Acquired - Mars Inc. (the chocolate story)
Episode Date: December 16, 2024M&M’s, Snickers, Milky Way, Double Mint, Ben’s Rice, Pedigree, Whiskas, VCA, Banfield… all the brands you know, owned by the company you know nothing about: Mars, Incorporated. And ...Mars itself is 100% owned and deeply intertwined with the Mars family, who are currently the second wealthiest (and perhaps first most secretive!) family in the United States. Tune in for one of the 20th century’s most incredible entrepreneurial stories across candy and pet care, and one that’s all the more incredible because it’s so little-known!Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Fall ‘24 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsCrusoeStatsigLinks:Hershey’s M&M response: Hershey-etsOur past episodes on Berkshire Hathaway, LVMH, and Novo NordiskWorldly Partners Multi-Decade Mars StudyEpisode sourcesCarve Outs:Dandelion Chocolate and the Dandelion Advent CalendarTesla Model Y + repair serviceSiloHome AloneMore Acquired:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, David how many current varieties of M&Ms can you name? Oh wow okay?
Well plain peanut peanut butter uh-huh actually plain is technically now called milk chocolate
Interesting there's dark right yep, which I've got right here
They had mint for a while did they discontinue mint mint is a holiday only theme hmm
So that's a seasonal one oh
is a holiday only theme. So that's a seasonal one. Oh, what else? I mean, at the end of the day, it's kind of only plain and peanut that matter, right? I think in sales numbers,
are there pretzel ones? There are pretzel ones. There are also almond. Oh, I'm at sea.
I'm allergic to almonds. So I never think about almonds. There's also some weird ones.
Caramel?
Yeah.
I don't want that at all, but they make it.
Crunchy Cookie, which replaced Crispy of our youth.
Do you remember the blue packaging, Crispy M&M's?
Oh yeah, I remember the Crispies. Yeah.
And then there's some specialty ones, Dark Chocolate Peanut, which I really want.
Fudge Brownie, campfire
s'mores and caramel cold brew.
Oh, I don't know about any of these.
And then there's these really wild limited edition ones. In addition to holiday mint,
birthday cake, chili nut and pumpkin spice latte.
That sounds disgusting.
I know. But yes, I think you are right. The milk chocolate and the peanut are the sales
drivers.
Yep. All right, should we peanut are the sales drivers. Yup.
All right.
Should we do it?
Let's do it.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight, another story on the way.
Who got the truth?
Welcome to the fall 2024 season finale of Acquired, the podcast about great companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
Listeners, we were thinking, what episode would be fun to do before the holidays?
We picked M&Ms, thinking this will be just some nice light-hearted
fare about the candies and the characters on commercials that remind us all of our childhood.
But as we dug into Mars Incorporated, the parent company, we realized that the story is totally
thrilling. It's got World War I, World War II, new technologies and inventions, and serious,
serious family drama. And their corporate strategy over the years is just as clever as companies like LVMH,
Walmart, and Costco.
I mean, you don't get to be the second wealthiest family in America without it.
Ha, seriously.
Maybe it's because we just did it, but I feel like there are a lot of echoes of IKEA in
this one too.
Absolutely.
And the Mars family is way more quiet and reclusive
than the Comprod family too.
They're way more quiet and reclusive than anybody.
Yeah.
Mars also owns way more than you think.
You may know that they own the world's most popular candy,
Snickers, in addition to M&M's.
Or perhaps you know they're in the pet food business.
But they also own everything from Ben's Original Rice to now Kind Bars, and they have one massive deal in the works
that we will talk about later on this episode. David, here's one crazy stat to illustrate
their sheer size. Do you know Mars now does more revenue than the Coca-Cola company?
I know. Wild.
Mars crossed $50 billion in sales last year, and they're still completely privately owned by the Mars family,
making it one of the top five largest private companies in America.
This really is an incredible American and global story.
Well, listeners, after this episode, come listen to ACQ2.
We just had one of my favorite conversations ever on the show,
in part because I just love talking computer architecture,
with Rene Haas, who is the CEO of Arm Holdings,
the chip design company that makes the designs
and the instruction set architecture of everything
inside your smartphone, your car, your laptop,
and now even massively in the data centers.
Gosh, between Synopsys and now Arm,
we're going to have to rename ACQ2
into acquired semiconductors.
Totally.
It was a great computer science lesson and history lesson
sort of all rolled into one.
So go subscribe to the ACQ2 feed and the podcast player
of your choice to check it out.
We've got a survey winner.
Thank you to everyone who took our survey.
It is Kurti from Boston.
We will email you with details on how to claim your free Ray-Ban Metas, and 10 other folks
in addition to Kurti will also receive free ACQ Dad Hats, so keep an eye out on your email
if that is you.
Now before we dive in, we want to briefly thank our presenting sponsor, JPMorgan Payments,
for an incredible year.
Yes, just like Abby say, every company has a story.
Every company's story is powered by payments, and and JP Morgan Payments is a part of so many
of their journeys from seed to IPO and beyond.
Yep.
So with that, this show is not investment advice.
David and I may have investments in the companies we discuss, although not Mars, obviously,
and this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
David, where do we start our story?
Oh, well, we start in September 1883. There's some debate about whether it's in Pennsylvania
or Minnesota, but there's a lot of legend, shall we say, about the Mars family, which
we will get into as we go here. But before really we start, I have to say a thank you
to Joelle Glenn Brenner, who wrote the amazing book, Emperors of Chocolate. Mars, as we'll talk
about, is an incredibly private company and private family. She's the only journalist that
ever got real access to the company, like ever. And it was in 1991, almost a century after founding, that she actually got access for
a Washington Post article and then that turned into the book, is that right?
Yep.
She was a young reporter at the Post and called the company like every day for a year and
finally got access and that became a piece in the Washington Post magazine and then she
turned it into the book Emperors of Chocolate.
Yep.
Okay. So, back to 1883, and let's just call it Minnesota. When Frank Clarence Mars is
born. Now, Frank's father is a flour gristmill operator, and his mother, Elva, is a housewife.
Both of those trades are going to become very important
here. So Frank, sadly, when he's very young and in what I think was also very sadly commonplace
at the time, he contracts polio. And he has a mild case, luckily, he survives, but it does affect
his legs and he has to wear orthopedic braces all growing up. Which means that Frank can't play outside,
he can't play sports, he has to stay home after school
with his mother in the home.
And so what does he do after school with his mother?
Well, his dad would bring home extra bags of flour
and somebody had to put that to use.
So Elva and Frank do lots and lots of baking.
They're baking bread, they're baking pies, they're
baking cakes, and most enjoyably for Frank they are baking candy.
And what was candy at this point in time?
Well I'm glad you asked. It's not chocolate. Chocolate is basically not a thing in America
yet. Candy though was big, and, we're talking about penny candy.
Gumdrops, licorice, all sorts of sugar-based sweets. And they were typically unbranded.
There were no big national or really even local brands of candy at this point in time. And they're
sold wholesale by small regional bakers to local retailers
and drug stores who stock them for kids.
The main market here is selling sweets to kids, and that's what Frank is doing.
You can think about the candy industry at this point in time, sort of like the baked
goods industry today.
You've got some local baker that's making them, distributing to a bunch of coffee shops,
and you don't really know, except in really bougie ones, who the baker of that particular scone is.
It's just, oh, I go to that coffee shop and they have scones there.
Exactly. So this is what Frank and his mom are making in their kitchen. Now, fast forward
to high school, and Frank has kind of become the local candy chef extraordinaire. He's
mastered all of his mom's recipes.
He's experimented with some of his own.
People are liking them.
And so after high school, he does the natural thing.
He becomes one of these candy entrepreneurs.
When he's 19 years old in 1902,
he establishes his own candy company there in Minneapolis
and goes into business selling his creations
and other people's creations wholesale to
these local retailers, merchants, drugstores, etc. for kids to buy.
In that same year, in 1902, he would also briefly marry a woman named Ethel Kisak.
Now, remember this Ethel.
She will come up much, much, much later at the end of the story.
But for the moment, the two of them have a son named
Forest. Forest Mars.
Our real protagonist this story.
Yes. But put a pin in Forest, we will come back to him in a few minutes. So his dad,
Frank, starts this candy business. You think, you're like, yup, this is it. This is the
company. You know, Mars, Snickers, M&M's, Milky Way, it's all to come here.
Out of this one company named Mars.
Yes.
Not true.
Well, not yet.
So we mentioned a minute ago that chocolate was not a thing yet in America.
Now at this point in time in 1902, that is not technically true.
Milton Hershey has started
selling his Hershey's chocolate bars in Pennsylvania, which he started in 1900.
The notorious five-cent just chocolate. I don't even think they had made Hershey's with almonds
yet. It was just the single five-cent slab of chocolate bar called the Hershey bar.
Yep. There weren't even any kisses yet. Nothing. It was just the very beginnings.
Hershey had not yet figured out how to scale production. So it was regional and it wasn't popular around the country and certainly not in Minneapolis. Hershey had just figured out by the
skin of his pants production and the recipe at all. He almost built an entire factory to produce
milk chocolate without knowing how to produce milk chocolate. That was like a lucky diving save at the last minute right before they needed to turn everything
on.
Totally.
So what Frank's selling, this penny candy stuff, it's fine.
And like I said, the target market is kids, which is a good market, but kids turn into
adults and then they stop eating penny candy.
And so the market is not that big.
There's also another problem with the penny candy business, a bigger one, which is in those
days it was all pretty highly perishable. And there's not air conditioning yet.
Exactly, exactly. And so most candy producers end up having really, really
horrible inventory problems and a lot of them end up going out of business.
Which, after a couple years, is exactly what happens to Frank.
So in 1910, Frank's now bankrupt, his wife Ethel divorces him and takes their six-year-old
son Forrest and sends Forrest off to live with her parents in a remote mining town in Saskatchewan,
Canada.
And Ethel stays in Minneapolis and takes a job
as a department store clerk and just hits reset on her life.
It's wild.
Do you know why?
What?
I think because nobody had any money to support him, right?
And in particular, Frank actually owed her $20 a month
for child support for Forrest when he was six years old,
but was failing to make payments.
And so she just couldn't support him
and needed to send him to the grandparents.
I mean, you gotta remember,
like we're in the early 1900s here.
This kind of stuff happened all the time.
Yep.
So Frank, undeterred by bankruptcy, divorce,
being a deadbeat parent, not paying child support,
he marries another woman also named Ethel.
Unbelievable.
Specifically, they move to Seattle.
Ayo.
Where Frank does what else? He sets up another candy business and starts hawking his candy
again. This Seattle candy venture goes about as well as the Minneapolis one. Within one
year, Frank is bankrupt again. The creditors are coming after him, so he skips town again, this time just down the road to Tacoma.
So this is two failed candy companies under his belt.
Yep.
We're now on number three.
He sets up another candy business in Tacoma in 1914.
Out of his house.
Yes.
He's running the business out of his kitchen.
That's right.
And that business also fails after a couple years.
So three down, three strikes.
We're now in 1920 and Frank and Ethel Number Two
return once again to Minneapolis,
figuring that 10 years have gone by.
They can now show their face around town again.
So Frank sets up, yet again, another candy company.
Candy company number four now in total, if you're keeping track at home.
And against all odds, this candy company would go on to become the globally famous $50 billion
annual revenue private family business, Mars Incorporated.
Sort of.
It's not totally Frank that is the reason for its success.
Yes. Okay. So what's different now about this fourth candy company that Frank starts? It's
chocolate.
And chocolate is a completely different universe than these penny candies, then caramels. The
first thing you have to know is it uses cocoa.
I mean, this is a very, at this point in history,
scarce and not very common in America.
Like very few people are importing it
from South America where it originated.
It's a totally different and difficult thing
to try and process.
And at this point in history,
only Europeans really are doing it,
except for one American entrepreneur, Milton Hershey.
Yep.
So we got to rewind a little bit and tell the Hershey story
because A, it's also crazy,
and B, it is deeply, deeply intertwined with the Mars story.
So Milton Hershey had been also
a actually successful candy entrepreneur.
He had his own shares of failures, but he started eventually a caramel company that
became quite big regionally in the Philadelphia area.
Yep.
He sold it for a million dollars in 1900, which is 36, 37 million today with inflation.
Yep.
He is among the most successful of this kind of generation of pre-chocolate candy
entrepreneurs. Before he sold the business though, in 1893, Hershey traveled to Chicago
where at the Columbian Exposition, which I didn't know this was the precursor to the
World's Fair, he tries chocolate for the first time and he's smitten in the German pavilion there.
There's a German company that is displaying chocolate and chocolate making equipment.
And Hershey is so taken by the rich complexity, deliciousness of chocolate that he buys from
this German company all of the equipment on display there, just like on the
spot.
And it says, I want this shipped back to my production facility in Lancaster, Pennsylvania
out in the Philadelphia countryside.
And I am going to set up a chocolate making operation.
Now this is not milk chocolate.
This is just plain chocolate.
And it's worth noting too, this concept of solid chocolate is a pretty new thing, like
a chocolate bar.
Up until, I don't know, 15, 20 years before this, basically all chocolate was drinking
chocolate.
And so this notion of a machine that makes chocolate as bars at the Columbia Exposition
is quite novel. Yeah, I mean, chocolate is a very rich, very complex food,
very difficult to make, and the history goes
all the way back to Montezuma and the Aztecs.
And even before the Aztecs, about 5,300 years ago,
around Ecuador.
Wow, I didn't even know that.
So we're talking about a 5,000-year-old tradition here.
Yes.
But like you said, until, call it the late 1800s, this is a drinking activity.
Yes.
And it's so different than the chocolate we think of today.
There's no milk chocolate.
It's not sort of that nice breakable chocolate with a shine.
It's a very different and only barely enjoyable flavor. It's better than everything
else, but it's not a bar of chocolate like you know today.
Yep. So you said milk chocolate and I said Hershey at this point is not making milk chocolate
when he first introduces it to his caramel company. As he gets deeper and deeper into
the chocolate world, he travels to Europe and learns about milk chocolate,
which had just been invented not too long before in Switzerland by the Swiss company
Nestle.
Sort of Nestle. We're going to talk about how to make chocolate. And then we're going
to use that as a basis of understanding for how to make milk chocolate and how the discovery
of milk chocolate came about. So first of all, how do you make chocolate? And
we have a huge thank you to Todd Masonis at Dandelion Chocolate, which is an excellent,
excellent bean to bar chocolate company in San Francisco for walking us through this
entire thing, not only giving us all the notes of how to describe it on air, but also taking
us through their factory in San Francisco, which is unbelievably cool if anyone has a chance to do it.
So where does chocolate come from?
There's a cocoa fruit that grows on a tree originally in South America, now very commonly
in Africa where they've been transplanted.
It's kind of a football looking thing.
You pick it, you cut open the pod and inside there are the seeds of the fruit.
David, you and I sort of ate some of it
or sucked on some of it.
It's sweet, but it's not chocolate.
It has no reflection of a chocolate flavor.
That all comes from the seeds or the beans.
Yeah, yeah, the fruit itself is actually quite delicious,
but it's like a pulpy sort of milky type thing.
Yes, so that fruit is actually the thing
that people ate for thousands of years,
but the seed ends up being the thing that becomes chocolate.
You first ferment those beans in wooden boxes.
The yeast eats the sugar that creates alcohol, then the acid eats the alcohol.
There's fermentation that kills the beans.
So after this fermentation, you then dry it.
All this kind of happens at the site of production or of growth, typically in South America or in Africa.
So then after the fermentation, you dry it out.
So this could happen sort of in drying beds or in mechanical smoke dryers or on banana
leaves.
All the different ways that you dry it can affect the flavor, how aggressively you dry
it contributes to how much acid is in the beans.
So there's a lot of fluctuation here in the flavor
just based on the way that you are harvesting
the bean itself.
The beans then go into sacks, they go on boats,
they go at this point in history, basically to Europe,
because that was the only place that was making chocolate.
They then get sorted, sterilized, debacterialized.
I suspect not a lot of this was happening in the old days,
but it is what happens now.
They get roasted.
You remove the shell, which is a process called winnowing.
So now you have nibs.
So just like the core, like meat of the bean
after it's been roasted.
Yes. You can press those nibs into create two separate things,
cocoa powder and cocoa butter.
Both of those come
from the nib, but there are many reasons why different chocolatiers will first separate
them out and recombine them in different ratios later. You grind the nibs down to the right
particle size. It then goes through something called conching.
Conching is awesome. It's basically like these big cylinders, right? That like spin around
and around and smooth out all these particles.
Yeah, and there's a great story back in 1879 that Rudolf Lindt, which is another name you may
recognize, the Swiss chocolatier, discovered it by accidentally leaving his cocoa in a roller
grinder over the weekend instead of shutting the machine off. So it accidentally pressed the beans
for three full days, which created this silky, smooth,
flowing texture. And then you could do cool stuff like add more cocoa butter in to get that Swiss
chocolate texture that we all know of today. If you've had it and you're like, how is this so
unbelievably creamy? You know, you separate the nibs into cocoa powder, cocoa butter, and then you
add a bunch more cocoa butter back in and it's that delicious Swiss chocolate. So 1879 is when conching sort of first discovered. Now there's,
David, to your point, specific conching machines that will do this as a part of the chocolate
production process. Still not done yet. You now have this great conched, liquidous,
wonderful chocolate sitting there. If you just let it dry, it's actually not shelf stable.
It will bloom. For any of you who ever left a chocolate bar in a hot car and it sort of melted
and then re-solidified, it gets that sort of white gross stuff on top and it doesn't have that shine
to it. It doesn't snap nicely the way that you're used to a chocolate bar snapping. There's actually
some pretty complicated chemistry that happens where you are taking this conched chocolate
and you are tempering it.
And what tempering it does is you are aligning
the crystals in the cocoa butter to make it so that it forms
into that shiny breakable chocolate that you know of today.
And this is an incredible process, right?
You take this liquid chocolate after conching,
you heat it up to like kind of super liquify it,
and then you cool it down to like
just the right amount of temperature
where the right sort of seed crystals form.
That's exactly right.
Right, and then you heat it back up again,
and then you let it cool.
And if you don't do that second step,
all the bloom will happen,
but you're gonna wanna get like
just the right seed crystals
to set the right crystal and structure for how it'll come together.
That's exactly right. When you're super heating it, you're eliminating all crystals so that
you can kind of start from scratch with this seed crystal, and then you're trying to let
the rest of the chocolate form around that seed crystal so they're all aligned in that
nice shiny break.
Believe me, I appreciated chocolate before doing this episode.
But now, like knowing how it's made, and we haven't even gotten to milk chocolate yet,
which is even more complex.
This is more complex than wine.
This is more complex than coffee.
Ooh, shots fired on wine and coffee.
You're going to hear something.
Well, at least in terms of like stages of production, right?
Like let's take coffee.
Coffee looks pretty similar until, you know,
you get the beans there roasted, but then you grind the beans and you just put the beans in liquid.
You're not getting any of these steps here.
Chocolate is remarkably hard to make. I think that is a huge takeaway. The fact that I'm looking
down here at all these bags of M&Ms and the Snickers bar, we sort of just assume, oh, this is an
industrial thing that just sort of comes off the line. It's an agricultural product that then has to go through a variety of different
processes developed on different continents,
many decades apart in order to create something very uniform and predictable and
desirable out of that pure agricultural product. Okay.
So that's all the way from the fruit through the fermentation, through
the processing of the beans, through the conching, through the tempering.
And in those last steps of the process in the conching and the tempering, you're also
adding sugar in, right? So like unless you want to make a hundred percent dark chocolate,
which is like very complex, but very bitter.
No one's going to eat that. Most people max out at 85% chocolate and the rest,
the 15% is sugar, or you're getting a 70% bar
and the 30% is sugar,
or if you're getting a milk chocolate bar,
it's more in that 30 to 50% cocoa
and the rest is sugar and milk.
But in reality, most of the time
you're eating chocolate these days,
unless it's a bean to bar producer,
like a dandelion or something,
you're ending up with all sorts of stuff added
in that process.
More cocoa butter, sugar, soy lecithin.
Oftentimes you'll get vanilla that's added
in part of this process
to kind of create a chocolate taste you know of.
Yep.
Okay, so we're still in the dark chocolate world here.
Let's talk about Nestle and milk chocolate.
Which is sort of a funny misnomer, right? Dark chocolate. It's just chocolate. It's
chocolate that doesn't have milk. So we needed to retro nimet something. Like we needed to
come up with a name and we're like, oh, it's dark chocolate. Okay. It's chocolate that's
chocolate and sugar, but doesn't have milk. Okay. Anyway, dark chocolate. So what is milk
chocolate then? Well, now we need to flash back 35 years before Milton Hershey sells his first caramel company. This is before
he started the Hershey Chocolate Company, 1866. Henri Nestle, David, to give some credence
to your comment, is researching infant feeding as a means to solve infant mortality. He invents
a new type of food for babies who are unable to breastfeed there in Switzerland.
And remember, at this point in time, something like one in five babies died before their first birthday.
So infant mortality is a massive, massive global problem.
Now he's researching this alternative infant feeding methods.
Milk would quickly turn rancid. So there was this question of how do you keep milk fresh?
He eventually solved it. It is hard to condense milk without burning it,
but he figured out this method of using an air pump
at low temperatures to concentrate sort of a milk powder.
And then he added a bunch of cereal,
a proprietary cereal mix he created.
And this is effectively the first baby formula.
So in 1867, he demonstrated that a baby could drink
this formula that he made, rehydrated,
and it was effectively a miracle to keep babies alive.
Totally.
This is like one of many mind blowing things in the research that I learned.
Nestle was a baby formula company.
That's how it started.
Totally.
It's great.
It's in the same way that Hermes, the Birkin bag was a bag for baby bottles.
Yeah, right. Who knew that baby formula literally leads to the modern chocolate industry?
Yep. So, incredibly, one of his neighbors who desperately needed this formula because his baby
was rejecting breast milk happened to be a chocolatier, a guy by the name of Daniel Peter.
So he had this idea for milk chocolate in 1867 by combining the dehydrated
baby formula with cocoa and sugar to create a creamy drink. We're still in the drink era
and people at that time were already pouring milk in with their drinking chocolate, but
he sort of said, well, can I create this as a pre-made product?
Yep. And again, to the issues with creating baby formula and then now here
the issues with creating milk chocolate. Milk is not a stable product. Milk goes bad fast.
So how are you going to put this in a product? Milk chocolate is something that sits on a
shelf for six months and you can eat it and it's not spoiled. It's kind of unique in that
way. Totally. So the issue that he kept running into, this is
Daniel Peter, was that the mixture was grainy, the water in the milk didn't blend well with the
cocoa's bean oils. It was a mess. And when he tried to dry the milk on his own, it was really easy,
David, to your point, that it was spoiling and the chocolate would sort of be rancid by the end when
he finished it. Eventually, Daniel Peter walked away from Henri Nestle's powdered milk entirely, and
instead he tried condensed milk, which is more like a concentrated syrup, not actually
dried powder.
