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Frito-Lay

Frito-Lay, Inc. is an American subsidiary of PepsiCo that manufactures, markets, and sells corn chips, potato chips, and other snack foods. The primary snack food brands produced under the Frito-Lay name include Fritos corn chips, Cheetos cheese-flavored snacks, Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips, Lay's and Ruffles potato chips, Rold Gold pretzels, and Walkers potato crisps (in the UK and Ireland). Each brand generated annual worldwide sales over $1 billion in 2009.[3]

Frito-Lay, Inc.
Logo used since February 1997
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryFood
PredecessorsThe Frito Company
H.W. Lay & Company
FoundedSeptember 1961;
61 years ago
 (1961-09)[1]
FateMerged with Pepsi-Cola Company to form PepsiCo, remaining as a subsidiary
SuccessorPepsiCo
Headquarters,
U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Steven Williams (CEO)
ProductsSnack foods
BrandsLay's, Fritos, Doritos, Ruffles, Cheetos, Hot Cheetos, Sun Chips, Tostitos, Rold Gold, Funyuns, Walkers, Kurkure, Uncle Chipps, Grandma's
RevenueUS$15.798 billion (2017)[2]
ParentPepsiCo
Websitewww.fritolay.com

Frito-Lay began in the early 1930s as two separate companies, "The Frito Company" and "H.W. Lay & Company", which merged in 1961 to form "Frito-Lay, Inc". In 1965, Frito-Lay, Inc. merged with the Pepsi-Cola Company, resulting in the formation of PepsiCo. Since then, Frito-Lay has operated as a wholly owned subsidiary of PepsiCo. Through Frito-Lay, PepsiCo is the largest globally distributed snack food company, with sales of its products in 2009 comprising 40 percent of all "savory snacks" sold in the United States, and 30 percent of the non-U.S. market. In 2018, Frito-Lay North America accounted for 25 percent of PepsiCo's annual sales.

History

The Frito Company

 
An animatronic vending machine of The Frito Kid at Disneyland's Casa De Fritos (currently Rancho Del Zocalo)

In 1932, Kansas City, Kansas-born Charles Elmer Doolin, manager of the Highland Park Confectionery in San Antonio, Texas, purchased a corn chip recipe, a handheld potato ricer, and 19 retail accounts from a corn chip manufacturer for $100, which he borrowed from his mother. Doolin established a new corn chip business, The Frito Company, in his mother's kitchen. Doolin, with his mother and brother, produced the corn chips, now named Fritos, and had a production capacity of approximately 10 pounds per day and roughly 30 cents per product. Doolin distributed the Fritos in 5¢ bags. Daily sales totaled $8 to $10 and profits averaged about $2 per day.[4] In 1933 the production of Fritos increased from 10 pounds to nearly 100 pounds due to the development of a hammer press. By the end of the year, production lines were operating in Houston and Dallas. The Frito Company headquarters also moved to Dallas to capitalize on the city's central location and better availability of raw materials. In 1937 The Frito Company opened its research and development lab and introduced new products, including Fritos Peanut Butter Sandwiches and Fritos Peanuts, to supplement Fritos and Fritatos Potato chips, which had been introduced in 1935.[5]

In 1939, the company purchased Fluffs pork skins and incorporated the Dallas business. Frito relocated the operation from Haskell Avenue to a new facility at 2005 Wall Street. Alice Rupe, who was one of Fluffs' original six all-woman crew, was placed in charge of operations. In 1940, she was named assistant treasurer and manager; in 1949 she was promoted to treasurer.[6]

In 1941, the company opened its western division in Los Angeles with two sales routes, which would become the prototype for The Frito Company's distribution system. In 1945, The Frito Sales Company was established to separate sales from production activities. Expansion continued with the issue of six franchises through the Frito National Company in the same year. In 1950, Fritos were sold in all 48 states.[7] The Frito Company issued its first public stock in 1954. In 1958, Frito entered the Midwest potato chip market by acquiring the Nicolay Dancey Company, which made New Era potato chips.[8] At the time of Doolin's death in 1959, The Frito Company produced over 40 products, had plants in 18 cities, employed over 3,000 people, and had sales in 1958 in excess of $50 million. By 1962, Fritos were sold in 48 countries.[9]

H.W. Lay & Company

In 1931, Charlotte, North Carolina-born salesman Herman Lay (1909–1982) sold potato chips in the Southern United States out of his car. In 1932, he began a potato chip business in Nashville, Tennessee. Lay was hired as a salesman for the Barrett Food Products Company, an Atlanta, Georgia, manufacturer of Gardner's Potato Chips, and eventually took over Barrett's Nashville warehouse as a distributor. Lay hired his first salesman in 1934, and three years later had 25 employees and a larger manufacturing facility where he produced popcorn and peanut butter sandwich crackers.[10]

A representative of the Barrett Food Company contacted Lay in 1938, offering to sell Barrett's plants in Atlanta and Memphis to Lay for $60,000. Lay borrowed $30,000 from a bank and persuaded the Barrett Company to take the difference in preferred stock. Lay moved his headquarters to Atlanta and formed H.W. Lay & Company in 1939. He later purchased the Barrett manufacturing plant in Jacksonville, Florida, along with additional plants in Jackson, Mississippi; Louisville, Kentucky; and Greensboro, North Carolina. Lay retained the Gardner trademark of Barrett Food Products until 1944, when the product name was changed to Lay's Potato Chips.[11]

Lay expanded further in the 1950s, with the purchase of The Richmond Potato Chip Company and the Capitol Frito Corporation. By 1956, with more than 1,000 employees, plants in eight cities, and branches or warehouses in thirteen others, H.W. Lay & Company was the largest manufacturer of potato chips and snack foods in the United States.[12]

Merger forms Frito-Lay, Inc.

