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HORIZON ORGANIC baseball hat USDA dairy milk products


HORIZON ORGANIC baseball hat USDA dairy milk products


$19.99


Horizon Organic Milk Dairy Red T-Shirt L Large


Horizon Organic Milk Dairy Red T-Shirt L Large


$8.97


Horizon Organic Dairy Foodie T-Shirt L


Horizon Organic Dairy Foodie T-Shirt L


$8.87

Horizon Organic Dairy

Hybrid Merger And Acquisition Model For Connecting Emerging Companies With Large Corporations

No risk, no reward is one of the oldest adages in business. This formulation of strategic risk was first expressed in written form by the Greek scholar Herodotus in 450 B.C.

In the realm of corporate mergers and acquisitions, the challenge for many companies is to obtain a highly desirable product or technology while risking as little capital as possible.

While growth through Merger and Acquisition continues to be a highly popular strategy – in 2006 there was a record $3.6 trillion in Merger and Acquisition activity, according to Thompson Financial – many CEOs and CFOs remain wary about making deals. In a recent survey of large corporation executives by Accenture, 45 percent reported their most recent Merger and Acquisition deal had failed to deliver all of the expected results.
One solution to traditional outright purchases is the hybrid Merger and Acquisition model. It is becoming increasingly popular.

In a hybrid Merger and Acquisition deal, a large public corporation takes a stake (typically 10 percent to 50 percent) in a smaller company (public or private). Generally, this equity infusion comes with a call option, a right to purchase the entire company at a later date at contracted valuation metrics.

The hybrid model has been successfully implemented by Cisco Systems, which began using it more than a decade ago. Between 1993 and 2007, Cisco made 119 acquisitions, many of them in start-ups or small companies with limited track records.
There are three key benefits for the equity parent in the hybrid model:

Diversified investments minimize overall risk.

Access to new technologies and products is obtained at minimal cost.

Managed resources are not dissipated.

For example, a corporation willing to spend $250 million could invest it in an outright purchase of one established company or take a dozen $5 million to $25 million stakes in start-up companies.
In the consumer products sector, we can look to Dean Foods, the leading U.S. provider of fluid milk and dairy products, for an example of a very successful hybrid acquisition.

Supermarket shoppers know Dean Foods through its many local brands, including Borden, Pet, Country Fresh, Meadow Gold and Horizon organic.

One of Dean’s most successful acquisitions was White Wave, an organic foods company. It was founded in 1976 by Steve Demos, an organic foods pioneer. He introduced Silk soy milk in 1996, just as the organic foods boom was beginning. In 1999, Dean Foods purchased a 25 percent stake for $5 million. Helped by Dean’s “smart money,” product sales soared to more than $250 million in 2004, when Dean purchased the remaining 75 percent of White Wave for $224 million.

Dean, acting in the Cisco tradition, left entrepreneur Demos and his management team in place and let the company operate with great autonomy. The result was a win-win outcome. By 2005, Dean Foods had more than $10.8 billion in revenue and was bigger than Kellogg and H.J. Heinz.

With successes like this, it may seem surprising we don’t see more hybrid deals. The reality is the hybrid concept faces points of resistance on both the seller and buyer side. These include entrepreneurs who are attracted by the glamour of venture capital, and CEOs and CFOs in large corporations who continue to equate ownership with control.

Obtaining an investment from a venture capital firm has great allure to entrepreneurs. Many first-time entrepreneurs believe that getting VC money signifies they have made it to the “big leagues.” What they often overlook are the long odds.

According to Jim Casparie, founder and CEO of the Venture Alliance, the odds of a first-time entrepreneur obtaining venture funding are less than 3 percent. He reports that in 2005, out of 125,000 interested parties making pitches to VC firms, just 2,939 received funding. The average amount worked out to $7.4 million.
When an entrepreneur does catch the eye of a VC firm, he may face punishing valuations, high expenses, and time-consuming reviews by multiple parties.

On the buyer side, resistance to hybrid mergers comes from the traditional culture found in many corporations that equates “ownership” with 100 percent control and a centralized, top-down decision-making process.

However, more and more corporations are coming to understand that in the accelerated world of 21st-century business competition, it is critical to diversify product development by investing in multiple projects. They are also seeing the advantage of fostering an entrepreneurial spirit within the larger corporate structure to improve motivation and boost creative thinking.

A hybrid acquisition can provide a corporation with an efficient vehicle for learning about new products and technologies. It can also serve as a platform for additional acquisitions.

