Zhang Ruimin (Chinese: 张瑞敏; born 5 January 1949) is the founder of Haier Group. He was also the chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Haier Group until his resignation in 2021. He was succeeded in these roles by Liang Haishan.[1]
Zhang Ruimin | |
---|---|
张瑞敏 | |
Born | |
Nationality | Chinese |
Education | Master's |
Alma mater | University of Science and Technology of China |
Occupation | Businessman |
Title | Chairman of the Board and CEO, Haier Group |
Political party | Chinese Communist Party |
Honours | First Chinese business leader to speak at Harvard |
Signature | |
Zhang was appointed the director of Qingdao Refrigerator Factory, predecessor of Haier Group, in December 1984. In 1988, under his leadership, Haier won the first national gold medal for quality in China's refrigerator industry history.[2]
Zhang Ruimin transformed Haier from a small, failing collective factory, to an Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem brand.[3]
In 1998, Zhang Ruimin spoke at Harvard University, becoming the first Chinese business leader to appear on the Harvard podium. He has received management attention and praise at home and abroad for his continuous management model innovations.[4] He created the Rendanheyi model – which encompasses management thinking and models with Chinese characteristics for universal application. Gary Hamel described him as "a CEO representative of the Internet era".[2]
Early life
editZhang Ruimin was born on January 5, 1949, to a working class family in Qingdao, Shandong; his parents were employed in a local garment factory.[5] As a youth, Zhang joined the Red Guards, visited Mao's birthplace, and attended rallies in Beijing since all schools had been closed, and when the movement was finally disbanded, he was able to avoid being sent down to the countryside.[6]
Zhang Ruimin studied at the University of Science and Technology of China where he graduated with a master's degree in business administration.[7] He has studied extensively about western management theories and has taken several courses on the subject.[8][9]
Career
editEarly years
editIn 1984, Zhang was appointed general manager of the Qingdao Refrigerator Plant, predecessor of Haier Group, a company that was insolvent and going bankrupt.[10][11]
In 1985, in order to raise employees’ awareness about quality and increase their support of the brand-building strategy, Zhang Ruimin took the lead in smashing 76 defective refrigerators. It was a watermark event that pushed Haier to become a household name.[2] Early in his tenure as general manager, Zhang traveled to Germany to visit the company's German partner, from whom they were purchasing technology and know-how.[11] He quickly realized that the company had a serious problem in terms of reputation and quality; it also reflected poorly upon his country.[11] To ingrain the concept of quality into his workers, Zhang decided to conduct a demonstration with some of the factory's product.
The next year, its refrigerators sold well in major domestic markets such as Beijing and Tianjin.[12] Zhang also instituted many reforms that were completely novel to the state-run Chinese economy at the time. To encourage productivity, Zhang tied employee pay scales to sales of the products which they produced. He also instituted a practice whereby a mistake by an employee would require that employee to stand before his co-workers to explain his error.[5] Another new concept that Zhang introduced was customer feedback. After noticing that sales were poor in Sichuan province, he discovered the reason to be that villagers would use the machines to wash sweet potatoes, clogging the drains in the washers. In response, Zhang had his company redesign the product to wash produce in addition to clothing.[5]
Haier Group
editIn December 1991, Zhang Ruimin established Haier Group and became its president.[7] At the same time, Haier started diversification under his leadership.[7]
During the period 1991–1998, Zhang Ruimin pursued mergers and acquisitions as well as industrial park developments. Haier acquired a number of targets in washers, TVs, and air conditioners, and some of these targets had different ownership structures.
In July 1995, the Qingdao municipal government decided to transfer all of Red Star Electric Appliances' shares to Haier Group. Red Star was originally similar to the former Haier, a major city-level enterprise in Qingdao, but due to poor management, even while Haier rose to the top brand of home appliances in China, Red Star bled a loss of more than RMB100 million and became insolvent.
The turnaround story later inspired a case study of The Haier Culture of Reviving Stunned Fish at the Harvard Business School, and Zhang Ruimin was invited to Harvard to speak as the first Chinese business leader at the Harvard podium.
