Kimberly-Clark Corporation is an American multinational private care company that manufactures most paper-based consumer products. Kimberly-Clark branded products include Kleenex facial tissue, Kotex feminine hygiene products, Cottonelle toilet paper, Scott and Andrex, Wypall wipes, KimWipes scientific wipes, and disposable diapers of Huggies and baby wipes.
Founded in Neenah, Wisconsin, in 1872 and based in Irving, Texas, since 1985, it has about 43,000 employees. Kimberly-Clark UK has Royal Warrants from Queen Elizabeth II and from Prince of Wales in England. Kimberly-Clark is also listed among Fortune 500. Subsidiaries under Kimberly-Clark include Kimberly-Clark Professional.
Video Kimberly-Clark
History
Kimberly, Clark and Co. founded in 1872 by John A. Kimberly, Havilah Babcock, Charles B. Clark, and Franklyn C. Shattuck in Neenah, Wisconsin, with a capital of $ 42,000. The group's first business operates a paper mill, which is extended by the collective over the next few decades. The company developed a cotton cell in 1914, a cotton replacement used by the US Army as a surgical cotton during World War I. The Army nurse used a cotton pad as a disposable bandage pad, and six years later the company introduced Kotex, the first disposable feminine. hygiene products. Kleenex, a disposable handkerchief, followed in 1924. Kimberly & amp; Clark joined The New York Times Company in 1926 to build a newspaper factory in Kapuskasing, Ontario, Canada. Two years later, the company went public as Kimberly-Clark.
The company developed internationally during the 1950s, opening factories in Mexico, West Germany, and the UK. It started operating in 17 more foreign locations in the 1960s. The company formed Midwest Express Airlines from the company's aviation department in 1984. The Kimberly-Clark headquarters moved from Neenah, Wisconsin to Irving, Texas the following year, although the product was still being produced in Neenah. Under the leadership of Darwin Smith as CEO from 1971 to 1991, the company changed from a business paper company to a consumer paper product company.
In 1991, Kimberly-Clark and The New York Times Company sold their joint paper mill in Kapuskasing, Ontario. Kimberly-Clark entered a joint venture with Descartables Argentinos SA headquartered in Buenos Aires to manufacture personal care products in Argentina in 1994 and also purchased a $ 123 million VP-Schickedanz (Germany) hygiene unit and 90% of Handan Comfort and Beauty Group (China).
Kimberly-Clark bought Scott Paper in 1995 for $ 9.4 billion. In 1997, Kimberly-Clark sold 50% of its shares in Canada's Scott Paper to Kruger's forest products company Inc. and buy diaper operations in Spain and Portugal and the maker of disposable medical mask Tecnol Medical Products. With its increasing presence in Germany, Switzerland and Austria, in 1999 the company paid $ 365 million for the Swiss-based Attisholz Holding business network. In addition to offering medical products, the company purchased Ballard Medical Products in 1999 for $ 774 million and Safeskin checkmate in 2000 at a price of about $ 800 million.
Also in 2000, the company bought almost all Taiwanese S-K Companies; the move made Kimberly-Clark one of Taiwan's largest consumer packing goods manufacturers. The company then purchased Taiwan Scott Paper Corporation for approximately $ 40 million and merged the two companies, forming the Kimberly-Clark Taiwan b/b. In 2001, Kimberly-Clark bought an Italian diaper maker, Linostar, and announced the closure of four Latin American manufacturing plants. The ambitious vision of Kimberly-Clark Sub-Saharan Africa - nothing less than converting a $ 250 million business into a $ 1 billion business by 2015.
In 2002, Kimberly-Clark bought rival paper-packaging rival Amcor in an Australian joint venture. Adding to the global consumer network business, in 2003, Kimberly-Clark acquired Klucze the Polish network maker.
In early 2004, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Thomas Falk embarked on the implementation of the company's global business plan detailed in July 2003. The Company combines North American and European groups for personal care and consumer networks under the North Atlantic group and works to ensure that the Asian, American Market Latin and Eastern Europe are supplied, particularly in the areas of value-added diapers, mild incontinence, and health care products.
Maps Kimberly-Clark
Ownership
In 2017, Kimberly-Clark shares were mainly held by institutional investors (Vanguard Group, BlackRock, State Street Corporation, and others)
Relationships with Midwest Airlines
The origins of Midwest Airlines can be traced back to 1948, when Kimberly-Clark Corporation opened the airline's aviation department and began providing air transport to company executives and engineers between the company's headquarters in Neenah, Wisconsin, and its paper mills.
