TY - JOUR AB - January 27, 2005, was an extraordinary day for Gillette's James Kilts, the show-stopping turnaround expert known as the “Razor Boss of Boston.” Kilts, along with Proctor & Gamble chairman Alan Lafley, had just orchestrated a $57 billion acquisition of Gillette by P&G. The creation of the world's largest consumer products company would end Kilts's four-year tenure as CEO of Gillette and bring to a close Gillette's 104-year history as an independent corporate titan in the Boston area. The deal also capped a series of courtships between Gillette and other companies that had waxed and waned at various points throughout Kilts's stewardship of Gillette. But almost immediately after the transaction was announced, P&G and Gillette drew criticism from the media and the state of Massachusetts concerning the terms of the sale. Would this merger actually benefit shareholders, or was it principally a wealth creation vehicle for Kilts?To understand the factors that persuaded shareholders of both P&G and Gillette to merge their companies, the valuation metrics involved in determining the merger consideration, compensation packages for key managers, and the politics (internal, local government, and regulatory) that impact major mergers. VL - IS - SN - 2474-6568 DO - 10.1108/case.kellogg.2016.000341 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/case.kellogg.2016.000341 AU - Stowell David P. AU - Grogan Christopher D. PY - 2017 Y1 - 2017/01/01 TI - The Best Deal GiIlette Could Get? Procter & Gamble's Acquisition of Gillette T2 - Kellogg School of Management Cases PB - Kellogg School of Management SP - 1 EP - 18 Y2 - 2024/04/24 ER -