You will prepare a summary presentation concerning the Kent Chemical case. Presentations are a necessary skill for the competent professional. In this Assignment each member of the team will have an opportunity to practice this skill.
Assignment 1: Team Assignment
Prepare a summary presentation for the Kent Chemical Executives using PowerPoint that includes the checklist items below.
Checklist:
Reference
s (1 slide)
The point distribution for the presentation will be as follows:
50% (25 points): Content addressing checklist items, focus, and organization
30% (15 points): Analysis, critical thinking, and persuasion
20% (10 points): Professional presentation, clarity of slidesTotal points for presentation = 50
Additional Instructions:
- Slides – It is important that the slides be streamlined, interesting, and professional. The use of an appropriate template and SmartArt to graphically depict information is highly encouraged. The majority of the detail should be placed in the notes sections. Respond using a minimum of 10 slides.
Reference
Bartlett, C. A., & Winig, L. (2012). Kent Chemical: Organizing for international growth. HBS Brief Cases.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
HBS Professor Christopher A. Bartlett and writer Laura Winig prepared this case solely as a basis for class discussion and not as a source of
primary data, an endorsement, or an illustration of effective or ineffective management. This case, though based on real events, is fictionalized,
and any resemblance to actual persons or entities is coincidental. There are occasional references to actual companies in the narration.
Copyright © 2012 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-545-7685,
write Harvard Business Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu. This publication may not be digitized,
photocopied, or otherwise reproduced, posted, or transmitted, without the permission of Harvard Business School.
C H R I S T O P H E R A . B A R T L E T T
L A U R A W I N I G
Kent Chemical:
Organizing for International Growth
In July 2008, Luis Morales, president of Kent Chemical International (KCI), the international arm
of Kent Chemical Products (KCP), balanced a computer on his lap, trying to merge the organizational
charts of his KCI worldwide operations with KCP’s domestic businesses. After his third attempt, the
two charts finally shared the screen. He had achieved digital success, but as he looked at a chart that
reminded him of a multiheaded hydra, Morales was not convinced he had found a real-life solution.
Over the past two years, the KCI president had been searching for a way to better coordinate hi
s
fast-growing international operations with Kent’s domestic core. Two previous reorganizations had
not achieved that objective, and now the global economy looked as if it were headed for a recession.
If he was to recommend another restructuring, Morales knew it would have to be successful.
Kent Chemical Products: The Company and Its Businesses
Kent was established in 1917 as a rubber producer, and its historical roots were still evident. The
founding Fisher family owned 10% of the stock and was still the largest stockholder, family members
held a few key positions, and corporate headquarters remained in Kent, Ohio, a town outside Akron.
During the 1940s, Kent had diversified into plastics and, as that market soared, expanded through
acquisitions to become one of the country’s largest producers and marketers of plastic additives and
other specialty chemicals. Responding to postwar opportunities, KCP opened a research laboratory in
1953, harnessing technology-based research to drive product development. By the 2000s, Kent had
become a leading global specialty-chemical company, with 2007 revenues of $2.2 billion. (See
Exhibit 1 for summary financials.) It held minority and majority stakes in more than two dozen
businesses in the U.S. and overseas, employed 4,200 people including 1,200 offshore, operated 30
manufacturing facilities in 13 countries, and sold its products in almost 100 countries
.
Kent offered a wide range of products from specialty lubricants to polymer additives, focusing on
niche-market needs in the construction, electronics, medical products, and consumer industries. The
range was managed through six business divisions, three of which had significant international sales.
4 4 0 9
F E B R U A R Y 2 3 , 2 0 1 2
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Consumer Products
Grease-B-Gone, the company’s first major consumer product, was introduced in 1966 and became
the leading de-greaser in the U.S. First targeted at the auto engine market, the brand had expanded
into a range of specially formulated products designed for high-margin niche household applications
such as oven, barbeque, and stainless steel cleaners. KCP subsequently introduced other specialty
household products including drain openers, rust removers, and eco-friendly surface cleaners.
