oC ELEBRATING 7 5 YEARS
Transcription
oC ELEBRATING 7 5 YEARS
o Ec a lb C E L E B R A T I N G 7 5 Y E A R S Celebrating 75YEARS of history Contents 19 23 –1929 C H A P T E R ON E : G U I D E D BY A D REAM 5 1930–1939 C H A P T E R TW O : B U I L D I N G ON A F OUNDATION 11 194 0 –1949 C H A P T E R TH R E E : S H I F T I N G INTO H I G H G EAR 17 19 5 0–1959 C H A P T E R FO U R: BU I L D I N G B U S I N E S S IN P OSTWAR AM E R I C A 23 19 60 –1969 C H A P T E R FI V E: MA S T E R S OF I NNOVATION 29 1970–1979 C H A P T E R S I X: JO I N I N G THE GIANTS 35 198 0 –1989 C H A P T E R S E V E N : OV E R C O M I N G TO U G H C H A L L E N G E S 43 19 90 –199 9 C H A P T E R E I G H T: F O C U S E D ON T H E FUTURE 51 © Copyright 1998 by Ecolab Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any manner without written permission. References appearing in italics in this book represent trademarks or product names of Ecolab Inc. Inquiries should be addressed to: Ecolab Inc. Corporate Communications 370 Wabasha Street North St. Paul, MN 55102 U.S.A. Library of Congress Number: 98-073812 INTRODUCTION I n 1923, Ecolab began with a single product, a single employee and a single-minded dedication to being the leader in cleaning and sanitation. As we celebrate our 75th anniversary, that powerful vision has become a reality. Today the Ecolab family is a $2.5 billion global enterprise with nearly 15,000 associates. We serve industrial, institutional and hospitality customers in more than 150 countries around the world. > Throughout its history, Ecolab has achieved its leadership position by being better at what it does than anyone else. We’ve anticipated customers’ growing needs, providing exceptional service and technologically advanced products and systems. We’ve continually moved the industry forward, contributing to a cleaner, more attractive and healthier world. Our size, scope and expertise today would undoubtedly surpass our early founders’ wildest expectations. > While technology has been crucial, it is people who have played the most important role in Ecolab’s success. Since 1923, the spirit, pride, determination, commitment, passion and integrity of our employees have made this company great. Therefore, this book is dedicated to those associates who, over the years, have built a solid foundation for our growth. > I am proud to stand at the helm of this outstanding company as we celebrate a long history of innovation and leadership. I also look forward to the next 75 years, because I know the best is yet to come. Allan L.Schuman President and Chief Executive Officer 4 CHAPTER 1: 1923-1929 Guided by aDream Before he founded Economics Laboratory in 1923, Merritt J. Osborn spent nearly 30 years in search of a product with a future. Osborn, known as M.J. to friends and co-workers, quit high school at 16 and went to work for a pharmaceutical company as a stock boy, then a salesman. His 15-year career in sales and promotions took him to companies in Chicago, New York and San Francisco. In 1908, he settled in St. Paul to work for Hamm’s Brewing Company and raise his family. B y 1911, M.J. was ready to take on his own business. He ing down the street. He wanted something that would be used up opened an automobile dealership for White Steamer daily, if possible, and go down the drain.” In one brief, ill-fated venture, M.J. marketed a rat poison Touring Cars at a time when horses and buggies clogged St. Paul’s narrow dirt roads. World War I ended his successful auto called Cyanatox. Warm weather caused the Cyanatox cans business, so he sold tractors instead. to split open and emit noxious fumes; federal inspectors deemed He switched to Ford Motor Company at the end of the war, a the product unsafe and shut down production. decision that would ultimately break him. Henry Ford, in defi- Then M.J. hit on another idea. He recalled from traveling ance of Wall Street, used his dealers and distributors to gener- that hotel rooms were out of service for up to two weeks when room carpets were sent to the cleaners. He hired ate the capital he needed. Overloaded with inventory, M.J. a chemist to formulate Osborn was forced out of business in a product to clean carpet in the rooms. 1923. At age 44, he was back to He named it Evaporato. square one, with a wife, two sons, and only $5,000 to his name. Economics Laboratory is born In 1923, M.J. Osborn formed the Evaporato Down the drain M.J. was drawn back to his early days Company, but the name in business. “His automobile experience was short-lived. M.J. rethought his had a very deep effect on his choice of a business strategy and renamed his new venture,” said his son, Steve Osborn, years later. “Country dealers almost always < C OLLAGE . Clockwise, from top left: had to take in a team of horses for a tractor New York City skyline, 1920s; Chicago skyline, 1929; portrait of Ecolab founder Merritt J. Osborn, completed in 1951. sale, and he used to hate to see them com- < E VAPORATO. Economics Laboratory’s first product was a carpet cleaner called Evaporato , later renamed Absorbit . 6 CHAPTER 1: GUIDED B Y A DREAM < E N D I C O T T B U I L D I N G . Economics Laboratory got its start in a three-room office on the sixth floor of downtown St. Paul’s Endicott Building. The company later moved to a larger office in the building’s basement. > I DA KO R A N . M.J. Osborn hired his first employee, Ida Koran, to manage the office while he built the business. A lifelong employee, Koran established the Ida C. Koran Trust for Ecolab employees upon her death in 1967. product Absorbit and his company Economics Laboratory, to On March 10, 1923, Economics Laboratory posted its first sale reflect his hopes for the future. The new company would be to Herman’s Cafe in Faribault – 100 pounds of Absorbit at “economic” by helping customers save time, labor and costs. a total cost of $18. Later that year, the company moved to a basement “suite,” The company’s products would be backed by “laboratory” research. Economics Laboratory’s motto, “Saving Time – which included a small back room for production. The staff Lightening Labor – Reducing Costs to Those We Serve,” was grew with the addition of a burly, jack-of-all-trades named printed on company stationery. George Meixner and two young ladies to make sales calls to St. Paul businesses. Meixner mixed and packaged Absorbit by day, In 1923, M.J. rented three small rooms on the sixth floor of St. Paul’s Endicott Building. He hired a local then vacuumed and scrubbed rugs at night in offices throughout carpenter, Elmer Linnerooth, to build a mortar box for mixing the city. “A very nice little business was developed on this,” said Absorbit, and he purchased a five-pound scoop. Then he visited Koran. “Actually, it was our only source of income.” Homemakers liked the product, too, so the company started the L. C. Smith Typewriter Company to purchase a typewriter and told the clerk he was looking for a secretary. She contacted selling eight-ounce packages through grocery stores. It was a a friend named Ida Koran and arranged an interview. decision they would soon regret. Absorbit was tricky to use, and “Mr. Osborn told me something about the ideas he had and the wrong mix brought disastrous results. “It got so that when- painted quite a picture, but actually there was nothing tangible at ever I lifted the telephone I was afraid I would hear a hysterical all,” said Koran. “This was all a dream and in the future, and I woman screaming that her rug had been ruined,” said Koran. really didn’t see where he had Economics Laboratory abandoned the retail business a job to offer me, though at the same time and concentrated on hotels, streetcars, railroad lines and I thought he was a very fine gentleman.” other commercial customers. These customers had no Ida Koran refused M.J.’s job offer, but he complaints, was persistent. He called her ten days later about but another problem arose. A little Absorbit went a long way. One order lasted a long time, so repeat freelance dictation. This time he sold sales were slow in coming. her on a $100 a month job. “There was just one promise that Mr. Osborn made which he didn’t keep,” said Koran. “He promised me that I wouldn’t have to work hard, I was really going to have very short hours, and the whole job would be a picnic.” < AB S O R B I T The job was no picnic. M.J. worked up to 14 AND S O I L A X . After struggling with slow Absorbit sales, Economics Laboratory achieved success with its hours a day, seven days a week as administrator, salesman, mixer and packager. Ida Koran was second product – Soilax.The chemical cleaner was perfect for use in mechanical dishwashers, a growing technology. the resident secretary, bookkeeper and floor sweeper. > E CONOMICS L ABORATORY S TOCK . M.J. Osborn con- vinced a few local business leaders to invest in his fledgling company. A $5,000 investment by Charlie Stott in 1924, shown in this stock certificate, helped Economics Laboratory succeed. 6 CHAPTER 1: 1923-1929 < A BSORBIT B OX . Absorbit, Economics Laboratory’s first product, cleaned carpets on the spot, eliminating the need to send carpets to the cleaners. > S O I L A X BA R R E L . In its early years, Soilax was packaged in wooden barrels and shipped to customers by rail. In the late 1920s, production moved to Chicago. Teetering on the edge mechanical dishwashing. Automatic dishwashers had been around By 1924, Economics Laboratory was in serious trouble. Bills since the 1860s but didn’t clean dishes well. However, technolo- were piling up and the initial $5,000 nest egg was long gone. gies were improving, and the transition from hand to machine After incorporating in February 1924, M.J. struggled to save the washing was beginning. The chemically formulated, non-suds- business. From morning until night he walked the streets of down- ing Soilax was a great improvement over ordinary soap. It was town St. Paul, knocking on doors and looking for investors. also easy to make. The three ingredients could be stirred together After weeks of grueling effort, his persistence paid off. Charlie with a garden hoe. And for two years, that’s how it was done. Stott of the Stott Briquette Company liked M.J.’s story, so he Economics Laboratory received its first patent on bought $5,000 in Economics Laboratory stock. He sent M.J. to May 11, 1926, for Floroscene, a concentration indicator see Alex McDonnell of Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, who in Soilax. The breakthrough product became the company’s invested another $5,000. Osborn returned to the office with foundation. $10,000. “He was really walking on air,” said Koran. “It didn’t take me very long to get the $10,000 into the bank and begin The pink powder paying some of our bills.” Conditions at the Endicott Building were challenging. The basement was cold and drafty. Myrtle Shoemaker, Soilax breaks through who joined the company in 1924, had to dump a mouse out of Business was out of the red and in the pink – in more ways than her desk drawer almost every day. one. Absorbit’s limited market potential had prompted M.J. to With the addition of Soilax, pink dust was soon sifting into search for other new products. He acquired one from a young the main office from the production room, covering everything. University of Minnesota chemistry student named Leonard H. “I would have a few pink and some green marks on my face,” Englund, who had developed a simple but effective cleaning said Koran. “And no matter how much I would scrub, when I compound. M.J. named the new product Soilax – based on got home “soil” or dirt, and “lax” for loosen. I usually had some of the Soilax Soilax’s magical color siftings on me.” change was the market- By 1925, the company had ing clincher. In powder outgrown its basement form, Soilax was pink. dwelling and moved to 2540 When mixed with water University Avenue, in the proper proportions, a small building in St. Paul’s the solution turned green. If Midway district. too much Soilax was added, A year later, the company it turned yellow, warning the moved again to customer that the solution was too strong. M.J. recognized Soilax’s potential for 7 CHAPTER 1: GUIDED B Y A DREAM < G EORGE M E I X N E R . Economics Laboratory hired its second employee, George Meixner, in 1923. In the late 1920s, Meixner moved to Chicago to set up and manage the company’s first production facility. > WASH B OILER DI S P E N S E R . Economics Laboratory first demonstrated its technological expertise in 1928, when it patented the first Soilax dispenser for mechanical dishwashers. Cutting-edge technology, combined with superior products and service, became a company trademark. Searching for salesmen the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company warehouse at 2694 University Avenue. A 100-pound mixer had replaced the mortar Through most of the 1920s, M.J. Osborn was virtually a one- box and hoe. Soon they were receiving raw materials by the car- man band, acting as sales manager, purchasing agent, production load. “This was the most eventful period in our history,” said M manager, and with the help of George Meixner, factory manager. J. Osborn, years later. “Soilax was clicking. We were now in M.J. personally hired every salesman. big-time manufacturing.” Unfortunately, many early salesmen were not polished pro- In the late 1920s, the company moved yet again and split its fessionals. With the introduction of Soilax, Economics operations. “We found ourselves receiving chemicals from Laboratory hired its first traveling salesman – Daddy Ash – to Chicago, compounding them and shipping them right back to cover St. Paul and surrounding towns. An unsophisticated, col- and through Chicago,” said M.J. Osborn. So headquarters moved orful character, Ash signed his correspondence, “Yours to a cin- to the Minnesota Building in downtown St. Paul. George der.” His rattle-trap car was an embarrassment to M.J., and his Meixner took the 100-pound mixer with him to wardrobe was bizarre. “He had a bunion on his foot, he wore the Crooks Terminal Building in Chicago to handle business in white socks, and he had the front part of his shoe cut away,” the East. recalled Steve Osborn. In 1928, Economics Laboratory invented and patented the Recruiting salesmen was difficult for a small company with first “wash boiler” dispenser that injected Soilax into a dish- limited products and resources. Keeping them was even harder. washing machine. Modeled after a toilet, the dispenser con- Training was minimal. A new salesman rode with another for a tained a float, which dropped as the solution level fell, few weeks and watched him work. Then he got an order blank, eventually opening a water inlet valve. Less than a dozen dis- a briefcase, and he was on his own. pensers were built due to high cost and complicated design. But it marked the beginning of the company’s expertise in mechanical technology. 9 CHAPTER 1: 1923-1929 < E.B. OS B O R N . M.J. Osborn’s son, Edward Bartley, known as E.B., joined Economics Laboratory a year after his brother, Steve, but stayed on for life. He began in sales, moved into management and took control of the company after his father’s death in 1960. > S.A. OS B O R N . After graduating from Dartmouth, Steve Osborn joined Economics Laboratory in 1927, eventually specializing in advertising and promotion. M.J.’s guiding philosophy from Dartmouth and joined the sales force. His proving ground Despite the difficulties, M.J. set high standards for his was New York City. For E.B., Economics Laboratory was an all- company regarding products, people and technology. Those consuming passion – one that would shape his life and that of guiding principles demanded that: the company. n n n n Products must fill an existing need that was not being satisfactorily met. Disaster in Chicago Economics Laboratory would be a leader in developing new “I have no employees, only associates,” M.J. was fond of products and technology. saying. He was called upon to demonstrate this team spirit soon When entering a new market, Economics Laboratory would after production moved to Chicago. George Meixner was work- know more about the cleaning processes of ing alone in the Chicago warehouse one Saturday, when he that industry than anyone else, including the customer. stepped into an open elevator shaft. He lay broken and bleeding The company would deliver excellent customer service. for hours until discovered by a night watchman. When M.J. got In M.J.’s mind, service was undeniably linked with sales and the news, he immediately contacted Chicago’s best doctor and was an overriding priority. “Accept the customers’ problems as hopped a plane. M.J. remained in Chicago for two months. By if they were your own,” was M.J.’s philosophy. Therefore, day, he donned coveralls and took George’s place in the factory, Economics Laboratory salesmen not only sold the product but manufacturing Soilax, lifting barrels and drums, and supervising also trained customers in its use. When problems arose, the shipments. At night, he was in the hospital at George’s bedside. salesman was expected to solve them. “Sometimes that service Good care helped Meixner pull through. Thanks to M.J., the was nothing more than punching prune pits out of a dishmachine health of the company was also stable. tube,” said former President and Chief Operating Officer Fred Lanners. “But the salesman was there. And when he left, he left his ‘calling card,’ a special card that indicated to the customer, in writing, that the job was done.” Second generation comes on board In 1927, M.J. Osborn’s son Steve completed his college degree and joined the company in sales, then in advertising and promotion. In 1928, his son Edward Bartley, known as E.B., graduated B U I L D I N G . In 1926, Economics Laboratory moved to its third location – the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company – along St. Paul’s University Avenue. < WE Y E R H A E U S E R > C H I C A G O F ACTORY , 1920 S . Strong business growth in the eastern United States and a good transportation system made Chicago the logical location for the company’s first production plant. 10 ‘‘Have faith in us, in yourself and in Soilax, and be profoundly convinced that it will pay people to do business with you. you.’’ CHAPTER 2: 1930-1939 Buildinga Foundation The hard times brought on by the Wall Street crash of 1929 were slow to reach Economics Laboratory. Soilax was a superior product and hotels and restaurants were eager to buy it. But most sales were made on credit, and, as the Depression deepened, customers started falling behind on payments. “The 1929 crash did not affect us for another two or three years,” said Steve Osborn. “We commenced to feel it in 1932 and things became pretty tight. We almost went under in 1933.” To keep the company afloat, employees gave up one month’s salary and took a cut in pay. N “ o class of men have experienced more discouragement expected to sell Soilax and also hire, train and supervise and faced greater obstacles in the last two a sales force. Many new hires weren’t up to the task. years than have salesmen,” M.J. Osborn wrote in a 1934 New Resignations and firings were frequent, and customer problems Year’s message to employees. “Have faith in us, in yourself and were commonplace. And when things went wrong, it was up to in Soilax, and be profoundly convinced that E.B. Osborn to make things right. it will pay people to do business with you.” That year, after two After six years in New York, E.B. returned to St. Paul years of operating in the red, Economics Laboratory finally net- as sales manager in 1934, with a $250 monthly salary ted a profit of $98.19. and a meager expense account. For the next 12 years, he virtually lived on the road. One business trip kept The growing him away from home from January 10 until August 22. national market E.B.’s location varied; his routine did Armed with Soilax, Economics not. He arrived in a city by train, Laboratory diligently expanded checked into a hotel and picked up its sales organization. One a city map. Then, with rented car, by one, cities throughout the Midwest and the East joined the Economics Laboratory domain. By < S O I L A X L E T T E R H E A D . In the 1930s, the mid-1930s, the company employed about 34 so-called “pow- Economics Laboratory built a solid business on the success of its most popular product – Soilax . der peddlers” in St. Paul, Des < C OLLAGE . Clockwise, from top left: In the 1930s, a downtown Minneapolis billboard at the corner of 7th St. and Hennepin Avenue promotes the benefits of Soilax; an EL chemist practices “Research in Cleanliness;” George Meixner oversees the Chicago factory. Moines, Detroit, Chicago, Cincinnati, Kansas City, New York and Boston. The man in charge of each city was 12 CHAPTER 2: BUILDING A FOUNDATION < H OME O F F I C E ST A F F, G L O B E B U I L D I N G, 1935. Front row, left to right: A.N. Larson, Ida C. Koran, E.B. Osborn, M J. Osborn, S.A. Osborn, H.W. Collins, John L. Wilson. Back row: Edna Appel Devine, Myrtle Johnson Shoemaker, Dora Lee Nelson, Bertha Spanenberg McElligott, Isabel Sixl, Linda Jarvinen Shreir, Della Johnson he called on customers to resolve problems and conducted cold those maps impressed customers. E.B.’s extensive knowledge calls to drum up new accounts. Working with local employment and his description of company research added even more agencies, he identified and interviewed potential salesmen and punch to his presentations. carefully checked their references. At the end of each long day, Product demonstrations were standard sales procedure. Each E.B. returned to his hotel, jotted down voluminous notes on the salesman in the 1930s was provided a black suitcase containing day’s activities and typed correspondence on his portable type- a thermos bottle full of hot water, a glass dish, writer. He personally trained the men he hired throughout the a sponge, a package of Soilax and pieces of aluminum to week and on weekends. By 1937, Economics Laboratory had demonstrate the merits of Soilax to prospects on the spot. salesmen in 35 cities across the country. Salesmen passed on sales tips through the Economics Reporter, a company newsletter begun in 1933. To sell Selling scientifically MikroKlene, a germicidal rinse introduced in 1935, a The psychology of selling was a passion for E.B., and he sought salesman wrote: “I fill a glass with soda water and show the to make it a science – a science he had learned the hard way. restaurant manager the thousands of tiny bubbles that appear on Lack of training, coupled with his natural shyness, had made his the sides of the glass. Then I fill another glass with soda water earliest sales efforts painful and unrewarding. He overcame his that has been well washed with MikroKlene. Few, if any, bub- handicaps through astute observation, meticulous planning and bles will appear. Bubbles are caused by grease and are the careful record keeping. The result of an improperly cleaned and unsanitary glass. Coca- sales techniques culled from his own experience helped him Cola® salesmen hammer and harp on this point, for the libera- form tion of carbon by soiled glasses makes a a standard selling system for the sales relatively inferior drink.” organization. Round-the-clock service “Informational selling” was instilled in every company salesman. “You sell But it often took more than sophisticated during a Depression by going to no end sales techniques to justify the high price of of trouble to find out all of the cus- Soilax. Service was the answer, and E.B. tomer’s problems, by studying some of Osborn turned his salesmen into dishwash- their methods so that we know some of ing consultants. them better than they do themselves…that’s thinking salesmanship,” E.B. wrote to salesmen in the 1930s. E.B. supplemented his own < I NNOVATIVE P R E M I U M S. Soilax relied on a variety of innovative premiums to help it compete in the retail market. sales presentations with visual aids, including maps of hard and soft water > F REE A DVERTISING. An independent areas. The enormous variation in trucking firm won the Soilax delivery contract in Chicago in the 1930s by providing a little free advertising. cleaning problems indicated by 13 CHAPTER 2: 1930-1939 < Economics Laboratory salesmen like Emil Briel helped hardware store owners from Des Moines to Omaha develop eye-catching Soilax displays. In this Sherwin-Williams store, Briel’s display, coupled with the two-for-one giveaway, captured customer attention. > ULYSSES S. G RANT. Loyal and tenacioussales veterans suchas Ulysses S.Grantwent to great lengths to help the companysucceed. In addition to sellingthe product,Grant invented the company’s first usable Soilax dispenser and had it patented in 1933. Soilax salesmen not only sold the product but also fixed and was a farm kid, you know.” But he got the business, and eventu- maintained the dishwasher, trained kitchen employees to use it ally worked his commissions up to $1,400 a month, ten times properly, analyzed dish handling procedures and recommended the average. ways to minimize breakage. They were on call 24 hours a day. Hardware stores discover Soilax Paul Evans, who joined Economics Laboratory in Philadelphia in 1936, was the type of salesman the company was While Economics Laboratory salesmen were promoting the looking for. Whatever it took to get the business, Evans was virtues of Soilax for mechanical dishwashing, others were using game. One time, an owner of a small restaurant decided to have it as an all-purpose cleaner. “We couldn’t understand why hard- some fun with the enthusiastic young salesman. ware stores were buying so many barrels of Soilax,” said Ida “If you wash the dishes tonight and you do a good job and the Koran. “We discovered that they were packaging it in five- product works like you say it will, I’ll buy it,” the man said. pound paper sacks and selling it to housewives for a dollar. They Evans returned at 5 p.m. and started washing dishes. Hour by would scoop it out of the barrel just like the old time grocer used hour, dirty dishes poured in. He wondered how such a tiny to scoop sugar.” Painters and contractors were also using Soilax restaurant could serve enough customers to generate so many for washing and cleaning walls before painting. Des Moines dirty dishes, but he continued to work doggedly. At 2 a.m., after salesman Emil Briel picked up quickly on the new market and washing the last plate, he asked began to supplement his restaurant and hotel business by calling an employee where all the dishes came from. The employee on paint and hardware stores. Two Des Moines salesmen, known as “the Myers boys,” pointed outside to a long row of parking spaces where cus- observed Briel’s success at hardware stores and persuaded tomers could order and dine in their cars. “I’d never seen what is known as a drive-in,” recalled Evans. “I 14 CHAPTER 2: BUILDING A FOUNDATION < D R . W I L S O N . Economics Laboratory’s commitment to scientific cleaning inspired M.J. Osborn to add a Ph.D. chemist, Dr. John L. Wilson, to the company staff in 1931. Wilson led the company’s research effort for 20 years. > B I L L PO D A S . Chemical engineer Bill Podas joined Economics Laboratory in 1938. When he retired in 1983, he headed the company’s multi-million dollar research and development center and was the last remaining employee to have been personally hired by the company’s founder. M.J. to package Soilax for the grocer. In 1935, Soilax was ments. “Economics Laboratory” and “Soilax, A little does a lot,” offered to grocers in a one-pound blue box. “It gave our men an was emblazoned on the side of at least one truck. additional product to sell, and it helped increase their earnings,” said Steve Osborn. “Many of them were making $12,000 a year Research in cleanliness in 1938.” Dr. John L. Wilson began his 20-year career with Economics Laboratory in 1931, as head of company research. In his one- The company backed its grocery effort with innovative premiums, including goldfish bowls, scrub pails and the like. But room laboratory, Doc Wilson mixed cleaning compounds, con- without a hefty advertising budget to promote the new consumer ducted product tests, washed bottles and worked with salesmen product, grocery sales were going nowhere. In less than a year, on new ideas. One Economics Laboratory abandoned the retail grocery market and innovative salesman, Ulysses S. Grant, a descendant of reclaimed the blue-boxed Soilax. the famous U.S. general, was granted a patent for the company’s first workable dispenser in 1933. Spreading the word A young chemical engineer named Bill Podas found In 1937, Economics Laboratory repackaged Soilax in a bright red a wife and a career at Economics Laboratory in 1938 and dou- box picturing a hand wiping a sponge across the front. “Loosens bled the research staff to two. “I took the streetcar from dirt, dissolves grease,” it declared. “A little does Minneapolis to the old Globe Building,” he said. “When a lot.” Print ads were placed in women’s magazines and color I got up to the sixth floor, I saw a sign on the door saying Sunday newspaper supplements, premiums were offered and ‘Economics Laboratory, Inc., Manufacturing Chemists.’ radio commercials aired. And, thanks to Chicago plant manager I went inside. There was a receptionist and that girl – the first George Meixner, the company person I ever saw at Economics Laboratory – was the girl I mar- got free promotion from the trucking firm handling its ship- ried.” 15 CHAPTER 2: 1930-1939 IN 1934. Chicago plant manager George Meixner inspected packages traveling through the semi-automatic carton filling and sealing machine in 1934. By 1939, the Chicago facility included 10 employees and a second-hand automatic packaging machine that could produce 30 packages per minute. M A K I N G SO I L A X “Bill, you look like our kind of folks. Do you want to go to Two years later, Economics Laboratory incorporated a new work for us?” asked M.J. after a brief interview. “I did at $125 a chemical, called sodium tetraphosphate, into a new and improved month. Then I thought about it, and I said, ‘Mr. Osborn, what dishwashing detergent. The company terminated distribution of kind of business are we in anyway? Do we manufacture chemi- Calgonite for its new product – Super Soilax. Calgon retaliated cals?’ and he said, ‘No, we will someday. Right now we’re with a patent lawsuit to block production of Super Soilax. Had mixing cleaning compounds for restaurants, hotels, painters and the tide turned against it, Economics Laboratory would have housewives,’” recalled Podas. His first job was formulating a suffered a severe and possibly fatal financial blow. But after new floor wax, called Satin Wax. intense litigation, Economics Laboratory emerged victorious. Despite its limited size, Economics Laboratory’s research efforts were the crux of the company’s scientific sales The end of the decade approach widely promoted in company advertising. By the late In 1937, 13 years after incorporating, Economics Laboratory 1930s, ads for new Super Soilax featured a paid its first dividend of $1 per share. Thus began an uninter- scientist in a lab coat with test tubes promoting “Research in rupted stream of annual dividends and stock splits, fueled by Cleanliness.” strong company growth. By 1939, Economics Laboratory sales were at the half mil- The Calgon fight lion mark, and about three dozen salesmen covered the country. In 1934, a competitor developed sodium hexametaphosphate, a Ten people manned a small Chicago factory, which had installed water conditioning chemical that greatly reduced filmy deposits a used automatic packaging machine capable of producing 30 left by automatic dishwashing detergents. The new Calgonite was vastly superior to Soilax. So the Osborns went to Pittsburgh and persuaded Calgon to make Economics Laboratory the exclusive distributor of the new miracle product. Suddenly, salesmen were being instructed to sell Calgonite against Soilax. It outsold Soilax three to one. packages a minute. A newly purchased plant in New Jersey was up and running. Back at home, more than a dozen people worked at company headquarters, which had moved into the Guardian Building in 1939. “Those were exciting times,” recalled John Johnson. “We worked hard at our jobs and we were a close knit group.” But Economics Laboratory, < S UPER S OILAX . The success of Soilax led and the country, would soon to a dizzying array of Soilax spin-offs including Soilax A, Soilax B, Soilax C , and Super Soilax, shown here, which was introduced in 1937 to combat competitor Calgonite. face another challenge. > G UARDIAN B U I L D I N G. Economics Laboratory moved into the ninth floor of downtown St. Paul’s Guardian Building in 1939. By 1963, the company occupied all but the ground floor. CHAPTER 3: 1940-1949 Shifting into HighGear In 1940, Economics Laboratory was making a name for itself with Soilax. Testimonial letters praising the effectiveness of Soilax poured into company headquarters. “It’s wonderful,” said one writer. “I put it in the bath water for my cocker spaniel and she emerged with a beautiful lustrous coat. So my daughter decided to use it in her shampoo with apparently marvelous results.” The versatility of Soilax was the subject of another writer, who used it to clean leather shoes, mixed it with shaving soap and added it to furniture polish. Other customers wrote of powdering a baby’s bottom with Soilax during diaper changes, sprinkling it on a steak as a meat tenderizer and adding it to toothpaste. T he success of Soilax created something of a black War II, brought a sudden and dramatic shift in the company’s market for the product, a problem that turned salesmen direction and an entirely new product focus. into sleuths. The company newsletter was filled with reports of people selling cases of Soilax out of back alleys and car trunks. MikroKlene to the rescue One Michigan salesman posed as a meat cutter in a Grand Rapids When the war began, the nation quickly transitioned grocery store to get access to a back room, where the illicit sup- its production capacity to support the war effort. Within months, plier’s name and address were filed. the military requisitioned Economics Laboratory’s small, newly acquired property in Newark, New Jersey, and converted it into By 1942, sales at Economics Laboratory topped the a military facility. In million dollar mark for the first time. But the Japanese attack Washington, D.C., the War on Pearl Harbor one year Production Board started to earlier, followed by ration America’s entry into World raw materials. Companies producing non-essential products were nearly > M IKROKLENE L A B E L . brought to a standstill. MikroKlene was developed in 1935, To stay in business, but its true value didn’t emerge until the U.S. entered World War II. MikroKlene, kept the company in business during the war years. Economics Laboratory had to do its part to support the troops. 