In 1945, The Frito Company granted H.W. Lay & Company an exclusive franchise to manufacture and distribute Fritos in the Southeast. The two companies worked toward national distribution and developed a close business affiliation. In September 1961, The Frito Company and H.W. Lay & Company merged to become Frito-Lay, Inc.,[13] combining their headquarters in Dallas, Texas. At this point, the company's annual revenues totaled $127 million, largely generated from sales of its four main brands at the time: Fritos, Lay's, Cheetos, and Ruffles.[14]

Division of PepsiCo, Inc.

In February 1965, the boards of directors for Frito-Lay, Inc. and Pepsi-Cola announced a plan for the merger of the two companies. On June 8, 1965, the merger of Frito-Lay and Pepsi-Cola Company was approved by shareholders of both companies, and a new company called PepsiCo, Inc. was formed. At the time of the merger, Frito-Lay owned 46 manufacturing plants nationwide and had more than 150 distribution centers across the United States.[15]

The merger was pursued for multiple factors, one of which was the potential for Frito-Lay snacks to be distributed outside of its initial markets of the United States and Canada—via Pepsi-Cola's existing presence and distribution network in 108 countries at the time of the merger. International distribution of Frito-Lay products expanded soon after the 1965 merger, and its U.S. presence grew at the same time, resulting in Lay's becoming the first potato chip brand to be sold nationwide (in all 50 U.S. states) in 1965.[16]

Also at this time, PepsiCo had envisioned marketing Frito-Lay snacks alongside Pepsi-Cola soft drinks. In an interview with Forbes in 1968, PepsiCo CEO Donald Kendall summarized this by noting that "Potato chips make you thirsty; Pepsi satisfies thirst." Plans to jointly promote the soft drink and snack products were thwarted later that year, when the Federal Trade Commission ruled against it.[11]

1965–1980

Upon the formation of PepsiCo, Frito-Lay soon began efforts to expand with the development of new snack food brands in the 1960s and 1970s, including Doritos (1966), Funyuns (1969), and Munchos (1971). The most popular new Frito-Lay product launched during this era was Doritos, which initially was positioned as a more flavorful tortilla chip. At first, the chip was perceived by consumers as being too bland. In response, the company re-launched Doritos in Taco, and later Nacho Cheese, flavors. The spicier composition proved successful, and Doritos quickly became the second most popular Frito-Lay product line, second only to Lay's potato chips.[7]

Frito-Lay faced increased competition in the 1970s from potato chip brands such as Pringles, launched by Procter & Gamble (but now owned by Kellogg's) in competition with Lay's. Nabisco and Standard Brands also expanded in the 1970s to produce potato chips, cheese curls and pretzels, which placed added pressure across Frito-Lay's entire line of snack food brands.[11]

1980–2000

Frito-Lay acquired GrandMa's Cookies in 1980, originally founded by Foster Wheeler in Portland, Oregon in 1914,[17] which launched nationwide in the United States in 1983. In January 1978, Frito-Lay's product development group led by Jack Liczkowski completed development of Tostitos, a Mexican-style tortilla chip lineup. Tostitos Traditional Flavor and Tostitos Nacho Cheese Flavor went into national distribution in the United States by 1980 and reached the sales of $140 million, making it one of the most successful new products introduction in Frito-Lay history. Tostitos sales grew quickly, and in 1985 it had become Frito-Lay's fifth-largest brand, generating annual sales of $200 million. Ahead of Tostitos at the time were Doritos, Lay's, Fritos, and Ruffles, each recording annual sales between $250 and $500 million.[10] While Tostitos became a long-term success, several other new products launched in the 1980s were discontinued after lackluster results. These short lived Frito-Lay products included Stuffers pre-filled dip shells and Toppels crackers, which came pre-topped with cheese.[18] In the late 1980s, Frito-Lay acquired Smartfood,[19] a brand of cheese-flavored popcorn which it began to distribute across the United States. International sales began to increase significantly at this time as well, with annual revenues from sales outside of the U.S. and Canada accounting for $500 million in 1989, contributing to total Frito-Lay sales of $3.5 billion in the same year.[11] In Canada, Frito-Lay began a partnership with General Foods-owned Hostess Food Products in 1987, before merging in 1988 to become The Hostess Frito-Lay Company.

Several new products were developed internally at Frito-Lay and launched in the 1990s, the most successful of which was Sun Chips, a multi-grain chip first sold in 1991. Sun Chips, along with new Baked (instead of fried) variants of Tostitos and Lay's, represented Frito-Lay's intent to capitalize on an emerging trend among adults in the U.S., who were displaying a growing preference for healthier snack alternatives.[20] In 1994, Frito-Lay recorded annual retail sales of nearly $5 billion, selling 8 billion bags of chips, popcorn, and pretzels during that year—outpacing competitors Eagle (owned by Anheuser-Busch) and Wise (owned by Borden).[21]

Up until the mid-1990s, Frito-Lay was represented in PepsiCo's organizational structure as Frito-Lay, a single division of PepsiCo. This changed in 1996 when PepsiCo merged its snack food operations into what was titled the "Frito-Lay Company", made up of two subsequent divisions, Frito-Lay North America and Frito-Lay International.[22] In 1992, Frito-Lay acquired full ownership of Hostess Food Products from General Foods, followed in 1997 by the acquisition of candied popcorn snack brand Cracker Jack, and in 1998 by multiple international acquisitions and joint ventures, including Smith's Snackfood Company (Australia), as well as Savoy Brands (Latin America).[23]

Recent history (2000–present)

In the early 1980s, PepsiCo continued to grow its Frito-Lay brands in two ways—through international expansion and acquisition. Through a joint-venture with Walkers, a UK chip and snack manufacturing company, Frito-Lay increased its distribution presence in Europe. Similar joint-ventures were arranged in other regions of the world in the 2000s, including Smith's in Australia, and Sabritas and Gamesa in Mexico. As a result of these international arrangements, some global Frito-Lay products (such as Doritos) are branded under the same name worldwide. Others maintain their original regional names. For example, Lay's chips are a similar product to Walkers Crisps in the UK[24] and both share similar logo designs.

