Lodi News-Sentinel

General Mills’ new CEO says food giant is ready to grow

- By Kristen Leigh Painter

MINNEAPOLI­S — Jeff Harmening knows the pessimisti­c view of big food companies.

Consumers are shifting from heavily processed foods to fresh, natural choices. Large, old companies can’t innovate fast enough to keep up with new competitor­s. In short, Big Food is dying.

The new CEO of General Mills doesn’t buy it.

“We understand the narrative about food. But that doesn’t mean we are going to follow it, and we don’t believe it is all right,” he said in his first extended media interview since becoming CEO two months ago. “Certainly there are some kernels of truth. But a kernel of truth is different from the whole truth.”

Harmening, 50, steps into his new job at a time of immense challenge and change for a company whose roots go back to flour milling operations along the Mississipp­i River in the early days of Minneapoli­s. Sales have declined for eight straight quarters, and the company has shed thousands of employees.

But Harmening, a 23-year veteran of the Twin Cities company, says the changing consumer terrain is also an opportunit­y for a business with some of the world’s bestknown brands, names like Cheerios, Betty Crocker and Gold Medal flour.

He sees potential to gain business overseas. He thinks General Mills can turn around embattled brands such as Yoplait yogurt while building on the strength of acquired lines like Annie’s, a maker of organic foods. And he wants to accelerate sales through online sites like Amazon.com or Walmart.com, a bright spot for the company’s sales.

To remain a global powerhouse, his goal is simple: return the company to growth.

“We have the talent to be able to do it,” Harmening said. “The key is getting everyone pointed in the same direction.”

As he moves ahead, Harmening will need to navigate an industry that has changed significan­tly in recent years.

In the background of every strategic move the big players make is the Brazilian private equity group 3G Capital, which orchestrat­ed the megamerger of Kraft Foods Group and H.J. Heinz Corp. The firm has been public about its intent to further consolidat­e the food and household-goods industries.

It is known for an intense focus on the bottom line, often starting with job cuts.

“They have a track record of getting high profits, but they have a reputation of being ruthless in how they get there,” said Brittany Weissman, food industry analyst for Edward Jones. “You are trying to avoid being that takeover target, and so you have to prove you can do it on your own.”

That is exactly what General Mills has been doing as it finishes up three years of deep cost-cutting efforts that resulted in the loss of more than 5,000 jobs, more than a 10th of its workers.

Harmening said he’s not interested in selling the company to 3G. While he said the Brazilian firm’s management approaches have had an influence, the firm is less impressive when it comes to creating sales growth. Harmening said a big part of General Mills’ identity will remain an emphasis on innovation and its commitment­s to consumers, community service and reducing its contributi­ons to climate change.

“We’ve studied 3G quite a bit. There are some things that they do really well that we’ve applied,” Harmening said. “We are a lot better for it, for having done that. But we don’t aspire to be them.”

Harmening’s approach to business was shaped by many of his experience­s growing up in Terre Haute, Ind.

His father taught literature and writing at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, but it was his mom who was the executive in the family. Jan Harmening was the dean of nursing at Indiana State University and a vice president at an area hospital, with a doctorate in business administra­tion.

Her success made an impression on him, though Harmening remembers seeing her repeatedly hit the proverbial glass ceiling throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

“There was once where the senior team at my mom’s workplace was having a golf outing and they invited my dad,” Harmening said. “He wasn’t on the senior leadership team.”

These moments shaped his view on workplace dynamics. “I saw the value she brought to her business and I think she could’ve even brought more, if she’d have been allowed to,” Harmening said. “So, yeah, I believe in inclusiven­ess, whether it is gender or race or sexual orientatio­n ... because I saw what happens when you don’t do that.”

Harmening grew up a threesport athlete who also excelled in chess, and one of the first words he still uses to describe himself is competitiv­e.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening said his teams are positioned to take on the new consumer terrain.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening said his teams are positioned to take on the new consumer terrain.

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