Rupali Report
Rupali Report
Rupali Report
Each member of Colgate lives by this mission and ensures providing outstanding
products and customers service to its customers. The company is not only committed
to values like integrity and respect but also aims at improving the community and
environment. Let us understand the key components of Colgate mission statement.
Colgate Palmolive Vision Statement
Colgate-Palmolive Company is a caring, innovative growth company reimagining a healthier future for all
people, their pets and our planet.
Core values-
Caring-They care about people: Their people, consumers,
shareholders and business partners. They are committed to act ethically,
with compassion, integrity, and honesty in all situations, to listen with
respect to others and to value differences.They are also committed to
protect the environment, to enhance the communities where they live and
work, and to be compliant with government laws and regulations.
Anti-Bribery Policy
Our Anti-Bribery Commitment
Colgate people and any third parties acting on our behalf or in connection with our
business are prohibited from giving or offering anything of value directly or indirectly to
any government official or entity, or to any private individual or entity, in order to
improperly obtain or retain any business advantage or to improperly affect any act or
decision.
Please note that the term "government official" is widely defined and may include
individuals who are employed by any public or state-affiliated institution or organization
or who act in an official capacity in any way, whether full-time, part-time or unpaid.
Government officials can be found in every branch and level of government and public
life and may include anyone from low-level customs employees, to employees of state-
owned media outlets, to high-ranking lawmakers, as well as researchers, professors,
teachers, dentists, veterinarians, or other professionals and Key Thought Leaders. If
you are in doubt as to whether an individual could be considered a government official,
you should contact the Global Legal Organization.
Commercial Bribery
In addition to prohibiting bribery of government officials, Colgate also prohibits its employees
and third parties from engaging in bribery of private parties. You should not seek to improperly
influence the judgment or conduct of any party with whom you might be conducting Company
business by offering or providing any payments, gifts or other benefits, or by any other unlawful
inducement.
Our Expectations
Colgate's reputation depends on the conduct of our employees as well as the conduct of those
with whom we do business. It is our goal to ensure that Colgate People and the third parties with
whom we work reflect the same high ethical standards and demonstrate a commitment to
compliance with all applicable laws. We further expect our third parties to ensure that their
employees and subcontractors understand and comply with this Anti-Bribery Policy.
Failure to comply with this Anti-Bribery Policy or any applicable anti-bribery laws, including
but not limited to the FCPA, may result in civil or criminal penalties, as well as termination of
the employment or business relationship.
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It is creating an environment where people feel free to offer suggestions, contribute ideas and
make contributions to the organization.
"Managing with Respect" creates an environment where people genuinely care about each other
and work well together to reach their full potential.
1. Communicate Effectively
2. Give and Seek Feedback
3. Value Unique Contributions
4. Promote Teamwork
5. Set the Example
Colgate operates in over 200 countries and adheres to the policies set forth in every place we do
business. This helps ensure a fair and respectful approach to the effective prevention and
treatment of HIV/AIDS and demonstrates our shared commitment to fight this epidemic.
Through programs around the world, we work to limit the impact of HIV/AIDS and maintain an
environment at Colgate that is conducive to openness and acceptance.
FOUNDER BRIEF PROFILE
William Colgate (January 25, 1783 – March 25, 1857) was an English-American soap industrialist
who founded in 1806 what became the COLGATE PALMOLIVE COMPANY.
Early life
William Colgate was born in Hollingbourne, Kent, England, on January 25, 1783.[1][2] He was the son
of Robert Colgate and his wife Sarah (née Bowles). The family moved to a farm
near Shoreham when William was six years old.
Robert Colgate (1758–1826) was an 18th-century English farmer, politician and sympathiser with
the American War of Independence and French Revolution, whose republican ideals impelled him to
leave their farm in Shoreham, Kent, in March 1798 and emigrate to Baltimore, Maryland, in
the United States of America, after which the family settled on a farm in Harford County, Maryland.
Colgate formed a partnership with Ralph Maher to manufacture soap and candles, and William
helped the two men, but the partnership dissolved after two years. The family later settled
in Delaware County, New York.