The Quaker Oats Company merged with PepsiCo in 2001, resulting in Quaker snacks products, including Chewy granola bars, Gatorade, and Quaker rice cakes, becoming organized under the Frito-Lay North America operating division. This operating structure was short-lived, and in 2003, as part of a restructuring, the international operations of Frito-Lay (formerly Frito-Lay International) were brought within the PepsiCo International division, while Frito-Lay North America was maintained as its own division, comprising Frito-Lay business within the United States and Canada.[25][26]

Frito-Lay continued to experiment with changes to the composition of its products, introducing Reduced Fat Lay's and Cheetos in 2002. The "Baked" product line also expanded in 2002 to include Baked Doritos.[11] In 2003, Frito-Lay introduced the first products in its "Natural" line, which were made with ingredients that had been organically produced. The first of these included Organic Blue Corn Tostitos, Natural Lay's Potato Chips (seasoned with sea salt), and Natural Cheetos White Cheddar Puffs.[27]

A new CEO, Irene Rosenfeld, was appointed in 2005. Under her management, Frito-Lay North America continued to expand its product lines with acquisitions such as Stacy's Pita Chip Company, which represented "Frito-Lay's desire to participate more broadly in the $90 billion macrosnack category",[28] particularly involving snack foods made with more natural ingredients,[29] according to reports from within its industry at that time.[30] In 2010, Frito-Lay reformulated Lay's Kettle and Lay's flavored chips into a new variant labeled as being made with all-natural ingredients.[31] Sales of Lay's potato chips grew by 8% following the change to all-natural ingredients. As a result, Frito-Lay announced in 2010 its plans to convert approximately half of all Frito-Lay products, including Sun Chips, Tostitos, Fritos, and Rold Gold pretzels, to all-natural ingredients in 2011.[31]

Controversies and health concerns

Stereotyping in 1960s commercials

In 1967, the company introduced a cartoon spokesman, the Frito Bandito, which became the subject of criticism from Mexican-American groups, who expressed concerns that it portrayed a Mexican stereotype. The Frito Bandito (voiced by Mel Blanc) wore a sombrero and bandoliers, had a handlebar moustache, and brandished pistols. Protests from advocacy groups such as The National Mexican-American Anti-Defamation Committee (NMAADC) prompted some initial concessions, such as the removal of the pistols and a thinning of the accent. The Frito Bandito was replaced in 1970 by The Muncha Bunch, and then again by a new cartoon called W.C. Fritos (based on W. C. Fields).[7]

Genetically modified ingredients

In the late 1990s, the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) was rising as a farming practice, as it made for the growth of larger (and thus less expensive to produce) corn crops. Frito-Lay, due in part to its leverage as one of the world's largest purchasers of corn, became the target of lobbying efforts from both proponents and opponents of GMOs. In late 1999, Frito-Lay asked its suppliers not to use genetically engineered corn. A similar announcement followed in early 2000, when the company asked its farmers not to grow genetically modified potatoes. Frito-Lay stated these requests were made in response to consumers' worries, and not in response to protests by the OCA, Greenpeace or other groups. A representative of Greenpeace expressed the perspective that this move was a positive step, stating, "Frito-Lay is about two-thirds of PepsiCo's sales. They realize the handwriting is on the wall and that people don't want to eat GMOs".[citation needed]

In 2012, the policy as stated by Pepsico was:

"Global Genetically-Modified Food And Ingredient Policy

PepsiCo is dedicated to producing the highest quality, greatest tasting food and beverage products in every part of the world. PepsiCo ensures all products meet or exceed stringent safety and quality standards and uses only ingredients that are safe and approved by applicable government and regulatory authorities. Approval of genetically-modified foods differs from country to country regarding both use and labeling. For this reason, PepsiCo adheres to all relevant regulatory requirements regarding the use of genetically-modified food crops and food ingredients within the countries it operates.

Where legally approved, individual business units may choose to use or not use genetically-modified ingredients based on regional preferences."[citation needed]

Trans fats

Amid rising concerns over fat intake and trans-fat, fat content was reduced and trans-fats were eliminated from Doritos, Tostitos, and Cheetos in 2004. The composition of Ruffles, Lay's, and Fritos were not changed as these products had always been free of trans-fat.[32]

Poor working conditions

In July 2021, Frito-Lay became subject to media attention over poor working conditions at its plant in Topeka.[33][34] These conditions, which allegedly include forced overtime and 84-hour workweeks, led to a strike involving hundreds of workers at the Topeka location. The strike began on July 5 and ceased on July 23, 2021.[34]

 
Frito-Lay company is based in Texas

Operations

As of 2010, Frito-Lay operates production plants, distribution centers, and regional offices in more than 40 countries, with its Frito-Lay North America headquarters residing in Plano, Texas. Within North America, Frito-Lay owns (and in some cases, leases) approximately 1,830 distribution centers, warehouses and offices. The division also maintains 55 production plants.[35] Its chief executive officer is Steven Williams.[36]

North America

 
A Lay's branded Ford E-350 truck in Rawlins, Wyoming. Frito-Lay operates around 22,000 vehicles, or 60,000 including PepsiCo.[37][38]

PepsiCo Americas Foods consists of PepsiCo's food and snack operations in North and South America. This operating division is further segmented into Frito-Lay North America, Sabritas, Gamesa, and Latin America Foods. It also contains Quaker Foods North America, although no Frito-Lay products are sold or distributed under that business unit. Food and snack sales in North and South America combined made up 48 percent of PepsiCo's net revenue as of 2009.[39]

Frito-Lay North America Inc. is the division which controls Frito-Lay product research and development, sales, and distribution within the US and Canada. Its primary brands include Lay's and Ruffles potato chips, Doritos tortilla chips, Tostitos tortilla chips and dips, Cheetos cheese flavored snacks, Fritos corn chips, Rold Gold pretzels, Sun Chips, and Cracker Jack popcorn. Products made by this division are sold to independent distributors and retailers, and are transported from Frito-Lay's manufacturing plants to distribution centers, primarily in vehicles owned and operated by the company.[40]

Sabritas and Gamesa are two of PepsiCo's food and snack business lines headquartered in Mexico, and they were acquired by PepsiCo in 1966 and 1990, respectively. Sabritas markets Frito-Lay products, such as Cheetos, Fritos, Doritos, and Ruffles, in Mexico. It also distributes local brands such as Poffets, Rancheritos, Crujitos, and Sabritones. Gamesa is the largest manufacturer of cookies in Mexico, distributing brands such as Emperador, Chokis, Arcoiris, and Marías Gamesa.[41]

Central and South America

PepsiCo's Latin Americas Foods sells Frito-Lay branded snack foods in Central and South America.[42] Its portfolio of brands includes Lay's, Cheetos, Ruffles, and Doritos, as well as local brands such as Fandangos, Lucky, Stiksy, Pingo d'Ouro, Baconzitos and Torcida snacks in Brazil (sold under the brand Elma Chips) and ManiMoto in Colombia.

