a homegrown leader - New York Air Brake
Transcription
a homegrown leader - New York Air Brake
20 QUESTIONS NORM JOHNSTON | NNY BUSINESS A HOMEGROWN LEADER N ew York Air Brake boasts a storied history in Northern New York, at one point employing thousands to manufacture train and truck brakes. Today the firm remains a vital part of the region’s economic landscape. On July 1, 18-year NYAB veteran Michael J. Hawthorne, a Harrisville native, assumed the job of president. We sat down with Mr. Hawthorne for his first indepth interview since he moved into the top post. 1 NNYB: How has the company transitioned from the leadership of J. Paul Morgan, who was president for more than 20 years, to a new leader? How does that happen? HAWTHORNE: The thing I always say in any of these discussions is that Paul did an amazing job. I grew up in the area, so I can remember back when Air Brake was dominant on the landscape and really sort of split away and at the time that Paul took over, I can remember coming in looking for a footprint in the market, bringing in the products and we were just a licensee of our competitor. So, he got the company back on good footing and slowly turned it to where it became profitable, and I think the man has made at least a black zero for the entire time he has worked here, which is incredible given that he had to transition from old and tired to new and modern. I spent the first part of my career working in engineering with only peripheral access to Paul. We bought assets of a company down in Fort Worth called Train Dynamic Systems, so I became involved with them to cut the directorship, which was the business lead, and that’s when I started to interact more regularly with Paul. That became my opportunity to learn from him and his behavior. As I got closer to this role, we moved me into operations lead to get a better understanding of our manufacturing floors and all our responsibilities here and he brought me to the board meetings, to the world meetings, to the different elements because Knorr-Bremse is a very big company, it’s a €4.5 billion-a-year business, and New York Air Brake will be over $300 million this year. We’re big but they’re giant. And, the transition was really hav- 40 | NNY Business | September 2012 n Michael J. Hawthorne, new NYAB president, committed to growth, success ing Paul make both the tactical introductions to the way the business runs and teach me why we are structured the way we are and then the personal introductions to the broader business elements because of our board of directors and our shareholders. 2 NNYB: How does a young man from Harrisville wind up on the path that you’ve taken and leading a major company? HAWTHORNE: I would say most of my interest in technology came when I started high school. We had a very capable chemistry and physics teacher who got a bunch of us interested in computers and at that point I was starting to find my engineering legs and decided Clarkson was a good place. Leadership to me is really irrelevant of discipline. I found that in every opportunity I’ve taken up the role of trying to organize and lead. Going into the technical realm helps satisfy my inner need to be designing things and building things and then as you get the opportunity to lead people, organizations, taking that same design need and then building a way that the organization is structured in the business and trying to make it so it can stand on its own. 3 NNYB: From your perspective from inside the ranks growing into the position you’re in now, how has the Air Brake been able to manage itself through the lean economic times while also growing its staff and maintaining profitability? HAWTHORNE: When I was part of some of the mergers and acquisitions teams, we took some very strategic positions to add companies. So, “New York Air Brake” people think of as Watertown, but we have a manufacturing site in Chicago that does brake shoes; we have a repair center in Kansas City that does both locomotive and freight repair; Kingston, Ont., has the manufacturing site of our locomotive brakes system; Train Dynamics Systems, that’s now in Irving, Texas, does mostly software for on-board control systems. And we have a manufacturing facility down in North Carolina near Charlotte. I’d say all of those have helped build the portfolio of products from the footprint in New York Air Brake. We are in this incredibly cyclical market and when the industry starts to decline, people don’t build [train] cars. Then the manufacturing floor here starts to lose its work, so all the other products have now come in to help to smooth out and bolster the capability of the company. We also know, and this is with all the humility I can muster, we have the best products. And when you look at our products against our competitors, we have superior products, superior technology. And we’ve invested a lot in the engineering piece. 4 NNYB: So of all these locations, how do you play these subordinate locations into this facility? HAWTHORNE: We have two LLCs. ABL in Kingston, Ont., is just a stand-alone business, but they supply us. And Anchor Brake Shoe in West Chicago is an LLC. So we can consolidate their financials into ours, but those are two businesses that operate with shared services from Watertown. The others are consolidated into the New York Air Brake portfolio. All of these report up through our organization to me. More than 800 employees. 