Showing posts with label pharmaceuticals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pharmaceuticals. Show all posts

Warner-Lambert

Warner-Lambert corporate history can be traces back to the 1850s when a Philadelphia pharmacist named William R. Warner began experimenting with a new tablet coating process to encase harsh-tasting medicines in a sugar shell.

William R. Warner & Company, a pharmaceuticals and cosmetic marker, was founded in 1920. For the next three decades, the company and its successor, Warner-Hudnut, Inc. acquired dozens of businesses in the consumer health care a and pharmaceuticals.

Meanwhile, in the American Midwest, Jordan Wheat Lambert launched Lambert Pharmaceutical Company in St. Louis. Lambert’s main product was Listerine antiseptic. He founded his company on what has become one of the most successful proprietary products in American marketing history.

On 31 March 1955, Warner Company and Lambert combined to form Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Company.

Warner-Lambert’s aggressive acquisition strategy continued through the next two decades and onto the 1980s. In 1962, the company bought American Chicle a New York based company that was among the world’s largest producers of gums and mints.

The year 1970 was a turning point for the growth of Warner-Lambert, acquiring Parke-Davis, once the largest drug manufacturer.

Warner-Lambert entered the controversial transdermal nicotine patch market in 1992 with its Nicotrol brand. Nicotrol had early but short-lived success in an already-crowded sector.

In 2000, Pfizer acquired Warner-Lambert for $90.27 billion in stock. Pfizer then became the world’s second largest pharmaceutical company, right behind GlaxoSmithKline. In June of 2000, the Federal Trade Commission approved the merger.
Warner-Lambert

History of Pfizer

Two cousins, Charles Pfizer and Charles Erhart, formed Pfizer in 1849 after they arrived in Brooklyn from Germany.

At first the venture was a small chemical manufacturer, but it achieved early success after developing a way to improve the palatability of a treatment for parasitic worms. After its discovery of Terramycin in 1950 Pfizer became a research-based pharmaceutical company.

Through the latter half of the 19th century citric acid - made from lemons, limes and oranges and used in soft drinks and cleaning fluids – became Pfizer’s central product.

For decades, citric acid was the company’s most popular product, but when the availability of the ingredients needed to make the product slowed during WWI, Pfizer was forced to find new supply sources. It did so after years of experimenting with fermentation, a process that eventually enabled Pfizer to produce penicillin on a large scale basis, as it did during WWII.

Pfizer’s first medicinal was a reformulation of santonin, an extract of Levant Wormseed, used as an anti-parasitic to treat intestinal worms.

Erhart, a confectioner, blended bitter-tasting santonin with almond-toffee flavoring, shaping it into a candy cone for palatabultiy and ’new santonin’ became a success for the company.

In 1998 the company launched Viagra, a novel erectile dysfunction drug that has become a $1 billion plus a year blockbuster and is often viewed as one of the most shrewdly marketed drugs of all time.

By 1999 it was among the world’s top producers of over-the-counter medicines and the leading producer of fish food and aquarium products.

In order to expand and strengthen its business, Pfizer has made numerous acquisitions, including Warner-Lambert in 2000, Pharmacia in 2003 and Wyeth in 2009.
History of Pfizer

Bayer AG

Bayer AG is a German chemical and pharmaceutical company.  On August I, 1863, businessman Friedrich Bayer (1825-1880) and master dyer Johann Friedrich Weskott establish a modest dyestuff factory in Wuppertal-Barmen, Germany (by the name of Friedr. Bayer & Co).

Bayer has its headquarters in Leverkusen, North Rhino-Westphalia, Germany. Bayer was one of the important German chemical companies of the late 19th and 20th centuries.

Its signature product was aspirin made of from coal tar. Bayer’s first important commercial products were coal-tar dyes for use in the textile industry. Because of the chemical linkages between these compounds and pharmaceutical products, Bayer moved into biochemical research and innovation.

Bayer has originated scores of pharmaceutical, chemicals, and synthetic materials; it was the first developer and marketer of aspirin (1899); of Prontosil, the first Sulfa Drug (1935) and of polyurethane (1937).

Bayer Chemical Company was the first company to isolate the natural compound salicylic acid. After this achievement, the company was able to synthesize this compound and market it. This is analgesic compound that reduces inflammation, lowers fevers and assists in blood circulation during critical times, such as a heart attack and stroke.

By the start of World War I, Bayer, under the technical leadership of chemist Felix Hoffmann, discovered and brought to market such landmark pharmacological products as aspirin, sulfa drugs and anesthetics.

In 1967, Bayer began acquiring companies to bolster its North American presence, in 1994 purchased Sterling Winthrop’s North American OTC drug business for $1 billion, including all trademark right in Canada and the United States related to the Bayer name and Bayer cross logo.

Today, Bayer is a global company that in fiscal 2014 employed 116,800 people, had sales of EUR 46.3 billion (US$4.6 billion), and marketed about 5,000 products.
Bayer AG

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