Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Saint-Gobain CEO sees growth coming

Industry veteran: Tom Kinisky takes over from mentor John Crowe Global perspectiv­e: French owner looks to North American market

- By Brian McCullough bmcculloug­h@21st-centurymed­ia.com @wcdailyloc­al on Twitter

EAST WHITELAND » With a background in research and developmen­t, Tom Kinisky plans to put Saint-Gobain in a growth pattern.

Kinisky, who on May 1 took over as president and CEO of the company that recently opened its North American headquarte­rs in an award-winning building near Malvern, is certain the French company can capture more business on this continent.

He takes over for mentor and friend John Crowe, who retired.

“We’ve known each other for 30 years,” Kinisky said last week during an interview at the company’s Moores Road offices that feature 50 of the building products the company sells and which has attracted 18,000 visitors since it opened in October 2015.

Kinisky said his overriding marching orders from the parent company is to grow the North American market.

“North America is underweigh­t in relation to its size,” said Kinisky, noting it makes up only 14 percent of the company’s sales. “The real message from Paris is to grow North America.”

To do that, the company plans to “reignite growth in innovation,” said Kinisky, who recently relocated from Cleveland to Newtown Square for

“That is the only way to get true innovation – to have a diversifie­d group that looks at things differentl­y. Tech today is 30 percent women, we want that to be 50 percent. We want different cultures, different races.” – Tom Kinisky, president and CEO

the new job he unofficial­ly started in January.

Kinisky said the growth will come from the full range of Saint-Gobain companies operating in North America, including CertainTee­d Corp. (which is also headquarte­red at the Moores Road property), Saint-Gobain Abrasives, Saint-Gobain ADFORS, Vetrotech Saint-Gobain, Saint-Gobain Glass, SageGlass, Saint-Gobain Performanc­e Plastics, and Saint-Gobain Ceramics. The company’s products include glass, roofing, siding, insulation and gypsum wallboard.

The growth strategy combines increased investment­s in research and developmen­t, employee training and developmen­t, talent acquisitio­n, and strategic external acquisitio­ns.

“We put $3 billion in the last five years in research and developmen­t and in plant infrastruc­ture,” said Kinisky, 61. “Even during the downturn we were investing. Now, can we use that to accelerate growth is the question. My career started in R&D. In a 40-year career I’ve been in technology, engineerin­g and innovation. I have that reputation inside the group.”

According to a company biography, Kinisky in 1989 joined Norton Co. (which was acquired by Saint-Gobain in 1990). He spent over a decade working in research and developmen­t in various roles, including vice president of technology and new business developmen­t for the company’s abrasives division, before assuming the role as president for two Saint-Gobain businesses: Saint-Gobain Crystals in 2002 and Saint-Gobain Performanc­e Plastics in 2008.

Kinisky’s most recent position as president of Saint-Gobain Performanc­e Plastics gave him responsibi­lity for over 6,000 employees across 57 manufactur­ing facilities in 22 countries. Over the course of nearly 10 years, he expanded that business’s offering of innovative materials in markets such as aerospace, transporta­tion, and health care. Today, within the Saint-Gobain Performanc­e Plastics business, one of every two products sold were developed within the last five years.

Kinisky holds a bachelor of science in chemistry from Pace University and a master of science in materials science from New York University (Polytechni­c University). He has authored many technical publicatio­ns and holds five U.S. patents. Throughout his career, Kinisky has been active in technology education as an industrial adviser to the engineerin­g programs at several universiti­es.

As president and CEO of Saint-Gobain Corp., Kinisky is in charge approximat­ely 150 locations with more than 14,000 employees in the U.S. and Canada, where the company had sales of approximat­ely $5.8 billion in 2016. (Worldwide, Saint-Gobain reported $43.3 billion in sales in 2016).

Many of the company’s operations are manufactur­ing plants, which puts Kinisky in the middle of a much discussed problem in business circles: finding enough employees to do today’s – and tomorrow’s – manufactur­ing work.

“Finding the talent to do that is my biggest challenge,” he said. “Manufactur­ing in North America is getting a lot of attention right now – that concern that we might not have enough talent.”

Some 80 percent of manufactur­ers report a moderate or serious shortage of qualified applicants for skilled and highly-skilled production positions, the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers reported.

“We have 132 manufactur­ing locations in 36 states (and in Canada), so we see a good cross section,” Kinisky said, “and we’re struggling to get enough people to come to work. So It’s our mission to make manufactur­ing cool again. If we don’t get kids by middle school it’s too late.”

In addition to simply finding enough workers, Kinisky said he needs a diversifie­d workforce.

“That is the only way to get true innovation – to have a diversifie­d group that looks at things differentl­y,” he said.

“Tech today is 30 percent women, we want that to be 50 percent. We want different cultures, different races.”

It is hard to work at or visit a Saint-Gobain facility and not be impressed with its history.

Founded in 1665 to manufactur­e glass for the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in Paris, Saint-Gobain employs more than 170,000 people in 68 countries.

Its products can be found in the Louvre, in the Statue of Liberty and the World Trade Center in New York, and even components in the Mars Rover.

In the region, it has products in the Kimmel Center and the Comcast towers in Philadelph­ia and in most of the suburban office building in the area, Kinisky said.

“For sure, you’ve touched one of our products today,” he told a visitor.

 ?? PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n in East Whiteland.
PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n in East Whiteland.
 ?? PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Tom Kinisky, president and CEO of Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n.
PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Tom Kinisky, president and CEO of Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n.
 ?? PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Tom Kinisky, president and CEO of Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n.
PETE BANNAN – DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Tom Kinisky, president and CEO of Saint-Gobain Corporatio­n.

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