5 NNYB: With all of these outposts in various locations, you must travel a lot? HAWTHORNE: Too much. I just got back from China on Saturday. One of the things that most people probably don’t understand is that Knorr businesses are really built around a center of competency and content. So we have products that nobody else makes. We build, design and control those products, but we transfer them to our sister companies. So, we have a plant in China, a plant in Australia, plants in South Africa and Brazil, all of which build other products, but they build our products as well. Not only do we benefit from having this expanded portfolio of product development 20 QUESTIONS just by acquisition, but we also enjoy the marketing and sales channels from a global perspective. Again, Knorr, they have a giant footprint, so we export a lot. That’s been one of the big benefits, as you’ve mentioned, how we sustained ourselves through tough economic times. China boomed when the U.S. was starting to slide, and that helped us tremendously. 6 NNYB: It’s not a big secret that New York, especially since Andrew Cuomo became governor, is working to sharpen its edge and become more business-friendly. With respect to doing business in New York, are there any challenges you find particularly rough? HAWTHORNE: New York is not the best business environment. That said, Watertown has done a lot to keep New York Air Brake here, and I think New York generally does what they can. The biggest challenge we face is trying to convince and attract talent. Watertown has produced some fine people, but when you go to Clarkson and you start to query fresh-outs, there’s not a lot of kids that want to say “Hey, I’m staying above the Thruway” and “Watertown is a great place to meet my wife.” When I talk to our engineering teams, our projects are a lot of fun to work on, but it can be difficult to attract enough talent and to sustain a level of growth. I met with Patty Ritchie and she asked the same question: “Is there anything we can do to bring more talent into the area that’s going to help sustain the business here?” Some of the sites we have, say in Texas, we have a lot of technology there. We ultimately want to be able to flex demand into different locations, and that’s just to continue the growth purge. 7 NNYB: Any frustrations or things that you feel New York could do to improve, with respect to fostering more job creation? HAWTHORNE: The tax structure is a little bit difficult. If we had a better tax structure, we’d be able to convince more investment. Certainly, we have a very capable work force and we don’t take that for granted. We know we spent a lot to train them and many people invest their careers to become capable. Union structures are often more difficult to manage than nonunion structures. So, New York is not a right-to-work state and we respect that but it is a more difficult challenge. I would say as any business is faced with the challenges of where do you manufacture, we are always defending that we can do it here better and cost-competitively and that is a consideration of how we source our labor. Infrastructure is always a challenge, and if you were to put a geographic center of our customer base, even in North America, you wouldn’t find it in Watertown. Every one of our suppliers has to ship in, then we manufacture and produce the product, then we have to ship out to the customer base. A weighted average would be much more Chicago, Kansas City or even Dallas, as those places are more central to both supply base and customer. That’s important that even we’re not geographically advantaged in that way, we really need to have infrastructure that allows material to flow very easily and very capably. 8 NNYB: How difficult is staff recruiting and what types of jobs are in most demand? HAWTHORNE: A labor force is generally not so hard. We find good talent. People who are willing to come in, the hourly wages are good and attractive, so when we have a job fair we typically have a long line and we have a good pool to draw from. Engineering talent becomes a challenge, and in some level of business becomes a challenge. What keeps me up at night is engineering. I need more engineers, more design engineers and more of the technologies like software and electronics. I need those, and I’m having a difficult time finding them. So we’re doing everything we can. Lockheed Martin just laid off between 50 to 100 folks, some engineers. So we go NORM JOHNSTON | NNY BUSINESS New York Air Brake President Michael J. Hawthorne discusses goals for his firm in his Watertown office. to their job fairs and recruit, so we’re finding more talent to draw from but I think it is going to become a standard problem. The Michael J. Hawthorne file NNYB: That said, what has kept New York Air Brake in Watertown for as long as it’s been, over 100 years? AGE: 44. 9 HAWTHORNE: I think some of it is tradition; momentum keeps things where they are, unless you find reasons to move them. If I look at what we’re really good at, our expertise, we built up a capability in Watertown for manufacturing, again in credit to the labor force for being as good as they are. Our engineers have understood the historic part well, and that’s not something that’s easily moved. That is a reason to be here. The difficult part is if we get into some of the technologies. We make freight valves. The valve of tomorrow is unlikely to be the valve of today, so you end up with a mechanical marvel that’s a hundred years old. It’s incredible. Tomorrow, it’s computers and actuators and sensors. I happen to be able to say I can get the right talent and resources and have them work here. Again, I come back to the resourcing issue, if I had the right resources; Watertown is a wonderful place to do business. If I don’t find the right resources, I’ve got a challenge; I’ve got to be able to stay modern. 