And when he tried this, plus then a final step of spreading the milk chocolate mixture
on these big trays to slowly dry them and slowly add a little bit more heat to turn
it into these milk chocolate flakes, That is the thing that worked.
That he finally was able to create this marketable milk chocolate,
flaky stuff that would turn into a drink.
And then later, especially over at Cadbury and, you know, other European
chocolate companies would turn into milk chocolate bars that Milton Hershey would try to emulate.
Ah, interesting.
I didn't actually know that it was condensed milk,
not the formula milk that ended up working for Nestle.
That's my understanding. I got this from, um,
there's a descendant of the Cadbury family, Deborah Cadbury,
who wrote this book called Chocolate Wars.
And two chapters out of 20 or something are about Mars,
but it was this great primer on the history of the chocolate industry to learn all this.
Mmm, interesting. Yeah, so you're deeper on this part than me.
So you might be asking yourself, why was everybody going through all this
trouble to combine milk and chocolate?
It's the perfect combination.
Chocolate is so wonderful and complex and delicious on its own, but it's heavily
bitter and when you temper it, not tempering in the chocolate process, but sort of
temper that flavor with the smoothness and the creaminess of milk,
anybody who likes chocolate knows it's just absolutely delicious.
Yeah, so by 1879, once you have milk chocolate in solid form
and then you have conching, you now go from bars that are sort of really gritty and hard to bite
to this kind of amazing mouth feel
that just massively increased the market.
10X, it's hard to get a number on it, but the market for what chocolate would be from
1879 onward is way bigger than before.
Yep, totally.
So back to Hershey.
He of course learns about all of this as he's building his new chocolate company there in
Pennsylvania and he decides that he's building his new chocolate company there in Pennsylvania.
And he decides that he's going to make milk chocolate too.
Except he's not a chemist.
He doesn't employ any chemists.
He basically has no idea what he's doing.
And for years, he just experiments via trial and error to try and find a way to produce
milk chocolate. He builds a huge new factory in
what would become Hershey, Pennsylvania, like the town of Hershey, Pennsylvania. He's basically
betting it all of, I am going to figure this out and I am going to bring chocolate and
milk chocolate to America at scale. Finally, after a couple of years, he does hit on a method that works for producing milk
chocolate.
However, you know, it's not quite as scientific as what you were just describing, Ben.
And in the process, effectively, the milk does spoil a little bit, which is why I'm sure all of our, you know, European and other
international non-American friends who are listening to us here and are saying like Hershey's,
that is so disgusting. I have no idea how all you Americans eat Hershey's chocolate
and why it tastes sour if you're not used to it, this is why. It is sour.
Yeah, so there are two versions of the story and we don't know which one is true.
But either way, David, it leads to this thing that you're talking about, which is there's
kind of a little bit of a funk or a little bit of a sourness in Hershey's chocolate.
And that is just what Americans are used to.
So to Americans, that's chocolate.
Okay, account number one, and this is all in the Cadbury book that I just mentioned.
After a series of laborious failures, Schmalabach, who was a scientist working with Hershey,
seized on the initiative and tried a slow evaporation of nonfat milk over low heat.
He succeeded in reducing the water content of the milk and added the sugar to create
a sweet, creamy concoction with no hint of a burned flavor. Better yet, they found that the mixture could be blended with the
ingredients of the cocoa bean without spoiling to produce a smooth milk chocolate. Hershey was
thrilled. Slightly sour, but distinctly original. The perfect American chocolate bar. Now, there's
a second view, which is that Hershey happened to acquire a large batch of milk powder from Europe
Which has slightly soured by the time it crossed the Atlantic
Reluctant to waste such a large amount he used it to make chocolate and found that it sold well
Company officials have always denied that soured milk powder played any part in the company's formula
Amazing amazing. Thank you. Deborah Cadbury for all If written by a member of the Cadbury family,
you can imagine why that story is preferred.
Regardless, here's the amazing thing, though,
that this illustrates.
When it comes to candy, and specifically
when it comes to chocolate, the most important thing
in the business is being first to market and setting the taste
of a specific regional area.
Because again, Europeans think that Hershey's chocolate is disgusting and Americans are
like this is chocolate.
When you're a kid and you eat this stuff for the first time, your taste gets associated
with oh, this is what this is.
There's also a nostalgia element to this too.
Because the tastes are so strong, so powerful, so complex, you bite into a Hershey's bar
and like subconsciously or not, your brain is going right back to childhood when you first ate that.
Yep. And actually today, 75% of candy is eaten by adults and in fact, it accounts for 90% of total purchases.
A complete departure
from the pre-chocolate world you were talking about with the penny candies at the checkout
counter.
Yep, totally. So Hershey, he was crazy in believing in the potential for all this, but
because he invested so much money, he set up the only scale chocolate production facility period in America.
He was able to set this taste for the country, which basically locked him
in as what chocolate was in America.
Fascinating.
And he's smart about this too, from a business perspective.
Like Ben, you mentioned the nickel Hershey bar.
He intentionally sets the price at a nickel. He totally
could have charged a lot more. This is like this great, delicious, luxurious
item. He wants it to be ubiquitous. So he prices the bars at a nickel and he
pushes distribution everywhere. Five and dime stores, grocery stores, gas stations,
newsstands, standard oil stations. He's pushing everywhere.
I mean, he basically invents the modern candy industry by doing this.
Yes.
And Hershey's kind of uniquely positioned to do it.
Imagine you're walking around today with 40 million bucks from the
sale of your previous company.
You realize there's something going on in Europe.
You know, it's going to work in America.
You can't get your hands on the formula but you can try and reverse engineer it.
Your competitors can't sell fund to the degree that you can and so he decides.
I'm rich i'm gonna go big immediately and so we build out this huge factory to start production before he's even finalize the formula.
even finalize the formula. So it's really like a go big or go home strategy
where if it works, boom, mass production,
mass distribution, I set the flavor profile in America
and I set the brand in America for chocolate.
And if it fails, it fails pretty catastrophically.
Yep.
So putting the final pieces
on this initial Hershey success story,
right after Milton Hershey figures out milk chocolate and starts this production and is
expanding distribution nationwide, World War I happens.
And the American military, as they have seen European armies do, they source chocolate
as ration bars for the troops.
And Hershey's is the big supplier.
So millions and millions of American GIs now get introduced and hooked on the slightly
sour Hershey's chocolate.
And it's great.
It's a super dense store of energy.
It triggers an emotional response in the brain.
I mean, everybody who eats sugar today knows that if you're eating sugar, it is triggering.
I don't know if it's dopamine or serotonin,
but there's definitely a stimulus of a happiness release,
which if you're a soldier in World War I,
you could use a little of that.
Yeah, it's got caffeine, totally.
So these soldiers then come home,
and right after the war is prohibition in America.
So you can no longer buy alcohol, or at least legally buy alcohol.
And all these adults are now like, you need some sort of social lubricant here.
Well, what's the natural alternative?
It's chocolate.
Which brings us to the candy bar.
So all of these former penny candy entrepreneurs all around the country, they're like, wow,
chocolate is amazing, we can market to adults, etc.
It's expensive, Hershey's selling their own bars.
What if I take just some chocolate and some other stuff and also make a bar?
Well that I could make a lot cheaper because the other ingredients,
whether it's nuts or nougat or sugar or whatever, are cheaper and I can develop my
own unique taste that people in my region might find appealing.
So by the end of the 1920s, there are more than 40,000 different candy bars being made
in America.
Oh my god. Almost all of which are these regional entrepreneurial operations. thousand different candy bars being made in America.
Oh my God.
Almost all of which are these regional entrepreneurial operations.
The most infamous of these is, Ben, do you know the story of the Baby Ruth candy bar?
No.
So it's still available today, Baby Ruth candy bar, named I think for President Grover Cleveland,
I think, daughter Ruth, baby daughter Ruth.
To introduce the bar, the Curtis Candy Company,
which made it, chartered an airplane
to fly over the city of Pittsburgh
and drop bars down with little paper parachutes
over the city.
It is like a literal drop.
It puts the visa drop to shame.
Wow.
Amazing.
We're gonna have to do that
for an acquired marketing stunt at some point.
I know, I know.
Charter at Airplane.
I think we would get into a lot of trouble if we did that these days.
I think so too.
Oh, man.
So, okay, you might be scratching your head a little bit and being like, wait a minute,
you just told me about how Hershey controls the means of production for chocolate and
nobody in America can make chocolate except Hershey.
Well that's right. And Hershey is freaking loving all of this
because they are supplying the chocolate
to all of these entrepreneurs.
They're like the AWS of the chocolate business.
They've become the Blue Jeans and Pickaxes company
in this gold rush.
Yes.
So like, if you've ever wondered,
how the heck did Milton Hershey build a town
and how do you become like Rockefellers or
Carnegie's or Vanderbilt's?
Like this is how.
This is when you start to see this separation of the different players in the value chain
of chocolate.
It used to just be, well, I buy beans and then I make consumer branded chocolate bars.
And this is the first time there's a sort of intermediation step where you say, well,
Hershey makes the chocolate and then other people buy the chocolate from Hershey for their consumer products.
And yeah, Hershey also makes a chocolate bar. But in America, this is really the creation of the wholesale business of chocolate.
Yep. And there's one game in town, at least when it comes to milk chocolate, which is most of the market, and that's Hershey. And the US military loves it too because you can put all these high energy density ingredients
Inside of the candy bar and then use the chocolate effectively to seal it in and keep it fresh
And so you put a wrapper around it you send it off at the troops and you know, you've got
Eggs in the nougat which has protein you've got nuts which is protein and fat
I mean all of this you're delivering these kind of complete meals
and fat. I mean, all of this, you're delivering these kind of complete meals, complete in quotes, but it's carbohydrates with sugar and other carbohydrates. It's fat,
it's protein. It's not a ton of protein, but they're energy bars. And it's all because the
chocolate seals up the ingredients inside. Totally. So this now brings us back to
Frank Mars in Minneapolis and the fourth candy company and what is different this time which is chocolates. So when Frank first gets back
to Minneapolis and starts up the fourth company he had seen out in Seattle and
Tacoma that buttercream truffles were like really really popular so he brings
the buttercream truffles he steals from the companies out there brings the
concept back to Minneapolis.
That's quite successful.
He calls them Victorian buttercreams and I believe started coating them in chocolate
using Hershey's chocolate, which makes sense given everything that's going on.
That becomes pretty successful.
He adds another line called Patricia's chocolates named after his new daughter, Patricia, that
he has had
with wife Ethel number two. And after a couple of years, the business is doing like, call it a
hundred thousand dollars ish in revenue. So like really, really well. We're not talking Hershey
levels of entrepreneurial ambition here, but that's not the ambition that Frank has. And then in 1922,
that Frank has. And then in 1922, he decides that he's going to get in on this candy bar craze that is sweeping the nation. And he introduces his first combination bar or candy
bar called the Marrow Bar.
Yes. And do you know the other name for these types of candy bars that are sort of chocolate
wrapped something else?
Combination bars, right?
The term I read was count lines.
Oh, no.
I didn't come across that.
So this is from the Cadbury book.
Interestingly, all chocolate before was measured by weight.
And once somebody kind of rolls their first candy bar off the line, you know, what we
now know today, the Snickers bar, the Milky Way, all these things, you couldn't really
just measure it by weight because it's got a bunch of much cheaper ingredients
inside, treating chocolate as one substance that has weight no longer maps to the consumer
product.
And so these lines where you'd manufacture these candy bars were measured by count of
bars.
So they're called count lines.
So these manufacturers are spinning up count lines instead of, I don't know, weight lines
or whatever they were before.
Amazing.
It's like the KD furniture from the IKEA episode.
So here we are.
The first candy bar, count line bar from the Mars Company, 1922, comes out and I don't
want to say it's a flop, but it's not a success.
No one's eaten Marlboro bars today.
Correct.
Correct indeed.
But then the next year in the summer of 1923, Mars, reappears in highly dramatic fashion,
and the two of them team up, father and son, to introduce a new candy bar,
one that will take the nation by storm, that would end up being called the Milky Way.
Or at least that's the legend.
And we will tell that in just a second.
Yes. But first, this is a great time to tell you about our presenting partner, JP Morgan
Payments. So everyone listening knows that we started working with JP Morgan earlier
this year, and you can probably tell it's going very well. David and I on this final
episode of the year wanted to pause and tell you why.
Well, first is the team, the folks that we work with there.
They are absolutely world-class.
And also they really get acquired.
They're huge acquired listeners just like you.
I mean, just look at the Chase Center show.
They took our vision and said,
what if we did all of this times 10?
Yeah, and deeper than that,
our two products and brands
just fit together like a glove.
JP Morgan Payments is the world's largest
payments franchise.
They power 18 of the top 20 corporations in the world
and most companies we've covered on the show.
In fact, 90% of Fortune 500 companies do business with them.
They're extremely trusted.
And at first, when we started working with JP Morgan,
we were a little worried of like,
oh, this might only be for big companies, but it's not.
We've seen startups that heard about JPMorgan payments
on acquired earlier this year for the first time
become customers.
Our goal in picking partners is to find
the very best companies that A, create value
for our audience right now,
and B, will scale with your success and be around forever.
That is JP Morgan Payments. They do literally $10 trillion in payment volume a day.
Yeah, listeners, think about how insane that is. With JP Morgan processing over 50% of all e-commerce transactions in the US,
their software and payment rails basically underpin our entire global financial system.
Yep. And lastly, payments is a process that every single one of your companies
needs. If you make revenue, you need payments.
And JP Morgan thinks about payments as a lever for growth,
not just vanilla operational stuff.
They've been investing heavily with products now for fraud prevention,
foreign exchange, working capital, and more. All of course,
built enterprise grade and with developer tools and APIs.
So thank you listeners for tuning in all year.
You can learn more at jpmorgan.com slash acquired,
which itself is a very cool custom site they built just for this partnership.
And when you get in touch, just tell them that Ben and David sent you
or shoot David or I a message in Slack and we'll get you connected with their team.
Our thanks to JP Morgan Payments.
All right, David. So, Forrest emerges into his father's life
and somehow we end up with the Milky Way. How does that happen?
Well, let's tell the legend. So, summer 1923, young Forrest Mars is 19 years old
and on summer break from college, more on college in a minute,
he's got a summer job as a traveling salesman, selling camel cigarettes.
Time's sure we're different.
Time's sure we're different.
I mean, it's debatable how true any of this is, so we'll roll with it.
One night he's in Chicago in late summer and he gets instructions from his
boss that they really got to blow it out.
They need to hit big time sales numbers here in Chicago.
Forrest, you got to go blitz the whole city with posters, marketing camel cigarettes.
So Forrest goes around and he puts billboards up all over downtown Chicago.
Supposedly like every storefront window on State Street, he's plastering with
camel cigarette posters, which certainly gets attention. It actually makes the Chicago Tribune
the next morning that this happened. But also much like if we were to do an acquired marketing
stunt like Baby Ruth and drop stuff from an airplane these days, it's also illegal, yes. And it lands young Forrest in jail.
So from his Chicago prison cell, Forrest makes his one phone call to the only soul that he
knows in the area who could possibly bail him out, his estranged father, Frank Mars.
Which this whole thing, I mean, this is the legend and this is the Mars company's version
of the story.
This is the journalist's version of the story.
This has been in other books.
But like, the guy hasn't seen his father since he was six years old and he somehow knows
his phone number to call him from jail.
By the way, his dad lives in Minnesota.
There's the whole state of Wisconsin between Minneapolis and Chicago.
But we're giving you a flavor of who Forrest is here.
Aaron Ross Powell If Forrest was in charge of coming up with the story of how this all went,
this is the story he would have come up with. So.
Tim Cynova Yes, exactly. And as we'll see, Forrest is in charge of everything. So, Frank shows up at
the jail, father and son are reunited after 13 years. During which, yeah,
Ben, like you said, they've had no contact with each other, but Forrest has his phone number to
call him. Frank bails out Forrest. By now, it's early afternoon of the next day, and he says,
all right, son, let's go out for lunch. And they go to a luncheonette to share a meal,
They go to a luncheonette to share a meal at which young Forrest, who is selling cigarettes, orders a wholesome malted milkshake over this lunch reunion with his father.
They get to talking, they're getting reacquainted, and Forrest learns that his dad is now this
middlingly successful candy entrepreneur.
His dad's telling him about this Maro bar that he's
introduced.
Faris says, well, hey, I got an idea for you.
What if you take this malted milkshake here?
Everybody loves a malted milkshake.
What if you take that and put that into a candy bar?
And you know, like I'm obviously pretty good at, you know, street marketing here.
I bet I can go sell that all around the country.
So they get to talking, jamming, father and son.
And with that, the Milky Way bar was born with the marketing of a malted milkshake in
a candy bar.
And this is the story.
There's so much in between.
I have an idea that you should put a malted milkshake in a bar
and actually what a Milky Way is.
It's nougat and caramel inside of chocolate.
It's a pretty different ingredient set than a malted milkshake.
There had to be quite a bit of R&D experimentation,
flavor development to figure out how to make the inside of your candy bar
taste like said malted milkshake.
But here is the exact quote from Forrest as recorded in the family archives that Joelle
got access to as part of her access to the company. He says, quote, I'll be damned if a short time
after our lunch, the old man has candy bar and it's a chocolate malted drink. He puts some caramel
on top of it and some chocolate around it.
Not very good chocolate.
He was buying cheap chocolate back then, but that damn thing sold.
No advertising.
A little farce.
Regardless of how all this happens, Frank Mars does release in 1924, the Milky Way bar,
and it does become a big hit.
That year alone, the first year that it comes out,
it does $800,000 in sales. Yes, the Marobar company went from $73,000 to $793,000 in one year.
And that is all the Milky Way, like undeniably huge success. And effectively, what they were
doing was they were the first ones who said, wait a minute, if we're going to make a count line, we should do it in a mechanical way.
And so even though all these other people are selling these one-offs locally to different
stores and hand making them, they were doing it in factory quantities all under the same
production process and brand.
Yep.
Now, it was early industrialization, but it was still much more industrial than the rest
of the manufacturers at this point.
Totally.
Now, first question you should be asking here is, wait, Forrest is in college now and ends
up in jail in Chicago?
Like, what the hell happened here?
Okay.
So when Forrest is six years old, as we said, he gets sent off to live in Saskatchewan in
Canada in like a hard scrab, rural mining community with his grandparents.
Unlike, I imagine, most of the folks around him, Forrest is a total outlier there. He's super smart,
super entrepreneurial, super ambitious, and he's a super arrogant show-off. Probably because he's so
insecure from his deeply traumatic childhood.
Deborah Cadbury has a good line in her book, Noah's flood wouldn't have deterred Forrest
Mars.
Yes.
So when Forrest graduates, unlike everybody else there who goes off to work in the mines,
he supposedly wins a scholarship to the University of California in Berkeley.
Now how he wins a scholarship to UC Berkeley, which is the public university of California,
when he's living in Canada and he's from Minneapolis is suspect, but we'll go with
it.
He does show up at Berkeley though, we know that, and he enrolls in the School of Mining
there with the idea that he is going to
study to become a mining engineer and go back and run a mine instead of just being a laborer in a mind. And this all makes sense. He had an engineer's mind. I mean, he also had a marketing mind, but
he ended up building a company that ran an incredible efficiency and thought through it
as sort of a systems thinker. Yes, 100%. So while he's at Berkeley in his first year there, to make money and support himself,
he takes a job in the cafeteria.
And supposedly he finagles a deal with the head cook that if forest can go source meat
and other ingredients for the meals cheaper than budget from local wholesalers,
that he and the chef would split the savings and just pocket the difference.
And of course, you might get a sense that Forrest is a good negotiator here.
This works like a charm.
And supposedly, he's soon taking home like $100 a week,
which if you annualize that to $5,200 a year, that's about double
what the average American was earning at that point in time.
So he's making bank.
Which by the way is a trend among all these entrepreneurs that we study.
You look at Ingvar, you look at Sam Walton, you look at Buffett.
I mean, all these guys, it feels like it's a part of their childhood story that as a
teenager or college student or something, they were out earning the average head of
household.
Totally.
And you know what?
It is still true these days.
Remember the Zuckerberg story of he and Adam D'Angelo are coding up sit apps and people
want to buy it for a million dollars?
Yep.
Just turns to software instead of candy bars.
Yeah.
Anyway, this is all during Forrest's freshman year at Berkeley.
And then the summer comes and of course the cafeteria closes down, so he needs to get
a job for the summer.
That's when he joins the traveling Camel Cigarette sales team.
And that probably is when somewhere or another, maybe it was in Chicago, maybe it was in Minneapolis,
he reconnects with his dad, Frank, and discovers that Frank
had become a wealthy man.
And I think regardless of whether Forrest had anything to do with the Milky Way idea
or launch or anything like that, meeting his dad, seeing that there is a business in the
family starts recalibrating Forrest's ambitions even higher than just being an engineer who
can now go run a mine.
He's like, oh, I should run a business.
I should run my family's business. I should run my dad's business.
And I imagine seeing one of his dad's businesses be successful is sort of a different type of data point for him.
He always knew my dad starts a company and it fails and just seeing an existence proof of a successful business has got to be a
reorientation for him.
Yeah.
Even when the candy company before Milky Way was just making $100,000 a year.
I mean, $100,000 a year, I mean, I don't know who knows what the margins are on that, but
even if they're 10%, he's making 4X, 5X what the average American is.
This is eye opening to Forrest.
So his literal words about this when he gets back to Berkeley are, the hell with running
some mines in the backwoods.
I'm so glad you have these Forrest quotes.
Oh my God, they're so good.
Supposedly in the Mars family archives, there's a video of Forrest chatting with one of his
longtime lieutenants from the company after he retired, but before he died.
And it's like in the family archives
and Joel got access to go watch the video,
which is where all these quotes are from.
It's amazing.
So he does his sophomore year at Berkeley,
but he's got his sights set higher now.
He, with his father's help and presumably money
for Forest's junior year, he transfers to
Yale and he's going to Yale with the goal of, I want to learn about business.
He's like focused.
It's like the Zuckerberg story of going to Harvard.
Yeah, Forrest wanted to go to Yale because it was Yale, but really he wanted to go to
Yale to meet all the other people.
So it just so happens that his roommate, his first year when he shows up at Yale, is
the nephew of Pierre S. Dupont.
Wait, really?
Yes, really.
No way.
That Pierre S. Dupont.
His nephew is Forrest's roommate at Yale.
Whoa.
And Pierre S. Dupont, at this point in time, is not only running Dupont, which is in and of itself one of the most important and biggest companies in America.