Europe

Frito-Lay snacks are distributed in Europe under the PepsiCo Europe operating division, previously PepsiCo International. Products include: Walkers Crisps, Doritos, Paw Ridge, Smiths, Cheetos, Duyvis, Snack-a-Jacks, Twistos, and Solinki.[35] PepsiCo maintains manufacturing plants in Europe, the largest of which are two snack manufacturing and processing plants located in Leicester and Coventry in England.[35]

In Spain and Portugal, operates the subsidiary Matutano brand.

Asia, Middle East and Africa

Frito-Lay products sold under the PepsiCo Asia, Middle East & Africa division represent the smallest (as of 2010) proportion on a revenue basis. However, its distribution is growing more quickly than Frito-Lay's primary markets.[43] While the primary global Frito-Lay brands are sold in some parts of these regions, many snack food products have been created to match local taste and cultural preferences. In India, one of these is Kurkure Twisteez, a potato-based snack food produced in flavors popular in the country such as "Masala Munch".[44] Frito-Lay has also employed alternate distribution means in these regions. In South Africa, it hired delivery drivers who had grown up in their delivery areas, with the intent of "making the product seem less foreign".[44]

Products

While the product catalog varies significantly by country, PepsiCo divides its snack products into two primary brand categories: those produced within North America, and those produced outside of North America.[45] In certain regions of the world, the company's snack food products are produced under regionally specific names such as Sabritas, Elma Chips and Walkers. The primary snack food brands and products produced under the Frito-Lay name include Fritos corn chips, Cheetos cheese-flavored snacks, Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips, Lay's potato chips, Ruffles chips, Grandma's cookies, and Walker's potato crisps (distributed in the UK and Ireland under the Walker's brand and in the rest of Europe under the Lay's brand)—each of which generated annual worldwide sales over $1 billion in 2009.[3] Frito-Lay also comprises multiple brands outside of the chip category, including Rold Gold pretzels, Cracker Jack popcorn snacks, and TrueNorth nut clusters and nut crisps.[46] In India, Frito-Lay uses its international brands as well as Uncle Chipps, a homegrown brand that it bought out in 2000.[47] Kurkure, an Indian snack developed and produced by PepsiCo India, announced on March 31 that it was now available in Canada, UAE, and the Gulf region as well.[48] Also, in Poland, there is a subsidiary brand called 'Star Chips' (a snack company). A Polish version of Lay's also exists in the country, based in Grodzisk Mazowiecki.

