Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mars charts its own course

- Stephen Badger Chairman Mars Inc. Interviewe­d by Dee-Ann Durbin. Edited for clarity and length.

Mars marches to its own beat.

It makes Milky Way and Snickers bars, but it doesn’t market them to kids in an effort to fight obesity. It makes 50 brands of pet food, but it’s also the largest operator of veterinary hospitals in North America. Americans know it for M&Ms, but it sells gravy in South Africa and mustard in Australia.

As a private, family-owned company — with $35 billion in annual revenue — Mars has some leeway to experiment. It even developed a DNA test for cats and dogs.

“We’re a 100-year-old business. We intend to be around 100 years from now, and part of what is incumbent upon us is to evolve with the times,” says Mars Chairman Stephen Badger, the great-grandson of Mars’ founder Franklin Mars.

Badger spoke to The Associated Press about candy, nutrition and other parts of Mars’ business.

What do you do about the trend toward healthy eating and the way candy is perceived?

It’s very, very much at the forefront of our mind. And we take very seriously the notion of ensuring that consumers know what our products contain. We ensure that on the front of the pack we put caloric informatio­n, and then on the back of the pack we put nutritiona­l informatio­n as well. So even in advance of, or in excess of, what a country might require legally, we’re committed to ensuring that consumers know what’s in our products.

Candy is an impulse buy. How will the growth of online shopping change that?

As a manufactur­er it’s really incumbent upon us to try to figure out how to generate that impulse online. It’s through a lot of rolling up our sleeves and getting dirty with testing and learning both in our own right as well as in partnershi­p with the likes of Alibaba, Tencent or Amazon.

You have partnered with Kind, which makes nutrition bars, and you’re working on your own high-protein snacks to fight malnutriti­on. Why is that part of your business?

When you look at us as the third-largest food manufactur­er in the world, and you look at the scale of the issues facing the world — whether it’s sustainabi­lity, income, human rights, child labor — those issues need to be dealt with. Then you fast forward to the other side of the equation, in terms of consumers and how are we going to feed the 7 billion that we have, not to mention the 12 billion we’re projected to get to. It’s going to have to be in some kind of sustainabl­e fashion and it’s going to have to be affordable. It’s going to have to be accessible. It’s going to have to be all of those at scale. I’m not suggesting there’s one product that is going to fix all of that, but it is a product that in the mix can really fundamenta­lly change the trajectory of childhood nutrition.

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