Pierre is also running General Motors at this point in time because Dupont is the largest
shareholder in GM.
And that is a crazy story that we will save for a future episode of Acquired on how that
came to be.
Oh, we got to do Dupont.
It's an incredible, incredible story.
But back to Mars, Forest worms his way
through his roommate into getting to know Pierre
and starts just pumping Pierre for lessons
on how he runs his businesses.
Like how does he run DuPont?
What is this DuPont planning system that you have?
How do you run a chemical industrial manufacturing process?
Exactly.
How do you do accounting?
How do you do planning?
Like, I want to know everything about this business.
It's freaking unbelievable that here's this kid from the mines in Canada who, in a few
short years in the 1920s, has worked his way up through hook and crook that he's rubbing
shoulders with one of the greatest businessmen of that era? Right up there with Rockefeller
and Carnegie? Yep. Amazing.
So after a couple of years, when Forrest graduates from Yale, he's ready to go put all this
knowledge to work in his dad's candy business. So the first thing he suggests to his dad, Frank,
is that, hey, we gotta get out of Minneapolis.
We gotta move to Chicago.
Chicago is the center of the candy industry at this point,
but also it's just a way bigger city
and it has way better freight distribution
to the rest of the country.
Yep, if you wanna go national,
Chicago is a great place to do it.
Yep.
And why else, David, you said it's the center of the candy industry.
Why else is that true?
Well, I think, yeah, definitely at this point already,
the Wrigley Company is there.
Yep. You bet.
Yeah. If you want to know how good a business gum is,
you should just ask yourself,
why do the Cubs play in a building called Wrigley Field?
And why is there an entire neighborhood called Wrigleyville?
Yes, yes, exactly. It's kind of like Hershey and the chocolate business.
Anyway, we will get to that much later in the episode.
Spoiler alert, Mars now owns Wrigley. Okay, so Frank goes along with this idea that they're going to move to Chicago.
But in his heart of hearts, he's not the same man that Forrest is.
He doesn't have anywhere near the same level of ambition.
He likes being wealthy now.
He likes being comfortable.
He's like, I'll go along with you to Chicago, but really I want to focus on enjoying the
fruits of our labor here.
So the factory that he builds in Chicago on the inside is really state of the
art per forest's designs.
On the outside, he spends $500,000 in, you know, whatever this is, 1928, 29,
buying a tract of land next to a golf course
to put a factory in.
The outside of the factory is like
this beautiful Spanish style building
with stucco and cupolas and like wrought iron ornamentation.
It looks like a Hollywood studio building.
Dude, you're building a factory.
Yeah, must've been great margins on those Milky ways.
Yeah, exactly.
Shows you the difference of where Frank's head is out and where Forrest's head is at.
And probably its differences over this factory, I would assume.
Start to chafe the relationship here a little bit.
Chafe the relationship, yeah.
He contracts the Austin Company, which had built and designed all the Ford automobile
plants and assembly lines to build the
lines in the Mars Factory. So, Forrest is pushing the workforce super hard. He's
like, we have this factory, we have these state-of-the-art lines, we need to run
these lines 24-7 with multiple shifts. Like everybody else is just, you know, oh
we run our lines during the day. Like, hell no. We spend all this money
investing in this factory. We need to crank out as many milky ways as possible scale economies baby totally so by 1929 which i think is the first
year that the factory is up and running they're producing 20 million milky way bars annually and
the forest is just like go go go go go 20 million of anything at this point in history is massive. Yes.
Now, one thing that they are not making in the factory,
of course, is chocolate.
They're buying all the chocolate wholesale from Hershey, which
probably is another reason for the move to Chicago of, hey,
we need to be on a main train line
not only to get the product out.
We need to be there to get the ingredients,
including chocolate, in.
Yep. So very quickly Mars becomes Hershey's biggest customer. They are buying millions of dollars
of chocolate every year from Hershey.
Which my understanding at this point in history is still that Hershey's like,
great we love being a industrial wholesaler supplier to other candy companies. This is only good for us.
Yes. I mean, I think the right way to think about Hershey at this point in time is like
Amazon. They are both amazon.com and they are AWS.
Yeah.
They're very happy either way. As long as chocolate is being sold in America, they're
taking their tax.
Yep.
So once this gets going and money really starts flowing
into the company, Frank wants to spend it.
So he builds a 20,000 square foot vacation home
on a lake in Wisconsin.
He buys a $2 million horse ranch in Tennessee
that he names the Milky Way Ranch.
He buys his own airplane so that he can be flown around
to all of these places.
Forrest hates all of this.
He's trying to reinvest as much into the business as possible.
Exactly.
He wants to be DuPont.
He doesn't care about a horse ranch or airplanes.
But even he, I think, probably would have to admit that he's thankful that Frank does
these things.
Because in 1930, the next year, Frank creates a new chocolate bar
that he wants to introduce to the market
and he decides that he wants to name it
after his favorite beloved horse at his Tennessee ranch.
Ben, you're opening it right now.
It's the most popular chocolate bar in America
and I think in the world.
Yep.
Yes.
The Snickers bar named after the horse in Tennessee. Thank God they bought
the horse ranch. I've been waiting for you to get to this part because I'm just trying
to be satisfied, you know? I just needed to grab a Snickers. Oh, amazing. It really is
so good. It's so good. I massively prefer the bean to bar style chocolate, the dandy
lion, you know, I like dark chocolate more than milk chocolate. I massively prefer the bean to bar style chocolate, the dandelion.
I like dark chocolate more than milk chocolate.
I might not even be able to finish a whole Snickers bar just because it's so sugary,
but oh my God is that first bite good.
I mean, we're talking about two totally different products here of like high-end chocolate versus
mass market chocolate, but not like Snickers are so good.
I feel like I'd go play in the NFL after a bite of this. Totally. Well, so there's another potential story of the origins of Snickers that we heard some
wind of rumors in the sort of Forest legend canon here.
Supposedly, Forest was thinking about what would be like, you know, an incredible product to build on the Milky
Way success and market to all of America and the world.
Because by the way, a Snickers is a Milky Way with peanuts.
Exactly. And so supposedly he went to the library, he wanted to know what did the Roman
army feed their legionnaires when they were out marching?
And apparently he learned that it was peanuts and eggs and sugar.
It's a lot of energy, super dense.
So the other story is that that was the inspiration for Snickers was putting what the Roman army
fed their legionnaires into a candy bar.
In practice, it's actually a great energy bar.
I was being tongue in cheek up at the NFL
because they're a partner of the NFL today.
But there's a whole industry around cliff bars
and things like that being marketed as energy bars
and Snickers being marketed as candy.
But really what's the difference?
Snickers launches in 1930.
In 1932, they add three Musketeers to the lineup.
Now three Musketeers originally was something very different.
Yes. So listeners, you are probably thinking to yourself,
a Three Musketeers bar is just that nougat and chocolate.
It doesn't have peanuts, it doesn't have caramel.
Why would this come after a Snickers?
Well, Three Musketeers is actually a misnomer.
I see you're eating a Three Musketeers, way to be in theme.
It was actually sold as a package containing three separate bars, each with a different
flavor, chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry. And due to restrictions during World War II,
they had to cut production to just the chocolate version. I think part of it was also a spike in
strawberry prices. And so they just did away with the vanilla. And so now it's just called
three musketeers, even though it's only the chocolate variant one musketeer
doesn't have the same ring to it no no it doesn't so if you're paying attention
here and thinking like wait a minute they built this factory in 1928 1929 sales
are skyrocketing Frank is living large 1930 they introduced Snickers, 1932 they introduced three Musketeers.
What else is going on in America and in the world
in the early 1930s?
The Great Depression.
Yeah.
This tells you everything you need to know
about the resiliency of the candy business.
Mars revenue goes up to $25 million in 1932.
They're just growing hugely.
I mean, what did we say?
Milky Way did 800,000 in its first year in 1932. They're just growing hugely. I mean, what did we say? Milky Way
did 800,000 in its first year in 1924. So they go from 800,000 of revenue in 1924 to
25 million in 1932. All amidst the throws of like the worst years of the Great Depression.
Yeah. Candy may not be good for you, but when you really need a dopamine hit it is there for you and boy does it condition a
addictive or addictive like activity where you sort of incorporate it into your habitual everyday life
It's a reoccurring purchase and at this point in time between
Mars and Hershey both were laser focused on keeping the price low to get as wide a distribution as possible
That's exactly what I was gonna say, you know forest both were laser focused on keeping the price low to get as wide a distribution as possible.
That's exactly what I was gonna say.
Forrest, and I think it probably really was Forrest here,
was closely studying Hershey and what they did
and realized, oh yeah, this is a scale business.
If we get to scale, we can make profits
while pricing our bars such that they are still accessible,
even for Americans that have lost their jobs
and are in the middle of the Great Depression. And by the way, they want a sweet treat more
than ever because their lives are depressing. Brilliant.
Yep. Absolutely. The other interesting thing is nowadays you've got all these variations
of candy in M&M's, peanut, M&M's, almond, dark M&M's. The Milky Way, the three musketeers
and the Snickers are all just adding
one ingredient to the same thing. But they're not labeling them that way. They're building
entirely different brands and franchises around each of these three products. I think that's
fascinating. They really didn't get into this whole variation thing until way later in their
life. That was not the standard practice then. This is a different product, it needs a different name and a whole different personality.
Yep. And actually, you know, I think to be fair to Frank, I think that is really like
Frank's influence on the business and company there. Forrest, as great as he was at so many
things, he was never a product innovator in the way that Frank was.
Hmm, makes sense.
As evidenced by the fact that, you know, here we are today eating the most popular candies in the world that Mars makes,
and it's still Snickers, Milky Way, Three Musketeers, M&Ms, which we will get into. That was Forrest's big contribution.
Yep. So, depression. Sales are going great.
Here we are, 1932, the worst years of the depression, and Forrest totally recognizes
all this like, we need to invest, invest, invest, pedal to the metal.
We are going to use everything happening here to blow away our competition.
We're going to go compete with Hershey.
We're going to become huge.
Frank though has no interest. According to Forrest, quote, my father says we're making
enough money. We have an airplane. We've got the fishing place. We've got horses. Why
do we need anymore? And Forrest's reply to that is, quote, I want to conquer the whole
goddamn world. So he issues his dad and ultimateum. Look, obviously you want to just go enjoy
life. Let me run things. Give me one third of the stock of the business. You keep two
thirds and you relax and I will make you even richer. Frank turns him down.
And I think he turns him down in kind of insulted. Like, I built this business and you came in recently and you're just randomly asking me
to give you a third of it?
Go to hell.
Yeah.
And, you know, of course there's more behind this.
Forrest was not liked within the company.
He's driving everybody hard.
Frank is this...
Kind of a distracted leader.
You can imagine if you're a line worker or even if you're a manager within the company.
That's great. Which boss do you prefer?
Right. Yeah.
So the company certainly sided with Frank here.
There's also the family element too.
Frank's got a new family now.
So he's got his wife, the other Athel, he's got his daughter, Patricia.
Frank's like, yeah, hey, I mean, you're my son too.
You've helped me build this business, but I'm not just going to give you a third of
the business. Either way, there's quite a bit of animosity around this. And Forrest
walks out and in the process tells his dad to, quote, stick his business up his ass.
There's no missing words in any of these direct quotes. It's crazy.
Yeah, literally. I mean, this is what he said he said. So Forrest leaves town, not to Chicago,
but leaves America entirely, goes off to a new continent to build his own business, his
own way, leave Mars incorporated, totally behind him, leave him in the dust.
Almost. He takes with him a right.
Yes. He has the right to what David?
He takes actually two things with him that his dad sort of gives him as he's heading out the door.
One, $50,000 and two, the foreign rights to the Milky Way recipe. Yes. But I don't think the Milky
Way name. No, not the Milky Way name, just the recipe. You can't't think the Milky Way name.
No, not the Milky Way name, just the recipe.
You can't market this as Milky Way, but you can sell this recipe internationally.
Yep. So, Forest takes these two sort of parting gifts, tells his dad that he'll never hear from him again, leaves America entirely.
And super sadly, Frank doesn't ever hear from him again.
Yeah, this is the last time that Frank and Forrest would ever speak.
Yeah, the next year when Frank is just 50 years old, he collapses in the Chicago factory
and dies of kidney failure and Forrest doesn't come back for the funeral.
Yeah.
Yep, that was it.
Now granted, in the 30s, much harder to come back from Europe on short notice, but still. Yep. That was it. Now granted in the thirties, much harder to come back from Europe on short notice, but
still.
Yep.
So Forrest is over in Europe and the set of events of what he does in Europe to build
this ridiculous, almost Trojan horse, like the set of skills he acquires, the assets
he builds up, is crazy
before he comes back to the US.
And before we talk about his European adventure,
now is a great time to talk about
one of our favorite companies,
the climate-aligned AI infrastructure company, Crusoe.
Yes, they build and operate GPU data centers
for AI workloads, and each one is powered
by low-cost
stranded energy that otherwise would go to waste or worse get emitted as greenhouse gases.
For this episode, though, we thought it'd be fun to talk about what actually goes into
building and running a GPU cloud and how it's different from traditional clouds run by the
hyperscalers.
Right.
You might have been thinking, have Ben and David lost their minds talking about
a new cloud provider in 2024?
Isn't it impossible to compete with the incumbent hyperscalers at this point?
And yeah, if you're trying to start a traditional cloud, but GPU clouds are different.
Yes, counter positioning.
Yeah, I mean, all the infrastructure that the hyperscalers have built up over the past
two decades actually is not optimal for GPU clusters.
Yep.
Which brings us to crucial difference number one, location.
Hyperscaler data centers need to be physically located where the internet happens.
Like latency is really, really important when say you're powering an e-commerce website.
But for 99% of AI training workloads, latency actually doesn't matter at all.
So instead, Crusoe puts their data centers in remote locations where quote unquote energy
happens.
Like where oil is being flared and you can take that energy and use it to power your
data center.
Totally.
So this not only creates cost efficiencies, it also just enables way more absolute power density
in a single location, which is super important when you're
trying to build a huge GPU cluster.
Yep.
And that leads to big difference number two, cooling.
AI training generates a tremendous amount of heat.
And traditional cloud data centers
usually manage that with air conditioning.
But air cooling is not going to cut it
when you're running a massive GPU cluster full out
for weeks or months on end.
So Crusoe builds their data halls,
which is the rows of racks within data centers,
with direct to chip liquid cooling.
This is where the liquid coolant gets pumped through
the racks to cold plate heat exchangers mounted directly
on each individual chip.
Yep, it's super cool.
This is all state of the art stuff and impossible for
the hyperscalers to replicate in their existing data center footprints.
Which means that Crusoe's customers get AI infrastructure that just scales way,
way better.
Bigger GPU clusters with less failures.
And when you're trying to train cutting edge large parameter models,
that doesn't just mean lower usage costs and better efficiency. It can mean the binary yes or
no difference in being able to accomplish your workload at all.
It's just an awesome, awesome company. David and I are super proud to work with them and
also to be investors. So to learn more, go to cruso.ai slash acquired that's C R U S
O E dot AI slash acquired, or click the link in the show notes and just be sure
to tell them that Ben and David sent you.
Thank you, Crusoe.
All right.
Forrest Summer in Europe.
A little longer than a summer.
Summer or, you know, close to a decade in Europe.
So we're here at the end of 1932.
Forrest and his young family now, by the way, with his young son
Forrest Jr. land first in Paris. And Forrest tries a couple little things, but eventually he decides
that if he's really going to build his own big company and stick it to his dad, He needs to learn the one critical thing that his dad didn't know. He needs to
learn how to make chocolate.
Yes. No better place than Europe to learn.
Here's his quote on it. You can hire lawyers, you can hire accountants, you can hire advertising
men or financial types. But if you want to get rich, you got to know how to make a product.
And you aren't going to hire anybody to make a product for you to make you rich.
They'll only make it for themselves.
True that.
Forrest is just like, he's such a freaking G. Like if it hasn't come across already
on this episode, he is hall of fame.
Complete G.
You gotta know how to do the scarce thing.
Totally.
So important. So, in early 1933, Forest moves his family from Paris to Switzerland to go learn from the Chocolate Masters.
And Forest goes to work first at Jean Tobler, making Toblerone, and then at the original itself, Nestle.
In the factories, without disclosing to anyone who he is.
So yeah, when I say he goes to work there, it's not like he calls them up and is like,
I'm Forrest Mars.
He doesn't tell anybody who he is.
His quote on this later is like, well, they never asked.
And he doesn't go get management roles.
He goes and gets jobs on the line as a factory worker, learning directly
how these machines work, how these chemical processes work, how to make chocolate.
Amazing. Who would do this today? It takes a very specific type of person. If you're sitting there
thinking, hmm, only some European company knows how to do this well. And I'm someone who attended an Ivy League college.
My family is wealthy.
I'm friends with the DuPonts.
Not only that, I basically feel like I've already built
a $25 million business.
But I'm going to upend myself, my family, and my life
and go and be a line worker in a plant in another country.
I mean, in this era, in the 30irties where it's difficult to get over there.
I imagine he went by boat.
I imagine they didn't speak English in the Swiss factory.
Yeah.
Would you ever do this listener?
If you're looking around at a pretty good life that you have and you're saying,
I'm going to go to a different continent, move my family up in my whole life.
So I can go and learn this scarce skill that I know is the key to building
a world dominating business.
It's a big trade off.
Big, big trade off and totally on brand for Forrest.
Cause you couldn't learn it in America.
That's the other thing.
Hershey is super secretive at this point in time.
No one knows their formula.
Well, I think not only is Hershey super secretive,
the sense I get at least from Emperors of
Chocolate, is they knew how to productionize their recipe, but they didn't actually know
the science of how it worked.
They kind of got there through trial and error.
The sense I got is that the European chocolate manufacturers, and probably Nestle in particular,
they really knew what they were doing.
And Hershey, sort of in an industrial sense, knew what they were doing, but nobody there
really knew the science behind it.
And in fact, there's a story about how the first plant that Hershey expands to, their
first second plant outside of Hershey, Pennsylvania, they can't get it to work.
They can't get the chocolate to taste the same.
Cause they like don't exactly know how they get that specific sour note in the taste.
That's so interesting.
But anyway, back to Forrest.
So for most of the year of 1933, they're just in Switzerland and he's working on the factory
lines learning how to make chocolate. And then toward the end of the year, when he feels like he's learned everything he needs to know,
he moves the family to England, where he uses the $50,000 to open up a small factory in Slau, England,
which is a small industrial town about 20 miles west of London.
It's right near where Heathrow Airport is today. And he installs the
family in a one-room apartment above the factory. And they start making a version of the Milky Way
adapted to British tastes. Which basically means more sugar, right? Yep. More sugar and less malt.
Malt is not as big in British tastes. So he has the recipe to the Milky Way that he's adapted now for British taste, but he
doesn't have the naming rights, and so he names it the Mars Bar.
And this of course goes on to become the most popular candy bar in the UK, I think still
to this day.
The funny thing is, the lineage of this weird family split, and this, you have the rights to the recipe, but not the marketing,
is the way that the world works today,
even though they are, spoiler alert, one company now.
If you get a Milky Way in the US,
and you go and you get a Mars Bar in the UK,
they're a little different, the way you just described,
but those are effectively the same products,
they never unified the brand.
Yes. Now, there is also an important difference besides the level of sweetness and level of
malt, and that is the type of chocolate that is used in the Mars bar versus the Milky Way.
Ooh, the Mars bar is Cadbury, right?
Well, in these early days, yes.
So Forrest has now learned how to make chocolate, but of course, with $50,000 a new startup factory, like there's no way that he's going to make his own chocolate.
Everything we talked about in chocolate making, it's like an insane amount of CapEx, really
hard, easy to screw up, potentially low yield.
Yup, totally. And like, you know, how are you going to get the supplier relationships
for the beans and like that requires a lot of capital, et cetera, et cetera.
And this part of the value chain really wasn't well established yet where there's these companies
specifically to go buy commodity beans from.
It was starting, but it was early.
Yeah.
Cargill wasn't the like massive giant with global liquidity for commodities buying and
selling that it is today.
Speaking of gigantic US privately held companies.
Yes, exactly.
We'll have to do that someday.
Yep.
So as you said, Forrest goes and does a deal with Cadbury's
to supply the chocolate for the Mars Bar,
just like Hershey had supplied the chocolate back in the US.
This is also important because remember, we
were saying there are local tastes in each country
market for chocolate, and Cadbury's chocolate
is to the British taste.
So it actually is a pretty different bar,
even though the core concept is very similar.
Hmm.
But it's just a matter of time and forest mind
until the operation eventually grows big enough
that he can and will make his own chocolate.
David, there is a Milky Way that you can buy today
in the UK.
Do you know what that is?
Oh, I do, but I'm not remembering.
Three Musketeers.
That's right.
I knew it was one of them.
I was like, it's not Snickers.
That is the brand that they decided to use for Three Musketeers overseas.
And Snickers originally was Marathon, I believe, in the UK?
Yes.
But now, globally, Snickers is Snickers.
So yes, Farce not making his own chocolate just yet, but of course his goal is that he
will.
He has a great saying that he repeats often that I think this is maybe around the first
time it starts coming up.
I'm not a candy maker.
I'm empire minded.
And that's like his mantra.
So once they start producing the Mars bar, pretty quickly it becomes a hit and starts going really well.
So by 1939, five years-ish after they get production up and running,
Mars UK has become the third largest candy company in Britain behind Cadbury and Roundtrees.
So like they go from nobody to third largest player, big industrial scale, pretty quick.
And in part, I mean, this is American capitalist coming in to an industry.
I don't know if you know this or not, both of those families were Quakers.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Interesting.
And so there was a pretty intense spirit behind the company of looking after your community.
Yep. This is Cadbury's and Rountree, right?
Yeah, in particular Cadbury built their factory outside the city in sort of this almost attempt at a utopia.
Ah, very Hershey-like.
In the same way that actually Milton Hershey was inspired by when he built Hershey PA. So there's this very like devout duty-bound
religiosity to the existing UK chocolate companies and in comes Brash Forest who's like, we're
going to do things the most efficient we possibly can, we're going to make the most profit we
possibly can and we're going to distribute as broadly as we can, as fast as we can. In
many ways it feels Bernard Arnaud-esque,
like you guys, look what I learned in America.
Yeah, yes, very, very much so.
It's funny, I wasn't even gonna tell this story
because, A, I don't know how true it is,
it's just ridiculous, but we'll tell you,
because I didn't realize the religious element
of the competitors, so Forrest,
oh man, eventually, flash forward, he will come back and he will retake over Mars Inc. in America.
And when he does, his first thing he does is he goes in the boardroom.
It's a management meeting.