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External links

frito, chips, company, named, fritos, american, subsidiary, pepsico, that, manufactures, markets, sells, corn, chips, potato, chips, other, snack, foods, primary, snack, food, brands, produced, under, name, include, fritos, corn, chips, cheetos, cheese, flavor. For the chips the company is named for see Fritos and Lay s Frito Lay Inc is an American subsidiary of PepsiCo that manufactures markets and sells corn chips potato chips and other snack foods The primary snack food brands produced under the Frito Lay name include Fritos corn chips Cheetos cheese flavored snacks Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips Lay s and Ruffles potato chips Rold Gold pretzels and Walkers potato crisps in the UK and Ireland Each brand generated annual worldwide sales over 1 billion in 2009 3 Frito Lay Inc Logo used since February 1997TypeSubsidiaryIndustryFoodPredecessorsThe Frito Company H W Lay amp CompanyFoundedSeptember 1961 61 years ago 1961 09 1 FateMerged with Pepsi Cola Company to form PepsiCo remaining as a subsidiarySuccessorPepsiCoHeadquartersPlano Texas U S Area servedWorldwideKey peopleSteven Williams CEO ProductsSnack foodsBrandsLay s Fritos Doritos Ruffles Cheetos Hot Cheetos Sun Chips Tostitos Rold Gold Funyuns Walkers Kurkure Uncle Chipps Grandma sRevenueUS 15 798 billion 2017 2 ParentPepsiCoWebsitewww wbr fritolay wbr comFrito Lay began in the early 1930s as two separate companies The Frito Company and H W Lay amp Company which merged in 1961 to form Frito Lay Inc In 1965 Frito Lay Inc merged with the Pepsi Cola Company resulting in the formation of PepsiCo Since then Frito Lay has operated as a wholly owned subsidiary of PepsiCo Through Frito Lay PepsiCo is the largest globally distributed snack food company with sales of its products in 2009 comprising 40 percent of all savory snacks sold in the United States and 30 percent of the non U S market In 2018 Frito Lay North America accounted for 25 percent of PepsiCo s annual sales Contents 1 History 1 1 The Frito Company 1 2 H W Lay amp Company 1 3 Merger forms Frito Lay Inc 1 4 Division of PepsiCo Inc 1 4 1 1965 1980 1 4 2 1980 2000 1 4 3 Recent history 2000 present 2 Controversies and health concerns 2 1 Stereotyping in 1960s commercials 2 2 Genetically modified ingredients 2 3 Trans fats 2 4 Poor working conditions 3 Operations 3 1 North America 3 2 Central and South America 3 3 Europe 3 4 Asia Middle East and Africa 4 Products 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe Frito Company Edit An animatronic vending machine of The Frito Kid at Disneyland s Casa De Fritos currently Rancho Del Zocalo In 1932 Kansas City Kansas born Charles Elmer Doolin manager of the Highland Park Confectionery in San Antonio Texas purchased a corn chip recipe a handheld potato ricer and 19 retail accounts from a corn chip manufacturer for 100 which he borrowed from his mother Doolin established a new corn chip business The Frito Company in his mother s kitchen Doolin with his mother and brother produced the corn chips now named Fritos and had a production capacity of approximately 10 pounds per day and roughly 30 cents per product Doolin distributed the Fritos in 5 bags Daily sales totaled 8 to 10 and profits averaged about 2 per day 4 In 1933 the production of Fritos increased from 10 pounds to nearly 100 pounds due to the development of a hammer press By the end of the year production lines were operating in Houston and Dallas The Frito Company headquarters also moved to Dallas to capitalize on the city s central location and better availability of raw materials In 1937 The Frito Company opened its research and development lab and introduced new products including Fritos Peanut Butter Sandwiches and Fritos Peanuts to supplement Fritos and Fritatos Potato chips which had been introduced in 1935 5 In 1939 the company purchased Fluffs pork skins and incorporated the Dallas business Frito relocated the operation from Haskell Avenue to a new facility at 2005 Wall Street Alice Rupe who was one of Fluffs original six all woman crew was placed in charge of operations In 1940 she was named assistant treasurer and manager in 1949 she was promoted to treasurer 6 In 1941 the company opened its western division in Los Angeles with two sales routes which would become the prototype for The Frito Company s distribution system In 1945 The Frito Sales Company was established to separate sales from production activities Expansion continued with the issue of six franchises through the Frito National Company in the same year In 1950 Fritos were sold in all 48 states 7 The Frito Company issued its first public stock in 1954 In 1958 Frito entered the Midwest potato chip market by acquiring the Nicolay Dancey Company which made New Era potato chips 8 At the time of Doolin s death in 1959 The Frito Company produced over 40 products had plants in 18 cities employed over 3 000 people and had sales in 1958 in excess of 50 million By 1962 Fritos were sold in 48 countries 9 H W Lay amp Company Edit In 1931 Charlotte North Carolina born salesman Herman Lay 1909 1982 sold potato chips in the Southern United States out of his car In 1932 he began a potato chip business in Nashville Tennessee Lay was hired as a salesman for the Barrett Food Products Company an Atlanta Georgia manufacturer of Gardner s Potato Chips and eventually took over Barrett s Nashville warehouse as a distributor Lay hired his first salesman in 1934 and three years later had 25 employees and a larger manufacturing facility where he produced popcorn and peanut butter sandwich crackers 10 A representative of the Barrett Food Company contacted Lay in 1938 offering to sell Barrett s plants in Atlanta and Memphis to Lay for 60 000 Lay borrowed 30 000 from a bank and persuaded the Barrett Company to take the difference in preferred stock Lay moved his headquarters to Atlanta and formed H W Lay amp Company in 1939 He later purchased the Barrett manufacturing plant in Jacksonville Florida along with additional plants in Jackson Mississippi Louisville Kentucky and Greensboro North Carolina Lay retained the Gardner trademark of Barrett Food Products until 1944 when the product name was changed to Lay s Potato Chips 11 Lay expanded further in the 1950s with the purchase of The Richmond Potato Chip Company and the Capitol Frito Corporation By 1956 with more than 1 000 employees plants in eight cities and branches or warehouses in thirteen others H W Lay amp Company was the largest manufacturer of potato chips and snack foods in the United States 12 Merger forms Frito Lay Inc Edit In 1945 The Frito Company granted H W Lay amp Company an exclusive franchise to manufacture and distribute Fritos in the Southeast The two companies worked toward national distribution and developed a close business affiliation In September 1961 The Frito Company and H W Lay amp Company merged to become Frito Lay Inc 13 combining their headquarters in Dallas Texas At this point the company s annual revenues totaled 127 million largely generated from sales of its four main brands at the time Fritos Lay s Cheetos and Ruffles 14 Division of PepsiCo Inc Edit In February 1965 the boards of directors for Frito Lay Inc and Pepsi Cola announced a plan for the merger of the two companies On June 8 1965 the merger of Frito Lay and Pepsi Cola Company was approved by shareholders of both companies and a new company called PepsiCo Inc was formed At