On the Record with
HARRY STONECIPHER, VICE CHAIRMAN, BOEING COMPANY
Sales
of new airliners will account for less than 50% of revenues at Boeing
Co. in five years as the company expands into new businesses, vice-chairman
Harry Stonecipher told Show News.
The commercial aircraft business will still grow at 4% to 6% per
year from an already huge $35 billion in annual sales -- but that's
not enough for Boeing to meet its corporate target of 15% annual
growth.
Military aircraft and missiles, the second of Boeing's three core
businesses, will remain flat in today's era of relative peace. "So
two years ago (chairman) Phil Condit and I identified space and
communications (Boeing's third core business) as the growth engine
for the company," Stonecipher explains.
To be more specific, Boeing has targeted space-based businesses
as the driver, rather than selling more launchers and satellites.
Examples so far are the Connexion by Boeing, inflight e-mail, live
TV service, and space-based Air Traffic Management.
The second leg of the strategy is to develop services around sales
of commercial and military aircraft. There, Boeing is expanding
rapidly in many activities, such as engineering, modification, maintenance,
and logistics management with the goal of becoming the largest aftermarket
provider for its own aircraft.
"The commercial and military services businesses each have
revenues of about $3 billion a year," Stonecipher says. "They
think they want to grow to about $6 billion each in five years,
but I think they want to get to $10 billion apiece. That is something
we are negotiating now."
Another business driving growth is Boeing Capital Corp, which Stonecipher
has charged with growing at 30% a year. "We don't know a lot
more about financing than anyone else, but we know a set of customers
who happen to want and need
financing-whether debt financing, operating leases, or finance leases,"
he says. Boeing, with good cash flow and a strong balance sheet,
can pump in $1 billion of fresh equity a year, and the Boeing Capital
can leverage it into $6 billion a year in new business.
With this backing and performance, Boeing Capital is able to borrow
at very attractive rates in the commercial market to further fuel
its growth. Its strength is now being brought to bear throughout
the company-in satellites and launchers, where Boeing is one of
the very few suppliers that can provide finance as well as hardware
and services; in new aircraft deals that often involve trade-ins
and sometimes passenger-to-cargo conversions as well; and in military
deals, such as leasing four C-17s to the RAF.
"That's our strategy," says Stonecipher. "We have
stood up three new businesses, and I expect we will stand up another
half a dozen in the next five years. All will be spawned out of
the technology base or customer base we have. We look at it both
ways: we know a set of customers and finding a way to provide them
more content is a way to grow a business; we know a set of technologies
and expanding those to another customer base might be appropriate
too."
There will be no repeat of disasters of the past, he insists. Among
them: windmills (Boeing knew all about those but nothing about the
utilities business), and high-speed hydrofoil ferry boats. Stonecipher
points to McDonnell Douglas's pre-takeover forays into health care
and computers as two more warnings of what not to do.
"All our new businesses will be relevant to our own customers
and our own technologies," he insists. "That's why we
continue to reinforce with management not to get too far afield-don't
forget to run the core business, as that's what generates all this
cash that permits us to go look at other things."
Acquisitions will be another area of growth for Boeing.
Stonecipher, a GE alumni since 1987, likes to quote the record of
his earlier boss Jack Welch.
"When I tell people GE really doesn't have any growth businesses
in its portfolio, they look at me and say 'what are you talking
about? They grow very nicely.' But Jack in his own words has said
he has acquired 1,600 businesses in 20 years. So the strategy, and
it is a good strategy by the way, says run your core business well.
That's what we do. Then you can go on and do your internal development
to keep the core business fresh, like Sonic Cruisers, and then go
on to the acquisition activity."
Stonecipher says he's quite aware that business schools say 70%
of all acquisitions and mergers fail. But they won't at Boeing,
he adds, because in his opinion they fail for two reasons-one is
that people forget to execute them in relation to their core business,
and the other is that they acquire businesses they know nothing
about.
He is determined, it seems, that neither will happen on his watch.
By John Morris