It's to his executives.
He falls down on his knees and says, I'm a religious man.
And he clasps his hands together and starts to pray. I pray for Milky Way.
I pray for Snickers.
I pray for M&Ms.
Uh, what a freaking character.
Yeah, if he was religious at all,
he was religious about Milky Way and Snickers and M&Ms.
Yep.
And dog food.
So, to this empire thing.
So in 1934, just one year after he started the whole thing and started making Mars bars,
he comes across this small British company called Chapel Brothers, which had started
making quote unquote Chappie's brand canned dog food.
And this is crazy.
At the time, nobody fed their pets pet food.
Oh, really?
Pets, dogs, cats, they just ate table scraps.
This whole idea that you feed specific pet food to pets, this all started in the 30s.
Like before that, you know, it was like, I don't know, imagine go back to medieval times,
like the dogs and cats, they just eat.
Right.
Throw them a ham.
That's the way you clean the table.
Right.
So, I have no idea how or why.
I couldn't fight it either.
I looked all over the place.
I was like, why of all the things to buy, did he buy a pet food company?
Totally.
And why did the Chapel Brothers start making pet food?
I don't know.
There is like as little information as there is about the company and the family.
What we do have, we have about the chocolate business.
We have almost no information about the pet business.
And who are you going to ask?
The Chappell brothers are long dead.
Mars isn't going to tell you.
But I'm so curious.
How did Forrest get the idea, hey, I should go buy a dog food company when the market
for dog food is new and unclear and...
Yeah.
Well, I think, you know, look, he was visionary and he got so many things and I think he probably
thought or maybe the Chapel Brothers thought and convinced Forrest that, you know, in the
post-Depression era, you know, the coming modern world, people's
relationship with their pets would change and that they would start feeding them dedicated
pet food. I mean, and obviously that was a huge, huge trend.
And there's kind of economies of scale to the manufacturing of this. Making canned dog
food isn't that different than making snacks.
Yeah, it's a manufacturing process.
Yeah.
Interestingly enough, I learned this and the fact that this happened in 1935 completely
blew my mind because I knew that Mars was in the pet food business much like Nestle
Purina is in the pet food business.
I thought this was like a recent diversification hedge, but here it is effectively at the founding
of Mars, or at least forests modern Mars, and he's in the first second year of business buying
and diversifying to pet food. And it was immediately a good idea because it became profitable after just
a couple of years and started generating enough cash flow to fund the expansion of Mars Bars.
Yeah, it's good margins in the pet food business.
Apparently, even in 1935.
Yeah, so that's a huge success.
So as this company is getting set up, I mean, would you expect any less of Forrest, I guess?
He's hitting it out of the park with Mars Bar on the candy side.
He's building a whole new industry on the pet food side.
And this here in Slough in England is really where the principles,
literally the principles, Mars calls them the five principles of the company today,
but just the culture of Mars gets set.
Oh yeah, you found the original ones, right?
Yes. So if you talk to anybody who works or worked at Mars, they will quote the principles
at you religiously.
It's like the Amazon leadership principles.
Totally. It's like, oh, that's principle number five, freedom, or oh, that's principle number
three, mutuality, et cetera, et cetera.
I think how these started, maybe even back in England, Forrest started a document called
the Mars Way, where he was like codifying
all this.
And I think after he retired and the business passed to his sons and the next generation,
I think that's when they sort of adapted that document into the Mars principles.
But it's really interesting.
It's worth going through them all.
So number one, the first principle is quality.
Forrest was completely obsessed with quality
on every dimension.
The ingredients that are going into the candy bars,
the candy bars themselves, the wrappers,
the shelf placement displays.
He was way ahead of the curve on all this stuff.
He knew the candy was an impulse purchase
and like the way the product actually looks,
how it's displayed, what the packaging is,
what the placement is in the shelf in the retailer.
How consistent it is.
How consistent it is.
These were like big, big drivers of purchases.
And there's of course the famous story about he, you know, finds a defect in a wrapper
and then he calls his executives into a room and he hurls at the glass and says, you know, yeah, it's his temper and his obsession with quality all combined into one.
Yeah, I'm laughing. You say famous story. I'm like, which one? I think there are a million
of these stories. But even here in the thirties in the UK, he basically implements the Toyota
production system in the Mars factory. This is long before the Toyota production system exists.
Any employee in the factory could stop the line for any reason at any time.
If there's anything that's out of place, anything that could impact quality, you know, anything
is dirty, anything is not perfect.
Every single worker in the entire facility can stop the whole line.
And he also, if something had a defect, he would throw out the whole batch, right?
Yes.
As like a, let's scorch the earth around the defect.
Yep. I'm sure he wasn't thinking about it in these terms, but he really wants to instill this as a cultural norm in the company.
So anytime if there was a mistake that Forrest then found that hadn't been caught on the line,
he would just berate whoever should have stopped the line and be like,
you needed to have stopped and fixed this. You cannot let this get into the finished product.
The other aspect of the quality principle though, much like IKEA,
it's not just quality for quality's sake, it's quality for money. It's quality at a given price, value for money.
We've already been talking about how this is like
the ultimate scale business
and scale economies business in candies.
Forrest knows that if you can offer a higher quality
for a given price than your competitors,
you're just gonna build a lead and compound forever
and ever and ever in this business.
Interesting.
So quality principle number one, most important.
Two, this is awesome.
Responsibility is the second principle.
And you might be like, oh, responsibility, like, OK, whatever.
For all of his crazy intensity, Forrest was not a micromanager.
He wanted to know how to do everything in the business,
including making
chocolate. But he knew that if he was going to scale, like he wants to be DuPont here,
you know, he wants to be General Motors. He needs the best people working the hardest
in charge of everything. Like he can't be around telling them how to do their jobs.
So the question then is when you're starting up in a new country, tiny factory, how do
you get the best people? How do you incentivize them? He's like, well, I'll just pay them. I'll just pay them a lot.
So for years and years, the standard within Mars was that you should make three to four
times the normal salary for your job.
That's so insane.
And I think that's come down over the years. It's now like 2X, but it's still true.
I even saw numbers that say they try to pay their employees a minimum of 10% higher than
other companies in the industry.
Interesting. But definitely in those early days, it's like, no, we're going to pay you
three or four times the amount that you would make elsewhere.
I also know they try to tie pay aggressively to the performance of the company. So high
bonuses rather than high salaries, which also means in tough years they would just cut.
It's not quite having equity in the company,
but it's much more akin to being a partner in a business
than it is to being an employee.
Exactly.
Okay, so, you know, I said salaries,
it's not salaries, it's bonuses.
This is what your take home pay should be.
Everyone's salary in the company,
again, starting in the earliest days there in Slough, tied to
overall company performance and hitting overall company metrics.
There is no, at least in the early days, individual performance element to your bonus, except
for one thing.
Do you know what the one thing is?
The one individual performance metric.
Did you show up on time?
You get a 10% bonus if you are never late in the entire year.
And it's everybody from Forrest himself on down.
Everybody has a time card.
You punch the time card when you go in.
I'm pretty sure this is still true that the CEO of Mars today has a time card and they
punch in and out every day.
And a 10% bonus is contingent on not being late.
So even more, I don't think this terminology starts until they get back to America, but
everybody in the company is an associate.
Obviously people are in charge of different things and have different external titles,
but internally everybody is an associate.
There are no perks for anyone.
So there are no executive parking spaces.
There's no executive offices.
Boy, Forrest really wants to rebel against his father.
There are no offices, period, to this day at Mars.
Is this the first open office company?
So we said on the meta episode that we thought Facebook was the first open office. No, Mars
was the first open office starting in the 1930s. So every building, entirely open floor plan,
you get a black metal desk, get this.
This is how crazy it is.
Again, even still to this day,
there are just a small number of conference rooms
in any given Mars office.
Oh yeah, because they hate presentations, right?
They hate presentations, they hate meetings,
but like sometimes you have to have a meeting.
The conference rooms do not have doors. They hate presentations, they hate meetings, but sometimes you have to have a meeting.
The conference rooms do not have doors.
There is no privacy allowed anywhere, which is the craziest thing given that the company
itself externally is incredibly private.
But no, internally, the culture is everything is open, everyone is equal.
There are no perks here whatsoever.
And Forest is doing this in the 30s.
This is crazy.
I was going to save this for later, but this is a fun time.
I Google mapped the recent factory that they built to make M&Ms,
and it's like a corporate headquarters and manufacturing facility.
And there's a bunch of pictures on Google Maps of the exterior and interior,
just like you would expect from anything that's on Google Maps.
And it's pretty dated.
It's just a very boring drop ceiling,
fluorescent lit, cheap office.
And the real estate that it's on is like,
near an Amazon fulfillment center.
I mean, it's like kind of off the highway
in the middle of nowhere, inexpensive.
But there are two big M&Ms waving at you
out of the parking lot.
I think that's the standard decoration.
Yeah, you can tell how pissed Forrest wasn't his dad
about the Chicago factory specifically,
but also just like how deep seated this is.
Yep.
Okay, so then principle number three is mutuality.
So Forrest obviously is like hyper competitive, but he also knows that this is
an ecosystem that he's in and the retailers are super important. The suppliers are super important.
Distributors are critical. Everyone needs to make money and everyone needs to be incentivized for the
long term. And as long as his partners are making money and making more money selling Mars products
or supplying Mars than they are any of Mars' competitors,
that's going to be a compounding advantage.
Yep.
So that's three.
Four is efficiency.
Okay, this is a really, really interesting one.
Probably back to his whole mindset and time at Yale and studying DuPont.
Forrest is crazy about studying
business and management literature. Like I don't think anybody was reading
business management literature in the 1930s and 1940s. It's a good point. It's
true both for management and for investing. If you think about the way that
people were even investing back then, it was like stocks were gambles. You know,
Buffett was one of the first people
to believe the intelligent investor,
oh, you can tell something about the quality of revenue
and this intrinsic way to build to a value of a business.
The investment mindset of quality and a discounted cash flow
and the management mindset of there's a science
to building an organization, these were pretty new ideas.
Totally, I mean, Buffett had to go study with Ben Graham
to learn this stuff.
Yep.
So while he's in England,
Forrest reads a textbook called
Higher Control in Management by T.G. Rose.
And the subtitle of this book is
a method of producing the facts and figures of
industrial and commercial undertakings so that they can be used for the purpose
of management. It's quite academic. Yeah, business academia had not yet learned
marketing about itself. So in the book though, Rose argues that the primary focus
of management should not be on revenue or profit or growth,
but instead on a metric called return on total assets or RODA. And again, if you talk to
anybody in Mars today, RODA, RODA, RODA, RODA, everything is about RODA.
It's funny, I came across this researching, I had to look up the term. We've never studied
in on an episode before.
All right. So what is return on total assets? It is net profit dollars divided by the total dollar value of the company's fixed assets.
So it's effectively an efficiency metric of your profits divided by your fixed cost of
your assets.
Yep.
Now the textbook way to do it is by the cost of your assets as measured on your balance
sheet.
The way Forrest does it though, and the way the company still does it today is, no, that's
insane.
Whatever this is valued at on our balance sheet, whatever it costs us to build this
factory 10 years ago, doesn't matter.
What matters is what is the value of it today?
Oh, interesting.
So, they are constantly revaluing what the replacement cost is of all their fixed assets,
all their factories, et cetera.
Like, okay, if this factory disappeared.
What's the market value if we were to sell this thing and get rid of it?
Exactly.
And so that way they're always making sure that they're like, hey, we're really efficiently
using our assets.
We're not just artificially being efficient
based on what we paid for them 10, 20 years ago.
It's fascinating.
So for you and I, it'd be like the profit dollars
of the business from sponsorship
divided by the cost of our microphones
and the very modest, tangible assets
that we have in this business.
Actually, I think if we were to use this,
we would divide our profit dollars
by the value of the acquired
brand and we would value the acquired brand sort of as highly as possible.
So you're basically wanting to say per unit of fixed investment I've made, how much yield
in terms of profit am I getting out of the fixed investment I've made?
Exactly.
I'd argue David that for acquired, we'd actually want to use our time, valued at some
certain amount, as the denominator.
What's our profitability per unit of time, which is our fixed resource?
Well, it depends, I think, what you think is more valuable, our time or the acquired
brand.
We should probably do both, actually.
Who knew this would turn into an actual holiday special?
Yeah. So anyway, supposedly, Forest had and Mars has,
or at least used to have, a specific target
of 18% return on total assets for every division
and every factory, which means essentially
that every investment needs to pay for itself
in less than five years
So if you're making 18% of your value back every year, you know That would be like five six ish years if you're using the textbook definition, but they're always increasing the value of their assets
So it's like in effect anytime forest is making a decision to invest in something
He's like I want like four-year payback on this four to five year payback.
And they don't want to be higher or lower than the 18%.
Right.
Cause if you're lower than 18%, you're not using your resources
enough to generate enough profit.
If you're higher, then you're taking too much profit.
You're taking too much profit, which is bad for your customers, or you're
not reinvesting aggressively enough.
Yeah.
You should be spending more on advertising
and marketing, et cetera, et cetera.
Right.
It's totally fascinating.
I have a couple other things on efficiency
that I was going to say for Playbook,
but since we're here, we should bring them up.
Yeah, let's do it.
So this one comes from a friend of the show,
Arvind Navaratnam at Worldly Partners,
who writes this great research that we link to
for every episode now.
He pointed out that
despite operating with 30% fewer employees than its closest competitor, so today this
is Mars versus Hershey, Mars generated more output per worker than any other in the industry.
So in 1990, for example, Mars's revenue averaged 429,000 for employee compared to 228,000 at Hershey.
So they're just doing more with less.
Yeah, miles ahead.
And I think part of this comes from the fact
that they're just amazing
at the industrialization of production.
David, you've raised that point
that the factories run 24 hours a day
and at that Chicago plant, you know,
I think today the fund size Milky Way bars are produced at over 5,500 bars per minute.
It was a stat that I saw.
They just run at incredible efficiency in production, but they also then do effectively
share this increase in efficiency with employees by doing the higher pay and the bonus based
pay. So if the revenue per employee is way higher
than their competitors like Hershey,
they should pass some of that efficiency benefit
along to their employees in terms of higher compensation,
which in turns retains people for longer,
which keeps tribal knowledge around,
which decreases recruiting costs.
I mean, it's very Costco like in that way.
It is, it's totally a flywheel type reinforcing structure
where it all fits together.
The other thing that they do is they aggressively try
to reinvest profit dollars back into the business,
doing things like R&D on new types of manufacturing
equipment that they can build for their plants.
That's the primary benefit.
The second benefit is they don't pay as many taxes
since they're reinvesting before those dollars fall
all the way to the bottom line as income.
Yep, totally.
It's very John Malone-esque.
They want to keep as much capital in the business as possible and not recognize a lot of it
as income.
Yep.
Malone and Buffett too.
Yep.
So then that brings us to the last principle, which is freedom, which I think in the early
days here, to the extent Forrest
thought about this as a principle, I think it was just like, he wants to build his own
business, be free from his dad, be his own person, prove himself. Over time, this comes
to mean family ownership and not going public, being a private company, not taking on debt.
And then in the next generation after Forrest and beyond, it means being incredibly private.
We've alluded to the privacy of the family.
Like for years, the family refused to have any photographs taken of them for fear that they might get published.
They really, really mean it about being private.
In fact, when Joelle wrote the Washington Post article, do you know the thing about the photographs?
I think it was the first time that John and Forrest Jr. had ever been photographed in
public.
It was, but then Mars didn't like the Washington Post article, like didn't like the way it
came out.
So not only did they then fire their PR consultant, they went and found the newspaper's freelance
photographer and paid off $20,000 for the rights to the photos to be sure they couldn't
be reused.
Yeah.
Wild.
Just wild.
But as we've talked about from IKEA to our business here at Acquired, complete ownership
or at least board control in Metta's case is freedom.
You can do things like invest for 10 years from now when it's going to be a super lumpy
period between now and 10 years from now.
If you believe in the long-term vision, you can sub-optimize the short-term.
And for Mars, that means private ownership.
Yep. And I think it means things like you can operate with rota as your primary operating metric
instead of profitability.
Good point.
So, back to the Forrest Mars story in progress. Starting up in the 30s,
amazing success story within a couple years by the end of the decade. They're
the third biggest candy company in the country. Incredible achievement. Riding
high. And then the end of the 30s brings something else, which of course is World War II. Yep. Now, to hear Forrest tell it, the UK government decides that in order to help fund the war
effort, they're going to impose a very heavy tax on all foreign residents living within
the country, which of course would include Forrest and the Mars family.
Which is kind of an interesting philosophical tax. We need to go to war. How are we going to finance the war? Well
who's riding the coattails of us being an awesome place to live but isn't
actually a citizen? Let's tax them to pay for the war. Right and so he would also
claim that he believed that it was Cadbury's and Roundtree's that actually
lobbied Parliament to implement this tax expressly
to run him and Mars out of town because they were threatening their business.
Chocolate was a big national business.
They were among the biggest companies in the country.
Totally.
It's not unreasonable to think that.
On the other hand, I suspect Forrest also had his ambitions always on coming back to America anyway, and
now seemed like a pretty good time to do it.
In fact, it was a very, very good time to do it.
So in 1939, he leaves all of his businesses running in the UK, and he moves with his family
back to the US.
Also, that's crazy. UK and he moves with his family back to the US.
Also that's crazy.
The fact that you can trust someone in the UK as World War II is breaking out, hey, you
run these businesses that I own and I can trust that I continue to own them while I
move across the ocean.
I wouldn't be confident that when all the dust settled, I would continue to own those
businesses.
Totally right.
Which, if Cadbury's and Roundtree's was actually behind trying to run Forrest out of town,
clearly they didn't know the loyalty of his employee base well enough.
Yeah.
Yeah, totally wild in 1939 that Forrest could do that.
So he moves back to America, and of course he has his sights set back on Chicago and
Chicago Mars.
Honey, I'm home.
Yeah.
Remember, Frank had died a few years before.
And at this point, Chicago Mars is being run by Forrest's widowed stepmother, the other
Ethel, and her half brother, who is the president and CEO of the business.
And they, of course, detest Forrest, and they won't let him anywhere near the company.
And who owns the company at this point?
So, Forrest has some shares after his dad has died, but he's by far a minority shareholder.
The biggest shareholder, I believe, is the other Ethel, the second wife.
And then Forrest's half-sister, Patricia, her daughter, also holds a large stake.
And then I think the employees of the business owned equity at this point.
So Forrest, I don't know, I'm guessing he probably owns maybe 10, maybe 20% of the business.
Not enough to be a controlling shareholder.
Okay.
So, Forrest does what Forrest does. He says,
the hell with you. I started from scratch once to prove you all wrong. I can start from scratch
and do it again back here in America. Which is the final gauntlet, right? It's one thing to go
across the ocean and start from scratch in a smaller market where no one knows your name.
You can kind of sneak around and do these deals. Now he's here in America. Can he start a from scratch
candy company on the world's greatest stage?
Which on the one hand he has more connection here and more resources. On the other hand,
he's battling the old Mars at every step of the way.
Right. And he hasn't lived his chances because he has brought back a secret weapon.
Before Forrest leaves Europe, he had spied a new, to him at least, type of chocolate
candy that had become popular with soldiers in the Spanish Civil War called Draguet.
And I think it's called Draguet because I believe
it was originally a French style of candy intended
for French noble ladies who wanted to eat chocolate
but not have the chocolate melt
on their white gloved hands.
Oh, interesting.
And so what is Draguet?
Well, Draguet is small round pieces of chocolate
coated with a candy shell to prevent them from melting
in your hand or in hot weather.
And confectioners call this hard panning,
the colored candy shell, which is effectively hardened sugar
syrup.
Yes.
And so Forrest, as he's heading back to the US,
thinks, you know, I think there might be some global appeal hardened sugar syrup. Yes and so far as he's heading back to the US thinks you
know I think there might be some global appeal here in this drudge a product but
before we tell the M&M's story that was a great time to tell you about one of our
favorite companies Stats Egg. Yes we are going to do something a little bit
different today listeners by sharing a story from one of their customers, BlueSky.
I was somehow not at all surprised when StatSig told us BlueSky was a customer.
It really does seem like every up-and-coming tech company these days is using StatSig.
OpenAI, Figma, Versel, Notion, BlueSky, etc.
Yep. So listeners, by this point, you've probably heard of BlueSky.
They're a new open
social network that has a serious emphasis on user choice. For example, users can build their own
home feed and move between apps in the open ecosystem. And if you ever decide to leave
Blue Sky or switch providers, you can just take all of your followers with you. They've got a ton
of momentum. And David, I didn't even tell you this yet. I actually just set up the at acquired
FM account there yesterday.
Ah, I saw the email come into the acquired FM email address.
That must be what that was.
Yep.
The influx of new users that they have gotten
over the last few weeks is massive.
They have added 10 million new users
just in the last couple of weeks.
Pretty crazy for a relatively new social media app.
Yep, and the Blue Sky team has been using Statsig
for pretty much everything from running
experiments to collecting user analytics and releasing new features.
We asked Blue Sky to share a couple specific use cases with us to illustrate.
One, when the Brazilian Supreme Court banned X in Brazil, Blue Sky obviously saw an influx
of Brazilian users.
The way they realized this was StatSig.
They had a dashboard that
tracked posts by language, and all of a sudden they saw a Portuguese post spike which tipped them off.
Two, you may also be one of the many people crying out that you just wish you had a feed of people
you follow in chronological order like the old days of social media. Blue Sky has been using StatSig to run an experiment
to mathematically prove that users want and enjoy
this style of browsing a feed.
It's kind of an inversion of the rest
of algorithmic social media these days.
Totally.
So listeners, we are a grownup podcast now,
and we do things like get real quotes from customers
as a part of segments like this.
So here's what Blue Sky's CTO had to say.
Blue Sky collects a lot of feedback from users,
but StatSig gave us concrete answers
about what was working and what wasn't.
We thought that we didn't have the resources
for an A-B testing framework,
but StatSig made it achievable for a small team.
It remains our best tool for evaluating product decisions.
So good.
If you want to leverage StatSig to grow your business, there's a bunch of ways to get started.
StatSig has an insanely generous free tier for small companies, a startup program with
1 billion free events, which is $50,000 in value, and significant discounts for enterprise
customers.
To get started, just go to statcig.com.
That's s-t-a-t-S-I-G dot com slash acquired.
And remember to tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right, David, M&Ms, let's do it.
Hell yeah, let's do it.
I'm gonna eat some dark chocolate
and some almond M&Ms to celebrate.
Ooh, nice.
I think I'm gonna pop a peanut butter.
Okay, so the legend is that the reason peanut butter M&Ms are not as big as what you would
think their market potential is in the US is because Forrest Jr. and John Mars, the
sons of Forrest Sr. who would take over and then launch peanut butter M&Ms, they grew
up in England.