18 C HAPTER 3 : SH I F T I N G < T RAIN LOADING AT INTO HIGH G EAR C H I C A G O F ACTORY . Before the war erupted, Soilax was the company’s mainstay. Cartons of Soilax were shipped by the carload to distributors around the country. > A UTOMATIC PA C K A G I N G , 1940S . By 1940, Economics Laboratory was packaging 600 cases of Soilax B each day. This automatic packager ran 24 hours a day during the spring cleaning season to meet consumer demand. Luckily, the key to continued operation was close at hand. In scrounged things; we drove all over and picked up anything that the 1930s, Doc Wilson and a University of Minnesota microbi- we could find that we thought we might need.” In Brooklyn, ology professor had developed MikroKlene ACS-4, employees salvaged old wire where they could find it. In a powerful germicidal disinfectant used to sanitize milk cans and Greenwich Village, they cruised alleys looking for discarded glasses. The product was a natural solution to a major military motors. At the plant, the chemicals used to make MikroKlene threat – disease. The crowding and unsanitary conditions sol- were caustic and irritating to eyes and skin. A shortage of work- diers endured in army camps made amoebic dysentery spread like ers made production even more difficult. “In two years, we had wildfire. In 1942, Economics Laboratory was granted the con- two Christmas days off,” said Beyer. “We worked seven days a tract to produce MikroKlene ACS-4 for shipment to the front. week, sometimes as much as The contract gave the company 24 hours a day, until we dropped.” the raw materials needed to maintain production and a guaran- When Beyer did finally collapse with the flu, the Osborns, teed customer – the United States government. who were staying in New York, took him in. M.J. packed him Soon the use of MikroKlene germicidal dishwashing rinse into a cab and checked him into an adjacent room at the was standard procedure in military installations throughout Gotham Hotel. Mrs. Osborn nursed him back to health. Europe and the Pacific. Tubs of MikroKlene solution were Sales from MikroKlene enabled the company to add a new placed on the decks of transport ships and in Army camps in Chicago factory in 1944. After the war, the company sold its every corner of the world. After washing his mess kit with Brooklyn plant and moved back to Lyndhurst, New Jersey. soap, each soldier finished the job by dipping it in Company management toyed with the idea of moving a MikroKlene solution. The chemical was also used to wash Economics Laboratory headquarters to Lyndhurst, as well, but fresh fruits and vegetables in tropical areas. roots were strong in St. Paul. They decided to stay put and focus Economics Laboratory eventually made 100 million units of the company’s resources on research and the development of new MikroKlene during the four years of the war. “MikroKlene was products. the single product that kept Economics Laboratory going,” said Despite its conservative business approach, new technolo- Bill Podas. gies began to creep into the office environment. A state-of-the-art duplicating machine purchased in 1945 Hard times during the war was front page news in the company newsletter. A new tele- In 1942, the company moved its production operation phone switchboard, complete with central reception and 23 into an abandoned warehouse in Brooklyn, New York, and phone stations, was another impressive modernization. “We Chemical Engineer Bill Beyer was charged with getting didn’t have computers and fancy equipment,” said John it up and running to produce MikroKlene. “There was no Johnson. “We kept a tight rein on finances and operated on gut glass in the windows. It was just a shell,” said Beyer. “There feeling and instincts. We had to turn pencils was nothing to work with because we were at war. We just in and get them resharpened.” ON PAGE 16. Clockwise, from top: World War II soldiers sterilized their mess kits in MikroKlene solution; a former soldier returned to work at the Brooklyn plant in 1946; glassware sparkled after a Super Soilax cleaning. Postwar growth < C OLLAGE Massive changes hit the nation in the postwar era. Labor costs soared throughout the U.S., and labor unions gained 19 CHAPTER 3: 1940-1949 < O U T D O O R A D V E R T I S I N G . In postwar America, Soilax regained its premier position as the top selling product at Economics Laboratory. This 1946 billboard touted the economy and cleaning ability of Soilax to American homemakers. strength. Restaurants and hotels could no longer afford That was really the first time we were differentiated from our to hire people to wash dishes by hand, as most had done before competition.” Service, not product, became the bedrock of the company’s the war. success. “Nobody wants to buy a detergent, they want clean Responding to this opportunity, Economics Laboratory’s research team introduced new dishwashing machines, electronic dishes,” said Lanners. “So we got them clean dishes. We gave dispensers, heavy-duty detergents and rinse additives to the all the credit to our product, but it was really our sweat and institutional market. The company backed its new products with work that made it work.” exceptional customer service. Happenings on the home front In 1946, the company introduced the first electronic dishwashing dispenser. This major advance in technology allowed Big things were also happening in the consumer area in the post- the dish machine to sense the concentration of detergent, like a war years. Tract home developments were springing thermostat. In 1948, the company developed the first rinse addi- up like weeds all over the country, as soldiers came home eager tive. It seemed that dishes unloaded from restaurant dishwashers to marry and settle down. Modern kitchens, complete with an were never completely dry. Kitchen workers had to finish the array of electric appliances, were part of job with a dishcloth, which contaminated the dishes. But the the new era. Suddenly, the home dishwashing machine new rinse additives caused water to sheet off the dishes, dramat- was a high volume appliance. Young homemakers were particularly interested in ically speeding the drying process. Injecting it into the dish- dishwashing machines and the company washer was the next challenge. was eager to show them the wonders of this new W.C. “Red” Sannor, a New Jersey salesman during the war convenience. Economics Laboratory hired a years, made equipment servicing and training a priority in his sales home economist, named her “Alice White,” efforts. “Sannor found out he and put her to work answering questions could sell like mad if he went mailed in by homemakers. At the same time, in and made sure everything Economics Laboratory representatives vis- was working right,” said Fred ited neighborhoods, randomly knocking on Lanners. “When M.J. saw how doors, and demonstrating new products to effectively he was developing housewives. “We’d take the machine out, business in New Jersey, he brought show them how to rack them, how much him in to become service manager detergent to use, and check water hardness,” said Podas. and teach everybody to do it his way. The company worked hard to move new products and technology into the field. Bill Podas and > M AGAZINE A D. This full-page ad for Super Soilax , featuring the brand’s germ-killing effectiveness, appeared in magazines geared to the hotel, restaurant and food industries throughout 1944. 20 C HAPTER 3 : SH I F T I N G INTO HIGH G EAR W I T H PANS . Homemakers kept their pots and pans gleaming with Pan Dandy, a specially formulated cleanser developed to scrub away tough cooking stains. < H OUSEWIFE > M.J. E.B. In 1946, M.J. Osborn (seated) and his son E.B. Osborn worked hand in hand at the company’s Guardian Building headquarters. AND other research specialists traveled from coast to coast, work- few complaints and returns and the promotion was, of course, ing with salesmen on product development and technical service discontinued.” and getting clearances from health departments, plumbing departments and electrical departments. The company worked The company divides into two markets with appliance manufacturers such as General Electric, In 1948, the company separated into two sales divisions. The Westinghouse and Hotpoint to get Economics Laboratory’s new Kitchen Division catered to hotels, restaurants, schools and dishwashing detergents approved for the new dishwashing other institutions. The Packaging Division served consumers machines. through wholesale and retail outlets. The success of Soilax had sparked variations on the well-rec- Prizes and promotions ognized brand name in both divisions. The Kitchen Division Throughout the 1940s, advertising budgets for Economics marketed three types of Soilax for mechanical dishwashing: Laboratory products were minimal. Ads for Soilax continued Soilax Formula A was used in soft water areas, Soilax Formula appearing in women’s magazines and on local radio. Prize give- C was used in moderately hard water areas, and Super Soilax aways were a promotional mainstay, sometimes with hilarious was marketed for hard water use. There was also Super Soilax results. Heavy-Duty for tougher mechanical cleaning jobs. In addition, there was Tetrox, formulated for hand washing, and Pan Dandy, A regional coffee company had run a successful promotion that awarded registered wire-haired fox terriers to prize winners. for pot and pan scrubbing. MikroKlene rounded out the divi- Economics Laboratory decided to run a similar radio promo- sion’s product line. The Packaging Division sold Soilax Formula A to grocery tion. The “Why I Like Soilax” promotion awarded live canaries to the best customer entries. “We stores, and Soilax Formula B to paint, hardware and variety got a very good mail response,” recalled Steve Osborn. stores for use as a general cleaner. It became evident that one “Unfortunately, this was in the spring, and we didn’t realize that product could not support an entire division. Also, the names canaries molt in June and they don’t sing. We did get quite a were getting too confusing. The company decided to capture the new home dishwashing market with a fresh new consumer product. Super Soilax Heavy Duty was renamed Electrasol, in reference to the new “electric” appliance trend. It was the first detergent made for home dishwashing machines and it was an immediate hit. < E L E C T R A S O L A N D PAN D ANDY. In the postwar years, Economics Laboratory’s research efforts yielded a number of successful new products, including Pan Dandy, a pot and pan cleaner, and Electrasol, the first powdered detergent exclusively developed for automatic dishwashers. > D I S H W A S H I N G D IVIDENDS . In 1946, E.B. Osborn wrote and produced “Dishwashing Dividends,” thefirst of several colorand sound motion pictures. During the shooting, Osborn, right, discusses a film take with Professor H.B. Meek at Cornell University’s Hotel School. 21 CHAPTER 3: 1940-1949 ANNIVERSARY . In February 1949, Economics Laboratory celebrated its 25th anniversary with a banquet at the Hotel Lowry in downtown St. Paul. Bill Podas, left, Master of Ceremonies, welcomes M.J. to the celebration. Ida Koran (seated, left) and Mrs. M.J. Osborn join M.J. at the head table. < 25 T H rather than ‘Soilax,’” said Bill Podas, who helped produce the Electrasol’s success secured the company’s consumer market position at a crucial juncture. Competition was heating up. film. Salesmen carried a projector and a reel of Dishwashing Retail giant Procter & Gamble had launched Spic & Span in Dividends on sales calls, and it was viewed by public health 1947 and put millions into promoting it. Within a year of Spic & departments, schools, restaurant managers and trade associa- Span’s introduction, Soilax sales dropped 40 percent. Soilax tions. Within ten years, this widely viewed training film was recovered, but it was clear that Economics Laboratory was up averaging 200 showings against the giants in the per month. ® E.B. followed his film success with Flying Saucers, a film on general cleaning market. But with Electrasol, the company had how to prevent breakage, and Spotlight on Breakage, a film teaching the upper hand in home dishwashing. dishroom employees proper dish handling techniques. E.B. goes Hollywood E.B. Osborn’s belief in the power of visual selling made him The first 25 years quick to incorporate new techniques and technologies into sales In February 1949, Economics Laboratory employees gathered presentations. His first effort was in 1940, when he produced a together to celebrate the company’s 25th anniversary at the slide show at the United Airlines commissary at Chicago’s Hotel Lowry in St. Paul. Mr. and Mrs. M.J. Osborn were guests Midway Field. In 1946, he teamed with a New York motion pic- of honor, and eight employees with more than 20 years of ser- ture company to produce this early work, called Dishwashing vice joined them at the head table. Among them were Dividends, as a full-scale color Company Secretary Ida Koran; Vice President and film. This unique training film on institutional warewashing General Manager E.B. Osborn; Vice President and took such a soft sell approach that it contained no product refer- Advertising Manager Steve Osborn; Stenography Depart- ences. “We went so far as even changing the nameplate on our ment Head Myrtle Shoemaker; Sales Correspondent electronic dispenser when it was filmed so it read ‘detergent’ Isabel Sixl; General Sales Manager P.R. Evans; Office, Credit and Purchasing Manager A.N. Larson; and Director of Research Dr. John L. Wilson. As a gift for his 70th birthday, M.J. Osborn was presented with an “executive’s refrigerator” to match his office furniture. When he took the podium, Osborn spoke with pride of the company which included 130 employees in St. Paul, 100 salesmen, and 100 manufacturing employees in Chicago and Lyndhurst, New Jersey. “You haven’t seen anything yet, as far as Economics Laboratory, Inc., is concerned,” he told the crowd. How right he was. 22 ‘‘I liked the fact that it was a small company, and you trained with a salesman.’’ Al Schuman CHAPTER 4: 1950-1959 BuildingBusiness in Postwar America In 1950, M.J. Osborn resigned his position as president of Economics Laboratory and passed responsibility on to his son, E.B. As chairman of the board, M.J. continued to actively participate in company management. But E.B. brought numerous changes. Getting the house in order I to its existing locations in Chicago and Lyndhurst, n the late 1940s, a group of salesmen broke away from New Jersey. The company also divided its research department Economics Laboratory to join a competitor, a former com- into Analytical, Institutional Product Development, Consumer pany employee. It was a major blow to E.B. but also a wake-up Product Development, and Home Service, call. Working from opposite ends of the country, E.B. and Sales a departmental liaison that linked the consumer with Manager Paul Evans visited, evaluated and retrained every company headquarters. Finally, Economics Laboratory moved its executive offices to member of the salesforce in a drive to get back to the fundamentals that had built the company. New York City in 1954. As E.B. reasoned, 80 percent of the This “new religion,” as Evans called it, produced a strong new company’s business was in the east. The major advertising agen- sales and management team to drive the company’s two new cies were based there. Air travel was becoming the preferred mode of business transportation, and New York was a major divisions to new heights. transportation hub. Growth and the need for greater efficiency were driving reorgani- New dairy division zation in other areas as well. In In 1950, Economics Laboratory 1953, the company added turned to opportunities a Santa Clara, California, plant in the dairy industry, a natural fit with the > E LECTRASOL . Electrasol was company’s institutional a hit with homemakers in the growing suburbs of postwar America. dishwashing expertise. At the time, dairy sani- < C O L L A G E. Clockwise, from top: Economics Laboratory opened a dairy division in 1950; New York skyline in 1957; intensive research created new and improved products. tation was a major industry problem. Because of improper 25 CHAPTER 4: BUILDING BUSINESS IN POSTWAR AMERICA < N EW D A I R Y DIVISION . Economics Laboratory ventured into the dairy business by washing milk cans and cleaning dairy operations in the Upper Midwest. The company eventually led the industry with its Clean-In-Place system, an automated cleaning system that thoroughly cleaned dairy processing systems at the touch of a button. cleaning and refrigeration, a quart of milk had a refrigerated dark green china was prone to water spotting. The system elim- shelf life of three days at best. Furthermore, traditional cleaning inated water spots and dried the dishes instantly, so the restau- methods caused milk cans to corrode quickly. rant manager called M.J. Osborn to rave about it. “Start making Economics Laboratory devised new products and equipment those things as fast as you can,” said Osborn after seeing the that delivered superior results. Soon the company was looking equipment demonstration. for salesmen to build a new Dairy Division focused on The new RP3 system was designed to inject revolutionary Minnesota, northern Iowa and western Wisconsin. “Most of the new Rinse Dry into final rinsewater. The Rinse Dry dairy industry was in the small towns and rural areas,” recalled system was exhibited at the National Restaurant Show in Fred Lanners. “As the dairy division expanded, we found that Chicago in 1953 to great industry acclaim. Soon Economics there wasn’t any coverage there by our Institutional men. So we Laboratory was selling dispensers at $495 apiece, a radical got the bright idea, we might as well sell our Institutional prod- departure from the company’s traditional practice of providing ucts.” Combination territories were formed and Economics free equipment. Laboratory extended its reach into America’s hinterlands. Rinse Dry was a highly profitable product. “It was really about that point when we started making money,” said Research takes off Lanners. Growing use of molded plastic dinnerware by institutions in the 1950s was presenting a range of dishwashing challenges – and Consumer Division comes on strong opportunities. Coffee staining was one problem. Abrasive By 1953, Economics Laboratory’s leading automatic cleansers destroyed the plastic’s surface. The company’s solu- dishwashing detergent, Electrasol, was competing with tion was Dip-It, a chemical bath that lifted out coffee stains from Calgonite, and the company was conducting lab tests plasticware and coffeemakers without corroding or abrading the to improve the Electrasol formula. surface. Dip-It became a leading product in hotels and restau- Adding chlorine to the dishmachine cycle dramatically rants. In 1952, it was packaged for home use and sold through improved cleaning results. But all drip bleach dispensers cor- grocery stores. roded the dishwashing machine. When Neither glass nor plastic dinnerware the lab developed a formula using dry dried readily in high-speed dishwashing chlorine, the results were outstanding. machines. Restaurants needed to wash “We developed the first stabilized chlo- dishes fast and stack them dry and unspot- rine detergent formula which we called ted. So in 1954, the company introduced #221,” recalled Bill Podas. “We worked the first rinse injector equipment to accom- with the Hotpoint laboratory in pany its other recent industry break- Chicago, and they liked through – rinse additives. our new formula very much. The products were tested at The Golden Rule restaurant in downtown St. Paul, whose expensive 25 CHAPTER 4: 1950-1959 < D IP - I T. Plastic dinnerware gained popularity in the 1950s and presented new product opportunities for Economics Laboratory. Dip-It, a noncorrosive chemical cleaner that safely removed coffee stains from plastic cups and coffeemakers, was a hit with institutions and consumers alike. > F INISH PA C K A G I N G. Economics Laboratory added a second automatic dishwashing detergent brand in 1953. By adding chlorine to the wash cycle, the new Finish improved cleaning results without corroding the dishwasher. Economics Laboratory goes international Hotpoint recommended that we change our Electrasol formula to #221. We were concerned because the cost of pro- By the early 1950s, Economics Laboratory products were ducing the new formula was 50 percent higher than in demand outside the United States. Many inquiries came from the cost of the existing Electrasol. E.B. conceived the idea Canada, and an Institutional salesman in Buffalo, New York, of a second brand, and he had a name – Finish.” began to service a few accounts across the border. By 1955, there was enough business in Canada to form a sales territory, and the Hotpoint gave Finish a ringing endorsement and helped launch it. “We ran off 50,000 copies of a letter to company contracted with a Canadian manufacturer to produce Hotpoint dishwasher dealers and distributors coast to coast,” Economics Laboratory products for the new area. In 1954, Olaf Stark, then general manager of passenger flight said Podas. “This led to grocery distribution, and Finish appeared next to Electrasol on the grocer’s shelf.” services for SAS worldwide, discovered Economics Laboratory It became a million-dollar product in its second year. while visiting the SAS flight kitchen at New York’s JFK In 1955, the company introduced its rinse additive to Airport. Impressed with the products, Stark put up $2,000 for 10 the consumer market under the name Jet-Dry and convinced percent of a new venture in Stockholm, Sweden, and Economics General Electric to build rinse injectors into home dishwashing Laboratory invested an additional $18,000. The subsidiary, machines. Soon, Electrasol, Finish and Jet-Dry were the prod- Soilax A.B., Sweden, became Economics Laboratory’s first ucts homemakers looked to for dishwashing perfection. European subsidiary in 1956. This opened the door to the world. With a budget of Consumer product expansion followed quickly. The company acquired Essential Chemical, $70,000, Fred Lanners was instructed to Inc., of Milwaukee, and its product called develop international operations throughout Fun, a controlled sudsing laundry detergent. Europe. From Sweden it was an easy step to Strong competition from All hampered suc- Norway, Denmark and Belgium. Travel stops cess, so the company turned to other opportu- through London led to a subsidiary nities. Soon it was brokering consumer in England, then the rest of Western Europe. ® International operations generally adopted the products includingRed Bear copper ™ ™ cleaner, Ammident toothpaste and Kiwi ™ Soilax name because Economics Laboratory was too difficult shoe polish. to pronounce, and it didn’t translate well. In the Western Hemisphere, business was also opening up. In 1958, a New York sales< R I N S E DRY. Wet dishes and water spotting man moved to Mexico City to service U.S. on china were a continual problem for restaurants until Economics Laboratory introduced the Rinse Dry system at the National Restaurant Show in Chicago in 1954. hotel chains. This led to the formation of Soilax de Mexico. S.A.Venezuela followed, > F I N I S H A D V E R T I S I N G . In the 1950s, most of the along with a multitude of countries. Soilax advertising budget for the company’s Consumer Division products went into print advertisements in women’s magazines. became a truly international product. 