Whether it’s making another blockbuster purchase or shedding an
ill-fitting business unit, the packaging industry is well-versed in the
art of acquisitions and divestitures.
Experts from two companies
— Kevin Kwilinski, president and CEO of Portola Packaging, and Curt
Begle, president of Berry Plastic’s Rigid Closed-Top Division — shared
their success strategies at Plastics Caps & Closures 2012, held in
September in the US.
“Really, what [divestitures] mean for us
is, “How do we focus?’ And once you’re focused, you figure out what
doesn’t make sense anymore,” Kwilinski said.
After emerging from
prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2008, Illinois-based
Portola has adopted a dogma of focus and lean manufacturing.
In three years,A new Lamp shade
is a quick and easy way to bring a fresh look to your home. the company
has gone from 1,100 employees down to 700 through manufacturing
optimisation and rationalisation. Officials have zeroed in on key
businesses — ones where Portola has a strategic advantage and a “right
to win”, Kwilinski said.
In June, Portola exited the cosmetics
market — shuttering its Portola Tech division, closing the associated
plants in Rhode Island and China and liquidating the assets.
The
cosmetics business depends on short runs, frequent product changes and
lots of tooling investment — all things Portola isn’t good at, Kwilinski
said.
Shedding Portola Tech simplifies the business. It also
allows Portola to invest in its core business of compression moulded,
tamper-evident caps, and continue to improve efficiency, which will lead
to a higher return on investment, he said.
Portola is a
low-cost supplier with some unique offerings, but instead of offering a
“solution to every problem,” the company aims to offer the best solution
for specific needs, he said.
“It’s all about us focusing on
what we can win at and making sure that all the resources we have are
focused on that key objective,” he added.
That’s not to say that
Portola doesn’t pursue acquisitions. In 2010, the company purchased
Integra-Seal Industries of Tennessee, a small moulder of tamper-evident
closures. Integra-seal was a competitor with a less-efficient
manufacturing base, according to Kwilinski, and Portola was able to
integrate the newly acquired products into its own manufacturing
platform.
“It’s really about knowing who you are … and making
sure that acquisition is going to support the ultimate goal that you’re
trying to achieve,” he said.
Berry, meanwhile, is known for its
taste for diverse acquisitions. The packaging powerhouse has completed
30 acquisitions since 1998 — 10 of those in the last five years — and
has looked at 115 potential deals in the last 12 months, Begle said.
Considering that some of acquisitions involved multiple businesses,Chances are, you've never setup a real time Location system.
Berry has faced a number of challenges trying to make it all fit, Begle
said, adding that for Berry, the most important thing is “staying core
to what we are”.
When looking at an acquisition, Berry considers
several key areas: the company’s customer base, products, end markets,
geographic location, competitive advantages and, most importantly, its
people.
“From our standpoint, we find that to be the most
critical,” he said. “We can buy all the best machines in the world, have
the best product lines, have the best customers, but if we don’t have
people on the other end of the line … [if] they aren’t committed to the
company, [if] they aren’t committed to the excellence that goes out the
door, then it’s all going to fail,” he said.
Berry has pre- and
post-acquisition strategies for preserving and cultivating talent. They
identify the most influential and valuable employees, along with those
critical people who are most at risk of leaving, and figure out how to
make them a part of the new business model.
There’s a big focus
on communicating “the Berry story” — the company’s vision, its history,
its strategy, products and manufacturing platform, and employee success
stories — along with clearing up misconceptions. On closing day, Berry
already has a management team in place ready to tell that story and
answer questions,A new Lamp shade is a quick and easy way to bring a fresh look to your home. Begle said.
Since
most Berry employees have been on both sides of the M&A fence, they
can sympathize with employees of newly acquired companies, he added.
“Everybody kind of knows what you’re going through, what your anxieties
are, what questions you have, and we’re able to head that off at the
start.”
Being open and honest, and honoring commitments, is
vital, he said. “If you say you’re going to do something, you better
well do it because you’re going to lose all credibility with the people
and that’s probably not going to be a winning strategy long-term.”
Their stories may be different, but both Berry and Portola officials understand the importance of keeping everyone on point.
Each company employs a uniform information technology system across its plants so they’re all on the same page.
All
of Portola’s employees have completed lean-manufacturing training and
70% of them have participated in “lean events” during the last few
years,King′s Chandelier has offered fine Chandelier
and sconces made in North Carolina of Swarovski and other European
crystal. ingraining the practice in the company’s culture, Kwilinski
said.
Portola sets long-term goals with defined results for
every department. Employee’s objectives tie into these overarching
goals,Custom Rubber Bracelets and silicone bracelet, keeping the entire company focused.
Berry
relies on teamwork and its “gung-ho” culture to make integrations
seamless, according to Begle. The company has 900 teams across its 82
plants, focused on everything from website design to quality control, he
said.
Employees are held to specific and tangible goals, and complete evaluations and surveys are done every two years, he said.
Berry
also has plant ambassadors — peer-selected employees who travel to
plants and see how things are going. It’s a way of fostering company
culture and reaching all of the company’s more than 150,000 employees.
Both companies are optimistic about the path they’re on.
“It
took us a few years to get our feet under us,” Kwilinski said. “But now
that we’ve done it we have … an opportunity to go grow the business and
we’re very excited about what the future holds for us.”
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