Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Paul Iams; Founder Iams Pet Food

16 views
Skip to first unread message

Hyfler/Rosner

unread,
Nov 2, 2004, 7:49:02 AM11/2/04
to
Pd obits: NY Times today


IAMS--Paul. October 26, 2004. Age 89. A loving husband,
father and grandfather.

Founder of the Iams Pet Food Company. We regret his passing,
but rejoice in the rich life he lived. Paul, Barb and Carrie

Hyfler/Rosner

unread,
Nov 3, 2004, 7:50:11 AM11/3/04
to

"Hyfler/Rosner" wrote:

> Pd obits: NY Times today


NY Sun obit:

Paul Iams, 89, Pet Food Manufacturer
BY STEPHEN MILLER - Staff Reporter of the Sun
November 3, 2004

Paul Iams, who was the first to spot the marketing niche for
high-end, high nutrient pet foods, died October 26 in
Chappaqua, at age 89, the Iams Food Company announced. The
Dayton, Ohio, company, now owned by Procter and Gamble, is
the leading producer of veterinarian-blessed kibble, with
more than $800 million in sales in 77 countries in 2002.

Iams, a native of Dayton, was a state champion tennis player
in 1933 who became interested in the pet-food business a few
years later while working with his father, Harry, a grain
broker.

In 1938, Iams went to work for Cincinnati-based Procter &
Gamble, where he worked as a soap salesman before joining
the Navy for World War II. When he returned from the war, he
raised about $5,000 to start an animal feed company at the
Tipp City Feed Mill in Dayton.

During the early 1950s, Iams began selling feed to mink
ranchers. In a story he told many times, he noted that the
ranch dogs who ate the mink food developed unusually glossy
coats. Thus was born the notion of specialty pet foods. Iams
immediately spent $71 on animal nutrition books and began
improving his product, according to a 1987 interview with
"Dayton-Spring field Business Life." The company still does
a significant business with mink ranchers, the company says.

He opened his first manufacturing plant in Dayton with five
employees. The first product, for dogs, he named Iams 999 -
"to imply that it was nearly perfect," he said. Most of his
customer base included dog breeders and veterinarians.

Iams exercised complete control of his products, down to the
somewhat idiosyncratic purple-and-green packaging. When the
company introduced a new line of foods, Iams dubbed it
"Eukanuba," a term the company claimed was 1940s slang
popularized by Hoagy Carmichael that meant "supreme."

The company grew during the 1960s and 1970s, and by the time
Iams sold the company to his protege, Clay Mathile, in 1982,
it had $16 million in annual sales, mainly in the Midwest.
The company named an animal-research facility for Iams in
1987.

Under Mr. Mathile, Iams sought national growth far more
aggressively, and it reached the $500 million mark in sales
in 1996. Mr. Mathile, who frequently appears on the Forbes
400 richest Americans list, sold Iams to Procter & Gamble
for $2.3 billion in 1999.

Under Procter & Gamble, Iams has continued to prosper as the
consumer giant has sought synergies. One, "Dental Defense,"
is a line of pet foods that combines Crest toothpaste with
dog food.

Iams retired to Sun City West, Ariz., where he lived until a
month ago.


0 new messages