26 CHAPTER 4: BUILDING BUSINESS IN POSTWAR AMERICA < F R E D L ANNERS . Fred Lanners established Economics Laboratory’s first European operations in the mid-1950s. He was named president and CEO in 1961. > N EW S A L E S TERRITORY IN C ANADA . In 1955, Economics Laboratory opened its first international sales territory in eastern Canada. Fred Lanners, then head of International Operations, formally announced the opening. A solid sales approach like there wasn’t anybody I couldn’t sell, because it was In the midst of dramatic growth and expansion, the so simple the way that E.B. taught it to us.” In 1957, Al Schuman was one of the Institutional Division’s company’s two-tiered sales system remained the same throughout the 1950s. Each person came on board as a junior salesman, new junior salesmen. “I liked the fact that it was paired with an established salesman for 18 months. The junior a small company, and you trained with a salesman,” he said. For salesman traveled with his senior partner, learning what to do the first two years, he spent every Saturday afternoon and why. The senior salesmen introduced the new man to key at his supervisor’s house, learning about products and ways to customers and gave him leads. He also contributed to the sell them. Two years after being hired, he was promoted to terri- junior’s salary, and the company made up the difference. In tory manager. return, the senior man got a low cost assistant. Spreading the word on Soilax Intensive training kept the senior salesman sharp and helped the junior get up to speed quickly. For the first month, the In 1956, consumer advertising for Soilax reached 33 million junior spent every day with his senior partner. After about 90 homes, two-thirds of the nation’s households. Sales promotions days, most new salesmen were on their own. Most territories like the Soilax Derby aired on local radio stations. A bugle call split at the end of 18 months, with enough business for both. signaled the start of the Soilax Derby race. The first woman to “That’s the way our company ran our Institutional Division for get to the grocery store and holler “Soilax!” got a free package. the first 20 years,” recalled Larry Hodges, former senior vice “It worked pretty good for a while,” said Steve Osborn. “It got president, who joined in 1950. to the point where women would get into a dispute as to who was first. And of course the grocer didn’t like to argue with the Planning and reporting were part of every salesman’s daily women. That was the end of that.” regimen. “We had a little route book at E.B.’s insistence. Imaginative institutional salesmen were given a wide berth Salesmen were instructed to make up a work plan every night for the next day,” said Hodges. Salesmen also had demonstra- in promoting company products. “When I was a salesman in tion and sales technique instructions. “I felt New York, I made my own cards that said ‘Al Schuman, the Soilax Man in Queens,’” he said. Schuman also drilled holes in the roof of his service truck and attached a “Product of the Month” display. DE M E X I C O . Economics Laboratory opened an office in Mexico City in the late 1950s, forming Soilax de Mexico. Since the company’s name was difficult to translate, international offices generally took on the Soilax name. < S OILAX > C AP T H E D OG . Master salesman Ulysses S. Grant attracted lots of attention at institutional trade shows with his dog, Cap. The friendly black lab frequently made the rounds with a bucket of Soilax samples. 27 CHAPTER 4: 1950-1959 < A L S C H U M A N , J U N I O R S A L E S M A N. A hardworking and innovative young man named Al Schuman joined Economics Laboratory as a junior Institutional salesman in New York’s Queens borough in 1957. GOES P U B L I C . In 1957, Economics Laboratory conducted an initial public stock offering to generate the capital needed to support company growth. The transition to public ownership signaled a new era in company management. > EL Veteran salesman Ulysses S. Grant was one of the most private sales of common stock, several issues of preferred inventive. In his home workshop, Grant built an Economics stock, mortgages and bank borrowings. “In those days, Laboratory display for trade shows at his own expense. you had to write to M.J. and tell him you wanted to buy some He draped the booth in black velvet and attached a Soilax logo stock, and then you went on a waiting list,” said Ken in glittering rhinestones. He took his black Labrador retriever Markwardt, former senior vice president of finance, who Cap to trade shows. Cap carried a bucket of Soilax samples to bought his first 10 shares in 1953. “If he approved of you, then each attendee and waited until the person took a sample. Then he you could buy some.” wagged his tail and moved on. Trade show invitation replies often In 1957, all that changed. With annual sales of $28 million and included the postscript: “Please have Mr. Grant and his dog Cap a net worth of approximately $3 million, Economics Laboratory present.” went public with an offer of 100,000 shares A live duck Grant used to demonstrate the effectiveness of a at $15 per share. new wetting agent was also a popular draw. When Grant put The company needed the money to grow and also to buy a additive into the water tank, the swimming duck sank, amazing product called Soil Off for $1 million from the SOS Company. onlookers. The banks had balked on a $1 million loan, In St. Paul one year, Grant joined a parade down Kellogg saying Economics Laboratory’s ratio of debt to earnings was too Boulevard for “Clean Up and Paint Day.” He covered his car high, and there wasn’t enough cash in reserve. with crepe paper and installed a chair on top where Grant’s wife The public offering gave the company the money it Helen sat, throwing Soilax samples to the crowd. needed. Unfortunately, new liquid detergents introduced by competitors quickly captured the market, and Soil Off Economics Laboratory goes public foundered. Within a few years, it was abandoned. Until 1956, Economics Laboratory was owned by the Osborn family, company employees and several private investors. Decade’s end Growth had been financed through periodic Economics Laboratory ended the decade with 1,000 employees and sales of nearly $30 million in three company divisions – Institutional, Consumer and Industrial, which incorporated dairy and other new markets. The company occupied offices in New York and six floors in downtown St. Paul’s Guardian Building. A separate mechanical manufacturing facility operated on St. Paul’s Como Avenue. And the company produced products in a fully automated new Chicago facility and in plants in New Jersey, Dallas, Toronto and California. International operations were expanding rapidly. The company was poised for another decade of growth. 28 Our company has enjoyed record growth and successful operations for more than forty years.’’ ‘“ CHAPTER 5: 1960 TO 1969 Mastersof Innovation When Merritt J. Osborn died in January 1960, the company he had founded was a powerhouse of scientific sanitation. With 1,000 employees and nearly $37 million in sales, Economics Laboratory, generally known as EL, served 60,000 U.S. customers through a network of more than 450 salesmen in 16 district sales offices. Six plants in the U.S. and Canada manufactured EL products, which were trucked to customers from 80 warehouses scattered throughout the country. Subsidiaries in foreign countries were spreading the Soilax name worldwide. The Institutional Division still anchored the company and generated 65 percent of annual revenues. The Consumer Division contributed another 30 percent and a start-up Industrial Division was making inroads in dairy and industrial cleaning. “We are not flying any longer by the seat of our pants,” said E.B. Osborn in a 1960 message to the sales force. Acquisitions fuel company growth E Klenzade’s pioneering development of Clean-In-Place (CIP) L had taken tentative steps into the dairy business cleaning was the most exciting aspect of the acquisition. The in the late 1950s. In 1961, the company acquired CIP system eliminated the need to break down and hand wash Klenzade Products, Inc., an established leader in dairy dairy plant pipes and valves. EL’s timed and controlled rinses plant cleaning and sanitizing. With Klenzade, EL acquired 90 and cleaning solutions, forced through a CIP pipe system, technical sales and research personnel, a new 80,000-square- allowed a dairy plant operator to clean miles of pipes with the foot manufacturing plant in Beloit, Wisconsin, licensees in Italy push of a button. Klenzade’s CIP system spread to dairy farms, and Mexico and distributors in Canada and Puerto Rico. dairies, meat and poultry plants, bottlers, breweries and canners. “Klenzade had a national sales force The aseptic filling techniques Klenzade developed to combat and a complete line of products,” said Ken Markwardt. “We bacteria in were able to integrate the 10 or 12 territory managers we had in our Dairy Division into the new Klenzade Division.” < K L E N Z A D E . Klenzade Products, Inc. was a leader in dairy sanitation when it was acquired by Economics Laboratory in 1961. The company renamed its Dairy Division the Klenzade Division to capitalize on Klenzade’s established reputation. CHAPTER 5: MASTERS OF INNOVATION < K L E N Z A D E ’ S O R I G I N A L F ACTORY . The Klenzadeacquisition brought Economics Laboratory a new 80,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Beloit, Wisconsin, the dairy heartland. > K L E N Z A D E L UBRICATING P R O D U C T S. By the mid-1960s, Klenzade technology was being applied to a wide variety of food processing applications. The KlenzJect system, shown here, provided controlled, continuous lubrication and cleaning of food conveyer systems used to produce citrus products, baby food, frozen pies and other foods. us that you couldn’t mix chlorine with a caustic because the milk were later applied to bottled and canned draft beer and two of them would blow up or something,” said Larry Hodges. fruit juice, dramatically improving flavor and shelf life. “But they did develop a way to put both ingredients into the After the Klenzade acquisition, EL explored opportunities in same barrel. And those products were Impact and Score.” aviation, transportation cleaning, metal processing and the It took a solid year of development, testing and modifica- paper industry to develop its small Industrial Division. The new direction culminated with the 1964 acquisition of Magnus tion, followed by a process to fine tune production Chemical Co. Inc., of Garwood, New Jersey, a leader in marine, and packaging before Score was market ready. Advertising and aviation and industrial cleaning. Magnus’s three plants and 22 promotion, including the movie, “The Score Story – Research international, independently owned licensees bolstered EL’s & Development of Machine Warewashing,” backed up the global presence. “Its customer list reads like ‘Who’s Who’ in sales force. A revolutionary new defoamer was another breakthrough. American industry, and its direct sales effort is backed by 160 trained men,” said E.B. Osborn in 1965. That year, the division “Pump and spray action creates a lot of foam hired a four-man team of retired Army Aviation Board members in the dishwashing machine,” said Bill Mizuno, who to tap the military market. EL also acquired Magnus licensees in was hired in 1943 as a scientist. “Air gets into the pump, Hawaii and Norway and purchased a 50 percent interest in you lose pressure and you get very poor dishwashing. Magnus Brazil. The defoamer suppresses the foam so you won’t have the pump lock problem.” Salesmen began carrying eye drop- Smaller EL acquisitions included the Moran Company, a small Dallas dishwashing compound business, and J. Nelson pers of defoamer on calls to quench foam in front Prewitt, Inc., a consumer products company in Rochester, New of the customer. Like product innovation, service continued to differentiate the York. Matey, a bubble bath for children, was Prewitt’s major product, but it didn’t succeed. After two years, EL wrote off the company, and in the mid-1960s, EL put a name on it. “It is the $150,000 loss on the Prewitt investment. company’s objective and constant aim to render to our customers what we like to call ‘Total Responsibility’ Products and service differentiate EL Early in the decade, EL’s new liquid products were replacing powdered, general-purpose cleansers like Soilax. In 1963, EL achieved another cleaning breakthrough. “The R&D guys had always told < C OLLAGE . Page 28, Clockwise from top: Salesman Al Schuman at the 1964 World’s Fair; Construction of the Osborn Building in 1967; Bulk chemicals used in Economics Laboratory products. > I MPACT A N D S CORE . In the 1960s, liquid commercial cleaners combining chlorine and highstrength alkali and polyphosphates replaced traditional powdered detergents as the institutional cleaners of choice. 31 CHAPTER 5: 1960 TO 1969 < S O I L A X PAMPHLET. During the 1960s, the International Division became a significant contributor to the company’s growth and success. Advertising and promotional materials reflected this important new market emphasis. > S A L E S M A N , V E N I C E , I TALY . Dressed in his white lab coat, an Institutional Division territory manager in Venice, Italy, unloads his gondola on the way to a service call. for end satisfaction with the product and its benefit,” Upgrading manufacturing said E.B. Osborn. This approach required salesmen EL expanded and modernized plant facilities throughout the to work with senior reps for two years to develop their 1960s. In 1960, the outdated Santa Clara and Glendale opera- technical knowledge of products, equipment and on-the-spot tions were consolidated in San Jose, joining operations in trouble shooting before getting a territory of their own. The Chicago, Dallas, Lyndhurst and Toronto. Klenzade and Magnus extended apprenticeship made EL salesmen experts in their added manufacturing facilities in Beloit, Wisconsin, and specialized fields with a professional approach to servicing Garwood, New Jersey. A third New Jersey plant – in accounts. Woodbridge – was completed in 1967. Magnus channeled efforts into three areas – metal working, Reducing freight costs was a major concern. “We were ship- transportation, and pulp and paper. Klenzade developed a “Total ping a heavy product and needed locations throughout the United Cow Care” system for the dairy farm market. Institutional States, ” said Ray Wheeler, former vice president of manufactur- launched the “Utility Man” program to cross-train dishwashers, ing and quality assurance. “We debated whether we should porters and other foodservice sanitation workers in related jobs. have a lot of small satellite plants or whether we should have The program improved efficiency, productivity and worker fewer large plants.” The company chose the latter. retention. EL also began to buy chemicals in bulk. “Before, everything was in bags and drums and manhandled,” said Bill Beyer. “We International rides growing economy would have two guys on fork trucks for an hour-and-a-half and A worldwide improving economy helped the International two or three guys piling the bags. Then we started getting bulk Division expand dramatically in the 1960s. EL established chemicals blown in. The guy backed a subsidiary in France in 1962 and acquired an Italian company in his truck, hooked up and pumped it in. When he pulled out the following year as part of the Klenzade acquisition. At the we had a tank full. It cut our costs tremendously.” same time, EL established operations in Southeast Asia, Contract packaging also generated cash to upgrade plants Australia, New Zealand and Japan. and equipment. EL’s first contract was for Snowy Bleach, fol- In 1963, EL products were distributed worldwide through lowed by Sta-Flo and Sta-Puff laundry starches. direct exports, 10 subsidiary and 15 distributor operations. “It allowed us to buy better, higher speed equipment than we Soilax was a registered trademark in 40 countries and pending in would have been able to justify without those contracts,” said 12 others. EL broke ground for a production plant in Stockholm, Wheeler. Automatic bottle packing for Sta-Flo slashed labor Sweden, the first plant outside costs. Computerized pallet storage increased efficiencies. By the the Western Hemisphere. Division management moved from late-1960s, the company was saving on bulk materials, bulk Toronto and St. Paul to the company’s executive offices in handling and fast, modern packaging equipment. Detailed bud- New York. geting and review by the Data Processing Department enabled By 1969, International consisted of 27 wholly-owned EL to control costs and expenses. Quality assurance labs added subsidiary operations, 50-percent-owned companies in to plants helped Brazil and Japan, 11 licensees and numerous distributors EL improve product quality through on-site testing. in the Caribbean and Southeast Asia. International was now contributing healthy earnings. 