sheet Total Assets

138,014.00 135,695.00

61,527.00 57,048.00 43,706.00

Page 17: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS (CONT’D)

Key Data from Income Statement Net Income

10,340.00 8,684.00 6,923.00 6,156.00 5,186.00

Page 18: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS (CONT’D)

Key Ratio’s Gross Margin Debt/Equity Ratio Current Ratio Quick Ratio Return On Equity Return On Assets Return On Capital

Page 19: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

RATIO ANALYSIS

Key Ratio’s Gross Margin Debt/Equity Ratio Current Ratio Quick Ratio Return On Equity Return On Assets Return On Capital

PG Nes Uni Ind 51.8 30.8 14.5 20 .54 .67 .78 .84 .9 .8 .7 .98 .6 .11 .4 .7 16.8 30 32.3

30.9 7.9 8.3 10.9

9.6 10.2 13.4 17.6

13.4

Page 20: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

SWOT SUMMARY/CORE ISSUE

Page 21: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

SWOT

Strengths product variety and

diversification Line of shaving

/grooming products Supply chain

technology

Weaknesses Constant

innovation= higher prices for consumers

Page 22: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

Opportunities Globalization

Threats Private labels

Core Issues: Overlap in

management Overlap in P&G-

Gillette products (I.e. Old Spice deodorant and Right Guard deodorant)

Expensive products

Page 23: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

LONG TERM OBJECTIVE AND STRATEGIC SCENARIOS

Page 24: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

LONG TERM OBJECTIVES

Generic Strategy: Differentiation Grand Strategies:

Innovation Conglomerate diversification Concentric diversification Strategic alliance

Page 25: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

SCENARIOS

Best

Worst

Likely

Page 26: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

CORPORATE LEVEL STRATEGIC ALTERNATIVES

Page 27: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

CORPORATE LEVEL STRATEGY

Stay in same SBU’S Get into new SBU’S

Keys to success Proper asset mgmt Possible change of

mission statement

Page 28: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

CORP LEVEL STRATEGY

Best Case Expand to new mkts Grow by 30%

Worst Case Lose Mkt share Fail to expand

Most Likely Grow by 10% Continue current

corporate strategies

Page 29: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

BUSINESS LEVEL STRATEGIC ALTERNATIVES

Page 30: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

BUSINESS LEVEL STRATEGY

Generic Options Low Cost Leadership Differentiation

Pros/Cons of both

Rivals Unilever Colgate-Palmolive

Page 31: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

GRAND STRATEGIES

Low Cost Leadership Concentrated Growth Market Development

Differentiation Product Development Innovation

Page 32: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

STRATEGIC CHOICE

Page 33: Procter & Gamble 9.30 Section.ppt

STRATEGIC CHOICE

Corporate level strategy: Get into new SBU’s.