the time of the merger Frito Lay owned 46 manufacturing plants nationwide and had more than 150 distribution centers across the United States 15 The merger was pursued for multiple factors one of which was the potential for Frito Lay snacks to be distributed outside of its initial markets of the United States and Canada via Pepsi Cola s existing presence and distribution network in 108 countries at the time of the merger International distribution of Frito Lay products expanded soon after the 1965 merger and its U S presence grew at the same time resulting in Lay s becoming the first potato chip brand to be sold nationwide in all 50 U S states in 1965 16 Also at this time PepsiCo had envisioned marketing Frito Lay snacks alongside Pepsi Cola soft drinks In an interview with Forbes in 1968 PepsiCo CEO Donald Kendall summarized this by noting that Potato chips make you thirsty Pepsi satisfies thirst Plans to jointly promote the soft drink and snack products were thwarted later that year when the Federal Trade Commission ruled against it 11 1965 1980 Edit Upon the formation of PepsiCo Frito Lay soon began efforts to expand with the development of new snack food brands in the 1960s and 1970s including Doritos 1966 Funyuns 1969 and Munchos 1971 The most popular new Frito Lay product launched during this era was Doritos which initially was positioned as a more flavorful tortilla chip At first the chip was perceived by consumers as being too bland In response the company re launched Doritos in Taco and later Nacho Cheese flavors The spicier composition proved successful and Doritos quickly became the second most popular Frito Lay product line second only to Lay s potato chips 7 Frito Lay faced increased competition in the 1970s from potato chip brands such as Pringles launched by Procter amp Gamble but now owned by Kellogg s in competition with Lay s Nabisco and Standard Brands also expanded in the 1970s to produce potato chips cheese curls and pretzels which placed added pressure across Frito Lay s entire line of snack food brands 11 1980 2000 Edit Frito Lay acquired GrandMa s Cookies in 1980 originally founded by Foster Wheeler in Portland Oregon in 1914 17 which launched nationwide in the United States in 1983 In January 1978 Frito Lay s product development group led by Jack Liczkowski completed development of Tostitos a Mexican style tortilla chip lineup Tostitos Traditional Flavor and Tostitos Nacho Cheese Flavor went into national distribution in the United States by 1980 and reached the sales of 140 million making it one of the most successful new products introduction in Frito Lay history Tostitos sales grew quickly and in 1985 it had become Frito Lay s fifth largest brand generating annual sales of 200 million Ahead of Tostitos at the time were Doritos Lay s Fritos and Ruffles each recording annual sales between 250 and 500 million 10 While Tostitos became a long term success several other new products launched in the 1980s were discontinued after lackluster results These short lived Frito Lay products included Stuffers pre filled dip shells and Toppels crackers which came pre topped with cheese 18 In the late 1980s Frito Lay acquired Smartfood 19 a brand of cheese flavored popcorn which it began to distribute across the United States International sales began to increase significantly at this time as well with annual revenues from sales outside of the U S and Canada accounting for 500 million in 1989 contributing to total Frito Lay sales of 3 5 billion in the same year 11 In Canada Frito Lay began a partnership with General Foods owned Hostess Food Products in 1987 before merging in 1988 to become The Hostess Frito Lay Company Several new products were developed internally at Frito Lay and launched in the 1990s the most successful of which was Sun Chips a multi grain chip first sold in 1991 Sun Chips along with new Baked instead of fried variants of Tostitos and Lay s represented Frito Lay s intent to capitalize on an emerging trend among adults in the U S who were displaying a growing preference for healthier snack alternatives 20 In 1994 Frito Lay recorded annual retail sales of nearly 5 billion selling 8 billion bags of chips popcorn and pretzels during that year outpacing competitors Eagle owned by Anheuser Busch and Wise owned by Borden 21 Up until the mid 1990s Frito Lay was represented in PepsiCo s organizational structure as Frito Lay a single division of PepsiCo This changed in 1996 when PepsiCo merged its snack food operations into what was titled the Frito Lay Company made up of two subsequent divisions Frito Lay North America and Frito Lay International 22 In 1992 Frito Lay acquired full ownership of Hostess Food Products from General Foods followed in 1997 by the acquisition of candied popcorn snack brand Cracker Jack and in 1998 by multiple international acquisitions and joint ventures including Smith s Snackfood Company Australia as well as Savoy Brands Latin America 23 Recent history 2000 present Edit In the early 1980s PepsiCo continued to grow its Frito Lay brands in two ways through international expansion and acquisition Through a joint venture with Walkers a UK chip and snack manufacturing company Frito Lay increased its distribution presence in Europe Similar joint ventures were arranged in other regions of the world in the 2000s including Smith s in Australia and Sabritas and Gamesa in Mexico As a result of these international arrangements some global Frito Lay products such as Doritos are branded under the same name worldwide Others maintain their original regional names For example Lay s chips are a similar product to Walkers Crisps in the UK 24 and both share similar logo designs The Quaker Oats Company merged with PepsiCo in 2001 resulting in Quaker snacks products including Chewy granola bars Gatorade and Quaker rice cakes becoming organized under the Frito Lay North America operating division This operating structure was short lived and in 2003 as part of a restructuring the international operations of Frito Lay formerly Frito Lay International were brought within the PepsiCo International division while Frito Lay North America was maintained as its own division comprising Frito Lay business within the United States and Canada 25 26 Frito Lay continued to experiment with changes to the composition of its products introducing Reduced Fat Lay s and Cheetos in 2002 The Baked product line also expanded in 2002 to include Baked Doritos 11 In 2003 Frito Lay introduced the first products in its Natural line which were made with ingredients that had been organically produced The first of these included Organic Blue Corn Tostitos Natural Lay s Potato Chips seasoned with sea salt and Natural Cheetos White Cheddar Puffs 27 A new CEO Irene Rosenfeld was appointed in 2005 Under her management Frito Lay North America continued to expand its product lines with acquisitions such as Stacy s Pita Chip Company which represented Frito Lay s desire to participate more broadly in the 90 billion macrosnack category 28 particularly involving snack foods made with more natural ingredients 29 according to reports from within its industry at that time 30 In 2010 Frito Lay reformulated Lay s Kettle and Lay s flavored chips into a new variant labeled as being made with all natural ingredients 31 Sales of Lay s potato chips grew by 8 following the change to all natural ingredients As a result Frito Lay announced in 2010 its plans to convert approximately half