32 CHAPTER 5: MASTERS OF INNOVATION < F I R S T C OMPUTER . The enormous size and weight of early computers made installation extremely difficult. In 1959, the company’s first computer was lowered into St. Paul headquarters by helicopter. > B I L L M I Z U N O, S CIENTIST. Bill Mizuno joined Economics Laboratory as a chemist in 1943. During his long career, he invented or co-invented 49 products that received United States or foreign patents. Emerging technology lations designed to protect the public against food and environ- In the early 1960s, electronic technology was still in its infancy. mental contamination. By the mid-1960s, EL was actively Each day, a typical company headquarters switchboard operator researching biodegradable detergents with public health groups, placed about 20 long distance calls and received 40. Direct long chemical manufacturers, trade associations and government distance dialing was being phased in. regulatory agencies, and modifying raw materials and products to meet industry standards. Even so, EL was quick to embrace new technology. In 1959, Biodegradability was resolved and water contamination took the country’s first solid-state Remington Univac computer was installed in the St. Paul offices. In 1961, the Data Processing its place. In 1967, E.B. Osborn and Vice President of Research Department was formed to control inventories and receivables. Bill Podas met with cabinet members of President Lyndon In 1966, EL installed 14 IBM 360 computers in its Guardian Johnson’s administration to study the deterioration of America’s Building headquarters “The capabilities of the system and the lakes, and Podas was named to a federal task speed with which it operates are hard to comprehend,” reported EL Today. The system produced 300 punch cards per minute. Research efforts expand By 1960, EL’s research department held more than 50 patents and employed about 200 people. “We had Ph.D. chemists all around, microbiologists, physicists and engineers,” said Bill Podas. That year, EL purchased 29 acres in Mendota Heights to build a new research center. In 1962, the company completed a $500,000 pilot plant on the new site. Two years later, the Merritt J. Osborn Research and Development Center opened. The 50,000-squarefoot facility included an environmental test chamber, instrument room, microbiology laboratory and test unit and a complete technical library. By the time EL completed the $400,000 mechanical plant, it was time to expand. EL renewed its emphasis on general and fundamental research. An active organic synthesis program enabled EL to create tailor-made molecules. Pure research also allowed EL to meet the new wave of federal, state and municipal laws and regu- > O S B O R N B UILDING . The 22-story Osborn Building dominated St. Paul’s downtown landscape when it was completed in June 1968. The building was constructed primarily of stainless steel, glass and polished black granite – chosen for superior cleanability. 33 CHAPTER 5: 1960 TO 1969 < M.J. O S B O R N R E S E A R C H & D E V E L O P M E N T C E N T E R. The Merritt J. Osborn Research and Development Center, a state-of-the-art research facility named in honor of the company’s founder, opened in 1964 in the St. Paul suburb of Mendota Heights. > O S B O R N BU I L D I N G DEDICATION . Economics Laboratory President and CEO E.B. Osborn, right, joined St. Paul Mayor Thomas R. Byrne at the podium for the dedication of the Osborn Building in June 1968. force researching pollution problems and solutions. “We are executive suite and employee cafeteria. A modern data process- involved in this problem, because we are concerned not only ing center was equipped to communicate with the company’s with making and selling chemical products,” said E.B. Osborn, 110,000 customers worldwide, process 50,000 monthly invoices “but also with what goes down the drain.” and process payroll checks and tax forms for EL’s 2,500 By the late 1960s, about 200 projects in basic research, employees. equipment engineering, product development and pilot produc- It was also the first high-rise in the Midwest equipped with the tion were routinely underway. The process included product Vertical Improved Mail postal system, a postal control station in development, customer panel testing, three district market tests, the basement complete with vertical mail conveyors. The build- pilot plant scale up, area expansion in one plant, national distrib- ing’s cost, including furnishings and original art, was $9 million. ution and quality assurance testing. A grand opening event was held on June 19, 1968, with E.B. On-site testing in institutional and home environments was Osborn, St. Paul Mayor Thomas R. Byrne and other city officials still a vital part of consumer product development. Home presiding. “From the outset, I was resolved that the Osborn Service Supervisor Dorothy Wood and Home Economist Building should project a special quality of cleanliness, an Joanne Huseby traveled the country to interview EL product atmosphere of hygiene, that would speak for the world leader in consumers and worked with 500 Twin Cities homemakers serv- environmental sanitation,” said E.B. Osborn. The Osborn ing as testers for new EL products. The two home economists Building’s “cleanability” received national coverage in Time also personally responded to more than 100 letters each month. magazine and became a corporate symbol. “There were no individual cubicles and telephones,” said Osborn building is a monument to Alice O’Connor, who joined the Data Processing Department sanitation soon after the opening. “Desks were lined “The decision to build our new administration building up in one big room, with one phone for each department and in St. Paul was not difficult to make,” said E.B. Osborn at extension cords all over the place.” a press conference in 1965. “Our company has enjoyed record growth and successful operations in this city for more than 40 Decade’s end years, and we have a sentimental as well as Near the end of the decade, EL was producing more a practical attachment to this community and its people.” than 500 products, including organic raw materials, bulk powders, liquids and packaged goods. In 1969, a Construction of the Osborn Building began on January 24, 1966, directed by Architect Clark Wold. Workers topped it off at sale to the McAlpin Hotel pushed EL over $100 million 13 stories but EL management decided to add another seven sto- in sales. That June, the over-the-counter Market Edition ries. The completed structure was a tower of stainless steel, of Commercial and Financial Chronicle listed Economics glass and polished black granite, encircled by a reflecting pool. Laboratory as one of the 200 fastest growing U.S. companies. Its 22 stories included two sub-street floors and 270,000 square feet of space, including an expansive lobby, general offices, an 34 CHAPTER 6: 1970-1979 Joining theGiants In 1970, EL was first recognized as a major corporate force. Earnings had grown nearly 20 percent annually between 1960 and 1970, placing it eleventh in earnings growth on the Standard & Poor’s ranking of publicly owned corporations. The company had an unbroken record of dividend payments stretching back to 1937. T he turbulent decade brought worldwide recession, mount- The management shift accompanied a flurry of acquisitions. ing inflation, high interest rates and escalating prices on EL acquired Star Filter Company, a Detroit-based manufacturer raw materials and freight. EL adapted by raising product prices of coffeepot filters; Tykor, a specialty and improving manufacturing efficiencies and worker produc- chemicals division of Borden, Inc.; Prodilac S.p.A., a tivity. Lights were turned off and thermostats adjusted to con- leading Italian consumer detergents company, and the remain- serve energy. Distribution warehouses were expanded and ing interest in its Brazilian joint venture. inventory control and management information capabilities Another key acquisition was Raburn Products, Inc., added. And EL continued to thrive by helping customers lower of Wheeling, Illinois, manufacturer of transport carts and dish costs, conserve resources and improve safety and efficiency. In racks for institutional warewashing. The Raburn acquisition 1975, EL squeezed onto the annual list of Fortune 500 compa- became the foundation of the Institutional Division’s special nies, ranking 500. purpose equipment operations, which was later anchored by a state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Fifty year anniversary Elk Grove, Illinois. Following its acquisition, EL gradually EL celebrated its fiftieth year in 1973. That year, extended Raburn’s product offerings from standard molded dish the company achieved its 39th consecutive racks and silverware systems to a wide variety of custom- year of growth in sales and earnings, introduced designed and color-coded warewashing and storage more than 100 new products and expanded systems. Raburn Equipment also extended production capabilities in eight foreign EL’s expertise to a multitude of safety and countries. The year also brought new senior management. E.B. Osborn relin< E COLAB ’ S 50 TH A NNIVERSARY . quished the presidency to Fred Lanners, EconomicsLaboratory celebrated its long history of service excellence during its 50th anniversary year. “Service is Golden” was the theme for the year and was highlighted in the company’s annual report. who had joined EL in 1948. Osborn retained his position as chairman of the board and CEO. < C OLLAGE . Clockwise from top: Developing new products through research; supervised cleaning provided by Environmental Sanitation Services; the company’s Distinguished Service Award. 37 CHAPTER 6: JOINING THE GIANTS < EL R ECOGNITION . By the 1970s, Economics Laboratory’s logo was a recognized corporate symbol. > M O V E F ROM M ANHATTAN. In 1971, Economics Laboratory moved its executive offices from 250 Park Avenue in Manhattan to the suburb of Harrison, New York, near White Plains. The move cut commuting time for most employees, which was a welcome relief. sanitation compliance solutions for commercial foodservice equipped to handle problems with every one. Eight dispatchers providers and laundries. in Memphis handled 300 calls a day through a toll-free number, EL broadened its industrial capabilities by acquiring the freeing up the respective sales forces. Maritec Companies, a group of companies specializing in cleaning chemicals for the international shipping trade. The acquisition Guarding public safety produced a new EL subsidiary, Magnus Maritec International, Throughout the 1970s, EL researchers worked closely with field Inc., based in Palisades Park, New Jersey. specialists, government officials, university experts and public groups to grow the business and serve the public need for sani- Growing use of new, no-iron, permanent press fabrics for table linens, bed linen and uniforms created another market tation and safety. Environmental concerns remained a major opportunity for the Institutional Division. EL acquired Fraser research focus. Phosphates, a major component in EL products, Laundry Systems, Inc., of Memphis, Tennessee, were under scrutiny in the early years, the nation’s only established institutional laundry and in 1971, EL discovered the means business. It also acquired certain assets of to reduce phosphates in EL products. Hammond Industries, Inc., of Waco, Texas, manu- “This new development provides the facturer of Fraser Laundry machines. By the mid- company with a new raw material base 1970s, EL was manufacturing and selling laundry from which we equipment, detergents and dispensing systems can develop a whole new family of for- through its new Econ Systems Division. mulated products, thus permitting us to position our entire product line to meet New services were being formed to capture new markets. EL launched evolving environmental standards,” Environmental Sanitation Services to said E.B. Osborn. Raw materials short- hire, train, supervise and schedule ages necessitated modification of scores kitchen, janitorial and laundry crews of product formulas to guarantee avail- in large restaurants, hotels and hos- ability pitals. An Equipment Engineering to customers. By 1973, the Merritt J. Osborn Division was formed to market CIP systems to Magnus, Institutional Research Center had doubled three and Klenzade customers. EL times since opening in 1962, and formed a Service Division to pro- EL had a new Chemical Engineering vide equipment repair and preven- Facility in Eagan, Minnesota. Two tive maintenance to Institutional years later, EL opened its first satellite and Econ Systems customers. research center in Rio de Janeiro, More than 40 different manufac- Brazil, then followed with labs turers made EL equipment, and in Belgium and New Zealand. Service Division personnel were 37 CHAPTER 6: 1970-1979 < E CON S YSTEMS DIVISION . The development of synthetic fabrics made on-premise laundry operations affordable for many of EL’s Institutional customers. Recognizing an opportunity, the company became an early leader in this growing business. > E C O -T E M P. Research breakthroughs in chemical sanitation enabled EL to save energy and reduce customer costs through Eco-Temp, a low-temperature dishwashing program introduced in the late 1970s. tion specialist. A team visit to a customer yielded in-depth The Research Department also began marketing directly to customers in 1973 through its Capsule Consulting Service. analysis of all processes and Capsule, short for Consultation on Aseptic Practices and procedures, along with suggested improvements to help reduce Uniform Sampling of Equipment, provided high level technical energy and labor costs. But Institutional continued to lead the company in marketing services to the healthcare and food processing markets. innovation and sales strength. With an obvious need to serve the New sales strategy ever-broadening national hospitality and restaurant chains, the EL restructured its sales organization early in the decade. Left division created a new National Accounts Team in the 1970s. behind was the junior-senior system that had built the company. This special group of account representatives extended EL’s In its place was a new “one-eight” system, which assigned eight market reach by selling to corporate headquarters of the grow- sales associates to a district manager whose main responsibility ing multi-unit food and lodging chains. As the major chains was sales training. The new approach solved a nagging problem moved into global markets, with the old system – good sales people were not always good EL went with them. In time, the National Accounts Team trainers. EL began the 1970s with 35 districts and ended it with nearly 100. < R ABURN R A C K S . EL’s acquisition of Raburn Products, Inc. Substantial increases in manpower and additional training evolved into a highly profitable institutional equipment, storage and compliance operation called Raburn Equipment. continued through the decade. In 1979, EL embarked on a marketing technique called team selling, drawing on the expertise of > E NVIRONMENTAL S ANITATION S E R V I C E S. Environmental Sanitation Services, initiated in 1975, provided EL customers with trained personnel to handle warewashing, bussing, laundry and general maintenance. numerous specialists. A Klenzade team, for example, included a hydraulic and process engineer, food microbiologist and sanita- 38 CHAPTER 6: JOINING THE GIANTS < F REE ‘ N S O F T. A packet of Free n’ Soft was filled by high-speed equipment. The successful consumer product was developed to work as a fabric softener in the clothes dryer. > G UARDIAN S YSTEM . The Guardian System, introduced in 1976, produced consistent, sparkling-clean results at a lower cost per dish than traditional methods. Its safety and ease of operation revolutionized the industry. evolved into the Global Accounts Team, providing consistency Finish, and both liquid and solid Jet Dry were leaders. Lime-A- and quality in products, systems and service to locations Way, a specialty bathroom and kitchen cleaner formulated to throughout the world. eliminate lime and scale deposits, was an instant hit. Free ‘n Instrumental in the conception and development of Soft, the first in-dryer softener, the National Accounts Team was Al Schuman, the young junior was another Consumer breakthrough. “The static buildup on salesman hired in 1957, who would someday take the reins of synthetic clothes was making people get zapped as they took the company. The concept, like many of EL’s, again proved rev- clothes out of their dryer,” said Mizuno. “We developed it to fill olutionary in the industry. that need.” Energy and resource conservation was an important focus in Product proliferation the Industrial and Klenzade markets. Magnus developed prod- In the early 1970s, EL offered more than 900 products and more ucts to recover pulp fibers for recycled paper making, processed than 100 new and reformulated products were marketed each waste oil for reuse, and developed synthetic lubricants that year. EL had a third of the consumer market with Electrasol and lasted a year instead of two weeks. Klenzade’s Dy-Gest cleaned dairy plants and equipment at low temperatures, and new MP 1800 microprocessors allowed plant operators to precisely control CIP cleaning cycles and recapture milk clinging to pipes and silos. Aseptic meat cutting techniques helped extend the shelf life of packaged meats from 10 to 40 days. Klenzade’s new noniodine teat-dip called Blu-Gard became the hottest new product in the dairy business. But EL’s Institutional Division remained the company’s product leader by a wide margin. In the early 1970s, EL offered both powdered and liquid automatic dispensing systems for institutional warewashing. In 1976, EL took institutional warewashing to a new level with the revolutionary Guardian System. Highly concentrated Guardian System detergents provided better results while conserving energy. And a new safety dispenser with solid-state electronic controls precisely delivered detergent to the commercial < P R O D U C T PROLIFERATION . Economics Laboratory marketed a broad line of successful household brands in the 1970s. > A S I A N M ARKET. EL conducted intensive on-site research and testing in Asia, Europe and other areas to guarantee superior product performance in local markets. 