In 1999, Zhang Ruimin became Chairman of the Board of Haier Group.[7] In the same year, Zhang Ruimin invested USD30 million to build the Haier Industrial Park in South Carolina, USA in an effort to produce home appliances locally. In this seven-year stage, Haier established 18 manufacturing plants, 17 distribution centers, and 9 R&D centers, underpinned by a three-pronged strategy of R&D, production, and distribution.
Zhang began a concerted effort to expand Haier's presence abroad, beginning in Europe, where Haier already had connections thanks to its partnership with Liebherr.[13] In 1993, the company also began shipping its products to the Middle East and Africa,[14] and entered South East Asia in 1996. To break into the American market, Zhang realized that Haier would need to offer niche products such as wine coolers and mini-refrigerators, popular with hotels and college dormitories. To achieve this, Haier dissected its 80,000 workers into hundreds of internal micro companies, each with a profit and loss account. Haier adopted a policy of "catfish management" whereby each division manager has a shadow manager who is ready to take charge of the division if, for whatever reason, the manager misses targets for three months.[15] By the turn of the century Haier claimed up to 60 percent of the electric wine cooler market. Haier also open a manufacturing plant in Camden, South Carolina that produced full-sized refrigerators.[16] Factories were also opened in Indonesia, the Philippines, Pakistan, and Jordan. By 2005, revenues at Haier had surpassed $12 billion and the company employed over 30,000 people; the Financial Times recognized Zhang Ruimin as one of the "50 most respected business leaders in the world."[17]
While a price war was ongoing in the home appliances industry in the period 2005–2012, Zhang Ruimin adopted the strategy of production on demand for zero inventory. During this period, Haier underwent a significant transformation from organization-centric to user-centric and from a manufacturing organization to a service organization.
In May 2000, Zhang Ruimin attended the 30th World Economic Forum. While there, he was invited to speak at the International Institute for Management Development (IMD) in Lausanne, Switzerland.[18]
In 2002, C.E.O., a film based on the life story of Zhang Ruimin and co-produced by China Film Group and Shandong Film Studio, premiered.[19]
On 18 October 2011, under Zhang Ruimin's leadership, Haier Group acquired the white goods businesses of Sanyo Electric in Japan and Southeast Asia.
Following the completion in December 2012 of Haier's acquisition of Fisher & Paykel, the largest home appliances brand in New Zealand, the Fisher & Paykel New Zealand R&D Center (Dunedin and Auckland) became one of Haier's five R&D centers globally.[20]
On 26 December 2012, Haier's 28th anniversary, Zhang Ruimin announced that Haier had entered a new strategy stage with a networking theme.[21]
In 2015, he was included in the 2015 Thinkers50 Rankings and received the Thinkers50 2015 Ideas into Practice Award.[22]
Haier invested in the construction of an industrial park in Pune, Maharashtra, India, in November 2017. Five connected plants were built in the industrial park for refrigerators, washers, air conditioners, water heaters, and color TVs. When the industrial park is fully operational, its annual output will reach 3.8 million units, and its product categories will add washers, air conditioners, water heaters, and TVs to refrigerators.[23]
On 25 October 2019, Qingdao Haier Biomedical Company Limited (stock name: Haier Biomedical and ticker number: 688139) became the first Qingdao-based company to list on the Star Board. It started trading on the Star Board of the Shanghai Stock Exchange, with a total of 79,267,900 shares issued at RMB 15.53/share. The successful IPO of Haier Biomedical is a microcosm of Haier's self-driven transformation in the IoT era. Jiang Qiping, an IoT researcher and director of the CASS Information Research Center, calls Haier Biomedical's IPO a significant precursor to a "period of fast growth" of IoT enterprises in China.[24]
In October 2019, Zhang Ruimin was honored with the Forbes China Lifetime Achievement Award.[25]
Politics
editZhang Ruimin joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1976.[5]
In 2002, Zhang became a member of the 16th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.[5]
Awards and honors
edit- Entrepreneur of the Year (1997), Asia Weekly[citation needed]
- First Chinese business leader to speak on the Harvard podium (1998)
- Financial Times' Global 30 Most Respected Entrepreneurs (1999)[citation needed]
- 2001 CCTV China Economic Personality of the Year[26]
- Financial Times' Global Top 50 Most Respected Business Leaders (2005)[17]
- Forbes China Philanthropy List (2009)
- China's Most Powerful People (2009), BusinessWeek[27]
- Dale Carnegie Global Leadership Award (2012)
Published works
editFilms
edit- C.E.O. (2002 film) directed by Wu Tianming
Biographies
edit- Yong, Hu. Thus Spoke Zhang Ruimin
- Yong, Hu. Zhang Ruimin’s Management Journal (Management Journal of Famous Chinese Business Leaders Series)
Manga
edit- A Challenge of China’s No. 1 CEO
Notes
edit- ^ "Haier Founder Zhang Ruimin to Step Down as Chairman - Caixin Global". www.caixinglobal.com. Retrieved 27 February 2024.
