Corporate culture clashes: What does rocky P&G/Gillette merger teach? (slate.com) 2 points by gojomo 12y ago ↗ HN
[–] bprager 12y ago ↗ Not a win for the consumer: these double and triple shaving blades are more expensive than ever. [–] mathattack 12y ago ↗ Haven't they made it to the 5 razor yet? I don't think Warren Buffett was bragging about success for the consumer at the expense of the owner. :-)
[–] mathattack 12y ago ↗ Haven't they made it to the 5 razor yet? I don't think Warren Buffett was bragging about success for the consumer at the expense of the owner. :-)
[–] mathattack 12y ago ↗ Perhaps it's just being nit picky, but I think the author misread the original WSJ [1] article that he quotes.In the OP: Gillette, for example, had a “memo culture”; P&G’s “Proctoids” favored face-to-face meetings.In the WSJ article: Then there were culture clashes: Oral-B favored meetings while Crest liked memosOral-B is Gilette, Crest is P&G.It makes me wonder about his conclusions. They seem logical enough.[1] http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:KItFlIl...
3 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 20.8 ms ] threadIn the OP: Gillette, for example, had a “memo culture”; P&G’s “Proctoids” favored face-to-face meetings.
In the WSJ article: Then there were culture clashes: Oral-B favored meetings while Crest liked memos
Oral-B is Gilette, Crest is P&G.
It makes me wonder about his conclusions. They seem logical enough.
[1] http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:KItFlIl...