39 CHAPTER 6: 1970-1979 < E C O -L I N E . Demand for convenient, one-stop shopping sparked the growth of the food distribution industry in the 1970s. EL responded with Eco-Line warewashing, laundry and housekeeping products to reach these new wholesale customers. The program was the forerunner of today’s Distributor Programs. dishmachine in proper proportion. “The concept of the Guardian International reaches 50 countries dispenser was to have a prepackaged product that you could put In 1970, ten years after it was officially set apart as a new divi- into a dispenser without handling it,” said Mizuno. “One of the sion, International Division sales exceeded $30 million and it key factors that started the program was safety in handling prod- served more than 40 world markets. The division returned its ucts.” International Operations offices to Minnesota, established a Two programs initiated in the 1970s – Eco-Temp European satellite headquarters office in Brussels to guide and Eco-Line – became important contributors to the Institu- efforts in 15 countries and added new operations in Spain, tional Division’s success. Eco-Temp began in 1976, when the Switzerland and the Dominican Republic. In 1977, International Institutional Division first began to purchase low-temperature, set up area headquarters in Latin America and Hawaii. By the large-capacity dishwashing machines from the manufacturer end of the decade it conducted business in more than 50 coun- and rent them to customers. Through chemical sanitizing, the tries. machines could wash dishes at 140 degrees Fahrenheit instead Until the mid-1970s, International operated with significant of the standard 180 degrees Fahrenheit, providing a significant autonomy. “International was independent and we would get cost savings for customers. Later renamed Ecotemp, this low- reports when they had them ready,” said Ken Markwardt. “At temperature dishwashing business gradually grew and one of the board meetings, someone expanded into a core Institutional program offering institutional customers a broad array of warewashing products and equipment choices for monthly lease or purchase. Eco-Line was also developed in the 1970s when food distributors were becoming a major industry force. EL recognized that many of its customers wanted the convenience of one-stop shopping for food and supplies and the simplicity of a single monthly invoice. In response, at the 1977 Institutional Management Meeting, the division officially launched more than 50 warewashing, laundry and housekeeping products and sold them to distributors under a new name – Eco-Line. Institutional salesmen called on the distributor’s customers. The distributor set the prices and made the product deliveries to the end-users. Eco-Line increased the division’s market share by reaching smaller customers. In time, EL dropped the Eco-Line name and broadened its network of wholesale food and hospitality industry distributors. The growing business was renamed Distributor Programs, eventually providing each member of its carefully selected network of distributors with custom-labeled EL products. 40 CHAPTER 6: JOINING THE GIANTS < EL’ S SE R V I C E P OLICY. Economics Laboratory backed its commitment to service in writing by presenting customers with a detailed description of services they could expect to receive. > E.B. AC C E P T S AN A WARD . In 1970, E.B. Osborn received the Distinguished Service Award in Washington D.C. in recognition of EL’s efforts to provide job opportunities to the mentally-challenged. and equipment in nine U.S. plants and 20 plants in other coun- asked me a very simple question, and I couldn’t answer it.” tries. This lack of accountability led to a reorganization of the International Division in 1975, which brought finance, corporate planning and staff functions under more centralized super- Growing social awareness vision. Responding to new laws on consumerism, pollution, human and civil rights, EL formed a Corporate and Public Affairs Major plant expansion Department in 1970 and pledged to work with government to In 1971, EL manufactured more than five million pounds of meet change, communicate with employees, the public and powdered and liquid products per day and operated eight U.S. stockholders, and protect the environment. EL began to actively promote equal opportunities for women plants and two in foreign countries. Record company growth led to major plant construction throughout the decade. A plant in in the 1970s. EL Today featured stories on women and minori- Garland, Texas, replaced EL’s Dallas facility. On the interna- ties in supervisory positions and suggested ways to move up the tional front, plants were added in Milan, London, Tokyo and ladder. Women also began to join the sales ranks in the mid- New Zealand. In 1974, despite price controls, gas rationing and 1970s, and the company’s top recognition award – the “Man of raw materials shortages, EL invested $25 million in capital the Year” award – was changed in 1975 to “Employee of the expansion, the largest sum in company history. That year, it Year.” The 1970s also brought an intensified focus on employee con- completed its largest production facility in Joliet, Illinois, to consolidate and replace plants in Chicago, Beloit and Roscoe. cerns through company-sponsored programs and “Joliet was so depressed in those days that when we finally family counseling on alcoholism, chemical dependency and dri- decided to move there, we became front page news,” said Ray ver safety. Wheeler. By the end of the 1970s, EL manufactured products 41 CHAPTER 6: 1970-1979 < D ISTINGUISHED SERVICE A WARD . In1970, The Presidential Committee on Employmentof theHandicappedhonored EconomicsLaboratory with its Distinguished Service Award. > F R E D L ANNERS N A M E D CEO. Before his death in 1978, Chairman of the Board and CEO E.B. Osborn passed the reins of the company to Economics Laboratory President and Chief Operating Officer Fred Lanners. Lanners served as chairman, president and CEO until he retired in 1982. In 1970, E.B. Osborn traveled to Washington, D.C., The void left by E.B.’s death led to a proliferation of new to receive the Distinguished Service Award from The management posts, including a three-person Office Presidential Committee on Employment of the Handicapped of the President, created in 1979. Top executives split the com- for EL’s work with the mentally-challenged. pany business along international and domestic lines, and a new The company program provided vocational training decentralized approach kept them autonomous. and employment of these people as “Utility Men” in the food- In 1979, EL surpassed $400 million in sales, the forty-fifth service industry. The program began in the sixties, attracted consecutive year of sales increases. It ended the decade with national interest and expanded throughout the country in the three single divisions – Consumer contributed 25 percent, ensuing years. It was later extended to train underprivileged Klenzade added 13 percent, Magnus generated 10 percent – and a residents in Caracas, Venezuela. four-business Institutional Division which generated 52 percent of company revenues through Institutional, Econ Systems, Osborn era ends Environmental Sanitation Services and EL Service. Economics Until 1978, EL exhibited many attributes of a family-run com- Laboratory just kept getting bigger and better. pany. E.B.’s wife Gloria sat on the board. His son was a senior executive. The company had traditionally promoted from within, rarely looking outside to fill important positions. Many senior executives at EL, including EL President Fred Lanners, had never worked for another company. “Fred had basically the same philosophy that E.B. had,” said Hodges. “He reported to E.B. probably longer than anybody else in the company.” In 1978, 71-year-old E.B. Osborn named Lanners CEO. In August, he died at his home in Bronxville, New York. “To the last moment he was going to the doctor’s office with his briefcase, studying papers,” said Podas. < JO L I E T, I L L I N O I S. EL’s 10-acre plant in Joliet, Illinois, was completed in 1974. The company’s largest plant, it was built to accommodate Midwest sales growth for years to come. > E C O L A B VE H I C L E O N G OLDEN G A T E BRIDGE : As the 1970s ended, service institutions, manufacturers and consumers from coast to coast depended on Economics Laboratory for quality products and outstanding service. 42 ‘“Service ranks supreme: Throughout the 1980s, Ecolab’s reputation for service and problem solving was unmatched by any competitor.’’ CHAPTER 7: 1980-1989 Overcoming Tough Challenges Economics Laboratory, like many U.S. companies, was riding an inflation tide in 1980. Sales exceeded $500 million and the company marketed more than 1,000 products and services for cleaning, sanitation and related uses. More than 2,600 sales and service personnel provided customers with “Products and Services for a Cleaner World.” It seemed that nothing could stop EL’s upward climb. However, the illusion was about to be shattered. The Apollo debacle The high price of Apollo drew skepticism from stock analysts. As it In February 1980, EL acquired Apollo Technologies, Inc., a New Jersey company specializing in chemical systems to control combus- turned out, the skeptics were right. Economic circumstances, govern- tion and emissions in coal-burning electric utilities. At $71 million, the cost mental decisions and even nature seemed to work against success. of Apollo was enormous, but EL executives were confident of its potential. Falling oil prices and abundant natural gas lowered demand for coal and With Apollo, it was felt, EL got a technical infrastructure that would have chemical products used to treat it. Enforcement of air emissions and cost $100 million and taken 10 years just water discharge regulations went into decline. The United States to get to where the competition was at the time. enjoyed an unusually mild winter. And rising consumer costs and conservation measures instituted in 1979 led to the first drop in electric A new Industrial Group was formed, comprised consumption in U.S. history. of Klenzade and a six-part Apollo Division that included Pulp and Paper, The financial drain caused Electric Utilities, Mining and Metallurgy, Metal Processing, and Magnus by Apollo had a dramatic impact Maritec. A new Water Sciences Division was also on 1980 earnings and problems launched to provide products and services to opti- continued to worsen. mize heat transfer, energy efficiency and corrosion < S O L I D PO W E R . Solid Power , a chemical warewashing capsule introduced in 1981, set new industry standards for safety, convenience and cost. inhibition in boilers, evaporators and cooling towers. < C OLLAGE . Clockwise from top: Solid Power production line; Institutional sales force parades through downtown St. Paul in 1984; company forms Pest Elimination Division. 44 CHAPTER 7: OVERCOMING TOUGH CHALLENGES < P IERSON “S ANDY ” G RIEVE . Sandy Grieve was named chairman of the board and chief executive officer in January 1983, after CEO Fred Lanners retired. > S O L I D P OWER L A U N C H E D I N E U R O P E. In 1985, Gerald K. Carlson, senior vice president – International (left), and Allan L. Schuman, senior vice president – Institutional, extended EL’s global presence by successfully launching the company’s line of solid products in Europe. Grieve comes on board Renewed focus on core businesses brought an end When CEO Fred Lanners retired in November 1982, to EL’s varied Magnus operations. Magnus was sold to Man- the board of directors had an opportunity to bring in Gill Chemical Co. in 1986 and Pulp & Paper was a fresh perspective. They chose an outsider – Pierson sold to Diamond Shamrock that same year. Magnus’s European M. “Sandy” Grieve – to head the company. operation went to Henkel KGaA of West Germany and Magnus Maritec was sold to Drew In January 1983, four days after Grieve became chairman Chemical Corp. of New Jersey. and chief executive officer, EL shut Apollo down, In 1986, EL achieved record sales and earnings, halting an annual operating loss of about $4 million. and the corporate annual report theme was “Mission The company was forced to take a $42 million loss. “When Accomplished” to reflect the successful three-year EL makes a mistake, it is a beaut,” said Bill Podas. restructuring effort. Costs were reduced more than Grieve immediately announced a three-year plan to reduce annual costs by $30 million, refocus on core strengths $50 million annually and $62 million in assets were and eliminate marginal businesses. “Fiscal 1983 was a year of sold and converted to cash. Ecolab stock, which had dropped to dynamic decision and change – perhaps $12 a share during the dark days of 1983, rebounded to nearly the most difficult in your company’s 60-year history,” said $30 a share. Only one-third of the 16 corporate officers in 1983 were still Grieve in the 1983 report to shareholders. “It was a year of painful but necessary decisions that were made in order to on board three years later. Half had been recently recruited from regain our momentum and focus on our strengths.” outside the company, including its new Chief Financial and Administrative Officer Michael E. Shannon. And more than half That year, EL cut general and administrative expenses by $5 million by reducing personnel. Surplus property sales generated of the 100 second-tier senior managers were new to their posi- $10 million. EL closed Capsule Laboratories and discontinued tions. manufacturing in Ireland. The Industrial Division cut its sales force in half, A pivotal year research was streamlined into fewer, By 1987, EL had survived its greatest set- more interrelated disciplines, and the back and was poised to move forward. fragmented financial area was cen- Even so, it was to be the most pivotal tralized into one cohesive unit. year in its history, a year that would profoundly change the company’s identity At the same time, EL added and structure. 95 Institutional salespeople world- In December 1986, Economics wide, stepped up new product developand Laboratory, Inc. changed its name to Consumer divisions, and invested in Ecolab Inc. to provide a simple and management information systems to unifying worldwide identification. ment in the Institutional improve efficiencies. 45 CHAPTER 7: 1980-1989 < A P IVOTAL Y EAR . In December 1986, the com- pany adopted a new name – Ecolab Inc. – and traded its listing on the NASDAQ market for a new listing on the New York StockExchange.The changes heightened the company’s visibility worldwide. > C H E M I C A L E N G I N E E R I N G FA C I L I T Y. In 1980, EL doubled the size of its Chemical Engineering Center in Eagan. The company expanded and modernized its facilities throughout the decade to accommodate growth and new technologies. In 1987, Ecolab acquired ChemLawn, the nation’s largest The new identity incorporated the essence of the former name – “Eco” for ecology and environment, lawn care services company, for $376 million. and “Lab” for technology and labor. It also resolved the prob- The largest acquisition in Ecolab history, ChemLawn lem that had plagued the company for decades – a lengthy, gave Ecolab a nationally known brand name and more than 1.5 cumbersome and confusing name that was often misspelled, million residential customers, which provided misinterpreted and improperly abbreviated. Suddenly, the com- it with a ready-made residential services business that pany that had been referred to as EL, Econ Labs, Economics complemented its institutional operations. After a profitable year in 1988, ChemLawn’s performance Laboratories and non-English identities such as Soilax Italia, became simply Ecolab – short, plummeted in 1989. During the critical spring period, the new easy to pronounce, with a contemporary appeal. organization could not handle the influx of calls from prospec- A bold, distinctive new visual identity accompanied the name tive and existing customers. Problems were complicated by the change. worst drought to hit North America in 50 years and growing public opposition to chemicals and pesticides. Customer cancel- That same month, Ecolab listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The NYSE affiliation enhanced the company’s stand- lations poured in, and ChemLawn ended 1989 with a loss of $8 ing in the investment community and heightened the interest of million. Ecolab responded by cutting 500 jobs and rebuilding foreign investment institutions. The company also changed its field management. “Accomplishing the turnaround at fiscal year to a calendar year. ChemLawn is a gargantuan task, but one that we believe In 1987, Ecolab sold its Consumer Division to Benckiser for ChemLawn is now equipped to accomplish,” said Grieve. $250 million, ending a half century of innovation that had made Ecolab products known to consumers throughout the world. Consumer’s latest success – Scrub Free – a heavy-duty bathroom cleaner introduced in 1983, was the most successful new product introduction in company history. Scrub Free sales hit $20 million in its first 18 months on the market. But competing with the consumer giants Lever Brothers, Colgate and Procter & Gamble was more expensive than ever. Despite record sales in 1984, Consumer Division earnings dropped after advertising and marketing budgets were factored in. It was the end of an era. < E C O L A B NA M E CH A N G E. In March 1987, Executive Vice President Allan L. Schuman introduced the company’s new name in full-page advertisements in leading industry publications. > E C O L A B IS L I S T E D ON THE NYSE. Ecolab’s 1986 listing on the New York Stock Exchange generated significant interest among institutional investors. By the end of the decade, Fortune magazine ranked Ecolab 71st among the country’s largest diversified service companies. 