So they didn't get the peanut butter and chocolate thing.
Mmm.
Is that like a uniquely American?
Yeah, it's an American thing. Fascinating. Reese's kind of invented it. There's a a uniquely American? Yeah. It's an American thing.
Fascinating.
Reese's kind of invented it.
There's a whole great Reese's story.
Reese's was a separate company from Hershey
that was built down the road.
And I think it was a former Hershey employee.
Former Hershey employee started it,
and then Hershey's later acquired the company.
Great story.
Yep.
Anyway, here we are in August of 1939. Forest and the family have moved back to America.
He's ready to hatch his plan, his revenge campaign, and he goes and pays a visit to
Hershey, Pennsylvania. And by pays a visit, in typical Forest fashion, I mean that he
shows up there anonymously and unannounced,
and he signs up and does the public factory tour.
So awesome.
So Forrest.
So freaking awesome.
After the tour is over, however, he asks the tour guide if he could please go see Mr. William
Murray.
William Murray, of course, being the president of Hershey
and Milton Hershey's longtime number two
president and COO type,
but the guy who actually ran the company.
Milton, by this point, is very much focused on the town
and the orphanage and the Hershey Trust and all that.
And the gist here is, I need to buy some chocolate.
Yeah, well, let's keep telling the story.
So the guide's like, excuse me, who are you?
And why do you want to see Mr. Murray?
To which Forrest replies, just tell him Mars is here.
That's all he needs to know.
Because at this point, while Hershey was still
a supplier to Chicago Mars, they were really
starting to be a competitor.
They're starting to wake up to this idea that,
yeah, we're selling these other people chocolate,
but they could just go eat all of our market share.
Yes, they're starting to wake up to that.
But if this story is true,
Forrest is saying, tell Murray that Mars is here.
Obviously, the implication being Chicago Mars is here,
which is totally not true.
Right, because his father's passed at this point.
So the Mars that it probably is, is whoever is running the Mars company. Right, it's Ethel number two's half-brother
who is installed running the company. Either way, Forrest does get in to see William Murray,
and Murray has never met Forrest before, but of course knows who he is once Forrest introduces
himself, and Murray's like, um, great, okay, you're back in the US.
What can I do for you?
Forrest then proceeds to theatrically remove a handkerchief from his pocket
and place it down on Murray's desk.
And he opens up the handkerchief and there inside are Draje candy coated chocolates.
This is so Steve Jobs.
So Steve Jobs.
The showmanship.
It's amazing.
Drama.
It's amazing.
Forest is like, try one.
So Murray does and he's like, yeah, it's pretty good.
Forest says, what if I told you that I have had these candies in my pocket all the way
on the trip here from New York. The whole
train ride, all the time outside in this hot muggy August weather, all through the
factory tour, and not once did they ever melt. In fact, how do they taste? Do they
taste melted? They don't taste melted, do they? And Murray's like, oh, all right,
you've got my attention. So Forrest and William Murray work out a deal to start a new joint venture candy company
that will be 80% owned by Forrest and 20% owned by Murray's son, Bruce.
And Forrest says, I've even got the name for it.
We're going to call it Mars and Murray.
M&Ms.
And it's a new company.
That's what's worth noting here.
Well, several things are worth noting.
Obviously, Forrest is totally brilliant.
This is probably his most brilliant scheme on so many levels.
He knows that if he's going to build a new candy company,
come back to the US, take on and defeat
his father's old company in Mars,
he's going to need resources.
He's going to need chocolate,
which means he's going to need Hershey's chocolate.
And he's also going to need capital and money.
He just can't get that much capital out of his UK businesses,
remember the tax.
So there's a reason though that he specifically goes
to Murray to make this proposal, not to Milton Hershey.
A, Murray is kind of the COO type.
He's actually running the place and can marshal resources.
But even more important, Murray doesn't own Hershey.
He's just an employee.
The Hershey Trust owns Hershey.
Murray has no inheritance to give his family.
He's now, at this point, I think Murray is 66 years old.
So Mars is dangling something he wants.
Forrest is offering Murray the chance to have wealth and a legacy and a business to pass
on to his son.
Do you know what else Bruce Murray had access to?
The military purchasing division?
Yes, okay, we will get into that.
It's so brilliant.
So, this deal is nuts because Hershey has an exclusive arrangement
to supply chocolate to the US military.
The exclusive agreement!
And Forrest Mars has this thing
that God, if you think the military liked count lines,
they're gonna love these non-melt candy coated chocolates.
And so, he is going to the person who has the sole ability
to provide the military with chocolate and saying,
let's start a new company together with your chocolate
that is rationed for the war
in World War II for the military.
We're only going to sell this to the government.
I'm going to own 80% of it.
Your son's going to own only 20% of it.
I'm showing up with just the idea.
And Hershey's going to provide the chocolate, the sugar,
and the technical expertise and capital.
Yep.
And it's going to be an 80-20 deal?
I don't understand how this deal got done.
Well, what else is Murray going to do?
If he wants a legacy to pass on to his son, Murray's not going to go off and do this himself.
That would be disloyalty to Hershey.
And in fact, I would guess it's to avoid a conflict of interest for Murray himself to
say my partner is actually your son, not you.
Yeah.
So his employment contract isn't in violation.
And he's only a 20% owner, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, when you think about it, if Forrest were to go to William
Murray and say, hey, you and me enter into a partnership,
that's at least going to be 50-50, if not 80-20 Murray
to Mars.
But by saying, no, your son, yeah,
he's just so freaking brilliant.
What a G. So Murray agrees to this. And in the spring of 1940, Forrest and Bruce Murray,
the son, set up M&M Limited as a partnership. They build a factory in Newark, New Jersey,
and they start production in 1941. Ben, as you say, build a factory with Hershey Capital
and resources and chocolate and sugar and everything else.
Yeah, and there's a great quote in the Cadbury book
about how amazing it is that this is how Forrest makes his return to the US.
The line is, without the support of his own family,
but with the support of his leading rival, Hershey.
It is spooky.
You want to say diabolical, but I don't think Forrest is diabolical per se. It's just truly
genius.
It's just strategic.
Yeah. So of course, now what else happens in 1941, right as they set up the factory
and start production? The U.S. enters World War II. Which means significant chocolate rationing for
all the consumers in America and significant chocolate consumption by the military. So
all of a sudden, the US military becomes Hershey's biggest customer, just like during World War
I, which means...
And Hershey's is the only one with a chocolate contract.
And the only one producing milk chocolate at significant scale in America,
which means that they start severely limiting their wholesale chocolate supply
to all of their enterprise customers like Chicago Mars.
Or actually, they limit their chocolate supply
to all of their wholesale enterprise customers,
except for one M&M limited partnership, Or actually, they limit their chocolate supply to all of their wholesale enterprise customers
except for one M&M Limited Partnership.
Because of course, it's Bruce Murray's company.
Yep.
Sort of.
In minority.
Yes.
20% of it is Bruce Murray's company.
Now, of course, just like Hershey, the vast majority of young M&M limited partnerships
production is also going to the military.
So the Air Force was the biggest customer of M&M's during World War II.
The Army was number two.
I presume the Navy was probably also a large customer.
And like we've been talking about, who has the chocolate sales relationship with the
purchasing officers
in the Pentagon. It's William Murray at Hershey's and Bruce gets to tag right along. And as
head of sales in the new M&M Limited Partnership, he is perfectly positioned to do that.
It's so funny, head of sales. There's one customer.
Yes.
They're not selling it to the public yet.
No, there's three customers. There's the Army and the Air Force and the Navy.
Okay.
Yeah, they're not selling it to the public yet or at any sort of real value.
Now there's an interesting little sidebar to the M&M's story here.
And I suspect many of our British friends are listening to all this and saying like,
hey guys, what about Smarties?
Forrest, of course, was not the only one
to spot the potential of Drosier chocolates
for military use and then eventually for public consumption.
Well, like all things with Forest history,
it's a little bit hard to untangle truth from fiction,
but one thing that is undeniably true
is that Roundtrees introduced Smarties to the British market
in 1937. So three to four years before M&M's start up in the US and two years before Forrest
even leaves the UK.
Right. So he's saying it's this Spanish-American war thing, but very plausibly, he just saw
Smarties in the UK and was like, I gotta go back to America and launch this quick. There is no way that Forrest did not see Smarties
in the UK before he left.
And the early M&Ms came in tube packaging
just like Smarties.
Suspicious.
Also for the American listeners,
you're probably like Smarties,
those are a non-chocolate candy.
What are you talking about?
Those are different Smarties that are in the U.S. market.
Yes. British smarties are delicious. I loved eating them growing up with my British family
when I would go visit them in the summers. Well, as best as I think anyone can tell,
apparently there is some documentation about this in the Nestle archives.
Apparently, Forrest and George Harris of Roundtree
had both learned about dragees around the same time,
so during the Spanish Civil War.
And supposedly, they negotiated a gentleman's agreement
that Roundtree could have the British market
for dragee candies. And Forrest, who
was at this point in time starting to plan to go back to the US anyway, he could have
the American market. And in return, Forrest supposedly gave Roundtree the rights to manufacture
and market Mars bars in other British Commonwealth countries like Canada and South Africa.
So supposedly there's evidence to this effect in the Nestle archives, but we can't know for sure.
Regardless, none of this really matters at least for a few years because basically all of the
world's chocolate production is going to sovereign militaries around the world that are all fighting in World War II.
Okay.
Meanwhile, during the war, as M&M's is starting up and the US military is a big customer and
Forrest is sort of rebuilding his empire in America, he's on the lookout for his Chappie's
equivalent to bring into the US.
You talking about rice?
Time to talk about rice.
Another business that can provide diversification
and cash and resources to build up the candy business.
This is so crazy.
He owns a British company that makes Mars bars.
He bought the Chapel Brothers.
He started a new partnership in the US,
a third business called M&M Limited,
and now he's looking to start a fourth company that makes rice.
Yes, in Houston, Texas. So there are also, as always, a couple versions of this story,
but I think the one that is closest to the truth is that back when Forrest was in England,
he had gotten to know a chemist who had invented a new method for milling
rice that was called parboiling.
And when you parboil rice through this new method, it results in more nutritious and
importantly faster cooking rice for when you ultimately prepare it for eating.
And in 1942, this chemist and For forest form another joint venture company in Houston, Texas, and
they patent the method in America and start producing rice to sell, just like M&Ms, to
the military.
Because what's the military need a lot of?
Cheap calories.
Rice.
And hey, this is more nutritious, it cooks faster.
Like, great.
Great customer.
And this becomes Uncle Ben's Rice, today Ben's original.
The idea of launching a branded rice product in America was crazy.
I mean, it's not as crazy as like the pet food business, but there were no
brands in the rice category before Uncle Ben's.
You just bought rice.
It's a commodity.
So this is the first brand, at least in rice,
ever launched in America.
Fast forward, today Ben's Original
does over a billion dollars in revenue annually.
Crazy.
Listeners, you can tell all these did become one company
at some point, but at first they weren't.
Right, it was all these puzzle pieces
that Forrest was assembling.
So, back to M&Ms.
After the war, Forrest and Bruce Murray, of course, now need to find
new customers for M&Ms. They're going to relaunch it as a consumer candy.
Like, obviously, that was the plan, use the military, bootstrap up the production,
herseys resources, but like, obviously obviously this is going to be a consumer candy.
So yeah, it's crazy.
Basically five years elapsed between when they founded the company and when they
are able to actually do the consumer launch because of World War II.
Yep.
And you would think, great, what potential for the consumer market?
All the soldiers and pilots have been eating these all war.
It's going to be the same story as Hershey's bars all over again.
It's going to make M&Ms be Forrest's big success coming back to America.
Nope.
Consumer launch, pretty tepid.
Doesn't get a lot of pickup back with consumers in America.
For years.
For years.
This, of course, as you would imagine, creates quite a lot of tension between Forrest and
Bruce, especially because Bruce was in charge of sales.
And Bruce had been great at sales when he's selling to the military.
Selling to consumers not so much.
So did you hear about what supposedly Forrest did to Bruce here?
No.
Oh my gosh. So the story is, as sales are not going well,
Forest orders Bruce to produce a daily report
of the past day's sales of M&Ms in a written form to him
every morning in the office.
And every morning where the previous day's sales did not hit Forrest's
target, he would write in big letters in red ink, failed on the paper, and then he would
go tape it up in the men's bathroom in the company.
We've obviously been very laudatory of Forrest and he was an incredible, incredible genius.
The dude also had a temper to match his genius.
Is he trying to get Bruce to leave the company at this point or is he just trying to motivate him?
Well, yes. So here's the thing, you know, you read about lots of people who worked for Forrest
and lots of accounts in Emperors of Chocolate and elsewhere about his temper and how awful he was
and he clearly was awful. He's also doing things for a reason.
He's trying to get Bruce to leave the company.
He's trying to push him out
because he wants to own M&M's 100%.
So in 1949, four years after the end of the war
and middling sales at best of M&M's,
Forrest finally succeeds in pushing Bruce out.
And supposedly it comes down to a confrontation one day where Bruce is like,
I can't take it anymore with Forest,
how you're treating me, posting these reports in the men's bathroom.
Supposedly they get into a literal fistfight in the office in New Jersey.
Forest kicks Bruce out of the plant as security or whatever, come and take him out.
Forrest is his boss. I mean, this guy take him out. And Forrest is his boss.
I mean, this guy owns 20%, but Forrest is the CEO.
Telling him he can take his shares, but he can fire him.
Exactly.
So Bruce resigns.
And then once Bruce resigns, after this, this starts the negotiations of Forrest buying
out his 20% stake.
They settle on $1 million for the 20% stake.
So they're valuing the M&M's business at $5 million, which, you know, this is 1949.
So if you adjust for inflation in 2024 dollars, that would be like valuing the business at
$65 million and buying Bruce out for $13 million.
So, you know, $13 million payout, you know,
in today's dollars for Bruce to walk away.
For a company that like, it's not clear
it's gonna catch with consumers?
Right, exactly.
Okay, you worked on it for, well, it's nine years of work.
Yeah, it's nine years of work.
So like, you know, I think you could really debate
the valuation there in both sides.
Certainly M&Ms were not yet M&Ms.
But.
In fact, they hadn't even started
having the Ms printed on them yet.
No, they hadn't.
As soon as Forrest completes the purchase
and kicks Bruce out of the company,
takes 100% ownership, he goes in 1950
and hires the ad agency, Ted Bates & Company,
to perform a comprehensive market study for the product.
This is also another genius innovation on Forrest's part.
So other big diversified CPG companies like Procter & Gamble,
they were starting to do the sophisticated kind
of market research here, like we're talking
about, you know, the legendary Procter and Gamble product management function.
This was starting to happen, but nobody in the candy industry did this.
Like, the candy industry still operated seat of the pants, Frank Mars type entrepreneurial
stuff.
This is emblematic of the industry. Hershey had a strict
policy of not advertising at all. No advertising whatsoever. They did not do
any advertising until 1970. That's so insane. Which is absolutely freaking
insane. They didn't have sales targets either, right? The story about sales targets and revenue growth targets in Hershey was that in some
file card in some system, Milton Hershey had written, grow sales 4% every year.
And that was the plan.
That was Hershey's annual plan was grow sales 4%.
Yeah.
I will say it is pretty incredible how much from here on out the story is a story of ad campaigns
We are getting from a place where before this it was all product innovation and from here on out
It's marketing innovation like who won chocolate between
1950 and
2024 is a story of marketing and distribution. Yes, 100% marketing and distribution.
And you say ad agencies, I don't want listeners
to get the sense that, oh, it's just ad agencies that
are doing this and it's advertising.
It really is the discipline of marketing,
of which ad agencies I think were a lot more consultative
in this function back in the day than today.
They're much more execution oriented.
Really, this is like the creation
of the modern marketing discipline.
Yeah.
So the Ted Bates Agency goes off.
They do this product study, market study,
of who do M&Ms appeal to.
And they find that actually M&Ms are super appealing to kids. Now
this is interesting. The candy industry had obviously started as a kids market
but by this point in time it's an adults market. Everybody's marketing to adults
that's where everybody thinks the market is. And M&Ms and Smarties etc. this had
started as food for soldiers so they were focusing on the adult market. Turns out kids love the little pieces and the bright colors, et cetera, et
cetera. Here's the problem though. Kids don't buy the candy. The parents buy the candy.
So you've got to market to the parents to buy them for the kids.
Exactly. So they need to come up with some way to get that message across to the parents.
And this is where, frankly, I'm going to think just like one of the most brilliant
slogans and ad campaigns of all time is born.
The milk chocolate that melts in your mouth, not in your hand.
And it's become like water these days. Everybody knows that slogan. What makes it so effective,
I think, is it just so gets at the very, very, very core of the psychology of being a parent
of candy age eating children. And the core truth that it gets at is, yeah, you want your kids to be happy,
but really what you want is for your kids not to cause chaos in your home.
David, how do you know all this information?
I'm just reading about this and thinking of like, oh my God, imagining myself as a parent
in 1950, 1951, when this comes out, the last thing in the world I want is my snotty-nosed
kids running around the house, smearing chocolate all over the furniture, all over the walls,
all over everything, which also is the last thing that I want as a parent in 2024. Yep. And now here is this message being delivered to me of,
make your kids happy,
get them to stop whining,
give them the chocolate that they so desire,
and it will not ruin your furniture and your house.
It's perfect.
Yep.
They of course back up the parent marketing with
also sponsoring the most popular kids television shows of the day, They of course back up the parent marketing with also
sponsoring the most popular kids television shows of the day the Mickey Mouse Club and the howdy-duty television shows and
Boy does it work by 1956 so they start this campaign and call it
5051 so five years later
M&Ms have become the biggest selling candy
in all of America, doing over $40 million
in annual sales and growing super fast.
Bigger than Snickers, bigger than Milky Way,
bigger than the Hershey's bar, incredible.
Wow.
Five years from basically zero to $40 million in sales.
They're just crushing it.
And they're starting to get worried about copycats.
They start adding the little M's.
Actually, they were black at first.
And then in 1954, they transitioned it to white.
And they ran a second ad campaign telling consumers,
look for the M on every piece to verify the authenticity.
So they're saying that we're building IP here.
We're not just making candy.
We are building a frame of mind and a nostalgia point
and a trust with consumers.
Yep.
And of course today, I say as I pop some M&Ms into my mouth,
M&Ms are not just a kid's candy.
Kids still love them, but adults love them too.
But it's back to this nostalgia thing. Like everybody today who is an adult eating M&Ms,
grew up eating them as kids.
Yep.
1954, there's the first TV commercial
featuring the animated M&Ms characters.
Obviously different than the ones you know today,
which are computer animated, but very cute, hand-drawn.
Actually a few different versions of them, but pretty
consistent concept all the way from then until now.
The personalities changed a little bit, but these personified M&Ms that have witty stuff
to say is they're pretty early.
Yep, totally.
Speaking of copycats, M&Ms were so successful that Hershey's really was getting worried.
David, as you said, it became the better selling candy than Hershey's bars. So
Hershey's launched something called Hersheyettes and we'll link to it in the show notes. It's fun looking at the old marketing for this failed product.
The biggest issue with marketing Hersheyettes is people would say, what is it? And in order to say what it is, you had to say they're like M&Ms, which that's a tough marketing position
to be in.
I mean, you nailed it earlier when you said,
being first to market is really important.
And in markets where it is important to be first to market,
getting scale quickly, so you become the product of record
or of reference when people are trying to describe
the category, M&Ms was that to a T.
Totally, totally was.
Hershey's would then later, as a part of the Reese's franchise
try to do Reese's Pieces. Actually, there's a fun story around that that we will talk about
a little bit later. But here in 1954 land, there's just a lot of fun dialing in happening of all the
marketing. The Peanut M&Ms launched, but first only in tan. They then realized, what are we doing that we need to change this?
So in 1960, they added yellow, red and green right around the same time in 1955.
TV started becoming a real factor in American's homes and it was just perfect timing.
I mean, it was a match made in heaven for these candy companies to utilize and create
demand for their products after the war. If you
wanted a brief moment of emotion for your brand with a quick tagline, a TV
commercial is just custom made for that. And Deborah Cadbury puts it really well.
She says, one great TV campaign could shift decades of customer loyalty in a
matter of weeks. Especially in a new category like candy-coated chocolates.
Yep. 1955, Mars also gets into the vending machine business.
Interestingly over in England, they start this business called VendPak, which created
the earliest vending machines.
They eventually sold this off in 2006, but they had built coin mechanisms and bill validators.
I think they were like the market share leader in how to read bills in vending machines all across the world
Yeah, they also got into change makers like you put bills in and you get coins out. Oh interesting. Yeah
So speaking of Empire minded at this point forest Empire is pretty much complete
He's got the most popular candy bar in the UK with the Mars bar
Mars is European operations have become very, very large in and of themselves.
I think they had started making their own chocolate instead of buying from Cadbury by
this point.
I think that's right.
I think they had transitioned or were transitioning to making their own chocolate.
In the US, obviously, he's got M&Ms, which are now the number one candy in the US.
He's crushing it there.
He's got the biggest and pretty much the only
pet food business in the entire world.
He's also got the biggest and only branded rice business.
All told, all of his sets of companies,
I believe here now in the, call it mid to late 1950s,
are doing like 200 million-ish in revenue. So a big empire.
However, there are two things that he still doesn't have. One, of course, is his
father's company, Mars Inc. Chicago Mars. And he owns what, 10 ish percent around
this point. But he doesn't control the company. And then two, of course, is fully separating himself from Hershey's and controlling all
the means of production for all of his American businesses and making his own chocolate in
America.
Right.
Because if Hershey's cut him off, M&M's would be screwed.
He has a big liability there.
Now, of course, Hershey's doesn't want to do that because then they'd lose a whole lot
of business.
They'd lose their biggest customer. Yeah, exactly. And probably also knowing Forrest was strategic
when he chose to push Bruce out of the business because I believe William Murray had already
retired from Hershey's at that point. It would be like Forrest to plan all that out to a tee.
Yeah.
It would be like Forrest to plan all that out to a tee. Yeah.
Anyway, like I said, at this point, Forrest Empire is doing, call it 200 million-ish of
revenue annually around the world.
And Chicago Mars had about 50 million of revenue.
So Forrest is, call it four times the size of Chicago Mars.
Now when Frank Mars, his dad, had died, the majority of the company
went to his second wife, Ethel. It's about two-thirds I think that she gets
and then there was one-third that had gone to random other shareholders over
time, many of which were employees I think. Yep, I think that's right. And I
think maybe Forrest and Patricia got like some small stakes at that point in
time. Okay. And Ethel, like we said, installed her half-brother
William running the company. Ethel dies in 1945, and when that happens, her stock gets split 50-50
between Patricia and Forrest, per Frank's original will. Ethel had two-thirds, one-third goes to Patricia, one-third goes to Forrest.
