Goodyear Enlists Key Suppliers in Innovation Initiative
09 September 2009 - 10:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
Suppliers Join in Quest to Speed Leading Edge Products to Market
AKRON, Ohio, Sept. 9 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Dozens of business
leaders from around the globe gathered at The Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Company's (NYSE: GT) world headquarters recently to learn
the latest in global demand trends in the automotive and tire
industries and how these trends will challenge the tire maker's
research and development organization. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050204/GTLOGO) But each of
them also received a clear invitation from their Akron hosts:
participate with Goodyear in the pursuit of innovations and achieve
success, together. "We brought together our key suppliers from
across a wide array of industries and laid out our vision of the
future for them," explained Jean-Claude Kihn, Goodyear's chief
technology officer. "We described the technologies we need to be
successful in the future - to drive relevant innovation into our
new product engine. Our message to them was simple: our goal is
innovation leadership. We can try to achieve it separately, or we
can succeed as a team, multiplying the shared benefit of our
combined R&D efforts." In today's redefined auto market,
there's no room for slow players. So Kihn and his team of
scientists and engineers at the company's two Innovation Centers in
Akron, Ohio and Colmar Berg, Luxembourg have embraced a much more
open philosophy regarding innovation and new product development
than is common in the tire industry. And they have also expanded
their collaboration with the company's global procurement
organization. Kihn noted that Goodyear innovators will continue to
team with leading research and testing institutions like Sandia
National Labs. However this new initiative allows Goodyear to also
tap into their close working relationships with their suppliers to
encourage joint technology development that will help the tire
maker bring "game changing" products to market at an even faster
pace. According to Mark Purtilar, Goodyear's chief procurement
officer, executives from the supplier companies left the meeting
energized. "The post-event feedback clearly demonstrates their
overwhelming support of our initiative," he said. "They recognized
the fact that this is a totally unique approach in our industry."
Companies that took part in the Goodyear supplier innovation events
included some familiar names such as DuPont, Sumitomo Chemical,
ExxonMobil, Bekaert, Kemai and Rhodia. The more than 30 suppliers
in attendance represent some of the industry's strongest R&D
organizations. "Our suppliers have the skill, resources and
experience to innovate in their respective areas - based on our
input," Kihn said. "They are excited about the opportunity to team
with Goodyear at a whole new level. They realize that it's a
winning proposition for both parties." Since the April meetings,
these suppliers have proposed nearly 200 initiatives in the areas
of acquisition cost, materials management, conversion cost and new
product development that can have a direct, positive impact on
Goodyear's product innovations. These initiatives will serve to
enhance Goodyear's overall R&D expenditures, but more
importantly, they will significantly enhance the company's supply
chain. "When fully aligned with Goodyear's new products engine, the
combined effort should accelerate significantly the introduction of
relevant new innovations," Kihn said. "Innovation in difficult
times makes more of a difference than ever," stated Bert De Graeve,
chief executive officer of Belgium-based Bekaert Corporation, a
global leader in drawn steel wire products and applications. "We
greatly appreciate Goodyear's commitment to long term collaborative
innovation with its suppliers. The definition of a good supplier
goes well beyond a cheap supplier for the next quarter and Bekaert
is ready to take on the innovation challenges outlined by
Goodyear's executive leadership," he said. Goodyear and the
supplier companies will facilitate the application of new
innovations into new tire products while protecting each other's
intellectual property through a series of new, or enhanced
technical and commercial agreements. "We want to ensure that the
commercialization of any innovation occurs at the appropriate stage
of a product's development," Kihn said. "And we also want to make
sure that there are sufficient incentives provided to our suppliers
so that they concentrate on the most marketable innovations."
Goodyear is one of the world's largest tire companies. It employs
nearly 70,000 people and manufactures its products in more than 60
facilities in 25 countries around the world. Its two Innovation
Centers in Akron, Ohio and Colmar Berg, Luxembourg strive to
develop state-of-the-art products that set the technology and
performance standard for the industry. For more information on
Goodyear, please visit http://www.goodyeartires.com/
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050204/GTLOGODATASOURCE: The
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company CONTACT: Roger Rydell,
+1-330-796-8880, or Keith Price, +1-330-796-1863, both of The
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company Web Site:
http://www.goodyeartires.com/
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