of all Frito Lay products including Sun Chips Tostitos Fritos and Rold Gold pretzels to all natural ingredients in 2011 31 Controversies and health concerns EditStereotyping in 1960s commercials Edit In 1967 the company introduced a cartoon spokesman the Frito Bandito which became the subject of criticism from Mexican American groups who expressed concerns that it portrayed a Mexican stereotype The Frito Bandito voiced by Mel Blanc wore a sombrero and bandoliers had a handlebar moustache and brandished pistols Protests from advocacy groups such as The National Mexican American Anti Defamation Committee NMAADC prompted some initial concessions such as the removal of the pistols and a thinning of the accent The Frito Bandito was replaced in 1970 by The Muncha Bunch and then again by a new cartoon called W C Fritos based on W C Fields 7 Genetically modified ingredients Edit In the late 1990s the use of genetically modified organisms GMOs was rising as a farming practice as it made for the growth of larger and thus less expensive to produce corn crops Frito Lay due in part to its leverage as one of the world s largest purchasers of corn became the target of lobbying efforts from both proponents and opponents of GMOs In late 1999 Frito Lay asked its suppliers not to use genetically engineered corn A similar announcement followed in early 2000 when the company asked its farmers not to grow genetically modified potatoes Frito Lay stated these requests were made in response to consumers worries and not in response to protests by the OCA Greenpeace or other groups A representative of Greenpeace expressed the perspective that this move was a positive step stating Frito Lay is about two thirds of PepsiCo s sales They realize the handwriting is on the wall and that people don t want to eat GMOs citation needed In 2012 the policy as stated by Pepsico was Global Genetically Modified Food And Ingredient PolicyPepsiCo is dedicated to producing the highest quality greatest tasting food and beverage products in every part of the world PepsiCo ensures all products meet or exceed stringent safety and quality standards and uses only ingredients that are safe and approved by applicable government and regulatory authorities Approval of genetically modified foods differs from country to country regarding both use and labeling For this reason PepsiCo adheres to all relevant regulatory requirements regarding the use of genetically modified food crops and food ingredients within the countries it operates Where legally approved individual business units may choose to use or not use genetically modified ingredients based on regional preferences citation needed Trans fats Edit Amid rising concerns over fat intake and trans fat fat content was reduced and trans fats were eliminated from Doritos Tostitos and Cheetos in 2004 The composition of Ruffles Lay s and Fritos were not changed as these products had always been free of trans fat 32 Poor working conditions Edit Main article 2021 Frito Lay strikeIn July 2021 Frito Lay became subject to media attention over poor working conditions at its plant in Topeka 33 34 These conditions which allegedly include forced overtime and 84 hour workweeks led to a strike involving hundreds of workers at the Topeka location The strike began on July 5 and ceased on July 23 2021 34 Frito Lay company is based in TexasOperations EditAs of 2010 Frito Lay operates production plants distribution centers and regional offices in more than 40 countries with its Frito Lay North America headquarters residing in Plano Texas Within North America Frito Lay owns and in some cases leases approximately 1 830 distribution centers warehouses and offices The division also maintains 55 production plants 35 Its chief executive officer is Steven Williams 36 North America Edit A Lay s branded Ford E 350 truck in Rawlins Wyoming Frito Lay operates around 22 000 vehicles or 60 000 including PepsiCo 37 38 PepsiCo Americas Foods consists of PepsiCo s food and snack operations in North and South America This operating division is further segmented into Frito Lay North America Sabritas Gamesa and Latin America Foods It also contains Quaker Foods North America although no Frito Lay products are sold or distributed under that business unit Food and snack sales in North and South America combined made up 48 percent of PepsiCo s net revenue as of 2009 39 Frito Lay North America Inc is the division which controls Frito Lay product research and development sales and distribution within the US and Canada Its primary brands include Lay s and Ruffles potato chips Doritos tortilla chips Tostitos tortilla chips and dips Cheetos cheese flavored snacks Fritos corn chips Rold Gold pretzels Sun Chips and Cracker Jack popcorn Products made by this division are sold to independent distributors and retailers and are transported from Frito Lay s manufacturing plants to distribution centers primarily in vehicles owned and operated by the company 40 Sabritas and Gamesa are two of PepsiCo s food and snack business lines headquartered in Mexico and they were acquired by PepsiCo in 1966 and 1990 respectively Sabritas markets Frito Lay products such as Cheetos Fritos Doritos and Ruffles in Mexico It also distributes local brands such as Poffets Rancheritos Crujitos and Sabritones Gamesa is the largest manufacturer of cookies in Mexico distributing brands such as Emperador Chokis Arcoiris and Marias Gamesa 41 Central and South America Edit PepsiCo s Latin Americas Foods sells Frito Lay branded snack foods in Central and South America 42 Its portfolio of brands includes Lay s Cheetos Ruffles and Doritos as well as local brands such as Fandangos Lucky Stiksy Pingo d Ouro Baconzitos and Torcida snacks in Brazil sold under the brand Elma Chips and ManiMoto in Colombia Europe Edit Frito Lay snacks are distributed in Europe under the PepsiCo Europe operating division previously PepsiCo International Products include Walkers Crisps Doritos Paw Ridge Smiths Cheetos Duyvis Snack a Jacks Twistos and Solinki 35 PepsiCo maintains manufacturing plants in Europe the largest of which are two snack manufacturing and processing plants located in Leicester and Coventry in England 35 In Spain and Portugal operates the subsidiary Matutano brand Asia Middle East and Africa Edit Frito Lay products sold under the PepsiCo Asia Middle East amp Africa division represent the smallest as of 2010 proportion on a revenue basis However its distribution is growing more quickly than Frito Lay s primary markets 43 While the primary global Frito Lay brands are sold in some parts of these regions many snack food products have been created to match local taste and cultural preferences In India one of these is Kurkure Twisteez a potato based snack food produced in flavors popular in the country such as Masala Munch 44 Frito Lay has also employed alternate distribution means in these regions In South Africa it hired delivery drivers who had grown up in their delivery areas with the intent of making the product seem less foreign 44 Products EditWhile the product catalog varies significantly by country PepsiCo divides its snack products into two primary brand categories those produced within North America and those produced outside of North America 45 In certain regions of the world the company s snack food products are produced under regionally specific names such as Sabritas Elma Chips and Walkers The primary snack food brands and products produced under