Avery Dennison

Avery Dennison Corporation
Public
Traded as NYSE: AVY
S&P 500 Component
Industry Packaging
Founded Los Angeles, California, United States (1935)
Founder R. Stanton Avery
Headquarters 207 Goode Avenue
Glendale, California
, United States
Key people
Dean A. Scarborough
(Executive Chairman)
Mitchell Butier
(President and CEO)
Products Label materials, apparel branding labels, tags, tickets, specialty adhesive tapes, RFID, medical tapes, sensors, wound dressings
Revenue DecreaseUS$6.0 Billion (2015)[1]
IncreaseUS$0.4 Billion (2015)[1]
IncreaseUS$0.3 Billion (2015)[1]
Total assets DecreaseUS$4.1 Billion (2015)[1]
Total equity DecreaseUS$1.0 Billion (2015)[1]
Number of employees
25,000 (2015)[2]
Website averydennison.com
The Avery logo designed by Saul Bass in 1975 is used exclusively on office products by CCL Industries, which acquired the logo when it purchased Avery Dennison's office products business in July 2013.
Avery Dennison headquarters in Glendale

Avery Dennison Corporation is a global manufacturer and distributor of pressure-sensitive adhesive materials (such as self-adhesive labels), apparel branding labels and tags, RFID inlays, and specialty medical products. The company is a member of the Fortune 500 and is headquartered in Glendale, California.

History

Dennison Mending Tape from the second half of the 20th century.

The company was founded in Los Angeles, California, in 1935 as Kum Kleen Products, a partnership of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stanton Avery. The name was changed to Avery Adhesives in 1937. In 1946, the company was incorporated as Avery Adhesive Label Corp., and the name was subsequently changed to Avery Adhesive Products, Inc. in 1958, and to Avery Products Corporation in 1964.[3] The name was changed again to Avery International Corporation in 1976, and it became Avery Dennison after the company merged with the Dennison Manufacturing Company in 1990.[4]

Dennison Manufacturing

The Dennison Manufacturing Company was founded by Andrew Dennison and his son Aaron Lufkin Dennison, residents of Brunswick. Maine, in 1844, as a jewelry- and watch-box manufacturing company located in the Dunlap Block of Maine Street. Five years later Aaron turned the Dennison Manufacturing Company over to his younger brother, Eliphalet Whorf Dennison, who took over and developed the company into a significant-size industrial enterprise. It was in 1898 that the business moved to a location in Framingham, Massachusetts. (Aaron Dennison went on to co-found the Waltham Watch Company in 1850, a leader in the American system of watch manufacturing using interchangeable parts.)

Office and Consumer Products

Avery Dennison created a separate division for office products such as binders, file labels and name badges in 1982. The division and its products, sold under the Avery brand and logo, contrasted with the company’s larger materials division in that its products were finished (“converted”) materials, and they were aimed at consumers as well as businesses. Over the next 30 years, the division grew, as personal computing created a market for printable media both at home and at work. However, with the rise of email and the decline in conventional mail, the office products market as a whole began to decline. On July 1, 2013, Avery Dennison completed the sale of Office and Consumer Products and a second business, Designed and Engineered Solutions, to CCL Industries. CCL purchased the Avery office products brand along with the business. Avery Dennison retains its full name, history, brand and logo.

Operations

The company is headquartered in Glendale, California. It ranked number 435 on the 2015 Fortune 500 list with total sales of $6.0 billion.[5] Its main lines of business are pressure-sensitive materials (contributing 73% of 2015 revenues) and retail branding and informations solutions (contributing 26% of 2015 revenues).[6] The company operates in more than 50 countries and employs 25,000 people worldwide.[2] Its first overseas subsidiary was established in the Netherlands in 1955.

Divisions

The company's operations are organized into three business units:

The Pressure-Sensitive Materials segment manufactures and sells pressure-sensitive roll-label materials, films for graphic applications, reflective highway-safety products, a variety of specialized tapes, performance polymers, and extruded films.

Printers take its label materials, which are manufactured in large rolls, and convert them into finished labels by printing, cutting and applying them to packaging for consumer goods such as shampoo, beverages and pharmaceuticals. Consumers, who often make purchasing decisions at the last minute, choose among vividly branded packages on the shelf, and Avery Dennison intends for its materials to enhance products’ “shelf appeal.”

The Retail Branding and Information Solutions segment designs, manufactures, and sells various branding and information management products and solutions for apparel and general retail, including tickets, graphic, barcode and radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags, labels and inserts, woven and printed labels, external embellishments, price management systems, a variety of fasteners, and related supplies and equipment.

The information management products that the business provides, including its RFID-based systems, help apparel and other retailers to manage inventory both within stores and across supply chains that today extend for thousands of miles. The ability to accurately identify inventory and replenish it can help improve the shopping experience, as goods are less likely to be out of stock.

The company also operates Vancive Medical Technologies, which provides products such as wearable sensors, barrier films, wound dressings and a variety of tapes and securement products for the healthcare industry. Results for Vancive Medical Technologies are reported in Other specialty converting businesses. Vancive Medical Technologies products are sold to medical products and device manufacturers.[7]

Patent infringement

In 2012, Avery Dennison and 3M Company agreed to settle patent and antitrust litigation between the parties. The litigation began when 3M alleged that Avery Dennison infringed 3M's patents related to retroreflective sheeting used for road signs and other highway and transportation products and requested an injunction to prevent Avery Dennison from selling its OmniCube retroreflective product. The court denied 3M's request, and after Avery Dennison brought claims of its own against 3M for patent infringement and antitrust violations, the parties agreed to dismiss three pending cases.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "AVY Financial Statements, Google Finance". Retrieved October 26, 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Investor FAQs". Retrieved October 26, 2016.
  3. Avery Products Corporation. 1964 Annual Report, p. 17.
  4. "Strategic Report" (PDF). Avery Dennison, PAC Consulting. PAC Consulting. 19 Apr 2004. p. 3. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  5. "Fortune 500 list". Fortune Magazine.
  6. "2015AnnualReport".
  7. "Business Summary". Avery Dennison, Business Summary. Avery Dennison. Retrieved 28 March 2013.
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