P&G Senior Archivist Greg McCoy shares insights into the remarkable legacy of our founders, William Procter and James Gamble: "They chose to be deliberately upfront and honest with consumers, providing a full eight ounces of pure soap in every bar — no fillers, just quality." 🧼✨ This commitment to integrity was revolutionary in 1837, as consumers often expected inferior products for their money. Our founders set a foundation of trust that continues to guide our business practices today. #PGHeritage #PGandMe #Workplace
A powerful reminder of how much trust and transparency shape a brand’s legacy. In live production, we feel the same responsibility, delivering pure quality, no shortcuts. Inspiring to see how P&G built this mindset so early on.
Love this insight into the brand’s origins — a clear example of how values shape decades of consumer trust.
God
The story is beautiful, but I'm more curious to see how the 2025 version will be written 😃
Excelente visión, Isaías. La colaboración entre industria, sector público y sociedad es la base para construir un México más próspero y sostenible. Desde Rearmando, sigo de cerca el trabajo de PepsiCo en temas de innovación, desarrollo social y acompañamiento a las familias mexicanas. Inspirar crecimiento con propósito siempre genera impacto. Un gusto leer iniciativas así. #MéxicoConPropósito #LiderazgoConVisión #Rearmando
Fascinante
A powerful reminder that integrity never goes out of style. Procter & Gamble’s commitment to honest value and pure quality continues to set the standard even today.
Content Marketing Specialist | $100M+ Growth | SEO, Video & AI Strategy | Featured 10× by LinkedIn News
2dIntegrity becomes a competitive advantage when it’s operationalized not advertised. What P&G built in 1837 wasn’t just a product standard; it was a repeatable system of truth-in-value that scaled trust across generations. When a brand commits to “no fillers, just quality,” every downstream function changes manufacturing, creative, messaging, and consumer loyalty all rise to meet that bar. That’s the kind of legacy that still defines category leaders today.