C-level corporate executives, however, must understand that dealing with entrepreneurs requires a special mindset. Many founders are fiercely proud of their company and protective of its products, and they want to maintain a high degree of control.

When both sides understand the benefits of hybrid acquisitions, highly rewarding synergies can take place. As we see more and more hybrid acquisitions pay off, the concept will no longer seem daring but instead will become a basic part of many corporate Merger and Acquisition strategies.

To drink or not to drink milk with rBGH?

“WASHINGTON – Milk from cloned cows is no longer welcome at the nation’s biggest milk company.

Although the government has approved meat and milk from cloned animals while it conducts further studies, Dean Foods Co. of Dallas said Thursday that its customers and consumers don’t want milk from cloned animals. The $10 billion company owns Land O’Lakes and Horizon Organic, among dozens of other brands.”

That should be forbiden. Read more about milk production and all kind of illnesses caused by dairy.
LOL LOL….what is the cleanest and safest?
Babydoll………..who cares about 5 points.

I just wasted 5 points asking the same question! It did not show up as a question already posted!

Anyway. I do not have a problem with this milk if it keeps prices where I can afford milk and other dairy products. It’s interesting to me that cows are being cloned more for breeding purposes than for milk or meat. Superior animals are cloned in order to breed them. Farmers can avoid costly stud fees by cloning.

I Love Boulder – Alfalfa’s Market

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Organic Baby Formula - Vermont Organics Milk Formula - 6 Pack 23.2 Oz Cans


Organic Baby Formula – Vermont Organics Milk Formula – 6 Pack 23.2 Oz Cans


$149.94


Vermont Organics milk organic baby formula is manufactured in Vermont, U.S.A., and contains all the vitamins, minerals, and nutrients required for growth and development; this organic formula is suitable for term infants during the first year. Vermont Organics also contains DHA and ARA, nutrients found naturally in mother’s milk that support infant brain and eye development. Vermont Organics Infan…

1 CASE Horizon 8oz Vanilla Milk, Organic, 18 per case ( Multi-Pack)


1 CASE Horizon 8oz Vanilla Milk, Organic, 18 per case ( Multi-Pack)




1 CASE Horizon 8oz Chocolate Milk, Organic, 18 per case ( Multi-Pack)


1 CASE Horizon 8oz Chocolate Milk, Organic, 18 per case ( Multi-Pack)




Organic Valley Organic 1% Lowfat Single Serve Milk, 8-Ounce Aseptic Cartons (Pack of 24)


Organic Valley Organic 1% Lowfat Single Serve Milk, 8-Ounce Aseptic Cartons (Pack of 24)


$12.95


A lunchbox classic Organic Valley’s delicious organic lowfat milk comes from the family farms of our cooperative, where the cows are raised on organic pastures and handled with the greatest of care. It’s certified organic, as are all our products, to assure you they’re produced without the use of antibiotics, synthetic hormones or pesticides. Ultra-pasteurization and revolutionary aseptic packagin…

Hershey's 2% Chocolate Milk, 21- 8 Ounce Aseptic Boxes


Hershey’s 2% Chocolate Milk, 21- 8 Ounce Aseptic Boxes


$9.40


Hershey’s Shelf Stable Milk is a Grade A milk procured from local family-owned dairies. Hershey’s Milk is aseptically processed under Ultra High Temperatures (UHT). The UHT process enables our milk to remain fresh with or without refrigeration for 13 months from production date. Hershey Aseptic Products are certified ‘rbST Free’ (no artificial growth hormones are used)….

Silk Chocolate Soymilk Natural, 8-Ounce Aseptic Cartons (Pack of 18)


Silk Chocolate Soymilk Natural, 8-Ounce Aseptic Cartons (Pack of 18)


$17.70


Upc: 025293-001411 silk choc prism soy 18/8 oz by silk dairy free; natural or organic ingredients; kosher; non-gmo project verified…

Making milk even more wholesome.(Food & Beverage Fast-Trackers)(Horizon Organic Dairy's milk brand goes beyond regional boundaries)(Cover Story): An article from: Food Processing


Making milk even more wholesome.(Food & Beverage Fast-Trackers)(Horizon Organic Dairy’s milk brand goes beyond regional boundaries)(Cover Story): An article from: Food Processing


$5.95


This digital document is an article from Food Processing, published by Putman Media, Inc. on September 1, 1999. The length of the article is 650 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.From the supplier: Longmont…