- ^ a b c "About CEO". www.haier.com. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
- ^ White, Colin (2004), "Haier: pioneering the Chinese export brand", Strategic Management, London: Macmillan Education UK, pp. 716–721, doi:10.1007/978-0-230-55477-1_21, ISBN 978-1-4039-0400-3, retrieved 15 June 2021
- ^ Fish, Stanley (11 August 2008), "A Conclusion and Two Voices from the Other Side", Save the World on Your Own Time, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/oso/9780195369021.003.0011, ISBN 978-0-19-536902-1, retrieved 15 June 2021
- ^ a b c d e Lynch, David J. (2 January 2003). "CEO pushes China's Haier as global brand". USA Today. Archived from the original on 29 January 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
- ^ Yi, Jeannie J.; Shawn X. Ye (2003). The Haier Way. Dumont, NJ: Homa & Sekey Books. p. 163. ISBN 1-931907-01-3. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
- ^ a b c d "Career data of Zhang Ruimin". China Vitae. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ Landler, Mark (23 July 2000). "In China, a Management Maverick Builds a Brand". New York Times. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ Schafer, Susan (29 July 2005). "Help Wanted". Newsweek. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ "Zhang Ruimin, CEO, Haier Group, China". BusinessWeek. 14 June 1999. Archived from the original on 5 January 2010. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
- ^ a b c "A Jack Welch of communists". Newsweek. 9 May 2005. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
- ^ "Haier Rises Through Reform and Opening Up". People's Daily. 8 August 2001. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
- ^ "About Haier Europe". Haier. Archived from the original on 25 December 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
- ^ "About Haier Middle East and Africa". Haier. Archived from the original on 25 December 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
- ^ "Smashing way to start a global business". BBC News. 22 October 2013.
- ^ "Haier Announces New Expansion At Its Camden Facility". Kershaw County, South Carolina. 8 March 2007. Archived from the original on 18 February 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
- ^ a b "Biography of Zhang Ruimin". Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ People's Daily [dead link ]
- ^ "首席执行官 (豆瓣)".
- ^ "Why did Premier Li Keqiang make a special trip to the Haier-Fischer & Paykel R&D center". 28 March 2017.
- ^ "NPC deputy Zhou Yunjie: The internationalization of home appliance brands must follow the brand ethos". People's Daily. 6 March 2013.
- ^ "Awards 2015 - Thinkers50". 27 October 2019.
- ^ "Haier holds groundbreaking ceremony of second industrial park in India". Xinhua Net. 29 March 2019. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020.
- ^ Haier Group's Strategy in the US Market (Report). 2003. Case Code BSTR072. Retrieved 30 January 2024 – via IBS Center for Management Research.
- ^ "Forbes China publishes annual list of outstanding businessmen".
- ^ "Chinaview: People". Xinhua. Archived from the original on 3 August 2003. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ "China's Most Powerful People 2009". BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on 20 November 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.