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Chocolate

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Title: Chocolate


1
Chocolate Change
Follow up of EIS Simulation Session
History can help us to better understand the
dynamics of change and the complexity of
managing or engineering (planning and
implementing) change processes at all levels
through the diffusion of values, beliefs and
desires, artifacts, mental habits and behaviors,
through education and development of children and
adults, through managerial interventions in
organizational contexts.   Take for instance
some of the key facts related to the History of
Chocolate gathered on a number of websites. As a
non-Swiss reader and particularly if originating
from non-sugar-dominated eating cultures, you
might wonder what Chocolate has to do with
Change. In fact, its not really about chocolate
only. Its about the process of how cocoa beans,
the core of chocolate, underwent a
transformation from being an exchange currency in
ancient South-American civilizations to become a
popular European consumer product (22 pounds per
year pro capita in Switzerland). Its about the
individuals and networks, groups, organizations
and communities that enabled this process to take
place over the centuries. Its about the role of
knowledge and technology in enabling and shaping
innovation processes and their diffusion. About
resistance factors such as knowledge retention
and exchange, rivalries, as well as planned and
unplanned synergies and collaborations.
2
The Origins A totally different context
  • 600 AD
  • The cocoa bean is considered the ultimate status
    symbol in the Mayan and Aztec cultures. They use
    the beans as currency and those wealthy enough to
    have an excess of beans use them to make a
    chocolate drink that gives them "wisdom and
    power".
  • 1000AD
  • Emperor Montezuma, who no doubt possesses more
    cocoa beans than anybody else at the time is a
    "chocoholic." Montezuma, it is reported, drinks
    nothing but chocolate, particularly before
    entering his harem. He believes that the
    concoction is a powerful aphrodisiac. The Aztecs
    believed that drinking chocolate. which was the
    undiluted, unsweetened liquor from fermented
    cacao beans, would bring great wisdom,
    understanding and energy. Legend held that the
    Aztecs have convinced the dread god Quentzacoatl
    to leave them in peace by giving him gallons of
    chocolate, which was also known as Quetzacoatl.

3
First Steps Things get serious, as Money grows
on Trees
  • 1492
  • Columbus was given some of the cacao beans and
    took them back to Spain, but he didn't know how
    to process and ferment them.
  • 1502
  • Columbus is the first European to discover cocoa
    beans and chocolate. But it is the Conquistadors
    that realize the value of "money that grows on
    trees". Hernando de Oviedo y Valdez writes home
    to tell of how he was able to purchase a slave
    for 100 cocoa beans. Later Hernando Cortez builds
    a cocoa plantation for the express purpose of
    growing money in the name of Spain.
  • 1519
  • Cortez descended upon the Aztecs and eventually
    destroyed Montezuma's armies and his capital. The
    Aztecs were convinced that Quetzacoatl had
    returned as prophesied and they tried to get him
    to leave by once again plying him with chocolate.

4
Things start moving, but knowledge
  • 1528
  • Cortez returns to Spain with cocoa beans and the
    tools needed to make chocolate. Not that he is
    particularly fond of the concoction. In fact, he
    is said to personally have found the drink
    distasteful, probably because the Aztec method of
    preparation called for flavoring the drink with
    spices, including lots of chili. Spanish cooks
    quickly remedy that by changing the recipe,
    replacing the peppers with sugar.
  • 1606
  • Spain manages to keep the discovery of chocolate
    a secret for more than a century. In the
    meantime, the Spanish cultivate quite a trade in
    the popular new beverage as well as cocoa
    plantations in their equatorial colonies around
    the world . It is an Italian merchant , Antonio
    Carletti, who put in motion the process that
    breaks the Spanish monopoly of the chocolate
    trade.
  • 1615
  • A Spanish princess married Louis XIII of France
    and the secret got out. Chocolate spread from
    France to England, Italy, Germany, Austria and
    Switzerland.

5
Penetration and First Innovations Elites and
Accidents
  • 1657
  • England's first chocolate house opens in London.
    Its a big hit with the upper class and soon
    becomes the place where the elite meet to sip.
    Cocoa bean prices are exorbitant and , as the
    Spanish historian Oviedo, notes "none but the
    rich and noble could afford " to frequent such
    establishments. Prices eventually drop and
    chocolate houses begin to appear throughout the
    country, challenging the primacy of coffee tea
    rooms and even pubs.
  • 1671
  • The personal chef to the Duke of Plesslis-Preslin
    in France watches as a panful of burnt sugar
    spills over a bowlful of almonds. One taste and
    the Duke is decidedly pleased. He's so pleased,
    in fact, that he lends his name to this new
    confection and so, the "praslin" or "praline"
    comes into being. But it took Belgian
    chocolatiers to perfect this particular treat.
    Eventually, the word praline becomes synonymous
    with a particular type of Belgian confection
    featuring a molded shell of chocolate that is
    filled with creams, caramels, light ganache and
    of course, praline.

6
Going Global England, Belgium Switzerland, and
the US
  • 1674
  • They're still drinking chocolate throughout
    Europe, but enterprising bakers in England begin
    adding cocoa to their cake recipes making
    chocolate widely available in solid form for the
    first time. Within decades, solid chocolate
    becomes available throughout Europe in a variety
    of forms, including bars, lifting the status of
    chocolate from that of a stylish drink to that of
    a superb, sweet delicacy.
  • 1697
  • Belgium is already established as one of Europe's
    premier centers for the production of chocolate.
    When the mayor of Zurich pays a visit to
    Brussels, he's so taken with the taste he returns
    home with news of the savory concoction, the
    inspiration for a new Swiss industry and no doubt
    a personal supply to savor for some time to come.
  • 1712
  • By the turn of the 18th century, chocolate makes
    its way back to North America. In little more
    than a decade, Boston apothecary shops are
    advertising and selling chocolate imported from
    Europe. Soon, Massachusetts sea captains are
    bringing back cargoes of cocoa beans, and the
    chocolate trade blossoms.