Career
William Colgate went to New York City in 1804. He there obtained employment as an apprentice to a
soap-boiler. He closely watched the methods practiced by his employer, noting what seemed to him
to be mismanagement, and learned useful lessons for his own guidance. At the close of his
apprenticeship he was enabled, by correspondence with dealers in other cities, to establish himself
in the business with some assurance of success. In 1806 William established a starch, soap and
candle business in Manhattan, on Dutch Street.[4] In 1820, he started a starch factory across the
Hudson in Jersey City.[5] William followed his goal of prosperity through life, and became one of the
most prosperous men in the city of New York. This circumstance, together with his great wisdom in
counsel, and his readiness to aid in all useful and practicable enterprises, gave him a wide influence
in the community, and especially in the denomination of which he was from early life an active and
honored member.
Personal life
The Rev. William Parkinson, pastor of the First Baptist Church in the City of New York, baptized him
in February 1808 and Colgate became a deacon.[1] In 1811 he transferred his membership in Oliver
Street Baptist Church. In 1838 he became a member of the Tabernacle Baptist Church (Manhattan),
to the erection of which he had himself largely contributed.
Colgate was a tither throughout his long and successful business career. He gave not merely one-
tenth of the earnings of Colgate's soap products; but he gave two-tenths, then three-tenths, and
finally five-tenths of all his income to the work of God in the world. During the later days of his life he
revealed the origin of his devotion to the idea of tithing. When he was sixteen years old he left home
to find employment in New York City. He had previously worked in a soap manufacturing shop.
When he told the captain of the canal boat upon which he was traveling that he planned to make
soap in New York City the man gave him this advice: ‘Someone will soon be the leading soap maker
in New York. You can be that person. But you must never lose sight of the fact that the soap you
make has been given to you by God. Honor Him by sharing what you earn. Begin by tithing all you
receive.’ William Colgate felt the urge to tithe because he recognized that God was the giver of all
Family
Colgate married Mary Gilbert (1788-1855) on April 23, 1810, and they had nine children: Robert
(1812-1885), Gilbert (1814-1838), Sarah (1816-1859), James (1818-1904), William III (1820-
1838), Samuel (1822-1897), Mary IV (1826-1873), Joseph (1828-1865), and Martha (1831-1837).
[7]
His son Robert purchased Stonehurst at Riverdale-on-Hudson in The Bronx about 1859 shortly
after it was built; it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983
that he possessed, not only of opportunity, but even of the elements which were used in the
manufacture of his products.
The small soap and candle business that William Colgate began in New York City early
in the 19th century is now, more than 200 years later, a truly global company serving
hundreds of millions of consumers worldwide. Throughout this history, Colgate people
and Colgate values have been at the heart of our success.
HISTORY OF COLGATE PALMOLIVE
(U.S.)
The small soap and candle business that William Colgate began in New York City early
in the 19th century is now, more than 200 years later, a truly global company serving
hundreds of millions of consumers worldwide. Throughout this history, Colgate people
and Colgate values have been at the heart of our success.
WILLIUM COLGATE an English immigrant to America and devout Baptist established a
starch, In 1833, he suffered a severe heart attack, stopping his business's sales; after
a convalescence he continued with his business. In the 1840s, the company began selling
individual cakes of soap in uniform weights. In 1857, Colgate died and the company was
reorganized as Colgate & Company under the management of his devout Baptist
son Samuel Colgate, who did not want to continue the business but thought it would be the
right thing to do. In 1872, he introduced Cashmere Bouquet, a perfumed soap.
In 1873, the company introduced its first Colgate Toothpaste, an aromatic toothpaste sold in
jars.[3] In 1896, the company sold the first toothpaste in a tube, named Colgate Ribbon Dental
Cream (invented by dentist Washington Sheffield). Also in 1896, Colgate hired Martin
Ittner and under his direction founded one of the first applied research labs. By 1908, they
initiated mass sales of toothpaste in tubes. Another of William Colgate's sons, James
Boorman Colgate, was a primary trustee of Colgate University (formerly Madison University).
In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the B. J. Johnson Company was making a soap from palm
oil and olive oil, the formula of which was developed by Burdett J. Johnson in 1898. The
soap was popular enough to rename their company after it in 1917 — Palmolive. Around the
start of the 20th century, Palmolive was the world's best-selling soap.
.