Eye on the ball.
by Pellet, Jennifer
Ward J. "Tim" Timken, chairman of Canton, Ohio-based
Timken Co., once got a major dose of brand affirmation by pulling into a
Kansas filling station. When the gas station attendant recognized the
name on Timken's credit card, he disappeared into the back of the
garage to retrieve a greasy bearing. "He slapped it down in front
of me and said, 'I just pulled that off the back end of my pickup
truck. I could have put it right back in there and it would have run for
another 200,000 miles!'" recounts Timken.
As the fifth chairman of the $5.2 billion friction management and
power transmission solutions company that his family took public in the
1920s, Timken continues to follow a business credo set by his
great-great-grandfather: "If it's got the Timken brand on it,
it will do exactly what we said it would." Yet, a great deal else
about Timken Co. has changed dramatically since Henry Timken founded the
company to manufacture the tapered roller bearing he invented in
1899--and most of that change took place over the past decade.
"Six years ago when we had a new management team coming in, we
looked at the market potential of selling tapered roll bearings and
steel and we said, 'It's not good enough,'" explains
Timkens, who notes that at the time, the industry overall was struggling
through a period of dampened demand and consolidation. "We stepped
back and said, "'What are we really good at that we can create
value doing?'"
The answer? Managing friction and transmitting power--in other
words, the knowledge behind the bearings and steel products Timken Co.
was best known for producing rather than simply the products themselves.
"We've been making bearings for more than 100 years, and steel
for 80," says Timken. "Marry those two together and we're
uniquely positioned to understand what happens to that bearing inside of
your application--whether that's wind energy, an airplane or a
rolling mill--because we touch all of those industries and have done so
for an awfully long time."
That expanded view of its role in the marketplace led to a
transformation period for the company, which began to make inroads into
new industrial markets, expand globally and make productivity
improvements, as well as pursue strategic acquisitions (most recently
Boring Specialties in February and The Purdy Corp. in 2007) and
divestitures. "Investing for the long term by driving productivity,
investing in technology, knowing what we're good at and not getting
into things we're not good at is how we've been able to put
together year-over-year growth and improvement," notes Timkin, who
reports that over the past decade energy consumption per ton of steel
produced has dropped by 35 percent.
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At the same time, infrastructure buildouts in emerging economies of
China and India have been driving an increase in demand within the
aerospace, oil and gas, and mining sectors that Timken Co. and
competitors like Sweden's SKF and Germany's Schaeffler Group
service. In fact, Timken Co.'s own international sales have
doubled, jumping from 15 to 30 percent over the past 10 years.
"There's a fundamental shortage of capacity around the
world right now," says Timken, who shrugs off the suggestion that
the company could suffer a setback due to the looming threat of a U.S.
recession. "Everybody's broad-brushing industries with this
subprime crisis, but it's not fact-based. As long as we continue to
see 10 to 12 percent growth in China and an increasing growth rate in
India, things will remain relatively firm."
In fact, over the next five years, Timken expects the pace of
international growth to intensify. "If you're not growing at
20 to 25 percent in Asia, you're doing something wrong," he
says. "I expect 45 percent of our sales to be coming from outside
the U.S. within five years. An economy is being created before our very
eyes, and a lot of what we do enables that growth. We provide the
bearings that make the steel mills and concrete plants run and the wind
energy work. That's what we're all about."
COPYRIGHT 2008 Chief Executive
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