46 CHAPTER 7: OVERCOMING TOUGH CHALLENGES > S K Y L I N E O F D OWNTOWN S T. PA U L . In 1986, the Institutional Division, the company’s largest, moved its headquarters to downtown St. Paul after more than 30 years in New York City. The consolidation brought a new spirit of unity to the company. Facilities and Technology than three decades, first from a swank Park Avenue high-rise In 1980, as the decade was beginning, EL doubled the and later from a suburban White Plains office building. The size of its Chemical Engineering Center in Eagan, built a new division’s dominant size and distance from corporate headquar- plant in Brazil and expanded facilities in the United States. In ters set it apart from the rest of the company. But the com- St. Paul, the company increased computer memory storage capac- pany’s new leadership felt the time had come to consolidate the ity nearly fivefold to accommodate 40,000 daily transactions and corporate offices under one roof and fully integrate the com- purchased two buildings adjacent to the Osborn Building to pany’s operations. Spearheading the move was Al Schuman, accommodate growth. then the senior vice president of the Institutional Group, who By 1986, capping off the turbulent years of restructuring, the envisioned enormous opportunities for a cohesive EL. company announced plans to move Institutional Division head- In July, 13 employees and their families sold their homes, quarters from New York to St. Paul. The packed up and moved to EL’s heartland headquarters division, which then contributed 56 percent of EL sales and 90 in St. Paul. The migration brought a boost to the local economy percent of earnings, had operated from New York City for more and added a dynamic spark to the company. The New Yorkers brought marketing skill and sophistication and a fresh and bold new business style. After a period of adjustment, the blended EL culture emerged stronger, smarter and more focused. International moves forward Throughout the 1980s, EL continued to expand its business in Asia and Europe. In 1984, EL acquired full interest in its Hong Kong joint venture. In 1986, it bought the remaining 50 percent share in EL Japan from Chisso Corp. In 1987, the company launched a joint venture in the People’s Republic of China and began operations in South Korea in anticipation of the 1988 Olympic Games. During the same period, EL acquired Deterquimica, S.A., of Spain; Elton Chemical S.p.A. of Italy, a $7 million commercial < S OLID T EAM O F S E V E N . By 1987, Ecolab’s “Solids Team” was the industry leader and the only full line of solid products designed to meet all institutional warewashing and kitchen cleaning needs. > E C O L A B PARADE I N DOWNTOWN S T. PA U L . In September 1984, the 1,200-member Institutional sales force ended its national sales meeting with a 30minute parade in downtown St. Paul. 47 CHAPTER 7: 1980-1989 < NASA S OAP. In 1986, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration chose EL to develop “space soap” for astronauts on space stations. To test its Zero-G Whole Body Shower Cleansing Agent, EL tested the soap in a NASA-type shower, which used only one gallon of water for bathing. > S O L I D C HOICE . Ecolab’s Solid Choice applied solids technology to the beverage industry. In 1988, Klenzade Senior Account Manager Doug Lee, left, answered an employee’s product questions. On a perfect September day in 1984, capping the laundry and institutional warewashing company; and Alkalion A.B., a $7 million Swedish company specializing in institu- first national sales meeting in six years for the company’s 1,200- tional laundry and warewashing systems. member Institutional sales force, EL held a 30-minute parade before a noontime crowd in downtown St. Paul. Six marching Institutional is solid performer bands blared, majorettes twirled and hundreds of salesmen in The heart of the company, the Institutional Division, continued to white coats marched behind floats bearing giant product repli- lead EL in financial performance and product innovation. Solid cas. State legislators and business executives reviewed the Power, introduced in 1981, was the new industry leader in restau- parade from the Osborn Building. “This is a one-on-one profes- rants, hospitals and other institutions. A patented, state-of-the- sion,” said Al Schuman. “This is a way to say thank you for a art capsule, Solid Power was inserted into a closed warewashing job well done.” system, delivering control, safety, convenience and low use cost. “Solid Power is a unique concept that will outstrip conventional Consolidating Ecolab’s institutional power systems and products,” predicted Al Schuman, vice president, In the mid-1980s, EL took its first step toward developing a new Institutional Division-U.S., in 1982. He was right. Sales soared, range of integrated, institutional services that would culminate and within two years, it was the nation’s top selling detergent in in the “Circle the Customer – Circle the Globe” strategy. In the institutional market. The success of Solid Power led to the 1984, EL acquired Lystads, Inc., a privately held company spe- development of a Solids Team of seven solid cleaning products, cializing in pest elimination services for the institutional sanita- the only full line of solid chemicals designed to serve tion market. Based in Grand Forks, North Dakota, the company all warewashing and kitchen cleaning requirements. was a market leader in the Midwest, with sales of more than $20 million. The next year, EL acquired ICE, Inc., of Atlanta, a pest 48 CHAPTER 7: OVERCOMING TOUGH CHALLENGES OF LYSTADS . EL entered the pest elimination business in 1984 by acquiring Lystads, Inc., a privately held company based in Grand Forks, North Dakota. < A CQUISITION > PE S T E L I M I N A T I O N D I V I S I O N . After a series of acquisitions, Ecolab formally created a Pest Elimination Division in 1987. The division contributed $30 million in sales that year. elimination company serving 10 states in the Southeast. By the acquisitions. The largest was the Textile Care Division end of 1986, following purchases of Guardian Pest Control, of Occidental Electrochemicals Corporation, a $15 million com- Inc., of Baltimore, Maryland, and Apest, Inc., of New Orleans, pany selling laundry products and dispensing equipment Louisiana, pest elimination comprised 10 percent of Institutional through distributors. In 1987, Ecolab formed the Textile Care business, or $30 million a year. In 1987, Division to provide laundry products, dispensing systems and Pest Elimination was elevated to division status and joined the services to commercial and institutional laundries. Ecolab was growing ranks of services, as customers turned to Ecolab for the again the national leader in the same high level of quality and professionalism in pest elimination institutional laundry business, furthering its “Circle the that they had come to expect in other offerings. Customer” evolution. After selling Econ Systems in 1981, EL renewed its In 1986, EL set the stage for a new Janitorial Division commitment to the on-premise laundry market in 1984 by acquiring the Airwick Professional Products Division of by acquiring Foussard Associates, Inc., a St. Paul company spe- Airwick Industries, a leader in floor maintenance and odor con- cializing in hospital laundry management. Although Foussard trol products for institutional housekeeping, particularly in the was sold only three years later, EL continued healthcare market. With the addition of a Janitorial Division, the to bolster its laundry-supply position through several EL sales-and-service force was armed with the products, services and professional expertise necessary to handle the full range of cleaning and sanitation requirements of any Institutional customer. Finally, three years later, Ecolab acquired NCD Detergents Inc., which led to the development of its Signature Label business, a custom label for distributors. The original Eco-Line program offered to distributors in the 1970s had grown into an enormous business. By the late 1980s, Ecolab’s carefully chosen alliances with the nation’s leading wholesale food and hospitality product distribution companies was placing Ecolab-manufactured private-label products in nearly every business in America. In 1988, the Institutional Group was reorganized and renamed the Ecolab Services Group. Al Schuman was tapped to head the new organization, which included Institutional, Pest Elimination, Textile Care, Janitorial and Klenzade, as AT C LEAN G L A S S E S . EL’s commitment to service enabled EL representatives to build close working relationships with customers. In 1983, chef Terry Ries, of the St. Paul Hotel, consulted with Ecolab Institutional sales representative Nick Fahey. < L OOKING 49 CHAPTER 7: 1980-1989 < TE X T I L E C ARE D I V I S I O N . Ecolab renewed its commitment to the on-premise laundry market in 1984. After several acquisitions,it formed the Textile Care Division in 1987,to serve customers processing a minimum of one million pounds of linen a year. > JA N I T O R I A L D I V I S I O N . EL acquired the Airwick Professional Products Division of Airwick Industries in 1984, which led to the development of a new Janitorial Division. In 1988, the division joined the Ecolab truly unique and always appreciated. well as U.S. Manufacturing and Distribution and Information In 1989, Fortune magazine moved Ecolab from the Services. As the decade ended, the carefully planned “Circle the Customer – Circle the Globe” strategy envisioned industrial to the service category, ranking it 71st among by Al Schuman was coming to fruition. Said Schuman in the nation’s “100 Largest Diversified Service Companies.” 1989: “Our strategy is to surround our existing customers Ecolab had more than 8,000 sales and service personnel with a variety of services, so that all they have to do is look worldwide and employed approximately 13,000 people in to Ecolab for all their cleaning and sanitizing needs.” 29 countries. Sales exceeded $1.3 billion. The Ecolab Services Group was strong and growing, but ChemLawn’s Service ranks supreme poor performance was dragging down earnings. Throughout the 1980s, Ecolab’s reputation for service and problem solving was unmatched by any competitor. “Our people are like doctors,” Al Schuman had noted in a 1981 article in Corporate Report magazine. “They will come out to service an account anytime, anyplace, day or night. You’re at a dinner party and a customer calls with a problem – you leave the party. We get to know a client’s business better than he knows it himself.” Ecolab’s strong service philosophy was a crucial ingredient in the company’s success. Frequent calls, checkups and maintenance visits kept Ecolab associates close to their customers, while periodically reviewing and evaluating customers’ needs helped Ecolab associates retain clients, build more business, and helped the customers maintain an optimal level of sanitation and achieve full compliance with safety and health regulations. Ecolab’s partnership approach to service cemented many customer relationships and provided customers with extra value that was > E X C E L L E N T S E R V I C E . Ecolab’s well-trained team of knowledge- able and professional associates sustained the company’sreputation for outstanding service throughout the 1980s. 50 The Qualities that define the Ecolab Culture:Spirit, Pride, Determination, Commitment, Passion and Integrity. CHAPTER 8: 1990-1998 Focused on the Future Ecolab entered the 1990s with a record $1.4 billion in sales and three separate lines of business. The five-division Ecolab Services Group was the core of the organization. The International Division was also strong and growing. But ChemLawn was still operating at a loss, despite significant investments to improve management, organization and productivity. In 1992, Ecolab announced plans to divest its ChemLawn subsidiary and take a $275 million loss. “While ChemLawn continued to offer good long-term potential in residential services, Ecolab’s core business and shareholder value would be best served if we concentrated on our institutional and industrial cleaning and sanitizing markets,” said Grieve. “We decided that our future should be entirely in the cleaning and sanitizing business where we began, where we are well positioned and where the worldwide market potential is enormous.” In 1992, Ecolab sold ChemLawn for $107 million. Ecolab goes global Henkel’s overall business In anticipation of a united European market in 1992, produced products and services similar to those offered Ecolab took steps to bolster its position across the by Ecolab’s Institutional and Klenzade businesses. Henkel- Atlantic. “As the 1990s begin, Ecolab is changing its busi- Ecolab headquarters was established in Düsseldorf, extended to 24 European loca- ness perspective,” stated Grieve in Ecolab’s 1990 tions, and immediately annual report. “A strategic alliance with Henkel became the leader in KGaA of Germany, currently being ½nalized, will strengthen Ecolab’s < S TRATEGIC AL L I A N C E position in the global marketplace.” W ITH HENKEL KG AA. Ecolab With nearly $8 billion in rev- entered the 1990s with plans to strengthen its global position. An alliance with Henkel KGaA made Ecolab a dominant force in Europe’s largest markets. enues, Henkel, a family-owned corporation based in Düsseldorf, was a giant in the chemical industry, marketing products worldwide < C O L L A G E. Clockwise from top: Food & Beverage Division; ECOLink provides on-call customer service; Ecolab’s sales force travels eight million miles each through five divisions. Part of month. 52 CHAPTER 8: FOCUSED < A L SCHUMAN AND ON THE FUTURE M I K E S HANNON . In 1992, Allan L. Schuman (left) was named president and chief operating officer and Michael E. Shannon was named vice chairman and chief financial and administrative officer. > M UFSO AWARD . From 1988 to1997, Ecolab was recognized as the equipment supplies and service “Supplier of the Year” by the Multi-Unit Food Service Organization (MUFSO) eight times. In 1998, the company received an additional honor when it was inducted into theMUFSOHall of Fame. Europe’s three largest markets – France, Germany and the foodservice industry. Italy. Before the joint venture, Ecolab’s European sales were $150 million. At the end of 1991, Henkel-Ecolab’s Thanks a million sales in Europe exceeded $750 million. In 1994, after closing the books on 1993, the most successful year in The company established Ecolab Export GmbH in 1992 to service non-European markets not already cov- the company’s history, Ecolab’s board of directors set ered. By the mid-1990s, the network of distributors and aside $1 million as a “Thanks a Million” award to employ- licensees was exporting products to more than 100 coun- ees. The company’s 7,000 non-management employees tries around the world, including countries in the Middle with at least one year of service received a profit-sharing East, Africa, the Asia Pacific region and Latin America. contribution to their retirement plan equivalent to five shares of Ecolab stock. A cash award was paid Successors named to employees in countries that didn’t provide retirement In 1992, the Ecolab board of directors named Al plan arrangements. The company doubled the award to Schuman president and chief operating officer, and Mike $2 million in 1997, following another record year. Shannon was elected vice-chairman, and chief financial and administrative officer. Schuman assumed Grieve’s Adding new markets duties as chief executive officer in March 1995, and when In December 1994, Ecolab added a broad new dimen- Grieve retired in December, Shannon became chairman sion to its “Circle the Customer” strategy. It acquired Kay of the board. “The 12 years I’ve spent at Ecolab have Chemical Company, the leading cleaning product supplier to been the most successful, satisfying and fulfilling of my the quickservice (fast-food) market, which includes fast-food 44-year career,” said Grieve in his farewell letter. “It has restaurants, convenience stores, grocery store delis and other been a privilege and quickservice outlets. A family-owned an honor to serve the customers, company based in Greensboro, North the employees and the shareholders Carolina, Kay Chemical had entered the of this outstanding, successful com- fast-food business in 1966, when the pany. ” industry was in its infancy. By 1994, it was a $70 million company with 280 After 37 years in the company’s employees. Institutional core, Schuman had the The transaction with Kay gave experience, drive and leadership to take Ecolab to a new level of Ecolab a long-sought position in the achievement. In 1995, Nation’s fast-food cleaning and sanitizing mar- Restaurant News named Schuman ket. Like Ecolab, Kay was known for among the excellent customer service, expertise in 50 most influential individuals in dispensing technology and related ser- 53 CHAPTER 8: 1990-1998 < PA R I S , F RANCE . The Henkel-Ecolab alliance opened the doors to many of Europe’s most prestigious institutions. This premier Parisian restaurant overlooking Notre Dame relies on Henkel-Ecolab products and services to uphold its impeccable reputation. The Janitorial Division also changed its name to Professional vices. The transaction created a sixth division for Ecolab. Products following the 1996 acquisition of Huntington Kay was a strong contributor from the start. It strengthened the breadth of Ecolab’s offering Laboratories, Inc., of Huntington, Indiana. The acquisition cata- to the restaurant market, providing pulted Ecolab into the number two position in the U.S. janitorial a strong presence in quickservice market. In late 1997, Ecolab acquired the specialty chemical business to complement Ecolab’s full service capabilities. By 1997, Kay had entered the growing grocery deli market and was generating of Minneapolis-based Grace-Lee Products, a five percent of the company’s total revenues. manufacturer and marketer of cleaning products for the U.S. vehicle car wash market. With the acquisition came a new cor- A seventh division was added in 1995 through the creation of Water Care Services, a division offering water treat- porate program – Ecolab Vehicle Care – providing products and ment products and services to the hospitality, healthcare and services to the $500 million independent car wash and company food processing markets. The company aggressively expanded fleet wash businesses. the division by acquiring Industrial Maintenance Corporation of Charlotte, North Carolina, RO/CO Corporation, of Washington, Product innovation continues D.C., and Western Water Management, Inc., of Kansas City, Ecolab’s unwavering commitment to meeting customer needs Missouri. provides the impetus for its outstanding record of product inno- Klenzade changed its name to Food & Beverage in 1995 to focus more directly on the Ecolab name. “The Klenzade name has served us well during the 34 years since its acquisition,” said President and CEO Al Schuman. “And with the name change, our Food & Beverage customers will receive the same high quality products, equipment and service as before. We are still the most trusted name in the business.” The division acquired H.B. Fuller’s Monarch Division the following year, which strengthened the geographic coverage of the dairy market. < R ESTAURANT N E W S . In 1995, Nation’s Restaurant News, a leading industry publication, named Ecolab President Al Schuman one of the 50 most influential individuals in the foodservice industry. > K AY C H E M I C A L C OMPANY. In late 1994, Ecolab acquired Kay Chemical Company, the leading supplier of cleaning and sanitation products to the quickservice (fast-food) industry. The privately held company became a new Ecolab division. 