In the U.S., these products were distributed primarily through independent retailers and buying
groups in the hardware and do-it-yourself sectors. Outside the U.S., consumer sales outlets and retail
distribution channels varied by country. In Brazil, for example, Kent sold through distributors to
small independent outlets; in France a direct sales force sold to national chains. And while consumer
preferences in the U.S. were largely homogeneous, overseas the product’s packaging, container size,
aesthetics (scent, color, etc.), and even active ingredients could vary from one country to the next.
About one-third of this business’s $522 million worldwide sales were outside the U.S., with strong
local and regional competitors in each offshore market. General household products were produced
in the company’s large, multiproduct mixing and packing plants in markets from France to Brazil to
New Zealand. However, the only non-U.S. facility able to produce the specially formulated, aerosol-
packaged Grease-B-Gone line was in France, in a single-product plant built in 1990.
Fire Protection Products
Kent entered the fire protection business in the 1950s by acquiring a company that had developed
fire retardant chemicals for the apparel industry. Subsequently, Kent’s R&D lab developed other fire
retardants for the electronics, building, and transport industries. Then, following the 1967 fire that
claimed the lives of three Apollo astronauts, government-funded research led Kent to develop a line
of foams, chemicals, and gases, thereby allowing it to enter the larger fire control market segment.
By 2008, fire retardants were mature commodities, but the fire control segment was a large, fast-
growing and increasingly specialized field, requiring big investments in R&D to keep pace. The latter
product line was sold to both fire control systems companies and original equipment manufacturers
(OEMs) in the electronics, building, and oil refining industries. Intense price competition particularly
in the retardant segment, caused Kent to focus on reducing production costs.
Outside the U.S., fire retardants were produced by former Kent licensees, FireGard plc in England
and SicherFeuer AG in Germany, both with long histories in the industry. Fire protection regulations
varied by country, so the chemical agents Kent produced in its four plants around the world often
had to be adapted to local markets. A few multinational customers accounted for the majority of
Kent’s $210 million in worldwide sales, 45% of which came from international markets. As the
number-three competitor worldwide, Kent faced pressure from both local and global companies.
Medical Plastics
In the 1960s, Kent collaborated with a major hospital supply company to develop a non-leaching,
sterilizable plastic that won the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval to hold intravenous
solutions. That partnership created plastic IV bags that gradually replaced the ubiquitous glass
bottles hanging over hospital beds around the world. Building on that reputation, Kent became a
leading supplier of plastics for medical applications. Over subsequent decades it developed special
formulations for everything from surgical instruments to implantable devices to replacement joints.
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Its customers were large global hospital supply and medical device companies with which it
worked in partnership to develop specialized plastics for targeted applications. In addition to
properties such as biocompatibility, self-lubrication, and non-toxicity, these plastics also had to retain
those characteristics under sterilization-imposed conditions of extreme temperature and moisture.
The company’s growing line of medical products all were developed in the company’s Ohio R&D
labs and manufactured in one of two specialized plants in California and the Netherlands. Overseas
sales accounted for about 35% of the business’s $625 million global revenue.
Kent Chemical International: Going Global for Growth
For many years, Kent’s overseas operations were seen as a source of incremental sales through
exports, licensing agreements, and minority joint ventures (JVs). That view changed in 1998, when
Ben Fisher, KCP’s newly appointed CEO, announced that a more strategic approach to global
expansion would be his top priority: “Our goal is to remake Kent from a U.S. company dabbling in
international markets to one that develops, manufactures, and sells worldwide.”
Old Root Stock, New Growth
To implement his vision of a global integrated company, Fisher named Luis Morales to head the
revitalized international division. Morales was a 22-year Kent veteran who had joined its Mexican
subsidiary in sales, risen to become country manager, then moved to Ohio to run KCP’s Consumer
Products division. He had a reputation as a smart, hardworking team player who liked to win.