In 1969, K-C Aviation was born from a company's air operations, and dedicated to the maintenance of the company's aircraft. In 1982, K-C Aviation started a shuttle flight to Kimberly-Clark employees between Appleton, Memphis and Atlanta. From these experiences and considering the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act, Kimberly-Clark and KC Aviation decided to set up regular scheduled passenger airlines, and out of initiatives, Midwest Express Airlines began on June 11, 1984. The airline's name is abbreviated to Midwest Airlines in 2003.
K-C Aviation broke away from the airline in 1996. Two years later, Gulfstream Aerospace bought K-C Aviation from Kimberly-Clark for $ 250 million, including operations at airports in Dallas, Appleton and Westfield, Massachusetts.
Environmental recordings
In 2005, Greenpeace launched the Kleercut campaign against Kimberly-Clark because the company has been linked to ancient boreal forest clearance. Environmental organizations have accused Kimberly-Clark of using more than 3 million tonnes of pulp per year from the forest to produce tissue paper products, such as the Kleenex brand. Greenpeace leads a large grassroots activist campaign targeting Kimberly-Clark to get 22% of its paper pulp from Canadian boreal forests containing 200-year-old trees.
Greenpeace ended its campaign in August 2009, following the launch of a new environmental policy by Kimberly-Clark. Both organizations announced that they are moving "away from conflict to new collaborative relationships to further promote forest conservation, responsible forest management, and the use of recycled fibers for the manufacture of tissue products."
Kimberly-Clark has a target to buy 100% wood fiber from independent certified sustainability suppliers, with a preference for fiber certified Forest Stewardship Council. Kimberly-Clark states that by the end of 2010, it has reached 98% of this target.
Major US consumer product line
- Cottonelle
Cottonelle is the brand name for bath products. Product forms include premium shower networks and wet cleaning products that are easy to clean.
- Depends
Depend is a brand name for incontinence products used by adults.
- GoodNites
GoodNites is an absorbent underwear marketed primarily for children and adolescents who are experiencing bedwetting.
- Huggies
Huggies are disposable diapers for babies and toddlers. Additional Huggies brand products include "Huggies Clean Team" products for toddlers such as shampoo, hand soap, hand wash, etc.
- Little Swimmers
Little Swimmers is a disposable diaper brand.
- Kleenex
Kleenex is a brand name facial tissue paper. Many versions have been created, including with lotion , our softest ever! , and regular . In the 70s, Dr. Cody Sweet (color psychologist) is employed through Public Relation And Edelman to represent the newly colored and colorful designed boxes of this product as a national media spokesperson.
- Kotex
Kotex is a feminine health product line that includes pantyliners, sanitary napkins, and tampons.
- Poise
Poise is a brand of bearings and liners for adult incontinence.
- Pull-Ups
Pull-Ups is a brand name training pants for toddlers, marketed along with Huggies baby product brands.
- Scott
Scott is the brand name of paper napkins, tissues, and tissue/toilet paper.
- VIVA
VIVA is a heavy duty paper towel brand name.
Mexican consumer product line
Includes most of the American products and these products:
- The Napkin Brand
Kimberly-Clark distributes various brands of napkins (Kleenex, Petalo, Suavel, Delsey, Lys).
- Brand of toilet paper
Kimberly-Clark distributes various brands of toilet paper (Kleenex, Petalo, Suavel, Delsey, Vogue, Lys).
- KleenBebe
The baby's brand name is similar to Huggies. This brand is a combination of "kleen" (Kleenex) and "bebe" (Spanish for "baby").
Kimberly-Clark also has various brands designed for professional market and medical markets.
Major professional and global products
KimWipes
KimWipes is a type of cleaning network commonly used in laboratories. They are intended for applications where leaving fibers or fibers on unwanted surfaces, such as slides and pipettes. They are sometimes used to clean the lens as well, but are used on optical lenses with water-based coatings and special solvents can cause light defects, and manufacturers recommend using laps designed specifically for use with laminated lenses. KimWipes consists of virgin wood pulp from certified forests, with few chemical additives.
DryNites
DryNites is a version of GoodNite sold in Europe and Australasia.
See also
- Kimberly Crest
- Toilet paper in the United States
References
External links
- Official website
Source of the article : Wikipedia