GILETTE
– FACTS ABOUT THE RAZOR KING -
G'day folks,
January 5, 1855 — Safety razor pioneer King Camp Gillette, who was born on this day, may have made millions from his business but he was a Utopian Socialist at heart.
So much so that he dreamed of the day when all industry would be taken over by
a single corporation owned by the public, and that everyone in the United
States would live in a giant city called Metropolis powered by Niagara Falls.
Gillette envisaged setting up a company to make this vision come true and
offered Theodore
Roosevelt a million dollars if he would run the operation. The former
President declined.
Ancestors of the strangely named King Camp Gillette were French Huguenots who
moved to England, then in the 17th Century to the newly established
Massachusetts Bay Colony. After King was born in 1855 the family moved from
Wisconsin, where they had settled, to Chicago, where he was raised.
He became a travelling salesman of hardware and in 1895, while honing a
“cut-throat” razor so that he could shave before starting work, he thought how
much better it would be to avoid this dangerous and tedious daily task by using
a replaceable razor.
Men had been grappling with the problem for centuries. Prehistoric cave
drawings show that clam shells, sharpened flints and even shark’s teeth had
been used for shaving. Gillette’s ideas were rather more sophisticated, even if
they were not new.
The first safety razor was in fact invented in the 1880s by the Kampfe Brothers
of New York, and as writer Brennan Kilbane of Allure magazine noted: “Gillette
did not invent the razor, nor the safety razor, nor the concept of disposable
blades, but he was the first to patent it. His economic legacy is best felt in
the frustration that heats your face when you realise your $22 razor blade set
requires you to continually repurchase a $36 eight-pack of refills.”
This all stems from advice given to the young entrepreneurial Gillette by an
employer: “Invent something that will be used and thrown away so that the
customer will keep coming back.”
Gillette's disposable blades created a new and lucrative retail concept in
which razors were sold quite cheaply so that consumers would be locked into the
need to continuously purchase relatively expensive blades. The selling
technique would become known as the ‘razor and blades model’ and is perhaps
most associated today with the printers and ink market.
In its first year of trading in 1903, the Gillette Safety Razor Company sold 51
razors and 168 blades. By the end of 1904, it had produced 90,000 razors and
12,400,000 blades. Gillette’s innovative sales strategy – selling the razors at
a loss but making profit on the blades – would turn him into a
multi-millionaire.
The fabulously wealthy King Camp Gillette died in 1932, aged 77. Today, the
highly successful Gillette brand is owned by the US-based multi-national
Procter & Gamble company which purchased the business in 2005 for a
staggering $57 billion.
Clancy's comment: Imagine how many razor blades have been used?
I'm ...
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