Morales began implementing the global integration strategy by taking majority interests in Kent’s
15 offshore JVs, acquiring other overseas companies, and generally expanding global presence. The
subsequent rapid international sales growth—from $139 million in 1999 (11% of total revenue) to
$598 million in 2007 (27% of revenue)—was managed through Kent’s International division. That
division reported to Morales through three regional directors—for Europe, Middle East, and Africa
(EMEA); Central and South America; and Asia-Pacific—all located in Kent, Ohio. (See Exhibit 2.)
Historically, regional directors had managed subsidiary and JV managers in 22 countries with a
light touch encouraging them to optimize their local positions. Because Kent was a minority
shareholder of many of these companies, its financial and operating control were often limited. But
strong informal links ensured the necessary financial and technological support. “For decades we’d
provided them support, and they had sent us dividends,” Morales said.
The entrepreneurial independence of offshore entities was often complicated by long competitive
histories. Morales acknowledged that the regional directors’ post-acquisition task of coordinating
activities and integrating operations was extremely difficult. “For example, FireGard and SicherFeuer
had been competitors for decades,” he said. “Even after we took minority positions, they refused to
cooperate or even to coordinate activities. In fact, it’s only in the last couple of years that we’ve finally
begun to get many of our own subsidiaries to stop exporting into each other’s markets.”
Even after Kent took majority positions, establishing control often proved to be difficult. In 2000,
the EMEA regional manager relocated his staff to Hamburg. “We needed to work more closely with
local companies to rationalize overlapping activities and duplicative operations,” he said. “But
relocating didn’t solve the problem. When my staff tried to consolidate redundant European
manufacturing, for example, local managers with 20 or 30 years’ experience in their markets ran
circles around them. It soon became clear that most of the regional staff simply lacked the market
knowledge and detailed technical expertise to counter the country subsidiaries’ strong pushback.”
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New Strategies, New Stresses
As overseas operations grew, Morales became concerned that his organization was not adapting
well to changing pressures and demands. His first concern was the impact of new systems. As Kent
acquired majority positions, corporate reporting systems had been added to allow operations to be
controlled and financial reports consolidated. But these changes had caused strains. “Having the data
sometimes tempted my staff to second-guess local country managers,” admitted Morales. “The
subsidiaries felt that we set arbitrary financial targets that were out of touch with their market
realities. Despite our good intentions, I think the country managers were often right.”
Capital allocation had also become more complex. Subsidiaries now had to complete capital
requests that were first reviewed by a regional manager, then by Morales, and often at the corporate
level. In the process, relations between subsidiaries and their U.S. technical contacts shifted. A
country manager explained: “Our U.S. colleagues used to consult with us on our projects, but once
they were involved in the funding decisions, they became more critical and less collaborative.”
Morales’s second concern was that overseas subsidiaries’ long history of independence led
managers to protect their self-interests. “When the Korean subsidiary wanted to manufacture fire
retardants for its electronics customers, its plans challenged the German subsidiary that had been
exporting retardants to Korea for years,” he said. “When we began trying to integrate the strategies of
our overseas operations, conflicts like this regularly reached my desk for resolution.”
Parochial attitudes also blocked technology transfer when the informal relationships that had long
linked offshore operations with U.S. technical experts were replaced by the more-formal structures
that growth had required. Berthold Hugel, SicherFeuer’s general manager, explained:
As we grew, a U.S.-based technical manager was appointed to the regional director’s staff as
our liaison with domestic divisions. Perhaps he just lacked good contacts, but we were never
properly connected. So I sent an English-speaking SicherFeuer employee to Ohio to serve as
our technical link. But he had no clout, so that didn’t work either. Finally, I decided that the
only way to get technical help and to learn what new products were being developed was for
me personally to travel to Kent headquarters every 60 days. So that’s what I did.
