Heineken’s CEO on leading a 150-year-old company
As Heineken marks its 150th year, CEO Jean-François van Boxmeer speaks about innovation, managing for the long term, and how he aims to uphold the company’s rich legacy.
What
challenges are unique to
leading an iconic company deep into its second century? In this
interview with McKinsey’s Rik Kirkland, Heineken NV executive board
chairman and CEO Jean-François van Boxmeer discusses leadership
against a backdrop of corporate tradition and changing consumer and
societal demands. Since joining Heineken in 1984, van Boxmeer has
worked extensively in Africa and Europe, and has held his current
roles since 2005. An edited transcript of his remarks follows.
Becoming a leader
Your
upbringing plays a very big part in what kind of leader you’re
going to be. Then when you start your professional life, the years
between 25 and 35, those are the years where you are the most prone
to change, to learn. You behave more like a sponge.
And
in my case, that happened in Africa. I was sent by Heineken, a little
bit by accident, to Africa. I was speaking French, and there weren’t
that many French-speaking guys around in Heineken, so I was sent to
countries like Cameroon and Rwanda, and the former Zaire, which is
now the Democratic Republic of Congo.
I
spent ten years of my life there. Those were very exciting years
where, beyond leading a commercial organization, you also had to deal
with a lot of societal problems, emergency problems, all kinds of
things you were unprepared for. They were extraordinary people with
an extraordinary energy in very adverse conditions, and that has
shaped me.
I
think my experience in Africa brought very early to me the
understanding of the relativity of the power positions that you are
dealt when you are in a leadership position in a company. Because
never forget that you can be a CEO of a company like I am today, but
it is a rented position. It’s only temporary. So never forget when
you climb up the stairs to tip your hat to those who climb down the
stairs. One day you will do the same. So I thought it was worth three
times Harvard.
Learning from acquisitions
When
we acquire a company, there are always two sides to it. You have the
processes that you discover in an acquired company, and you have the
people. And from time to time, you see that processes in an acquired
company are interesting and could be adapted for the worldwide
Heineken Group. In 2010, we took over a huge Mexican brewery,
Cuahautémoc Moctezuma. They had very tight processes for planning,
and that inspired us to really tighten up our planning processes for
the whole organization.
There is a lot of benefit of blending in, for
example, taking people who worked in mature, hyper-competitive,
sophisticated markets in, let’s say, Europe, with very specific and
delineated brand portfolios, and putting them into a growing,
high-growth market.
And
at the same time, putting people who were used to working in
high-growth markets where lines of command are very short and simple,
and very much action-oriented, and putting these kind of leaders in a
mature organization to speed up that organization.
Mobilizing to innovate
Innovation
is the lifeblood of the company. It has taken very different and
various forms. It is not only about the process we use to brew and
ferment our products, how we interact with our environment,
consumption of water and energy. All these processes are constantly
improved. The footprint that they leave on our planet is being
reduced and improved. That’s one aspect of how we innovate.
But
we also innovate on the consumer end with new products. So we
introduce cider to people who didn’t know cider. We introduce
Belgian brands to Brazilians. We introduce Mexican brands to the rest
of the world. And then there is a third leg, which is to look at
whether there are new products that don’t exist today, new ways of
tapping beer or selling beer that we can introduce so as to make our
business better.
So
innovation has many, many faces. And you have to mobilize your
organization around the innovations, not only by target-setting, but
also creating a culture where innovation is encouraged across the
board.
Confronting societal expectations
The
company should not think that it is there to issue policy lines for
society. It can issue statements about its own behavior, but not
prescribe policy. You have no legitimacy to do that. You are
accountable in front of tax authorities in the countries where you
operate for your employees, for your shareholders, your suppliers,
but in the first place, to your consumers.
And
what is specific to our industry is the alcohol problem. Alcohol
abuse has always been existent in the world, and we have no advantage
to be promoting alcohol abuse because that makes our business
unsustainable. So how can you play your part to make your business
more sustainable? It is to advocate responsible consumption.
The
latest addition was made by a deejay in the Netherlands. Armin van
Buuren has a successful international career. And in his commercial
spot he makes the point of, “Dance more, drink slow.” The ad
campaign says, “When you have a good dancing party, you drink
less.” And I had to explain to my people that it was better to sell
less and dance more, rather than trying to sell more and having
unfolding situations at the party.
Managing for the long term
ustainability
boils down to a very simple fact: If I continue to do things that I
do today, will I exist tomorrow? Is what I’m doing sustainable?
Don’t I use too much water and energy to make my beer? Do we not
use the wrong source of water supply to grow our agricultural
produce, which will lead us in 20 years’ time to problems and no
supply at all in the area where we are?
In
balancing the short, medium, and long term, I think you have to spot
the opportunities and map them. And say, “Well, what do I have to
do so that the next 3 years are going to be great years? What, from 5
to 10 years? And what could be in 20 or 30 years?”
And
so when we went on the acquisition trail, as we have been doing over
the past ten years, some countries we acquired business in, like
Nigeria, where we added to our existing business, was on a
perspective of short and medium term. When we acquired our Mexican
operation, it was a short and medium term. When we acquired India, it
was a long view, if you will.
When
we invested recently in a country like Ethiopia, it’s a long view.
It’s at the very early stage of its development, but we think that
Ethiopia in 20 years’ time is going to be a force to reckon with in
Africa. So we invested there. So the next ten years, returns will be
minute. In the first three years, we’re going to lose money in
Ethiopia. But 20 years from now, Ethiopia might be as big as Nigeria
is today. That is how you have to think about geographies as well as
brands.
People
have to embrace a product. They take it in their body, so it’s a
very intimate relationship they have with food and bev. Remember,
olive oil took 25 years to make it to our kitchen tables in northern
Europe. And sushi, which is raw fish—I think our grandparents would
have looked in total disbelief that we eat it.
The
same goes with when you go out and you’re going to sell cider on
the rocks to Brazilians or Mexicans. But take a look at 20 or 30
years, and then come back. That’s what you have to do also when you
lead a business which is 150 years old and still planning to go
another 150 years.
Jean-François
van Boxmeer is
chairman of the executive board and CEO of Heineken NV. This
interview was conducted by Rik
Kirkland, senior
managing editor of McKinsey Publishing, who is based in McKinsey’s
New York office.
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