As we get on into the 1950s, and Forrest has now turned M&Ms into a big success, he starts
turning his attention to Chicago Mars.
So he goes to the board and he says, hey, I own a third of this business, I think I
should have an office at the company and the right to come in and inspect the operations whenever I want.
I think they were like, sure, this seems like an easy demand to give this guy.
Like, whatever, we'll make an office for him.
There's a fox that wants to hang out in our hen house.
Is there anything anybody sees that's an issue here?
Nah, just build him an office.
Clearly, they did not know Forrest very well because he shows up.
I think he basically like relocates to Chicago and is like coming in every day.
He's spending a ton of time. He's criticizing everywhere.
He starts writing memos to the board about everything that is wrong at the company.
All the big mistakes that William is making as CEO and why William should be fired
and Forrest should take over.
This is not so different than how Elon ended up owning Twitter.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It actually is very similar.
Oh, I'm just a 5% position.
Oh, I should be on the board.
Oh, I have recommendations.
Yeah.
Before you know it.
This is exactly the same way.
Oh boy. Still though, William and Patricia and the rest of the management
isn't going to get on board with selling to Forrest or letting him take over.
And in fact, in 1959, William retires as CEO. Forrest figures like, okay, great, this is my chance.
He starts lobbying Patricia. He's lobbying everyone else who owns the company, all the management, saying like,
great, sell to me. Let me take over. Let me run this business.
Instead, Patricia decides to install her husband James, who had been working in the business
as CEO. Whether he was a good employee or not,
as CEO. Whether he was a good employee or not, he is a totally, totally terrible CEO of Mars, Chicago. So once he takes over in 1959, revenue drops from about 50 million,
like we said, to by 1963, it's down to about 40 million. So on the one hand, okay, a 20%
decline. On the other hand, this is a very, very high fixed cost business.
Yeah.
So, a 20% decline in revenue on a significant fixed cost base is catastrophic.
That would be a huge, huge change in the negative direction on your return on total assets.
Yeah.
It is a disaster for the company.
Now it's also a very convenient disaster for Forrest who wants to pressure everybody
else into selling and being able to take things over.
So finally, as this is happening in 1963, Forrest flies to San Diego where Patricia
lives.
Again, to give you a sense of James, the husband here, he's
commuting from San Diego to run this business.
And they didn't have Zoom then?
No, they didn't. And it's a manufacturing business. So yeah. Anyway, Forest finally
convinces Patricia to sell. He says, like, look, if we don't do something here, this
company is going to go bankrupt. I can save it. I will take it over. I will run it. She
says, okay, I Will finally agree on two conditions
One you have to promise me that you will not fire James my husband. He can remain a CEO far. This is like
Okay, are we putting that in writing or for how long and condition number two?
You need to promise me that you will make this company, our father's
company, Mars Incorporated, the new parent company of all of your businesses and preserve
our father's legacy.
And he says, sure, done.
Which is probably what he wanted.
Anyway.
Totally.
It's also his name.
And so is it that different if left absorbs right or right absorbs left?
And if you're the controlling shareholder of both?
No, it doesn't matter.
Yes.
Not yet CEO.
So Patty sells out in 1963.
Forrest now owns two thirds of the business.
He spends the next few months going around to all the other shareholders of the business,
again mostly current and former management, and buying out their shares.
And by mid-1964, he has full control of Mars, Incorporated.
Which, by the way, is 20 years after Ethel dies.
That's how long he has been on this quest to get full control of the business.
Right. Well, and really, I mean going back to him leaving for Europe,
like you have to imagine that this was on his mind the whole
time.
And just as a like a side note here, it's pretty insane that Forrest is able to out
of his pocket without external financing, go and buy up two thirds of a business that
is doing 40 million a year in revenue. I mean, it's just because he owns M&Ms and Uncle Ben's Rice and the
UK businesses. This is not a strategy that most people could run. If they're like, oh,
I wish I was a larger shareholder of this business that is large and dominant.
Right. You need some other way to get the money.
Yes.
Now, it was a distressed business at this point, but like, yeah, still.
I'm going to guess it's still valued north of 40 million.
Seems reasonable.
He needs to come up with 25 plus million in cash to pull this all off.
Yeah, amazing.
So once he takes control, he comes to Chicago, he immediately rips out all the office walls
in the building, open floor plan for everybody.
He demolishes the executive dining
room, he sells the company art collection and the company helicopter, and he hands everybody,
including James, a time card. He may as well have walked in with a sink.
He may as well have walked in with a sink. Seriously, oh my God. Tragically, later that year, Patty
dies of cancer, super young. I don't think she was even 50 years old yet. And once that
happens, Forrest fires James and makes himself CEO of the entire empire, all united, finally,
under Mars Incorporated.
You know, I read this story and I thought of the Darth Vader quote, I am altering the
deal.
Pray I don't alter it any further.
Yes, yes.
Now, I'm not 100% sure he may have kept James still employed in the business or something,
but yeah, he was out of CEO.
Forrest is the captain now.
Yeah.
I am altering the deal.
Pray I don't alter it.
So, so, so great.
Okay.
This now brings us to Forrest's final conquest, which is making his own chocolate in America
and fully ditching Hershey's.
And we should say too at this point he has completely overhauled the Chicago factory.
They're all in on mass productions.
These count lines are moving at they used to make a Snickers bar in a day and now they
can do it in under an hour.
I mean he's just going.
He's going. So his first act of business, once he becomes CEO of Mars
America, is he calls Hershey up and he's like, hello?
Remember me?
I'm the new CEO of Mars.
I just want to let you know that we are going to start phasing
out our chocolate purchases from you all.
And the way Hershey reacts to this is, what?
You would be stupid to do that.
Imagine how long it would take you
to pay back the investment necessary
to spin up your own chocolate factory.
You would have to be nuts to take on all that fixed cost.
We have literally an entire town here
that is dedicated to making chocolate.
And we are supplying it to you at a competitive price.
Yep.
So the Hershey's team estimates that it'll be
at least 10 years before Mars turns profitable
on this decision to make their own chocolate.
And okay, so let's say he just did it for control
and he didn't think the math would pencil,
which I don't think is right, but let's assume that.
It's been 60 years since they made that decision.
So I am sure they have reaped plenty of benefits
in operating leverage on having their own plant
versus needing to pay all those extra little margin dollars
here and there to Hershey's.
Totally.
So Forrest gives his Chicago plant managers
a deadline of six months to start making their own chocolate
in the factory.
And I suspect they turn profitable on this decision
a lot faster than 10 years out.
But there are obviously other reasons
that Forrest is doing this too.
One is the quality principle,
which I really do think the quality principle
is number one in Mars for a reason.
And if you really are serious about wanting to produce
the highest quality products at a given price,
you kind
of need to control all the means of production yourself.
Anyone who's serious about software should make their own hardware.
Yes, yes.
Alan Kay for the win.
The other reason that I think Forrest always had the dream of making his own chocolate
is to be able to scale as large as possible. Like we've
been saying all episodes, this man so deeply knew in his bones how to operate in a scale economies
market. And by controlling all the production himself, that was just another step that enabled
him to scale as big as possible. I think in any CPG business, it's a scale economies business.
But here, we haven't talked directly yet about how important shelf space is for candy.
Yes, I was about to bring up supermarkets.
Yes. So for candy especially, it really is a zero sum game.
90%, nine zero of all candy purchases are impulse purchases.
Only 10% of candy purchases are planned purchases.
So I found that it was 70% and the place that I found it was from, this is flashing forward
a little bit, some 1979 consumer market research that Mars commissioned.
And what they did with that information
was they launched an all out initiative to lobby merchants
to put candy displays near the cash registers,
which didn't happen until that point in history
and is now ubiquitous.
Ah, interesting.
So it may indeed be 90% now, in part because of those efforts by Mars.
Yes.
They were like, how do we lean into the idea that 70% in 1979 of our candy is purchased
on an impulse basis?
Wow.
I didn't realize that.
I thought that candy had always been by the cash registers.
It wasn't until this Mars initiative in 1979?
Maybe in smaller shops, but that's, I think, especially with supermarkets when that changed.
Interesting, interesting.
Well, so given the impulse nature of purchases here, I mean, it really is whatever candy
is right in front of your face tempting you to buy is what you're gonna buy. And so being the scale player, being
able to have the muscle with retailers to push Hershey's and other candy to the
back of the aisle or bottom of the shelf makes all the difference in the world
here. There's another interaction with supermarkets where the power actually
flows the opposite direction,
it's sort of an aggregation theory thing.
If you think about the way that merchants used to work, no one owned a lot of stores.
The power was sort of diffuse among retailers.
And so if you were a candy maker and you went to the local store in your town and you said,
you want to buy my bar and they'd say sure and they didn't really have an ability to push back or bargain.
They didn't have a lot of leverage supermarkets and especially chain supermarkets made it so there was a power concentration where the supermarkets could go to the candy manufacturers and say here's what you want.
and say, here's what we want. We want to market a uniform set of candy
and a small number of SKUs that don't overwhelm us
with inventory.
And we want you to put a lot of marketing
behind those things that we're selling.
And we're only going to stock them in the store
if you're really doing marketing campaigns.
Because television's blowing up
and we know that that moves product in our stores.
So tell us whatever you're going to do big campaigns on and that's the shelf space that's
going to get allotted. Yeah, you're totally right. It's a shift in technology with TV. It's a shift
in consumer behavior with the supermarkets and what it results in is massive returns to the scale
player. And what's so frankly just kind of sad is with the exception of advertising, Hershey
had been benefiting from this for its entire life as a company.
I mean, this really was Milton Hershey's strategy from the get-go.
Lower prices, get distribution, go nationwide, get shelf space, get placement, build a big
company. He just didn't put his foot on the gas.
Exactly.
Well, and then after his tenure and after Murray's tenure,
the company basically became brain dead
for like three decades.
They don't do advertising.
They don't have a marketing department at all.
And it's not like, you know,
I mean, Hermes doesn't have a marketing department.
Like Hershey really didn't have a marketing department
I think it was one of these things where a company
internalizes a behavior because it's always been that way and
They say well, there's a rule and the rule is we don't do advertising
But that rule was developed in a different time in a different environment where the rule made sense
And now you're sort of senselessly following a religion that is no longer
relevant in the new world. Yep. You know we haven't talked yet about
Hershey's ownership structure so it was and is a public company but the
controlling interest is owned by the trust. The management of the trust
became super super removed from the realities of the business and the market.
And I think that's how this happened.
Makes sense. Reflecting back on this period of time, thinking about forest Mars,
this sort of was the moment in world history for the global scale economies founder to rise.
If you think about the early 1910s, you couldn't take advantage
of economies of scale in the way that you sort of can now with the rise of globalization.
There are things that would have been non-economic before in addressing these small regional
markets, but now that you're distributing everywhere and America is a huge market on its own, finally,
and beyond that internationally,
you sort of have the potential for this personality type
that Forrest Mars was to really succeed.
And you can advertise and market and brand nationally
for the first time via television,
and then in the coming decades internationally.
Yeah, it's the rise of the scale economies entrepreneur,
I think is sort of a way to summarize it.
Yep, totally.
So now that Forrest finally has his own chocolate making
means of production, how do they finally knock off Hershey's?
Well, when Milton introduced the Hershey chocolate bar in 1900, as we've talked about all episodes,
he priced it at a nickel so that everybody even in 1900 could afford it. The problem, as we've been talking about Hershey's
decades-long brain deadness here, they kept the price at a nickel from 1900 until November 1969.
What? They never changed the price. I didn't realize it was that long. Almost 70 years, a hair's width from 70 years, they
not once changed the price of the chocolate bar. And which, you know, it was
sacrosanct. It was like, it's the nickel chocolate bar, it's Melden Hershey's
legacy, we can't change the price. So what did they
do? How did they manage inflation? They just kept shrinking the bar size.
I got to say, by the way, that five cents in 1900, just so people get a sense, is 23
cents in 1970. So it's a four and a half X that they sort of have to figure out how
to handle. Yep. So what do they do?
Rather than changing the price, they change the quantity.
They just keep shrinking and shrinking and shrinking the size of the bar.
Consumers are going to love that.
Oh yeah, they're going to love that.
So the original Hershey's bar was 1.25 ounces, one and a quarter ounces in 1900.
By the time 1969 rolls around, it is half of the original weight.
Ben, I see you're looking at a Snickers there.
How much is a Snickers today?
1.86.
1.86.
Now, that's not all chocolate.
A lot of the mass of that is cheaper stuff like peanuts.
But you can see in the consumer's mind,
you're like, wait, I've got this paper thin Hershey's bar
that like, yeah, it's a nickel,
but compare that to the big, meaty, satisfying Snickers.
This looks ridiculous.
Consumers don't care that the new gets cheaper.
Consumers care about, I mean, truly,
that is why Snickers is the satisfied slogan. Consumers care about how I mean, truly that is why Snickers is the satisfied slogan.
Consumers care about how much value does it seem like when I bite into this thing and eat it.
Yep. So, finally in 1969, Hershey can hold out no longer commodity prices spike,
and they make the historic decision to raise the price of the bar to 10 cents.
Ba-da-da.
the price of the bar to 10 cents. And they think that the way they can make this palatable to consumers is they will also
boost the size of the bar back up to the original one and a quarter ounces.
So actually economically, they're still at a wash here.
Both were about double.
Okay.
So it doesn't solve their problem.
It's just totally brain dead.
The problem is inflation.
And I think the thought process probably was, OK,
consumers are going to be outraged when we double
the price of the bar after 70 years.
The first time we raise the price of the bar,
we should give them some value.
So in the second time.
Well, this is where not having a marketing department
or doing consumer surveys or anything.
A way to communicate with customers at all.
Yeah. Turns out to be a really big problem.
Consumers are just like, what the hell?
A, you just raised the price. You doubled the price.
But B, you have just totally exposed that you have been gaming us for 70 years.
I mean, this is literally still a big deal today.
So much so that, do you remember the commercial that aired?
I think it was during the Super Bowl from Joe Biden talking about shrinkflation.
Oh, no.
This is like a presidential thing in our country today, where the president is railing
against shrinkflation by keeping prices the same and making CPG food smaller.
Amazing. Amazing.
So, yeah, I believe that people were outraged by it.
People were pissed. So Forrest is like, oh, man, boy, am I ever glad that I started my own chocolate
baking process here? Because he now decides that in response, he is not only going to increase his advertising
and blitz the nation with M&Ms and Mars products, he's also going to increase the size of his
bars while keeping price the same.
And he starts a price and size war with Hershey.
Now interestingly, in response to this, Hershey counters by actually finally starting to advertise
for the first time here in 1970.
It's the first time in the company's history
that they advertise and surprise, it works great.
But because commodity prices are staying high
and it's putting pressure on profits,
the board pulls the plug on their advertising.
Whoa.
Because they say like, oh, profits are down, we can't be spending.
So we need to stop advertising.
So they do two years of advertising.
It works great, but profits are down.
So they say, nope, we got to stop that.
Unbelievable. And as a result, in 1973, the combined Mars,
which is all of the legacy Mars Inc products, Snickers,
Milky Way, Three Musketeers, et cetera, plus M&Ms,
passes all of Hershey to become the number one candy
company in America.
There it is.
I don't think they ever looked back.
Well, Hershey did eventually retake the lead in America
from Mars much later.
But Mars is by far the largest candy company globally.
Hershey is basically just in America.
And I think Mars's American candy business
is about the size of Hershey's American candy business today.
I think they're kind of neck and neck, but Mars has everything else too.
Yep.
This game that you're talking about David of the cat and mouse price war game would
continue and Mars would basically have the advantage every time because Hershey's primary
thing they're marketing is the chocolate bar, which is made of the densest, most expensive thing in the whole
process. And Mars just has a durable competitive advantage in that they're selling something
to consumers that they value at the same price, but the cost of goods sold is way lower. I
mean, it has nougat and peanuts. And so what they basically do, there's another time, I
think this happens in the early 80s,
where Mars knows that the commodity prices are on the uptick for cocoa.
And so it's going to squeeze everyone's margins, but it's going to hurt Hershey the most.
So what does Mars do?
They announce bigger bars at cheaper prices.
What can Hershey do?
They're just getting boxed in from all angles.
And so this is a sustainable competitive advantage that Mars has selling something that has just
lower cost of goods for a equal perception of value to customers.
Yep.
The other thing that Mars builds up through the, maybe even starting in the sixties, but
definitely in the seventies and eighties, is a very, very sophisticated commodities trading department
that Hershey doesn't have.
Oh, really?
Of course they do.
Hedging and...
Of course.
This is very Mars style to do this.
Now, obviously it's a private company.
They never report any of this, but rumors are, these are rumors, but heard from multiple
places, Mars has actually made many billions
of dollars of profit from commodity trading over the years. So whereas for competitors
like Hershey's, commodity spikes and prices are like a big risk and impact to the business.
I'm sure Hershey's hedging also.
These days they are, but like back in the 70s 80s, no no they weren't. Mars is actually
profiting hugely from market swings in commodity prices. Wow. Total G, total G. So speaking of,
this is incredible. Here we are, 1973. Mars passes Hershey to become the number one candy company
in America. And a pretty surprising twist happens here in Forrest's story,
which is the end.
He retires.
He hangs it up.
He walks away.
And concurrently with him deciding that's it,
this is basically when the company stops communicating with the outside world.
So everything we're about to share from here on out is short,
is basically just headlines that happen from news articles,
and the company gets way, way, way more private after this.
Yeah. End of 1973, he's built up this whole empire,
gone to Europe, built the Europe business, built the pet business,
come back to America, built M&Ms, retaken over Mars Inc, battled Hershey, beat them at their
own game. He gives the company to his three children, a third each to Forrest Jr., John Mars, and
Jackie Mars, and totally walks away and retires. At this point, the Empire is doing about $800 million in annual revenue, and he's just done.
He no longer owns any part of it for the moment.
So Forrest spends the rest of the decade of the 70s in retirement.
His mother, the original Ethel, is actually still alive and I think he spends
a lot of it with her and taking care of her. And then after, you know, call it six, seven
years, he's starting to get a little feisty. You know, he can't keep an old horse out to
pasture here. So in 1980, when Forrest is 76 years old, he decides he's getting back in the game.
He is his father's son. What's he going to do? He's going to start a candy company.
He's going to start another candy company, which he names Ethel M. Chocolates after his
dear mother Ethel, who of course he considers the real Ethel Mars and matriarch of the family.
By the way, I ate some Ethel M chocolates last night.
I ordered some to prep for this episode.
They're great, delicious.
I have never tried any.
I need to get my hands on some.
It's extremely different than the rest of Mars products.
It's like a specialty chocolate.
Yes, well, so Forrest's business plan in starting FLM
is basically to build a competitor to C's.
Oh, that makes sense.
He sees, just like Warren and Charlie did back in the day,
that C's and high-end chocolate is actually a really, really good business.
And the plan is,
the way they're going to compete with C's is they are going to specialize
in liquor-filled chocolates.
So they'll make regular non-alcoholic chocolates, you know, high-end chocolates just like C's,
truffles and the like, but they also will specialize in alcohol-filled chocolates, which
were going through a moment of popularity here in the go-go 1980s. So, Forrest, as always, decides he's all in on this.
Liquor-filled chocolates are not legal in every state,
and Nevada is the epicenter of them.
So, he moves to Nevada.
I did not realize that's why FLM is in Nevada.
That's so funny.
That is why FLM is located in Henderson, Nevada, which is a suburb just outside of Las Vegas,
and Forrest, by God, builds a factory there outside of Las Vegas, builds an apartment
directly above the factory, and lives in the apartment above the factory from which he runs the business.
Guy has one speed and one playbook.
And this dude is like in his late 70s.
It's a success.
Within a couple years, FLM is doing $150 million in revenue.
Unbelievable.
Like, get out of here.
Unbelievable.
Now, as you said, Ben, it's not competing with Mars in any
way. It's competing with seas, but the business gets so big and Mars and forest children decide
that they want to own this business. So in 1988, after a forest has been running it for
seven, eight years, Mars acquires FLM for an undisclosed amount. I would love to have
been a fly on the wall for those negotiations between Forrest and his children.
I mean, what's the point of even negotiating? He's already given all of Mars to the kids.
So what's he going to do after the sale completes? Give the new stake to the kids too? Unbelievable. It is like the best coda ever to the story.
So shortly after the FLM acquisition is when Forrest Jr. and John Mars,
the brothers who are running Mars now as co-CEOs,
this is when they give Joel Brenner access and the Washington Post access
to write the piece about the company.
But yeah, Ben, as you say, they weren't happy with it and they never gave anyone access
again.
And today, their CEO does speak publicly, like does give quotes and statements.
They do release press releases.
They have a website.
They as a company have recognized that times have changed that consumers are not willing to go buy a product off the shelf when they know nothing about the company.
In this era of people wondering about what is mars doing with sustainability and we live in america and a world right now where diabetes is a massive epidemic and obviously they make a lot of products that contribute to that they want to have a voice in that conversation too. And so they do say more now than they used to because they've kind of realized we can't
be a $50 billion company that doesn't ever say anything ever.
True.
But what they don't do is allow books to be written about them or any sort of in-depth
piece.
No one knows what their balance sheet looks like, including their bankers.
They don't produce financial statements for their bankers.
Yep.
And some product stuff that happens in this time. In 1974,
they start producing Skittles in the United States after it becomes a success in the UK.
They bring Twix over from the UK. They bring Starburst over, which was Opal Fruits in the UK.
Yep. 1986, Mars acquires CalCan Foods in Los Angeles and begins its association in
America with dogs, cats, and their owners.
They've had the British business for a long time.
CalCan dog becomes pedigree.
CalCan cat becomes whiskus or whiskas.
Also in 1986, they acquired Dove, Dove Bars, and Dove Chocolate.
Yes. They enter the frozen snack business.
And then later launched Dove Promises and Dove Chocolate Bars on the brand.
So Dove was an ice cream bar company when they bought it.
And then they launched the chocolate bars and chocolate pieces after having acquired the company.
Which I think works reasonably well.
Yeah, I think works reasonably well.
Yeah, I think so.
It's not a huge business for them, but.
It's their direct Hershey bar competitor now,
of like a direct competitor to Kisses
and to the chocolate bar.
Yep.
The really big story though,
I think of the brothers tenure,
and Jackie too, as a third owner of the business,
and eventually later she does also work
in the business herself, is globalization.
So during their tenure, by the time they hand the business over to professional management
in 2001, they've grown it from that 800 million when Forrest left to 20 billion in revenue.
And yes, there are all those acquisitions and product launches we just talked about,
but the big, big thing is going global.