Frustration about links between geographic and product organizations also existed in the U.S.
divisions, as reflected in the comments of Jack Davies, the VP responsible for Fire Protection:
We had developed this great new halogenated flame retardant product that was selling great
in the U.S., but it was stalled in Europe. The U.K. subsidiary told me that their project-
appropriation request had been blocked by corporate. I discovered that someone in the
controller’s office was withholding approval as a lever to force the U.K. to bring its receivables
under control. It wasn’t my responsibility, but I stepped in to put a stop to it.
The third problem worrying Morales was that even within his international division, the regional
organization had difficulty coordinating issues with global implications. In the Medical Plastics
business for example, most of KCP’s customers were multinational hospital supply and medical
device companies. So when the Brazilian subsidiary unilaterally reduced prices on its line of general
purpose polycarbonates as a loss leader to sell more of the expensive, technical medical products, the
pricing impact was felt throughout Kent’s worldwide medical plastics business.
The issue highlighted the fact that nobody was coordinating price, product, or sourcing decisions
globally. “Worse still, because the international division had a regional rather than a product-based
structure, our global product-development needs and priorities were seldom communicated to the
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research group,” said Morales. “And since our R&D efforts respond to specific problems or identified
applications, they rarely focused on offshore opportunities or needs.”
The 2006 Reorganization: Bridging Gaps with GBDs
In June 2006, when CEO Ben Fisher also became Kent’s board chairman, he used the occasion to
announce a major reorganization. Angela Perri, who had joined KCP 20 years earlier as a PhD
scientist in the R&D lab, was named president of the U.S. businesses. Perri was a capable, hard-
driving, ambitious executive who most recently had run the U.S. Medical Plastics division.
Simultaneously, Peter Fisher, Ben’s 35-year-old son was named vice chairman with responsibility
for all corporate staffs and the international operations. Peter had joined Kent in sales before heading
the Consumer Products division for the past four years. Under the new organization, the
International division became Kent Chemical International (KCI), a separate legal entity structured as
a subsidiary of KCP. Both Angela Perri and Peter Fisher reported to the chairman. (See Exhibit 3.)
Morales hoped the reorganization would improve domestic/international relations. “Historically,
all vital communication between us occurred either at top levels or on the front lines,” he said. ”At
my level, I’d negotiate funding decisions, and in the trenches relationships between U.S.-based
technical experts and international plant managers got things done.” But as overseas operations
grew, Morales had become stretched thin as KCI’s principal top-level contact. And the advice and
support that had long flowed freely to the front lines was now provided slowly, reluctantly, and
often accompanied by an invoice for intercompany charges. “The regional directors should have
provided the extra link with the domestic divisions. But they never had the status or power of
product division managers, who were all KCP vice presidents,” said Morales.
To respond to these problems, Morales in 2006 appointed three global business directors (GBDs),
each with a long, successful U.S. career before moving to KCI. The GBDs would be responsible for the
three lines of business within KCI, and although the new roles were not well defined, they were
announced as VP-level positions reporting directly to Morales. Each GBD assembled a staff of 3 to 6
product or project managers and began defining their roles and setting priorities.
The consumer-products GBD was a 25-year Kent veteran of senior sales management in KCP’s
Consumer Products division. Before this appointment, he had run a small domestic JV. He explained
his understanding of the new role: “I’m trying to inject consumer-oriented thinking into our overseas
subsidiaries. I don’t care if they see my role as advisory or directive, as long as they do what needs to
be done. They have to realize they’re part of a global company now.” Responding to his mandate to
“sort things out,” particularly within EMEA, he saw his first priority as determining why the Grease-
B-Gone line had not sold as well in Europe as it had in the U.S.—and then to fix it.
A second GBD was given responsibility for fire protection products. He had 10 years of
international sales experience and four as manager of market planning in the Fire Protection division.
“I’ll need to assume worldwide technology control and marketing responsibility,” he said. “The way
I see it, regional managers should be mainly responsible for production and government relations.”
