Ajinomoto
Overview
Ajinomoto is a Japanese multinational food and biotechnology company that discovered and commercialized umami — the fifth taste — and remains the world's largest producer of monosodium glutamate (MSG) and amino acid products.
Historical Timeline
- 1909: Kikunae Ikeda discovers umami taste and patents MSG production
- 1925: Ajinomoto Co formally established in Tokyo
- 1956: Discovers industrial fermentation process for amino acid production
- 1980s: Expands into pharmaceuticals and biotechnology
- 2000: Launches 'Eat Well, Live Well' brand transformation
- 2024: Announces major investment in cultivated meat and alternative protein
Business Model
Three segments: Seasonings and Foods (45%), AminoScience (35% — pharma, animal nutrition, sweeteners), and Frozen Foods (20%). Revenue from B2C food products (Ajinomoto brand MSG, Cook Do sauce mixes) and B2B amino acid ingredients for pharmaceutical and animal feed industries.
Moat Analysis
Proprietary fermentation technology for amino acid production — over 100 years of process optimization. Umami discovery gives scientific credibility and brand authority in flavor science. Vertical integration from raw materials to finished food products.
Key Data
- revenue:
¥1.3 trillion ($9B) (2023)
- msg_production: ~30% of global supply
- employees: ~37,000
- countries: ~80+
- r_and_d: ~¥40B/year
Interesting Facts
- Professor Kikunae Ikeda discovered umami by tasting dashi broth and identifying glutamate as the source — he then crystallized it from kombu seaweed and patented the extraction process.
- Despite global MSG stigma in Western markets, Ajinomoto's MSG production has never stopped growing — it is now used in 90%+ of processed foods worldwide.