The brothers take them to Japan, China, Russia, the Middle East, South America.
This is really fun. In 1984, they start sponsoring the Olympics,
and they totally run the Visa playbook.
This is when they start unifying all the product brands globally.
Snickers is Snickers everywhere, and we can market globally.
They really do an amazing job.
Yeah, and so the brothers took it from 800 million to 20 billion.
Yes. Over 28 years, I believe, was their tenure.
A 25X in 28 years. It's almost like the Tim Cook story too, where it's the out years of
compounding and the globalization end up making the more recent story numerically far more
interesting than the early story.
But the early story is where the Maverick is.
I mean, we told this whole story about Forrest Senior, we're going to spend 10 minutes here
on The Next Generation, and The Next Generation took it from hundreds of millions to $20 billion
a year.
Yes, incredible.
Now, that said, while globalization was, I'm sure, a Herculean task and required a lot
of vision and commitment to it from the brothers, it really was, outside of the M&A, was about
globalizing all the successful brands that Forrest had built.
Yep.
So, speaking of M&A, and we were also talking about C's and Warren and Charlie a minute ago. In 2008, Mars buys Wrigley with the help
of Uncle Warren and Uncle Charlie.
I love that they come into this story.
It's the best.
I know.
There's some amazing quotes from Warren
at the time of the deal.
One of them is like, I've been conducting a 70 year taste
test on both Mars and Wrigley, and they both passed the test.
Oh, it's so good.
Because you know the analysis is actually far deeper than that,
but that also totally sells. It's Warren's personality.
Yeah. He actually is a really insightful quote
in the 2011 Berkshire shareholder letter,
while they were still a shareholder in Wrigley as a Mars subsidiary.
He says, quote,
still a shareholder in Wrigley as a Mars subsidiary. He says, quote, buy commodities, sell brands has long been a formula for business success. It has produced enormous and sustained profits
for Coca-Cola since 1886 and Wrigley since 1891. I mean, he doesn't say this, but like,
obviously this is the Mars formula too.
Sell commodities, buy brands. Sell commodities, buy brands.
Buy commodities, sell brands.
Oh, not as an investor.
Yeah, not as an investor.
Companies that buy raw products and then sell them as a branded product.
Basically you're allowed to create margin.
Yes.
The market is giving you the right, consumers are giving you the right to do that.
Yes.
It's funny, if you flip it and you say sell commodities, buy brands, that's a good mentality
for an investment portfolio.
Yes, definitely.
In fact, I thought that's what he meant.
I want to buy this because it's a durable brand or house of brands.
Interesting.
Yeah, no, no.
As the operating paradigm for a company of purchasing raw commodities and selling them
as branded products.
Right.
If you have cocoa beans backed up to one side of your factory and then Snickers
bars coming out the other, it's a good business.
Yeah, you're going to do good.
Interesting.
So it goes down in the middle of the financial crisis. They announce the deal in April 2008,
but it closes in October 2008, like right after Lehman collapses, Mars buys the Wrigley company for $23 billion.
Which is a 28% premium to where it was trading that day.
Yep.
And even Mars at this point in time doesn't have $23 billion of cash on hand.
Well they may have, but they didn't want to use it.
I'm always trying to guess how much, through all these points in history, I think Mars
piles up a lot of cash, but I think they're really conservative in how they decide to deploy it. I'm always trying to guess how much through all these points in history, I think Mars piles up a lot of cash, but I think they're really conservative in how they decide to deploy it. I mean, this is
the trade-off with efficiency, freedom, return on total assets as the way that you're going to manage
is you're just going to be very conservative in how you run the company. Yeah. But yeah, so Mars
pays $11 billion itself. They get $5.7 billion in bank debt from Goldman Sachs.
And then Berkshire comes in with the rest of the financing, about $6.5 billion total.
And $4.4 billion of that was a loan.
And then $2.1 billion is an investment into the newly created Wrigley subsidiary, over time, Wrigley will use the
profits from all their businesses to buy out Berkshire. And so it must have been negotiated
in that Mars had the right over some period of time to buy out that $2.1 billion equity
investment.
Indeed, that is correct. So what happens five years later in 2013, Mars repurchases the debt portion of Berkshire's
financing and man, this debt got in the financial crisis.
Like, Warren was so good to be investing in such high quality companies at the interest
rates that he got.
So the $4.4 billion in debt that Berkshire invested had an 11.45% interest rate.
Oh my God.
So during the five years that it was outstanding, Berkshire earned $2.5 billion just in interest.
Now, when Mars bought it back in 2013, that was before the debt matured. So they had to pay Warren
2013, that was before the debt matured. So they had to pay Warren a premium to buy it back early.
They paid a $680 million premium.
So all told for the $4.5 billion debt investment, Berkshire gets its money back plus another,
call it 3.1, 3.2 billion just on the debt.
Over five years.
Over five years. Over five years. Now, the equity portion,
the 2.1 billion, in 2016, Mars buys out Berkshire. So, Buffett sells Mars his entire stake back for
$4.6 billion versus the 2.1 that he originally invested.
He more than doubled the money in five years on that in addition to almost doubling the
money on the debt.
Even better for Warren because that equity that he held was preferred equity, it also
had a dividend associated with it of which they likely made another billion dollars in
dividends on the preferred equity.
It's interesting that they did the bank debt from Goldman Sachs and this dual instrument from Berkshire.
Yeah.
Why not go all one or all the other? Because you would think they would have the option to.
Well, I think this gets back to the value that Warren and Berkshire always provide, but we're especially
providing during the financial crisis, which is just the reputational guarantee and solidity.
Oh, you think getting Berkshire was what they used to be able to pull in the bank debt?
I bet it helped pull in the bank debt, because I doubt Mars had significant banking relationships going into this because they didn't have bank debt. I bet it helped pull in the bank debt because I doubt Mars had significant banking relationships
going into this because they didn't have any debt.
No, in fact, they classically never do acquisitions with outside banks.
They're obsessed with using only their own cash.
Yep.
And Goldman was Berkshire's preferred bank, so probably pulled Goldman in.
The other aspect to this is the Wrigley shareholders.
You had to give confidence to the Wrigley shareholders to vote for the deal to get it
done.
And so having Buffett come in, you know, put his stamp of approval, calm everybody down,
even in the midst of all the craziness with Lehman, I suspect there's no way the deal gets done if Berkshire doesn't get involved.
That's really interesting.
Given what was happening in October 2008.
Wow.
All told, Berkshire puts in $6.5 billion and about doubles its money in the whole
eight years.
So five years on the debt and then another few years on the equity.
How much did Goldman make on the deal? I doubt that much. Right. Definitely
Berkshire got some sort of premium for using their reputation in this deal.
Yep. Now interestingly, we didn't dive super deep on Wrigley as a company, but
it's a very good business. Probably, I'm guessing, even better than the candy business because gum, I believe, is
mostly a petroleum byproduct.
Is it really?
Yeah.
So for a long time, I don't know if this is still true, Goodyear, the tire company, was
one of Wrigley's major suppliers.
And it was like unused byproducts from petroleum.
That if you can brand that and sell it to consumers,
you're going to have pretty good margins.
So Wrigley, I went back and looked at their old 10Ks
before Mars acquired them.
They had about 50% gross margins and 20% net income
margins in the last decade of the company.
Pretty good for a business like that.
Not bad.
Not bad at all.
They also owned mints like Altoids and Life Savers.
That's the other big part of the business.
Right.
If chocolate is a expensive product to make,
gum is a not expensive product to make.
Yep.
Okay, other things that happened in the 2000s, they bought a significant stake in the Banfield
Pet Hospital chain, which is the largest chain of pet hospitals in America.
And was started in partnership with PetSmart.
That's right, because most of them are actually in PetSmart.
Yes, that partnership is now ended and Mars now owns Banfield outright 100%.
And I believe in 2007, they took a large stake
and then in 2015, they fully bought out PetSmart
for 100% ownership.
That's interesting.
It is worth noting, we did some sleight of hand there.
That's a completely different business,
pet hospitals than dog food.
Related in pet care, you can use the pet hospitals as channel for your dog food,
but very different type of operation that needs to be performed.
Yeah. This really is the big story about Mars of the last 10 years. So after they fully acquired Banfield,
in 2017 they acquired VCA.
Which is even bigger, right?
Yes, they were the largest independent
vet hospital operator in America
for $9 billion, so like a large acquisition.
And Ben, like you say, you know,
there's two interesting things
about getting into this business.
One, it's a super different business.
We're talking about a services business.
This is not manufacturing.
So very, very, very different DNA.
I think a big part of the strategy though, like you said about distribution of pet food, in 2002, Mars had bought a French pet food company called Royal Canin, or I've
also heard it pronounced Royal Kinnin.
And Royal Canin makes prescription pet food, like especially for like an aging dog or a
mobility challenge dog.
And as dogs became more and more family members and people
started caring for them more and more like humans, prescription pet food became
a really really big business. So I think Royal Canaan was like a grand slam
acquisition for the company and I think that's partially what led them to then
get involved with Banfield and BCA of like, oh, well, let's consolidate a lot of the distribution and value chain here in this prescription
pet food business.
Pretty interesting.
I mean, it's a very different business, but they run so decentralized that it's probably
okay that it's a services business and you're not having people who are making candy trying
to run a veterinary clinic.
It's a pretty small head office and it's a very decentralized operation.
I think the decision making authority really rests with the board still, but these independent
operating groups are independent operating groups.
Yep.
I'll pull a playbook theme forward, which is that this company obviously grows through inorganic acquisitions.
So in buying Wrigley, Royal, Canin, VCA, all these...
Mars itself.
Mars itself.
They've kind of overpaid on a price to earnings basis.
I mean, Wrigley was a 35X and a 27% premium over the public valuation.
Royal Canin was a 39x. But if you kind of think about,
especially with Banfield Pets Hospitals, they really understood what they were buying. So they
were able to underwrite better than anyone else. And I think this is very similar to the idea that
Ho Nam shared with us way back in our 2021 episode, which is multiples are kind of a blunt instrument
used for valuation when
you don't actually deeply know and understand the business. And when you do, you can just
underwrite better than everyone else and you have more margin of safety in the price that
you are willing to pay than the rest of the market does. So when they want to come in
over the top at a 35 X for Wrigley, maybe they know more about Wrigley than other bidders
do.
Interesting. Yeah. Or at least the case on Banfield was we've owned pieces of this business over and over. And so
now that we've amassed a minority share, we feel good about buying a majority share.
Yep. I totally buy it.
Arvin from Worldly Partners had a good comment to me about this, that they shoot bullets,
not cannonballs. And when you sort of see that in an acquisition strategy,
you should be careful not to judge too harshly when people overpay for things because they're
taking these little baby steps to try and understand first and maybe they know something you don't.
Yep. Speaking of, they ran this playbook again with their most recently completed
their most recently completed big acquisition of Kindbar. Yes, $5 billion in 2020 after buying a small piece of it a few years earlier and then buying the rest of it in 2020.
I didn't realize how big Kind was. Kind was doing $1.5 billion in revenue, I believe almost completely domestically in America.
Yeah, and Mars took it global.
And Mars took it global, yeah.
So I think that has been a big success for the company as well.
Do you know how they grew so big domestically?
Ooh, I don't.
Starbucks.
Ah, makes sense.
Check out counters at Starbucks.
Impulse Purchase.
There you go, there you go.
And it fits with Starbucks brand ethos.
It's like healthy.
Honestly, I eat them all the time.
It's a five gram of sugar bar that's super satisfying, that doesn't leave my teeth feeling gross or make me feel like I
ate something with a bunch of unnatural ingredients. I know it's still a candy bar,
but it's a five gram of sugar candy bar. So I think as far as Mars thinking about,
geez, we want some sort of diversification hedge if people stop eating candy bars,
they're on a good trend there. Which leads us to the final piece of the story, maybe?
Which is the biggest deal that the company has ever done or is attempting to do?
So in August, Mars announced that they have entered a definitive agreement with Kelenova
to purchase the company for $35.9 billion.
So what is Kelenova?
Right.
Yeah.
So we were researching this and getting into this.
I was like, Mars is paying $36 billion.
What is Kelenova?
It's like, Mondales.
You're like, Ooh, what's Mondales?
That sounds interesting in foreign.
And you're like, Oh, it's craft.
It's like a weird corner of craft.
Yeah.
So Kelenova, do I have this right, is Kellogg's minus the American cereal business.
That is correct.
So, it's all the snack businesses and international cereal.
So, the snacks are like Rice Krispie Treats, Pringles, eggs, Pop Tarts, RX Bar, which
is going to be interesting if they'll own RX Bar and Kind Bar.
It is the largest CPG transaction since the merger between Kraft
and Heinz in 2015. And so another Berkshire Hathaway special. I mean, if you think about it,
the family is worth 117 billion today, which essentially means the company's worth 117 billion,
which is kind of interesting. It's a 50 billion dollar company that at least Forbes
I think it's Forbes pegs it at 117 billion of enterprise value. Of course, there's no market to buy these shares
So who knows how to value it really right and when you say 50 billion dollar company, that's their annual revenue annual revenue
Yeah, so they have started reporting in recent years or at least
Alluding to what the top line revenue number is. Yes, that's correct.
They're going to get a lot bigger, I guess, is the takeaway from this.
If they're worth $117 billion now, and they're using a bunch of their cash and presumably
some outside leverage, we'll have to see, for a $35.9 billion acquisition, that's a
big size up.
That is transformative, yes. It also basically makes them look like Nestle.
Yeah.
Which Nestle has been the real competition for years now.
And Nestle is huge.
They're over a hundred billion dollars in revenue and they're extremely diversified.
Extremely diversified.
Yes. Which obviously again, Mars has always been diversified, but
nowhere near the extent that Nestle is. And now with the Kelenova acquisition,
they're going to look a lot more like Nestle. And Mars is going to be selling, I just looked it up,
investment grade bonds to help with its planned sale of Kelenova. So they are raising some outside
capital for that, not just using their cash. Interesting. Interesting.
So that brings us to today, David, we were just talking about it in 2021.
They did 45 billion in revenue.
2022 was 47, 2023 was 50.
And to your point, they're now saying over 50.
Here's the interesting thing that we have been hiding from listeners the whole
episode. And I know you've been dying to say Mars Snacking did 18 billion dollars in revenue. That is a segment of their business that includes
all the candy. So we've told this whole story all about the smaller piece of the business.
You'll notice 18 is not only a smaller number than 50, it's less than half of 50. Yeah. Pet care is actually the bigger business.
59% of revenue comes from the pet care segment and of their 140,000
employees, almost a hundred thousand work in pet care.
Yep.
Of course.
Services business.
They own thousands of hospitals.
Yep.
So we don't know the margin of the pet hospitals versus the dog food versus the candy.
Specifically about Mars, we can probably look at industry comparables to try to understand
that.
But at least on a top line basis and an employee basis, pet care is the dominant component
of this business.
If you want a little bit of a hint, the new CEO in 2022 came from their pet care division. In many ways, they are a pet food company that also makes candy and always has been.
I mean, if you look back, it was the year after Forrest Mars founded the UK division
is when they bought the first dog food, which was almost immediately cash generative.
Totally.
That's like the biggest aha moment to me is they've been doing this the whole
time. Other than the veterinary services that is again new. So you might be wondering, well,
how significant of the market of vets do they own? Mars owns 3000 locations out of 35 to 40,000
vets in the US. So that's like 8% of vets. They're not just exploring vets.
They're, I don't know, the largest
or one of the few largest player in vets
in the entire country.
I think they are the largest.
There are other vet roll-up plays.
It's been a darling of search funds and private equity
in the last decade is veterinary roll-ups, dental roll-ups,
you know, stuff like that.
Yeah.
Looking at the market, at least in the US,
Mars and Hershey each have about 24% market share
of candy and confections, and no one else even comes close.
It's the Hershey and Mars show here domestically.
Internationally, it's kind of a different story.
It is a very fragmented industry.
Mars is the whale with 11%
but the next highest are 7% and 5% and
Only a third of the market is made up by the top five companies Mars, Mondelez, Ferrero, Hershey and Nestle
So two-thirds of international candy and confections is made up by smaller companies and that is even after all these
Mergers from the last few decades.
So there's still this huge international long tail of candy companies.
Wow.
Because there's already been huge consolidation.
Yeah.
So that is the shape of the business today.
You've got a pet business masquerading as a candy business.
And we continued to perpetrate that narrative.
Yes.
Now, obviously, the pet business, huge, bigger in revenue, and I'm sure very, very large
in profits as well.
I don't know, I'm just purely speculating, but I suspect profit contribution-wise, they're
at least equal, if not bigger on the candy side.
Oh, man.
I could be totally wrong.
I don't know.
I don't know the economics of pet hospitals.
Yeah.
I would love to know that.
If your last name is Mars, please reach out or join us in the Slack, acquired.fm slash
Slack.
We'd love to hear from you.
Yeah.
Power?
Power.
So this is a segment we do in analysis in every episode based on Hamilton Helmer's excellent Seven Powers book and framework.
And the idea is that there are seven ways that a business can sustainably generate significantly
more profit than its closest competitors. And those seven ways are through counter positioning,
scale economies, network economies, switching costs, process power, branding, and cornered resources.
We have spent a lot of this episode talking about the biggest and most obvious one here
in scale economies.
Actually I like a lot of the businesses we study on the show.
Scale economies is the biggest deal.
It is actually kind of crazy.
It's almost always scale economies is a big part of it.
I think for the biggest businesses in the world,
it's these businesses that operate at high gross margin
in very large markets,
where you basically can build out a massive,
massive fixed cost space,
and then have great operating leverage.
Can you amortize your high margin sales
in huge volume across a comparatively small fixed cost base.
Manufacturing businesses are like that, software businesses are like that.
Cloud computing is like that.
Exactly. And the businesses that get the biggest tend to benefit from this principle.
Totally. Okay, scale economies, check.
Done. So there's a thing I want to bring up with you and this has been a debate in
the acquired slack. I don't know if you've seen it at all around branding. So the classic definition
of branding and I need to reread seven powers to refresh myself on this but the idea is if I show
you two products side by side that are identical but one is branded will you pay me more money
for the one with the better brand?
You know, the Tiffany ring versus the unbranded ring.
Yep.
I think there's another way that branding shows up.
Hmm.
Okay.
We said that IKEA doesn't have brand power last episode.
That's obviously not true.
It might be technically true in that they don't take margin because of their,
but they have to deploy their brand power in another way in the same way that Mars,
I don't think, charges more for a Snickers than a different candy bar. Mars doesn't take
price in the form of brand, but they do something else. There's brand power here for sure. Consumers
pick Snickers over unbranded, random, unsafe, untrusted candy bar.
Definitely.
I think it's got to be a version of our Costco episode,
scale economy shared, brand power shared.
There was someone in the Slack that pointed out that this brand power could translate to volume.
Essentially, if you trust the brand more and the prices are the same,
you just buy more
of it over time.
So you give more absolute margin dollars to that company over time, especially in a reoccurring
purchase business like this.
That's the way that brand power accrues.
It's not in margin percentage, it's in total lifetime margin dollars.
I totally buy that.
So by that definition, they absolutely have branding. Yep.
I've got one I want to talk about. I'm curious if any of the other set jump off the page to you.
Hmm. I think the candy industry used to have cornered resources. I don't really think it
does anymore. Same with process power. I'm not convinced that anyone's actually developed a
superior way to make something that is not
known by others in the industry.
I think Mars has always had the best technology and the best equipment and the best resources.
There's actually great stories about Forrest, perhaps both himself, but also through employees
and outside firms he'd hire would come up with all these technical improvements to the
manufacturing equipment, but they would never patent it because he didn't want to tip off any competitors.
Makes total sense.
Keep it trade secret.
Yep, totally.
No, none of the others jump off the page to me.
So obviously we did not do a deep dive on the pet business despite it being the larger
business.
I think though the main power in the pet business is switching costs. Oh, if your dog doesn't have problems with its current food, you're never changing to
another food.
Yes.
Well, there's a couple dimensions.
One, you're never going to change to another food because it's going to cause digestive
issues for a while.
Like, imagine if you only ate one food for years and years of your life and then all
of a sudden you started eating.
What are we doing? We should be feeding them table scraps so they get a well-rounded diet.
Just like the 30s.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I mean, it happens.
Dogs switch food all the time, but it's not like humans choosing
to eat something else.
It's a process.
Right.
But then pet hospitals, like vets, like huge, huge switching costs.
So I actually think this is like the primary power in the business on the pet side. Yeah, I think that's like huge, huge switching costs. So I actually think this is like the primary power
in the business on the pet side.
Yeah, I think that's right.
Okay, that's power.
Should we do playbook?
Yes.
The first one that I have is that you actually can build
a durable, sustainable business through great marketing,
not just great product.
And this makes me uncomfortable as someone who kind of doesn't want to believe that who always believes the best product wins.
I mean on the meta episode the takeaway was their growth came from product and not from marketing.
On this episode I kind of feel like it's the opposite the whole thing is the story of marketing campaigns and how.
Whoever had the better message for America at that moment,
I mean at least post 1960 was able to lean on that.
After the advent of television.
Yeah.
And of course paired with distribution, paired with grocery stores, paired with, actually
let's talk about the ET thing.
Yes, let's talk about the ET thing. Yes, let's talk about the ET thing.
This is really fun.
So in the late 1970s, early 1980s,
when Spielberg is making ET, the movie ET,
he's written into the script that ET is gonna be lured
into the house by a trail of M&Ms,
and anybody who remembers the details of the movie remembers that it is not to be lured into the house by a trail of M&Ms. And anybody who remembers the details of the movie
remembers that it is not M&Ms.
And M&Ms passed on the opportunity
because it had to come with a guaranteed million dollars
of co-marketing, consumer promotion,
trade promotions, displays, featuring ET.
Mars was not down to do that with the M&M's characters and passed on the
opportunity. If you saw the movie, there's a pretty memorable moment where it's Reese's pieces.
Yep. This was relatively early in the Brothers tenure, so I wonder, A, if Forrest would have
made a different decision, and also B, if the Brothers would have made a different decision and also be if the brothers would have made a different decision had they had a little more confidence in their own security in their
own place as CEOs.
So I think there was a timing element to this.
Hershey almost passed too.
Someone had to basically go bang down the door and say, I'll actually pledge a million
dollars from my budget that I was going to use for other stuff to use for this instead.
So Hershey leadership was also going to pass on it.
Yeah.
I mean, this was one of, if not the biggest deal up until this point for product placement.
Yeah.
It was a paradigm setting deal.
And it worked in a huge way.
Multiple sources cite that it three X'd the sales of Reese's Pieces when this came out.
And Reese's Pieces, they'd launched it a year before.
It had done well initially.
It kind of fell off.