The third GBD, an engineer and 15-year KCP veteran, was assigned to medical plastics. She saw
her role as a strategic planner linking the U.S., regional, and subsidiary managers. “To be effective,
the regional managers will have to maintain authority over their operations,” she said. “I can be most
useful by helping to integrate the international and domestic parts of our operation.”
After just a few months, the GBDs were faltering. “The subsidiaries saw GBDs as interlopers, but
some more than others,” said Morales. “The medical-plastics GBD was appreciated because she
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provided useful worldwide business coordination. But the consumer-products GBD was a disaster.
Subsidiaries felt he interfered in local issues where he had neither experience nor understanding.”
Many reasons were offered for KCI’s post-reorganization problems. The EMEA regional director
thought the new structure just strained the existing organization’s time and resources. “We wanted to
integrate our businesses globally, but the GBDs didn’t know what their role was, and as regional
directors, we weren’t clear about how to work with them,” he said. “So we ended up in a lot of
meetings that took us away from dealing with important day-to-day matters.”
Morales felt the main problem was the GBDs’ inability to provide a link to the domestic product
divisions and assume the conflict-resolution roles he had been playing. “Despite years of service, the
GBDs lacked the credibility and power to get things done. And some of the domestic managers didn’t
help. They just seemed to want control over the fast growth overseas businesses,” he said.
Jack Davies, the VP responsible for the Fire Protection division had a different view. He felt the
problem lay in the people appointed as GBDs. “I don’t think there was a single vice president in the
domestic corporation who saw them as equals,” he said.
The 2007 Adaptation: World Boards
By mid-2007, it was clear that the GBD concept was struggling. After long discussions with
Morales about more-effective means to integrate KCI with KCP, Peter Fisher developed the idea to
support GBDs with world boards. They would be composed of managers from the domestic and
international organizations, with geographic, product, and functional expertise all represented. These
boards would be responsible for developing strategies for the global businesses.
In June 2007, Peter Fisher presented the concept to a meeting of the company’s top 150 managers:
The GBDs are serving an important function linking our U.S. and international operations. But
they can’t manage this vital role by themselves. To provide support, we are introducing world
boards to help each business advance its global strategy and integrate its worldwide
operations. They are not meant to replace local management. Their role will be as planners,
reviewers, and communicators, not managers or controllers. They offer us an opportunity to
work together and share responsibility for ensuring that our global businesses succeed.
A world board was formed for each of the company’s three major worldwide businesses. Each
was instructed to provide worldwide marketing and operations planning, optimize global sourcing,
develop technology on a global scale, make investment recommendations, and build international
management capabilities. Although they determined their own membership, they typically included
the head of the U.S. product division, the division’s technical and marketing staff members, key
country general managers, and their appropriate product managers. The GBD served as board chair,
providing him or her with a forum to involve the domestic division managers in the international
business, and to give regional and subsidiary managers a link to the parent company.
The fire protection world board got off to a strong start and generally met the stated objectives. “It
works because the business has opportunities and problems with worldwide implications,” said
Berthold Hugel, the former German subsidiary general manager who was named Fire Protection
GBD in 2007. “Also, before each board meeting, Jack Davies (the domestic division VP) and I sit
down and work through all the issues so that the discussions never become politicized.”
The other two world boards did not fare as well. The medical plastics board became a platform for
discussion but rarely reached agreement or decided on action. And despite Peter Fisher’s personal
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intervention, the consumer products board met only twice, then quietly disbanded. “We couldn’t
even agree on what issues needed to be managed locally or globally,” said the new Consumer GBD.
Reflecting on the experience, Morales felt that the negative reaction to the 2006 GBD concept had
made managers hesitate to embrace the world boards. “Some of my country and regional managers
felt threatened and thought this was the first step in dismantling the regional organizations. And
many domestic managers thought it was just a way to give our struggling GBDs more power,” he
said. He also noted that in order to succeed, all board members—GBDs, domestic division managers
and country managers—had to be open, cooperative, rational team players, even when their interests
were not being served. “The model requires practically perfect managers,” he said.