54 CHAPTER 8: FOCUSED ON THE FUTURE < O A S I S S YSTEM . In 1994, Ecolab introduced the Oasis System , a rainbow of easy-to-identify cleaning products for the housekeeping market. Easy-to-use Oasis products are automatically mixed and dispensed on site. > HU N T I N G T O N P R O D U C T S. Ecolab became the nation’s second largest provider of janitorial products and services following its 1996 acquisition of Huntington Products. vation. For 75 years, Ecolab has set the pace in the industries it products no longer meets today’s requirements. Before, one group serves by developing products, services and equipment that per- refined a product formula, another tested it and a third manufac- form better, faster, cleaner, safer and more cost effectively. The tured company’s 1997 annual report summed up its approach with the off when its task was completed. Today’s new generation of solid cover theme: “You see products requires a complex process development approach. a world. We see a world of opportunity.” By aggressively Chemists and process engineers work closely to develop formu- pursuing these opportunities for innovation, 35 percent las. Small batch experiments follow to test chemical reactions. of Ecolab’s total U.S. sales come from products and services Packaging engineers evaluate containers and consider the prob- introduced or modified within the last five years. lems of storage, transportation and usage. People from opera- In the 1990s, the Institutional Division has continued it, each handing the project tions, product and process development, and manufacturing to launch a number of successful products, including the Oasis continually interact with chemists, technicians and engineers. product dispensing system, and Solid System III, the first solid The complexity of product development is vastly multiplied product and dispensing system for on-premise laundries. In when one considers the sheer numbers of products passing 1993, Ecolab achieved yet another breakthrough in institutional through the Ecolab process at any given time. In 1997, the com- warewashing with the Vanguard System, which proved to be pany introduced 135 differentiated products, systems and ser- one of the most successful vices. Scores of others remain under development and testing as product introductions in Ecolab history. Ecolab associates relentlessly seek Ecolab moved its solids technology another step forward in to anticipate industry needs, read market trends, and solve cus- 1997 with the introduction of GeoSystem 9000, tomer problems. In this never-ending quest for excellence, a third-generation line of high-performance solid detergents, Ecolab remains the undisputed leader. rinse additives, presoaks and dispensers for institutional ware- Patents protect Ecolab’s extensive investment in products washing. The company achieved new levels and technology development. Today, the company has 2,500 in food processing safety with the 1997 introduction of registered trademarks and more than 240 active Tsunami, an environmentally sound, easy-to-use patents. The company receives about 20 new food processing treatment that improves U.S. patents each year and has 30 in the the quality of processed fruits and veg- works at any given time. etables. In 1998, Tsunami received Circle the customer EPA and FDA approval for use in After building a firm foun- the waters of fresh-cut dation for expansion in the fruits and vegetables. late 1980s, Ecolab formally articulated its ongoing Ecolab has found that the commitment to service excel- linear product development process that lence worked in its “Circle the Customer – Circle the so well for yesterday’s powder and liquid 55 CHAPTER 8: 1990-1998 < Q U A N T U M . The 1993 introduction of Quantum helped Ecolab’s food processing customers improve equipment cleaning through a computer-programmed formulator that blends raw cleaning materials on-site and prints data on the type and amount of product used, and its application. > G EO S Y S T E M . A new line of solid, high- performance warewashing products called GeoSystem 9000 was introduced in 1997. Globe” strategy in the 1990s. As part of this two-pronged strat- stretch 2,150 miles, the length of the Great Wall of China. The egy, Ecolab develops and markets a broad array of products company dispatches more than 5,000 service vehicles to deliver and services to meet the full spectrum of customer needs. Then, products to customers in 150 countries. as customers grow globally, Ecolab goes with them, directly or Facilities focus on quality through distributors. Improvement of process, facilities and technology support the The Circle the Customer concept reflects Ecolab’s ability to forge strong and successful partnerships with even the largest company’s Circle the Customer – Circle the Globe strategy. In organizations. More than 1,500 Ecolab employees from 1991, Ecolab established a Total Quality Management program Institutional, Food & Beverage, Research, Marketing and based on the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award criteria Finance serve one foodservice and food processing conglomerate to improve business strategy and increase customer value. In the mid-1990s, Ecolab added plants in Thailand, account, for example. Food & Beverage supplies the account with products and services to plants that process the customer's Indonesia, Costa Rica and Mexico. The first new U.S. plant in lines of various food products. Institutional, meanwhile, sup- seven years was built in Hebron, Ohio, and a new state-of-the- plies cleaning and sanitation products and services to the cus- art corporate employee training center, Ecolab University, was tomer's more than 1,000 restaurants. Ecolab does, indeed, live its service commitment. Each month the Ecolab sales force drives more than eight million < C IRCLE T HE C USTOMER , C IRCLE THE G L O B E . In the 1990s, miles, the equivalent of circling the globe 10 times per day. Ecolab formally articulated its goal to fulfill the full range of customer needs, with its Circle the Customer, Circle the Globe strategy. Each year, cleaning products sold in the United States alone > S ERVICE M AN I N J APAN . Ecolab’s outstanding sales and service force provides Institutional and Food & Beverage customers in Japan with superior products and excellent service. 56 CHAPTER 8: FOCUSED ON THE FUTURE > W ORLDWIDE S OLIDS . Ecolab circled the globe in the 1990s with universal cleaning and sanitation solutions. The company’s world-renowned products, systems and services are industry leaders in every country. established in the company’s St. Paul headquarters campus in ously, even those in charge could only imagine how large, effec- 1998. The move brought new jobs to downtown St. Paul and tive and important this service would become to the company’s renewed Ecolab’s commitment to employee growth. “This spec- day-to-day operations. Now, ECOlink is a dream come true. tacular campus mirrors our company and its values,” said Schuman. “It’s a world-class operation, and it clearly demon- A people-oriented culture strates Ecolab’s commitment to its people, products and future.” Strong corporate focus and seasoned leadership has enabled Ecolab to achieve continually higher levels of financial perfor- It was in 1995 when Ecolab’s award-winning national customer service center, ECOlink, celebrated its tenth anniversary. mance in the 1990s. In 1997, global revenues reached $2.5 billion From three customer service representatives set up to handle and earnings attained a fourth year of double-digit growth. Today, two sales regions for the Institutional Division, ECOlink has almost 15,000 Ecolab associates serve customers throughout the grown to more than 190 representatives providing service to world. With more than 11,000 premium products, Ecolab is the five divisions. In 1998, ECOlink handled more than 13 million world leader in nearly every market it serves. “We have always customer calls, and the numbers are growing. Ten years previ- had the best products, and we’ve had people who are in tune to the market,” said Al Schuman. “We’re a very aggressive company.” Ecolab’s competitive drive is balanced by a caring attitude. “We’re a very people-oriented company,” said Schuman. “Our difference is our people, and our customers know it. We take an aggressive attitude, but we treat people well.” In 1980, Ecolab organized the Ecolab Foundation to systematize its educational, community development, health and human services and arts and cultural programs – to improve and stabilize communities. The company articulated its commitment to the environment in the 1990s through its ten Environmental Principles that guide the establishment of corporate policies and procedures. But the formal programs don’t capture the true essence of the Ecolab culture, which has existed for 75 years. Ecolab’s founder, Merritt Osborn, was a generous and caring friend to many in < F OOD & B E V E R A G E D I V I S I O N . Known for more than three decades as Klenzade, the division was renamed Food & Beverage in 1995 to more accurately reflect the markets it serves. 57 CHAPTER 8: 1990-1998 < E COLAB U NIVERSITY. Ecolab’s state-of- the-art employee training center, named Ecolab University, opened in the company’s downtown St. Paul headquarters in 1998. > H URRICANE A NDREW V OLUNTEERS . In the wake of 1992’s Hurricane Andrew, Ecolab employees united in Miami, Florida, to help residents repair their homes. ties and incorporate them into their lives. need. Ecolab’s first employee, Ida C. Koran, Schuman is confident that Ecolab’s strong culture sustained that spirit through the Ida Koran Trust, a fund that supports Ecolab employees enduring hardship or seeking funds will carry it to new heights in the years ahead. “We are to finance a child’s education. going to be a ten- to fifteen-fold bigger company in our one hundredth year than we are today,” he said. “Our Today, hundreds of Ecolab employees around the world are active community volunteers, generously donating their time basic strengths, our aggressiveness and our company and their skills to dozens of organizations. The company backs culture will make it happen.” its employees with generous contributions to people and organizations worldwide. When Hurricane Andrew hit the Florida coast in 1992, Ecolab shipped 65,000 pounds of disinfectant hand soaps, pot-and-pan cleaners and other products to the region, and employees pitched in to help people rebuild their homes. In September 1994, the company shipped 40,000 pounds of cleaning and sanitizing products to Iowa, Illinois and Missouri to aid in flood relief. Ecolab donated products to Rwanda refugee camps in 1994, in the wake of political unrest, and to Kobe, Japan, following its 1995 earthquake. And when floodwaters in Grand Forks, North Dakota, caused a shutdown of Pest Elimination’s headquarters in early 1997, relief efforts took on massive proportions. Donations to Ecolab associates and the Grand Forks community, both in monetary and material form, surpassed more than $200,000. In 1996, the company formally articulated the qualities that define the Ecolab culture – spirit, pride, determination, commitment, passion and integrity. Ecolab people from the top down and around the world embody these quali- > E C O L A B TO W E R. When Ecolab celebrated its 75th year in 1998, the company’s 21-story office tower remained a dominant landmark on the downtown St. Paul skyline. That year, the company initiated a renovation of its three-building headquarters campus to see it into the 21st century. 58 Quest for Excellence Ecolab’s Our mission Our mission is to be the leading global their education and training. We have constructive and innovator, developer and provider of cleaning, sanitation open lines of communication, and establish goals with our and maintenance products, systems and services. As a associates. We encourage associates to participate in set- team, we will achieve aggressive growth and a fair return ting these goals and judging their own performance. for our shareholders. We will accomplish this by exceeding Our global workforce is a team of diverse, talented, the expectations of our customers while conserving action-oriented people who demonstrate spirit, pride, resources and preserving the quality of the environment. determination, commitment, passion and integrity. Our associates are enthusiastic, honest, open and hardwork- Our shareholders We are a growth company. We will ing, do their jobs well, and expect their co-workers to do provide our shareholders with a 15% annual growth in likewise. We use the company’s assets as carefully as if per share earnings while continually investing in product they research and business development to assure a reliable were our own, suggest ways to be more productive, and future. Dividends will be consistent and recognize share- help each other. We encourage people to take initiative, holders’ needs for an adequate return and the company’s go the extra mile, make the additional call! Above all, we need for growth capital. Our financial objectives also want associates who accept responsibility and account- include a minimum 20% return on beginning of the ability for their own growth, behavior and performance. year shareholders’ equity and an “A” rated balance sheet. We provide a clean and safe work environment. We We intend to remain an independent company and care about each other and enjoy working together as a chart our own course. team. Recognizing that the quality of our shareholders’ invest- We learn from our mistakes and celebrate our victories. ment is built and measured over time, we will not sacrifice We hire the best qualified people. Associates are long-term growth in sales and earnings for short-term rewarded based on performance and teamwork. We results. encourage self-development and promotion from within. To effectively maximize our shareholders’ equity, we must have strong, positive relationships with our cus- Our customers Our customers are our business part- tomers and our associates. Our objective is to have all ners. We listen to them, respond quickly to their current associates be shareholders. needs and anticipate their future needs. We deliver quality services, products and systems that are safe and reliable. Our employees Our most important resource is our We are superior to our competitors, providing the highest associates. We recognize and reward associates who value to our customers at a fair price. actively demonstrate and support The Ecolab Culture and We work closely with our customers, tell them the truth Quest for Excellence. and earn their business every day. Superior service built We are committed to creating a global environment this company and continues to be our central policy and that respects diversity and individuality. To best utilize and develop our associates’ many talents, we invest in 59 philosophy. We are a vigorous, tough, ethical competitor. believe in the free flow of candid, objective information, up, down, and across organizational lines. We observe uniform Our organization We are a flexible, innovative, respon- accounting practices and prompt disclosure of operating results, sive and entrepreneurial organization. We structure our busi- with no surprises. We insist on preparation and planning. We nesses around the needs of our customers and provide only those encourage over-achievement. central services which are essential to our growth, the protection of our corporate assets, or provide significant advantages in Our society We recognize the importance of service to soci- terms of quality and cost. Performance is judged on the extent to ety and contribute positively to the communities in which we oper- which it promotes the overall good of the corporation over the ate. Our business is conducted in accordance with the law and separate interests of individual business units and functions. stated corporate and societal standards of conduct. Our business environment is constantly changing. We are This statement is an expression of our mission and shared val- committed to creative, innovative approaches that lead to break- ues, the achievement of which is an ongoing challenge and a through performance. We are always improving. never-ending process. It requires us to respond effectively to an We value simplicity; we take action. We expect results. We ever-changing environment. It requires pragmatism and dreams, endorse substance over form, and quality over quantity. We courage and confidence, trust and commitment. Culture Ecolab “We have many different ideas and many different people please our customers, surpass our record achievements, and drive throughout our organization. Yet we are one company, one team, our organization to greater success. with one culture.”– Al Schuman, president and chief executive offi- Commitment Like a family, we are united by an unspoken cer, Ecolab pledge, bound by our convictions. We prize dedication, and are Spirit Ecolab associates are the company’s heart and soul. moved to help each other and our customers. We accept nothing Hungry to succeed and passionate to achieve, we embrace the less than loyalty in our ranks. We are true to each other and to unknown, fearlessly taking risks, confident in our ability to our cause. deliver results. We are eager and ambitious. We tenaciously perse- Passion We wholeheartedly believe in our company; vere, surmounting obstacles with grit and determination. Above its goals and objectives are our mission, and we enthusiastically all, we find joy in our work, and in serving the company and our embrace them and relentlessly pursue them. More importantly, customers. we truly believe in each other, care, protect Pride Exceptional service, exceptional products…we delight in and support each other. presenting premium quality in all we offer. No matter how big the Integrity Professional. Reliable. Trustworthy. Honest. project, or how small the request, we strive for excellence in our Our corporate integrity is a critical asset and we are committed to response, for we relish perfection. We cherish our company, and upholding it worldwide. We set high standards, and we abide by represent it with honor. them as we practice business fairly and behave ethically. We Determination Ambitious and aggressive, driven and share our expectations with each other and strive to maintain a determined, enthusiastic and energetic, we cultivate the opportu- work place built on mutual values, nity to compete. We thrive on challenges, viewing them as an trust and goodwill. invitation to success. A true team, we work together to routinely 60 Publication Information Editor and Project Director Helen Carciofini Credits Calgonite – Beecham Inc. Spic & Span – Proctor & Gamble All – Conopco (DBA Lever Brothers Company) Kiwi – Sara Lee Corporation Snowy – Reckitt & Colman Inc. Sta Flo – The Dial Corporation Sta Puf – The Dial Corporation Scrub Free – Joh. A. Benckiser GmbH 28741/0800/0199 61