the Frito Lay name include Fritos corn chips Cheetos cheese flavored snacks Doritos and Tostitos tortilla chips Lay s potato chips Ruffles chips Grandma s cookies and Walker s potato crisps distributed in the UK and Ireland under the Walker s brand and in the rest of Europe under the Lay s brand each of which generated annual worldwide sales over 1 billion in 2009 3 Frito Lay also comprises multiple brands outside of the chip category including Rold Gold pretzels Cracker Jack popcorn snacks and TrueNorth nut clusters and nut crisps 46 In India Frito Lay uses its international brands as well as Uncle Chipps a homegrown brand that it bought out in 2000 47 Kurkure an Indian snack developed and produced by PepsiCo India announced on March 31 that it was now available in Canada UAE and the Gulf region as well 48 Also in Poland there is a subsidiary brand called Star Chips a snack company A Polish version of Lay s also exists in the country based in Grodzisk Mazowiecki References Edit Company story fritolay com Frito Lay Inc 2017 annual results PDF pepsico com PepsiCo Inc a b PepsiCo Inc 2009 Annual Report Financial Highlights Largest Brands pepsico com PepsiCo Inc Archived from the original on 21 December 2010 Retrieved 19 December 2010 Nelson Davia Silva Nikki 18 October 2007 The Birth of the Frito National Public Radio NPR Retrieved 18 December 2010 Communications Emmis May 1982 The Frito The venerable corn chip whose life is a Tex Mex history lesson Texas Monthly 138 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Fritos Bandwagon Twentieth Anniversary Issue Dallas The Frito Company October 1952 Clementine Paddleford Papers Richard L D amp Marjorie J Morse Department of Special Collections K State Libraries a b c Smith Andrew F 2006 Encyclopedia of junk food and fast food Greenwood pp 113 114 ISBN 978 0 313 33527 3 Frito Lay Wooster s top business Smith Andrew F 2007 The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink Oxford University Press p 240 ISBN 978 0 19 530796 2 a b Pederson Jay P 2000 International Directory of Company Histories St James Press pp 207 208 ISBN 978 1 55862 391 0 Retrieved 20 December 2010 a b c d e Burhans Dirk E 2008 Crunch a history of the great American potato chip University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 22770 8 Smith Andrew F 2009 Eating History Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine Columbia University Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 231 14092 8 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Frito Lay History fritolay com Frito Lay North America Inc Retrieved 20 December 2010 Frito Lay Inc Company Profile for Students highbeam com HighBeam Research 1 January 1999 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Mazze Edward M Michman Ronald D 1998 The Food Industry Wars Marketing Triumphs and Blunders Praeger p 185 ISBN 978 1 56720 111 6 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Bellis Mary The History of Potato Chips About com Inventors Retrieved 20 December 2010 Now that s a great cookie by Mary Jane Lamphier Collectors Journal 9 July 2018 Accessed 28 June 2020 Lamb Charles W Hair Joseph F McDaniel Carl 2008 Essentials of Marketing South Western College Pub p 44 ISBN 978 0 324 65620 6 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Kahn Joseph P 1 August 1988 The Snack Food That s Eating America Smartfood popcorn Inc Magazine Retrieved 19 December 2010 Higher Sales of Snacks Boost PepsiCo Profits but Stock Drops The Denver Post 29 April 1998 Gite Lloyd June 1995 B E Executive of the Year Black Enterprise 215 Retrieved 20 December 2010 McGraw Dan 16 September 1996 Salting Away Big Profits Frito Lay Launches a Powerful Snack Attack and Crunches the Competition U S News amp World Report Albala Ken Allen Gary 2007 The Business of Food Encyclopedia of the Food and Drink Industries Greenwood pp 338 339 ISBN 978 0 313 33725 3 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Snacks Brands pepsico co uk PepsiCo UK amp Ireland Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Form 10 K for PepsiCo Inc US Securities and Exchanges Commission 2006 via sec gov Plunkett s Food Industry Almanac E Book Plunkett s 2006 p 286 ISBN 9781593920524 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Strategy Frito Lay Lays Out Plans for Natural Line Brandweek 12 May 2003 Retrieved 20 December 2010 PepsiCo Frito Lay picks up pita chip purveyor Food Processing 21 November 2005 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Warner Melanie 11 May 2010 Why Frito Lay s Move Towards Clean Labels Is Smart Marketing Bnet Retrieved 20 December 2010 Spethmann Betsy 1 March 2009 Frito Lay Adds 100 Million Plus for Online and Offline Ads Direct Magazine Retrieved 20 December 2010 a b Morris Alex 23 November 2010 PepsiCo All Natural Growth Seeking Alpha Retrieved 20 December 2010 Siegel Jeff 10 August 2005 Conveniently Organic Turning Green into Greenbacks Wealth Daily Retrieved 19 December 2010 Hundreds of Frito Lay workers on strike in Topeka citing forced overtime and 84 hour workweeks Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2021 07 17 a b Frito Lay strike hits 12 days negotiations to resume Monday KSNT News 2021 07 17 Retrieved 2021 07 17 a b c PepsiCo Inc SEC Form 10 K for fiscal year ended December 26 2009 Businessweek Investing Archived from the original on 2 May 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2010 Corporate About Page Frito Lay Website PepsiCo Inc 13 February 2018 Retrieved 13 February 2018 Fisher Josh 2019 04 17 Frito Lay awarded Fleet of the Year fleetowner com Frito Lay Fleet Reaches CNG Milestone automotive fleet com August 5 2016 Bagh Carl 21 May 2010 Key facts about PepsiCo International Business Times Archived from the original on 6 April 2012 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Frito Lay North America Inc Company Profile Yahoo Finance Archived from the original on 28 February 2003 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Gould Jens Erik 13 July 2010 Pepsi s Mexico Chief Sees Sales Climbing 4 This Year as Economy Recovers Bloomberg Retrieved 15 December 2010 Doherty Jacqueline 30 November 2009 At Pepsi the Glass Is Half Full Barron s Retrieved 15 December 2010 PepsiCo Inc PEP Company Description Businessweek Archived from the original on 2 January 2013 Retrieved 20 December 2010 a b Frito Lay Using Potato Chips to Spread the Spirit of Free Enterprise ABC News 9 September 2002 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 21 December 2010 Frito Lay Brands list PepsiCo Inc Archived from the original on 16 December 2010 Retrieved 16 December 2010 Full List of Frito Lay Brands Frito Lay North America Retrieved 20 December 2010 Uncle Chipps shareholders ratify takeover by Frito Lay The Financial Express 17 October 2000 Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 21 February 2012 Kurkure goes Global First India born snack brand to be manufactured and sold in Canada UAE and Gulf region PepsiCo India Retrieved 31 March 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frito Lay Companies portal Food portalOfficial website Smiths Snackfood Company Australia Walkers Crisps UK Roberts Russ August 22 2011 O Donohoe on Potato Chips and Salty Snacks EconTalk Library of Economics and Liberty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frito Lay amp oldid 1170446517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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