Peter Fisher had a different view. “To accommodate all interests, some world boards had more
than 20 members. They had just become too large and unwieldy. There were too many competing
priorities, so the big issues were never addressed. And, frankly, many domestic division managers
were blocking progress and trying to control the global business directly,” he said.
From Perri’s point of view, the domestic organization would have been more supportive if key
managers had been consulted when the world boards were formed. “Peter and Luis expected the
division managers to be involved and supportive. But I was never asked my opinion about the world
boards’ structure or activities, and frankly I didn’t altogether agree with the concept,” she said.
Back to the Drawing Board: Another Change?
In March 2008, with the world boards concept struggling and strains in international/domestic
relationships, Perri met with Morales and Peter Fisher to discuss possible solutions. Perri was blunt.
”We’re a science-based company,” she said. “Our competitive advantage is in using our scientific
expertise to develop products. So it’s a real problem that we have barriers between the scientific
resources that I manage and the international markets that you control. We really need to fix this.”
Peter Fisher responded. “I agree that our technological capability is a huge asset, Angela,” he said.
“But let’s acknowledge that Kent’s domestic growth has plateaued. So the company’s future relies on
our ability to expand into international markets. We need an organizational solution that empowers
rather than subjugates our international presence.”
The Consultants’ Proposal
Recognizing the need to find a solution, the three senior executives contacted Sterling Partners, a
respected international management consulting firm, to help them sort through the issue. For a fee of
$1.8 million, a team of four consultants worked with four Kent managers to gather information on the
industry context, Kent’s competitive position, and the strategic objectives of each of its global
businesses. After analyzing these data, they prepared recommendations that they hoped would
convince Kent chairman Ben Fisher, a longtime skeptic of both outside consultants and complex
organizational structures.
The consultants concluded that one of the company’s main problems was that it had been
imposing uniform organizational solutions on a strategically diverse portfolio. Because each business
had a different mix of global imperatives and local demands, they suggested taking a more tailored
approach. In summary, their detailed report of analysis and conclusions found:
• The consumer product line’s key strategic need was for locally adapted marketing programs
to respond to local consumer needs, distribution channel differences, and competition that
varied by country. While the aerosol-based Grease-B-Gone line was sourced regionally, locally
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8 BRIEFCASES | HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
tailored general household products were usually produced in national mixing plants. The
report suggested a business that should be predominantly managed locally and regionally.
• The consultants placed the medical plastics business at the other end of the local–global
spectrum. Here the key success factor was the central R&D input required to develop new
products and technologies. Manufacturing occurred in two specialized globally scaled plants
where quality was tightly controlled. Customers were primarily multinational companies
with worldwide operations. These factors indicated a business that needed global control.
• Fire control products fell between these extremes. Because R&D was important for innovation,
global coordination was critical. But fire prevention was a highly regulated industry in which
relationships with national regulatory bodies and control agencies were critical. While some
customers were multinational corporations, many smaller national and regional customers
(and competitors) were also significant. Product sourcing was largely regional.
Under the Fisher family’s mandate that Kent not be broken up, the consultants recommended that
the company evolve to a more differentiated organization using a tool they termed ”decision matrix.”
The tool’s purpose was to expand on their analysis by defining core decisions business by business
and then creating a process to analyze how they should be decided. This process would involve
assembling the key business, geographic, and functional managers from each business and engaging
them in discussions about the decisions. The discussions would be facilitated by a consultant.
As a model, the consultants had prepared a set of blank fire protection decision-matrix forms. The
one for resource-allocation decisions for the European fire protection business is shown in Exhibit 4.
This completed form identifies that multiple players would be responsible to provide input (IP), offer
business or technical concurrence (BC or TC), and make recommendations (R). But it clarifies that the
final decision (D) on product development would be made by the Fire Protection division VP.