And then they were trying to use this to,
hey, maybe we can galvanize sales.
And I think it tripled Reese's Pieces sales for a while.
And then it ultimately, everyone knows Reese's Pieces are not
M&Ms.
They're good, but they're never going
to be competitive with M&Ms.
But at least in my experience, I haven't been to a movie theater
much lately. But I believe there is my experience, I haven't been to a movie theater much lately, but I
believe there is a lasting legacy of this, which is Reese's Pieces are a mainstay at
movie theater concession stands, and it's all because of this.
Totally.
So, maybe the takeaway is actually M&Ms are a better product, and Reese's Pieces are sort
of this specialty niche product product and that's why they
don't have the market share and maybe that this whole postulate is wrong that marketing
can create durable brands and the reason why all these Snickers and Milky Way and M&Ms
are victorious is because they're just better products.
Well, I think they're good products, but I think it's like the nostalgia element is just
so huge.
Right.
They're somewhat commodity products or it could have been either product.
And then it was about who could create a better lifetime
story over the story of your life about the associations
you have with that product.
Yep.
I think the candy industry is much like the luxury industry
in that once you have an established product and product
brand, it is impossible to kill it.
You just can't.
I mean, all the fumbles that Hershey had for decades and decades.
Still, today, what is a chocolate bar in America?
It's a Hershey bar.
You just can't kill it.
That's so true.
And let's flip back to the Mars side of the world.
The associations that they have leaned into with the brands that people love.
It's a very Disney-like playbook that M&M's has run.
In fact, they operate a M&M's store in Disney World or in Disneyland.
I can't remember which one, but they associate with the holidays.
They've got that commercial where the two M&M's characters come in the house.
Santa's just come down the chimney and run into them at the Christmas tree.
They do exist. So great. I mean, Santa's just come down the chimney, they run into him at the Christmas tree.
They do exist.
So great.
I mean, it's a classic.
They've run it every year for 20 years or something.
I think it started in the 90s.
Yeah.
The Rolling Stones they've associated with for Snickers, they had the I can't get no
satisfaction pad.
Obviously, the Olympics.
I mean, I'm looking at my Snickers bar right now.
The only other logo on it that is not Snickers is the NFL.
I mean they find ways to associate with national or global premier brands that everyone loves,
that you have nostalgia for.
In fact, NASA, they went up on, I think it was the space shuttle.
NASA can't obviously endorse because it's a government agency, but it's on the menu and it's a part of all the astronaut videos you watch where they're
popping M&Ms up and having fun trying to chase them around the cabin in zero
gravity. It's been a strategy for Mars to chase known loved Universal brands. Well
sounds like we've learned a lot here at acquired from the Mars playbook.
Yep. Another one, just like the innovation on commercials, think about how long they've had those computer generated M&Ms characters.
I looked it up. The first one I could find was in 1994. Jurassic Park was in 93.
And that was effectively the first use of computer generated 3D modeling in cinema.
That's right. Within one year, they were running commercials with those characters. Yeah. Wow.
They know how to create these durable marketing franchises and moments. In some ways, it's
actually shocking that they missed ET given how good they've been in all these other facets.
And ultimately the ET thing's a fun story, but did missing it really hurt them?
Not really, not in the long run.
My last one around this is in this sort of marketing world.
Do you remember in 1995 when they said they were going to do away with the tan M&Ms?
Yes.
Do you remember anything about that?
Is that when they were replacing it,
when there was a vote, right, of which color to replace it with?
And blue won.
Absolutely.
Genius.
Total genius.
They needed to spice it up because basically it was boring.
And does it cost them anything?
Or does it have any impact on their business
if they change the color of one to something else?
No.
Do they actually care what it is?
No. But they got care what it is? No.
But they got millions and millions of Americans to call 1-800-FUNCOLOR,
which by the way, I called yesterday.
Oh, amazing!
It is no longer in service.
You call 1-800-FUNCOLOR to vote.
So they're giving everyone this like vested interest in what the new color is.
Blue wins.
Blue replaces tan.
They lit up the Empire State Building after announcing it was blue with blue.
Genius.
So great.
This is like the Facebook internationalization where they have local people in each market
translate and then they feel ownership over the product.
Yeah.
Yes.
Totally. All right. That's all I got on their consumer marketing. I'm sure you read too Mars is constantly
rebalancing the ratios of colors in M&M bags to suit current tastes. Yes. It's amazing. Yeah.
It's not even I was shocked. I was like looking at the bag trying to I'm not going to go count but
apparently it's a secret what the ratios are.
But I think they're adjusting it constantly.
Interesting.
I believe that.
Okay.
Next one I've got is be a recession proof business.
I thought candy was the one I was talking about and the deeper I got into the research,
I realized, nope.
Pet food is one too.
People don't stop buying candy when times are bad and they certainly don't stop feeding
their pets, especially now in this era where we consider pets part of our families. And I think
the data shows it. If you look back at 2008, neither of their businesses took a hit from being
in that recession. And that's an awesome business to be in, if you can get it. Yep. A corollary to
being recession proof is being universal. A survey done by the Food Institute says that 98%
of households buy candy every year.
And of those, 97% are reoccurring purchases
at an average of 35 times a year.
Ooh, wow.
Again, good, good business if you can get it.
It's just like our Starbucks episode too.
Sugar is an addictive habit.
So all the research, I don't know, it seems like sugar is way worse for our bodies than
coffee.
I'm not at all worried that I'm addicted to coffee.
I'm pretty worried that I am addicted to sugar.
In fact, I feel pretty crappy after eating all these M&Ms and stickers.
I probably ate more than a recommended amount because we would sit here for five and a half
hours doing this.
But that's probably the most concerning thing about the whole business is they're extremely participatory in the increase of sugar consumption among Americans and around the
world and that it's very good for their business, at least their original core business, if we eat
more sugar. So I can see why they're diversifying away from those core franchises. Into Kind and
Kelenova, et cetera, et cetera. Yep.
More Kind bars are in my future.
Maybe some detox tomorrow.
All that said, no matter what happens, I don't think M&Ms and Snickers, they're not going
anywhere.
Even if everyone starts taking Ozempic, I don't actually think chocolate sales are going
to fall.
In fact, all the numbers show to this point, everybody who's been saying, Oh, people are trying to eat healthier and they're doing their very best and
they're changing their habits.
Chocolate revenues are still at an all time high.
I think this is a good place here in playbook.
There are a couple of things about chocolate that I want to talk about that
are more general than specific to Mars.
One is just that chocolate.
I'm sort of biased here because I love chocolate.
Me too.
Same.
I loved doing this episode because I love learning about chocolate.
It really is a food.
Part of that is marketing and part of that is a hundred years of Mars marketing and Hershey's
marketing and all that.
But really, really when you were describing the production process of chocolate earlier
in the episode, like it is one of the most complex, rich foods on the planet. When Milton Hershey shut down and got out of the Carmel's business, he thought
Carmel's is a fad, but chocolate is a complete food.
Chocolate is a food, exactly. And like he was totally right. I don't think chocolate
is going anywhere and the ozempic risk for chocolate is way lower.
Far lower than like gummy candies.
The other aspect about chocolate though,
and I think here is the right place to talk about it,
is the industry and what chocolate is,
is changing hugely.
I think most people have no idea about this,
but both the first and second order effects
of climate change are like massively,
massively changing the chocolate industry.
The cacao tree is a very, very sensitive tree.
It's this bizarre plant.
I don't think we talked about this earlier, but the pods, the fruit that have the seeds
and beans in them, it grows directly on the trunk of the tree.
There's no like branches.
It's the weirdest thing to look at.
It's like these football sized pods that just go right off the trunk of the tree. There's no like branches. It's the weirdest thing to look at. It's like these football sized pods that just go right off the trunk of the tree.
Yeah. And it's something like only 25 years of their full hundred and something year life,
they actually can produce the fruit in a way where you can use it to make chocolate.
Yeah. So it's this super, super long lead time to get a tree to the point where it's productive.
And it's a really narrow temperature and climate band that they can be grown in.
So as both world consumption and thus production of chocolate has increased hugely over the
past decades and climate change is happening, these trees are so sensitive to it, like it's
really impacted production.
That's the first order effect on the industry.
The arguably as big or bigger is the second order effect
of how the industry has responded.
So there's been huge efforts over the last couple decades
in genetic engineering and hybridization and breeding
of cacao trees to optimize for resiliency
and output and production.
All of which is good, you know,
ensuring continued production of chocolate.
As long as it doesn't come at the expense of taste.
Right, so that's the downside.
It has not been optimizing for taste,
either preservation of the current tastes
or just good taste in general.
So like actually, the taste of chocolate has changed a lot in the last few years as the
plants themselves have been engineered and changed a lot.
To be more resilient and productive.
Yep, exactly.
So a lot of the real, real richness and complexity that has for thousands of years made chocolate like
a super attractive food for humans is sort of in danger of being lost or being watered
down.
I will say the industry is very focused on this.
This is like a existential super, super important focus of Mars and the entire chocolate industry.
Yeah, that is the correct takeaway. Whenever you talk to people in the industry, this is what they're talking about.
Yep.
All right.
I have got a couple more.
The first one is conglomeration and doing it well.
They very early on learned how to acquire and conglomerate, how to do acquisitions,
which parts to centralize, spoiler alert, acquisitions, which parts to centralize, spoiler alert,
very few, which parts to decentralize, actually most of them.
When you are running two completely different businesses and running two completely different
geographies from the first five years of your company's existence, you end up actually
developing the muscle to do this well.
And so I think it's very different than these companies that later in life are like, we're
going to get into XYZ.
Mars always has been a diversified conglomerate.
And they actually look a lot like LVMH
in that they aren't a private equity firm.
They're a buy and hold.
I think they've made 30 acquisitions since the 90s,
and they've only sold two things since 2015.
It's very Bernard Arnault style.
They also don't rebrand things.
They keep the original brands,
even in the pet hospital business.
Yeah, that's super interesting.
You think of anywhere where you would want
to centralize the brand, it's like,
no, VCA, Banfield, they're separate.
Yeah, that's super true.
And then my last one is duration.
If you look at them over the last hundred years
They have grown revenue at a compound annual growth rate of 14% for a century
Pretty good the question sort of comes back to what conditions enable a business to grow
Like that for that long. It's global applicability
It's the margin structure you're talking about
where you can take in commodities and spit out brands.
It's the operational efficiency of doing it.
It's the reoccurring purchase that has a habitual,
if not addictive component to it.
It's the scale economies of being able to achieve
and maintain number one dominant market share over
many decade-long periods. Yep. It's pretty amazing that those things come
together in a way that make it possible to grow at 14% for a century, if
executed well. Wild. All right David, we are into the quintessence. Quintessence.
Listeners, this is a new thing that we added as we tried to figure out how do we
land the plane? What is the big takeaway that we added as we tried to figure out how do we land the plane?
What is the big takeaway that we can't stop thinking about after talking through the whole
story of the episode?
Great.
I'll go first.
A couple of things about this company.
One, man, Forrest Sr. was such a freaking G. And because the company is so private, like nobody knows about him, you
know, like, but he should be right up there with Sam Walton, Henry Ford, with the very,
very greatest American entrepreneurs of all time. He was truly a genius. I think probably
had a lot of complications and faults in his personal life.
Which is the same thing as basically everyone we cover on this show. Rockefeller, all of them, yes.
But when it comes to business and entrepreneurial leaders,
he's one of the greatest.
Yep.
For sure.
OK, so that's one.
That's not necessarily the quintessence of the company.
But I feel like we need to say that just because it's not
like a widely accepted fact.
Totally.
Two, though, we have not yet studied Coca-Cola.
We haven't studied Procter and Gamble.
So with the caveat that those companies
and ones like them probably also fit this bill,
I think Mars is one of the first modern companies.
Hmm, that's interesting.
Everything that Forrest was doing,
back in the 30s when he was starting were
like radical and now are just completely widely accepted.
Yeah.
Everything from open office structures to diversification, to getting into pet food,
to seeing that dogs and cats were going to become part of families.
Maximizing yield on equipment for efficiency.
Maximizing yield, operating, managing companies
in a scientific way, getting into television advertising, you know, all of it.
He was like really, really visionary on this stuff in an era where none of his competitors
were doing this.
I mean, God, the market research and the positioning that they did with M&Ms taking what essentially
was a failed product and then doing the research to understand who the target consumers were
and who the target buyers were and how that was different and then tailoring marketing
messages appropriately for that way, way, way ahead of its time.
Yep.
You're so right.
It's funny that leads me all to my quintessence of this episode is
How path dependent the outcome was?
Hmm, and what I mean by that is could you do all of the things?
That Forrest Mars did to create a company like this today. No, you could not it required
a company like this today, no, you could not. It required being in that place in that time
with that technology and that competitive set.
And this is probably true across all episodes,
but it just strikes me in the face right now
that he needed to have the chip on his shoulder
from the relationship with his dad.
He needed the assets that he got from his dad
when he went to Europe.
Yeah, oh, even before that, I mean, he wouldn't have gone to Yale if it weren't for his dad
finally becoming somewhat wealthy. And if he hadn't gone to Yale, he wouldn't have gotten
exposed to the DuPonts. Yeah, so many path dependencies here.
Right. He happened to be a American capitalist competing against British Quaker
and British Quaker inspired competitors.
Industrialization and mechanization,
the timing of television and commercials
and grocery stores when it did,
all of these were brilliant decisions executed
within the context of his time,
but you needed to be in that time and that place
in that specific situation in order to pull any of this off.
So the question is, how do you do this today with a completely different playbook?
Yep, you don't.
You build your own company.
Because all of the great companies that we study are their own companies.
Yep, exactly right.
Love it.
All right, before we get to carve outs, I have one piece of trivia for you.
Oh, I love trivia.
So you mentioned that the Hershey Trust
is responsible for maintaining the Milton Hershey School,
which started as a school for orphans
and now is a school for students
that come from low-income families
or sort of need a home or just need a benefit
from what the school provides.
David, how big is the endowment of the Milton Hershey School?
I think it is by far the largest endowment of a secondary school in America and assuredly the world.
Yes.
I want to say it's like 10 or 15 billion.
Yep, $17.4 billion.
Yeah, for a high school.
Well, it's some younger than that, but the enrollment of the school is 2200 students. And so the
endowment dollars per student, I assume, are the absolute highest anywhere in the world.
It is totally incredible. I mean, we debated when we first set out to do this episode,
whether it should be about Mars or Hershey. We ultimately decided Mars because these days
it's the bigger and more important company. But the Hershey story is freaking wild!
Milton Hershey gave the whole company to the Hershey Trust.
Yeah, which operated a school for orphans.
Like a high school for orphans that owns the company.
The primary shareholder has a primary purpose that is maintain the school.
Right. It is a very specific mission to support this school.
They have a hard time spending all the money.
I mean, they're never going to get close to actually spending the endowment dollars
or have any risk of spending the endowment dollars.
Just think about what 4% of $17 billion is a year
and think about what the required budget is to run a 2200-person school.
Yeah, totally wild. Love it.
Okay, carve-outs.
I got three.
One, we've already talked about.
Dandelion chocolate. these people are the best the factory is so freaking cool and the chocolate is absolutely amazing
They are a part of the bean to bar movement
So they source beans that are not commodity beans
They specifically source single origin beans they go the go the extra mile to remove any imperfections.
And then in a very craft way, they make some of the best chocolate you've ever tasted.
It really is like the wine industry.
Yeah.
I think I speak for you too.
We're both very grateful to Todd, Elaine and the team there for just kind of taking us
through it all and explaining how chocolate is made.
It was very cool.
So if you're looking for any late holiday gifts
or just any good chocolate,
I can't recommend Dandelion enough.
Ah, well, you stole one of my carve-outs.
Dandelion was one of my carve-outs.
But specifically, the Dandelion Advent Calendar.
Didn't you buy that for Jenny?
Which, thanks to our relationship with the company,
yes, I got the opportunity to buy.
I bought the double so that Jenny and I
can both enjoy every night.
Ooh.
Oh my God.
This is the single greatest Advent calendar that has ever been created in
the history of mankind, the artwork, the design, the presentation.
It's like, this is if Hermes made an Advent calendar with all of the
presentation and the objectness.
So like every day is an ornament that can go on the tree.
It's so great. And then the chocolate inside. They partnered with chocolatiers all over the country,
I think maybe even internationally all over the world to just highlight some of the very best
talent in the chocolate making industry globally. Anyway, amazing. Dandelion, they're so great.
All right. My second one, I think a while ago I mentioned I got a Tesla Model Y, which is just an awesome
car.
It's just great.
Went out the other day, noticed that there was a bolt sticking through the tire that
we had driven over and the tire was flat.
I opened up the app and within 90 minutes, there was somebody at my house that was taking off the wheel,
throwing it in a truck, putting on a temporary wheel.
So I was good to go immediately, you know,
within 90 minutes.
And then two days later, it showed back up at my house.
They had repaired the issue with the tire,
pumped it back up, gave me my wheel back,
took the other wheel.
I didn't have to do anything, I'm just standing there and the whole thing cost me like 120 bucks. Wow. It was like the best car service
experience I've ever had in my life. That's pretty awesome. It is wild how different Tesla is from
other car companies. The Model Y is the best family vehicle ever created by mankind. It's like the Model T of our generation.
Yeah, it totally is.
So great. Okay, that's number two. You got one more?
Last one. I think last year I carved out Silo. Silo Season Two is here on Apple TV and it is
excellent.
Yeah. Per usual par for the course for me, I have not watched any of it, but I did read the book and
the book is excellent.
You read Wool?
I read Wool, yeah.
It's great though.
I mean, a lot of times shows I think have a hard time maintaining their season one into
momentum into two and two into three and there's no problem with that here.
Didn't you get to meet the author a while back?
Hugh, yeah, he's great.
He's really great.
All right.
I had one other besides the Dandelion Advent Calendar, which is the movie Home Alone.
This is sort of a humorous one.
But since this is a nostalgic episode about our childhood and the holidays, Home Alone
was my very, very, very favorite movie growing up as a kid.
I saw it in theaters when it came out.
I was the perfect age.
I think Macaulay Culkin and I are roughly the same age, give
or take a year. Loved it so much. After Thanksgiving holiday travel this year, I have a whole new
appreciation for that movie, which is the perspective of the parents.
Did you leave one at home?
No, but I almost-
Did you come close? I now understand exactly how it could happen.
And I am excited to watch it again at the holidays this year through the lens of mom
and dad.
Nice.
Yeah.
Thanksgiving travel was pretty wild this year.
We went back to Pennsylvania to visit my parents and it was exciting
on the plane ride there. I'll put it that way. And the most awesome moment though, I
mean it was this was one of those plane trips as a parent where oh man like the
lowest of the lows shall we say. You're sorry for everyone around you. Sorry for
everyone around you but the most amazing thing happened. We landed after the five and a half hour flight.
And a very kind gentleman sitting in the seat
directly ahead of my three-year-old daughter,
who was causing ruckus the whole time and kicking his seat and etc.
He turned around and he said,
are you David from Acquired?
I was like, yes, I'm sorry.
You're like, oh no, I've been identified.
Oh no, oh no.
He's like, I've been listening to you the whole flight.
And then some other people in the row started popping up
and being like, oh, I've been listening.
Wait, multiple people were popping up and saying.
Yeah, that they listened to acquired
and either had been listening on the flight
or these are their favorite episodes.
It turned what was like a truly one of the lowest lows
of my parenting journey into a wonderful memory.
So thank you to you all on that flight
from SFO to Philadelphia the day before Thanksgiving.
After watching your daughter kick someone's seat
for five hours, you have to be like,
I really hope that guy doesn't ever know who I am.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that was my first reaction too of like, oh no.
But no, it turned into the most wonderful
turnaround of the day.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
All right, listeners.
Well, with that, a huge thank you to JP Morgan Payments, to Crusoe and to StatSig.
You can click the links in the show notes to learn more about some of our favorite companies.
Special shout outs also to Arvind Navaratnam at Worldly Partners for his awesome, awesome write up
on Mars.
There's way more data in that than we were able
to describe on air.
So if you want to see some great charts,
industry stats on chocolate over the years,
on sugar consumption, on Hershey, on Mars,
on the whole competitive set, it's linked in the show notes.
I can't recommend reading through his whole PDF enough.
Arvid is so great.
So great.
To Todd at Dandelion Chocolate, as we mentioned.
Yes, and also Clara Shen, who works at Dandelion as well
and chatted with me and had a lot of great insights
also on the industry and on Mars.
Yeah.
To Gary Guitard, who I'm sure many of you
have eaten Guitard chocolate, either directly by knowing it or indirectly by not knowing it,
as they are the chocolate supplier to many excellent chocolate companies around the world.
Including the world famous C's candies.
Yes.
Which I didn't know how much I enjoyed guitar chocolate until,
well, I realized how much of it I'd eaten through C's.
Yes. Speaking of trivia, I've got one for you related to guitar.
Before Milton Hershey started making chocolate in 1900,
there were three chocolate producers in America
who predated him.
And I believe all of which are still operating,
making dark chocolate, not milk chocolate, obviously,
at the time.
One of which was Guitard here in San Francisco. Do you know who the two others were? I don't
think you will get the one on the East Coast, but the third was also located here in San
Francisco.
Jared Ranere Ghirardelli
Jared Ranere Ghirardelli
Jared Ranere Yup
Jared Ranere Yes
Jared Ranere And then the
Jared Ranere East Coast, I don't know
Jared Ranere The one on the East Coast was Walter Baker's
in Massachusetts, I think.
Oh shoot, I did know that, yeah.
Yeah, Baker's sort of like the godfather of chocolate in the US, right?
I think that's right.
I think that's right.
But it's super interesting how two manufacturers popped up here in San Francisco in the 1800s.
Nice climate for it, even for air conditioning at least.
And then one more big thank you to say on multiple fronts
to Joelle Glenn Brenner, the author of Emperors of Chocolate
and the only journalist ever to get access to Mars.
One for just writing the book.
We read a lot of business books, business histories
here on Acquired and Emperors of Chocolate
is one of the greats.
It's a total page turner.
And then also thank you to her for chatting with me
as we were preparing.
She was very, very helpful in clarifying a few points and getting the story behind the stories.
Can't recommend the book enough. Go check it out.
Great. Well, if you liked this episode, go check out our other episodes on LVMH, Sony, or Berkshire Hathaway
if conglomerates are your thing, or for more complex manufacturing,
Nova Nordisk, the makers of OZempec.
Or if you want something more recent, check out ACQ2, we just had that awesome conversation
with the CEO of Arm Holdings, Renee Haas, if you're looking for more semiconductors
in your life.
And if you want to discuss it, please come join us at acquired.fm slash slack with the
other smart, respectful, kind folks
there.
With that listeners, happy holidays and we will see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Huh. Music