10 NNYB: This is a company people want to work for. How do you foster that climate? HAWTHORNE: I’ve gone to other manufacturing places, even some of our manufacturing places in other sites. Depending on what you build, it’s relatively easy to maintain a level of cleanliness, safety, wages and benefits. Knorr-Bremse is a company aware of what it means to have a social conscience. It does a good job saying that the benefit package has to be competitive but we have good health benefits, we pay a good hourly wage, the floor is clean and we have a modern manufacturing facility and capabilities. We are absolutely focused on safety. If you start to compare that environment to an environment that I grew up in where paper mills were where everyone’s dad worked, they were not a bad business but they were dirtier, dangerous and more difficult to sustain. I think we have a much more attractive work environment here. I’ve talked to folks about what it’s like to be here and that seems to be the prevalent reason. 11 NNYB: Has the Watertown Airport been a benefit for your business? HAWTHORNE: I’m a fairly heavy traveler and I flew out of Watertown maybe twice in 17 years because it JOB: President, New York Air Brake. FAMILY: Wife, Kimberlee, cosmetologist; son, Thomas, 20, a junior at the State University at Buffalo studying accounting; daughter, Christen, 18, a nursing student at Le Moyne College, Syracuse. HOMETOWN: Harrisville native. EDUCATION: Bachelor’s degree, Clarkson University, Potsdam; master’s degree, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy; master’s degree in business administration, Syracuse University. PROFESSIONAL: 18 years at New York Air Brake; previously worked at Raytheon, Boston. RECOMMENDED READ: “Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap … and Others Don’t” by Jim Collins. just was not useful. Since they put American Airlines service from Watertown to Chicago, I’ve probably flown 15 to 18 times in the last year. It’s great. If anybody is looking at this as a reason to keep that flight. We use it, and we use it a lot. They can’t reverse it. Boston is not useful for us. Everybody goes to Chicago. I can’t speak for other businesses but if I have friends or colleagues that travel and there are lots of jokes about spending time in O’Hare, you always go through O’Hare. Flying there from Watertown, it’s beautiful. 12 NNYB: Your overseas customers helped carry you through the recession here in the U.S. The economy in Europe has been shaky as of late. Have you felt any impact? HAWTHORNE: We haven’t had a huge impact, mostly because of the business segments we serve. Knorr-Bremse has two big legs, one is commercial vehicles, which is trucks and buses, and the other is rail. We’re clearly on the rail side. In rail you have two big legs, passenger and freight. And we are in freight. If you look at freight, we are typically considered more heavy hauling. Trains in North America are big, long, heavy and hard to run; they don’t go that fast. Europe typically has small freight trains and their brake systems are closer to what we would consider a passenger brake. Because NYAB is on the freight side, we aren’t necessarily impacted. Knorr-Bremse has felt the economic blows in Europe. But NYAB has not, not so far. We benefit from the commodities September 2012 | NNY Business | 41 20 QUESTIONS booms. The reason we went to Australia was because they are slowly exporting their country. Iron ore has gone out of there ship upon ship and the railroads are the means to move that. That hasn’t been immune but hasn’t had the impact that the European economies have felt. 13 NNYB: As gas and diesel prices increase, does that affect the demand for things being moved by rail rather than by truck? HAWTHORNE: We see that. We feel it indirectly because when you start to look at energy prices for transportation, the more traffic that was marginal on a truck becomes attractive for rail. There is more and more demand and if you look at a railroad’s financial statements, they’re taking advantage of it. Oil and gas and exploration and delivery has produced a lot of demand for rail. We shed a tear when we go to the pump, but we know the higher energy prices are the more attractive rail looks and more in demand our products are. 14 NNYB: Is the rail infrastructure in the U.S. in fairly good shape? HAWTHORNE: There are a lot of studies done, what I would get behind is the growth patterns and rates we’re seeing with the expectation of what rail could be. They will not be able to build enough tracks to manage the capacity demands they expect. In lieu of having more infrastructure, they’re investing in technology to move trains safety. Safely move the trains closer together, get braking distances down, which is a big role, we will have more capacity in the same infrastructure. It’s difficult to get permissions to build more tracks, double and triple tracks areas are where they find permission to do that, but the corridors are somewhat fixed. What you’re going to find is railroads will say, ‘How do we get more trains in the same territories and safely?’ That really benefits us because our technology product lends itself to that strategic approach. where our headquarters are, into the local community. The people that live in the area are always willing to open their hearts to get help when they need help. 15 17 16 18 NNYB: Are you in a position where you see growth in the future? HAWTHORNE: It’s going to be a balance. We are intending on our clients calling for investment and seeing staff up for new products and services. I have strong goals for growing salaried staff, but engineering is the bottle neck. Hourly labor force will flex in and out. We do everything we can to sustain people but we will follow the economic cycles. We are doing well and we hopefully will see sustained level of demand, but it is starting to soften. We will have more people working on new developments to bring products and services forward. Manufacturing will probably wane a bit but will pick back up when the next cycle is on the upswing. NNYB: The north country community is very charitable. What kinds of philanthropic efforts is Air Brake involved in? HAWTHORNE: We are big supporters of the United Way. We take an active role to support them directly through the business and in the work force. We at least are aware of the opportunity and we do a lot of matching. We have an open policy for employees that have charitable causes we have to screen them, of course, but they make a contribution, we match it. We try to encourage charitable behaviors that we think are important in the community. We typically try to have some participation on boards and pay back to the community. The gentleman that owns the company is a very generous man. He recognizes that his success in any community around the world is tied to how the business is perceived. Trying to pull cash and profits out of a community is not a sustainable strategy. I am always impressed by how much support we get out of Munich, NNYB: How did an engineering background prepare you to lead in management? HAWTHORNE: I find in engineering we are especially good at analysis. You are learning how to take a problem, analyze, make a set of solutions and determine what solve the problem best. When you move into the business realm, I find there are a lot of similarities. Taking a business, like Train Dynamic Systems for example, you have to have a concept so you understand the problem and develop the concepts, do the analysis and gauge which solves it best and inevitably in that you find you’re wrong, turn the loop and try and improve on it. The engineering concept of a design from concept to reality is very much the same as a business. NNYB: What makes for a great leader today? HAWTHORNE: We have had a lot of discussions lately on what makes a great leader. A great leader needs a vision and needs to be able to communicate and articulate that vision. If you can’t ask the teams to do something specific, you don’t have a chance. You have to have the vision and a way to communicate it and subordinate yourself. I found ascending into different leadership roles that your job becomes less and less solving the problem and more eliminating barriers that are limiting other people from solving the problem. You have to hold the organization up and you have to be critical and do the bad stuff; you have to tell people they aren’t doing a good job. You have to hold it up and say ‘This is where we want to be and why we want to be there. I’m going to do everything I can do to make you successful and get barriers out of your way and make sure you have the right funding and assets.’ I think a leader’s role then becomes subordinated to making sure the rest of the plan is being met. 19 NNYB: What do you do to unwind? HAWTHORNE: There are a couple of things I really enjoy. My kids, aside from being teenagers, they do offer some level of relief. They’re both great kids. I like weight training, I run a bit and martial arts. I do things that I build. I have gotten back into reading. Now with the iPad I don’t have to carry around tons of books. Unwinding for me is letting go of the day and doing something else. I think it’s an important part of being healthy to sever from work. It’s not a criticism of the team here, they are more than capable of operating without me. But it’s my need to cover all the bases. I think part of it is being new to the job. Some of it is just my drive. I have my iPhone or Blackberry far too often. I don’t necessarily want to disconnect entirely. But I do recommend time to pull back and get yourself out of that mindset. 20 NNYB: If you had a wish list at this point of improvements or where you’d like to be five years from now in this organization, what would be on it? HAWTHORNE: We need to keep growing and I’d like to find the ability to design products, manufacture products and deliver services to be better and more flexible. As we develop next-generation product, where do we take it? Where do we move it? How do we get it online? I want to find that we’re a more agile organization, going faster to market and move the product forward. I think every leader wants that. We have good plans to increase our velocity. In five years I’d like to see the $300 million a year grow by 50 percent. We will have to sell different things. We want to leverage every aspect of our business. We want to grow the job base here; we want to find the NYAB is a premier employer in manufacturing direct line and salaried staff. I would love to see that NYAB footprint grow in the Watertown area. — Interview by Ken Eysaman. Edited for length and clarity. 42 | NNY Business | September 2012