Ten similar sheets listed decisions relating to strategy development, budget preparation,
marketing decisions, etc. In all, 62 European fire protection decisions were identified for review. As
the next step, the consultants proposed that the executive team authorize a trial run of facilitated
discussions with European fire protection managers to complete these forms.
A Brewing Storm, A Key Decision
Although many senior Kent managers found the report convincing, others were worried it was
too complex. Some regional managers argued that the company should just revert to the geographic
structure that had allowed it to grow. But several domestic managers felt the time had come to
simplify the structure by giving them worldwide business responsibility.
While digesting the Sterling report, top management was also focused on the global economy. Its
2007 results had been down 30% from the previous year, and 2008 was beginning to look worse. With
an ongoing subprime mortgage crisis in the U.S., some felt a global economic downturn was brewing.
Morales knew that the time had come to make his recommendation. Conscious he had two strikes
against him on organizational change, he knew that his proposal not only had to resolve the
company’s organizational problems, but it also had to do so within a skeptical organization operating
in a threatening global economic environment. It was probably the biggest decision of his career.
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Exhibit 1 Kent Chemical: Summary of Financial Data, 2003–2007 ($ millions)
2007 2006 2005 2004 2003
Consolidated Statements of Income
Net sales $2,238 $2,072 $1,937 $1,810 $1,628
Cost of sales 1,700 1,440 1,339 1277 1,150
538 632 598 533 478
Selling, general, and administrative expenses 320 305 295 263 248
Research and development expenses 90 84 82 77 68
410 389 377 340 316
Income from operations 128 243 221 193 162
Royalty, interest, and dividend income 33 51 44 49 47
Interest expense -38 -44 -23 -30 -22
Other income (deductions) -2 -20 -3 -3 -1
Taxes on income -50 -110 -115 -96 -88
Income before minority interest and equity earnings 71 120 124 113 98
Minority interest earnings (losses) of subsidiaries 5 -1 -3 6 0
Earnings of associated companies 20 21 28 34 40
Net income $ 96 $ 140 $ 149 $ 154 $ 128
Kent Chemical International contributions to corporate results (Unaudited)
Net sales $ 598 $ 578 $ 466 $ 402 $ 322
Net income $ 24 $ 38 $ 37 $ 33 $ 23
Exhibit 2 KCP International Division Organizational Chart, 2000
President, Kent Chemical
International Divisio
n
Luis Morales
Licensing Manage
r
Controller
HR Manager
International
Counsel
Treasurer
Regional Director
Asia Pacific
Regional Director
Americas
Regional Director
EMA
Special Assistant
Manufacturing
Country Subsidiaries & Joint Ventures
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44
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For the exclusive use of R. Hairston, 2018.
This document is authorized for use only by Richard Hairston in Organization Diagnosis and Design 2018 taught by Rebecca Herman, Kaplan University from January 2018 to July 2018.
44
09
–
11
–
E
xh
ib
it
4
D
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Regional Director EMEA
GBD Fire Protection
Controller
Special Asst. Manufacturing
Human Resources Manager
Firesafe GM
Division Manager, Fire Protection
Plant Controller
Production Manager
Sales and Marketing Manager
Technical Director
Sicher-Feuer General Manager
Production Manager
Technical Manager
Financial Manager
General Sales Manager
KCP VP Fire Protection
Business Development Manager
Manufacturing/Engineering
Manager
Controller
Treasurer
Controller
Manufacturing
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Government & Public Relations
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1.
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of
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to
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7.
D
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w
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m
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ns
ex
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ch
no
lo
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; B
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B
us
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al
c
on
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ce
; C
=
C
on
cu
rs
; I
=
In
iti
at
es
; I
P
=
In
pu
ts
.
For the exclusive use of R. Hairston, 2018.
This document is authorized for use only by Richard Hairston in Organization Diagnosis and Design 2018 taught by Rebecca Herman, Kaplan University from January 2018 to July 2018.
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