7
Technology steps in and de Sade dinners
  • 1728
  • Back in Europe chocolate factories are springing
    up but they use the same age old labor intensive
    methods to grind and churn their products.
  • 1765
  • American colonists crave chocolate and the demand
    prompts James Baker and John Hannon to start
    their own industrial revolution by building a
    chocolate factory that uses water power to
    mechanize the production process. Their company,
    today known as the Walter Baker Company, is one
    of the oldest still operating in the US
  • 1772
  • Leave it to the Marquis de Sade to rekindle the
    old chestnut about chocolate being a powerful
    aphrodisiac. He gives a ball in Marseilles and,
    as author Louis Petit de Bachaumont writes "into
    the dessert he slipped chocolate pastilles so
    good that no one failed to eat some. It proved to
    be so potent that those who ate the pastilles
    began to burn with unchaste ardor and to carry on
    as if in the grip of the most amorous frenzy."
    The story may be mythical , but the infamous
    Marquis was arrested soon after the ball was
    over.

8
The Learning Curve the Dutch Treat
  • 1792
  • The Swiss, who today consume more chocolate per
    capita than any other nation (22 pounds, compared
    to 11 pounds per person in the US),are still
    trying to master the art of making chocolate. So,
    when the famed German author Johann Wolfgang von
    Goethe embarks on a tour of Switzerland, he takes
    no chances and packs his own chocolate and
    chocolate pot for the journey.
  • 1815
  • Dutch chocolate maker C.J. van Houten patented an
    inexpensive method for pressing the fat from
    roasted cacao beans. The center of the bean,
    known as the "nib" contains an average of 54
    cocoa butter, which is a natural fat. Van
    Houten's machine, a hydraulic press, reduced the
    cocoa butter content by nearly half. This created
    a "cake" that could be pulverized into a fine
    powder known as "cocoa". Van Houten treated the
    powder with alkaline salts so that the powder
    would mix more easily with water. Today, this
    process is known as "Dutching". The final
    product, Dutch chocolate, has a dark color and a
    mild taste.

9
The Swiss again, and the Brits
  • 1819
  • One hundred twenty two years after the mayor of
    Zurich brought chocolate back with him from
    Brussels, the Swiss develop a knack for making
    chocolate and Francois Louis Cailler opens the
    first Swiss chocolate factory on Lake Geneva. Not
    to be outdone, six years later Philippe Suchard
    builds his own machine, including the world's
    first chocolate mixer, and starts making his own
    confection.
  • 1847
  • If J.S. Fry Sons of Bristol, founded in 1728,
    is not the oldest chocolate factory in England ,
    it certainly is its most enduring and innovative.
    In fact, one son, Joseph, had the ingenuity to
    purchase and install a steam engine in his
    factory in 1789, soon after Watt invented the
    machine. A grandson, Francis, and a great
    grandson, another Joseph. carry on the tradition
    of innovation by adopting Van Houten's process
    and press and discovering a way to combine cocoa
    powder, sugar and cocoa butter to make the first
    real chocolate bars.

10
The power of Synergies Technology Moving
towards global popularity
  • 1876
  • The Swiss Daniel Peter was trying to add milk to
    chocolate to produce a smoother chocolate.
    However, you can't add water to chocolate, it
    makes the chocolate shrink and separate and
    generally disintegrate. Milk has water in it.
    Daniel Peter met Henri Nestle' . Nestle' had
    perfected the manufacture of condensed milk , so
    he and Peter added milk solids to chocolate and
    produced the world's first milk chocolate, as
    well as starting the Nestle' Company. Chocolate
    was still available only as cocoa or as a liquid
    at that point.
  • 1879
  • It was Rodolphe Lindt who thought to add cocoa
    butter back to chocolate. Adding the additional
    cocoa butter, which is essential to the modern
    manufacture of chocolate, helps the chocolate set
    up into a bar that will "snap" when broken as
    well as making it melt ont the tongue. Once they
    get started, the Swiss quickly show the world
    just how much they love their chocolate . They
    are the first to add powdered milk to the process
    and they refine the chocolate making art by
    introducing a "conching" machine that gives
    chocolate confections a smooth, creamy texture.

11
The US markets, and beyond
  • 1895
  • America's love affair with chocolate heat up when
    Milton S. Hershey sells his first Hershey Bar in
    Pennsylvania using modern, mass-production
    techniques that make the product less expensive
    and thus available for mass consumption.
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------
  • What does the story of the emergence and
    diffusion of chocolate over the centuries and
    each individual event tell us about managing
    change in organizations? Send back the attached
    ppt presentation (download it from
    http//wwwinsead.edu/eis/CC.htm) with YOUR
    annotations (hand-written or hand-typed at
    rachel.royer_at_insead.edu ). Add an annotation
    every time an event or set of events triggers an
    interesting association with what you consider
    worth knowing or understanding in managing
    change, based on your experience and insights.
  • The result will be a collective ppt presentation
    On Chocolate Change. A sweet, as well as
    potentially insightful and useful compensation
    for the sometimes bitter reality we experienced
    during the EIS Simulation!

12
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