such brands as Beck's and Michelob. But he views his own brew as the ultimate. "I make the Rolls-Royce of beer," he says. "How can I make a super Rolls-Royce? It doesn't exist. A Rolls is a Rolls; a Heineken is a Heineken." The appeal to quality goes back, some what humorously, to early in the history of the Heineken family's involvement with beer. It all began in 1864, when grandfather Gerard Heineken received an Amsterdam brewery called the Haystack as a gift from his mother. In a series of "Dear Maman" letters, he-had convinced her that she would see fewer drunks on her way to church on Sundays if only Dutch men could be induced to drink beer in stead of gin. However, he lamented to her, Dutch beer was very poor. And he saw no way to correct this sorry situation unless he personally undertook to make a high- quality beer. Grandson Freddy is the last of a disap pearing speciesthe proprietor. On paper, he is president and C.E.O. of Heineken NV. But his influence within the company sur passes that of any ordinary chief executive: he owns slightly more than 50% of the shares. Fat and friendly letters "There is magic in a name," Freddy re flects. "And Heineken is a good name for a beer, because it sounds German. In some places, that is an advantage." The name, he adds, "must be written correctly." Over the years, he himself has perfected the famed logo: "If you print Heineken in block letters, you have 11 harsh and un friendly vertical lines. I rounded and tilted the e's so that they now smile. I made the n's and the k fat and friendly. The impres sion is one of hospitality." Heineken rejects the theory that the boss should avoid becoming entangled in the day-to-day details of company operations. He directly supervises R&D, public rela tions, and finance, and he keeps an eye on other departments as well. "I must keep telling the marketing people not to make the bottle too elaborate with gold foil or fancy labels," he says. "Otherwise the housewife will be too intimidated to take it off the supermarket shelf." He insists on dignified, soft-sell advertising that em phasizes only the quality of the product: "I absolutely hate to be talked down to by an ad." On any new item bearing the Heine ken name, whether it be a promotional sail for a wind surfboard or a newly designed drinking glass, he personally passes judgment. Heineken has devised a management system that might well receive poor marks from a business-school professor, because it mixes staff and line functions. Heine- ken's principal aides are three managing directors of equal rank. Each has line re sponsibility for one major area of the world. Each is also responsible, however, for certain staff functions in areas beyond his own terrain. Rob van de Vijver, for ex ample, is responsible for the Western Hemisphere, but Ray van Schaik is in charge of marketing and advertising, two extremely important functions in Van de Vijver's turf. "Freddy's Three Pigeons" Isn't this system bound to produce con flicts? "Sometimes," concedes Van de Vijver, who recently ran into opposition from Van Schaik's advertising staff over how to promote a beer the company will brew in Canada. The two men sorted it out between themselves. But Van de Vijver maintains: "The system generally works well, because we all know pretty much how the other feels." And Van Schaik ami ably refers to the three managing directors as "Freddy's Three Pigeons," whose feath ers are rarely ruffled. The number of managing directors has been held to three because, says Heineken, "parties and factions cannot develop among so few." Among the managing di rectors Heineken encourages a relaxed at mosphere in which anyone can say almost anything to another. Over lunch Freddy can be given quite a roasting by his irrev erent colleagues. After receiving a number of verbal jabs that included a clear hint that the managing directors would refuse his request for reincarnation as their boss, Heineken recently turned to a guest. "And to think I hired these jokers," he said in mock despair. Heineken is given to classifying his peo ple into two categories: "career dogs" and "disciples." A career dog is an executive who sooner or later betrays himself as a man who plainly places his own success above the welfare of the company. "I'll get rid of him if it's the last thing I do," vows Heineken. He prizes the true disciple as being as essential to the company's perfor mance as malt and hops are to the brew. "A product can lose its reputation almost overnight," Heineken states. "I can't afford to have anyone except disciples running the company and brewing the beer." The global spread Though Freddy's system may be highly personalized and oddly organized, it clear ly works. Since he took over as president in 1970, the company's sales have more than quadrupled to $1.6 billion in 1980. The net profit, calculated by very conser vative methods, last year amounted to $41.8 million. During the first six months of 1981, sales rose 8% and profits 123%; the year as a whole should turn out to be one of the company's best. In revenue, Heineken ranks fifth in the world behind Anheuser-Busch, Miller, Britain's Allied, and Japan's Kir in. In geo graphical spread, however, Heineken is unequaled. The beer is imported by some 140 countries throughout Asia, Africa, and the Western Hemisphere. In addition to its No. 1 position in the U.S., it also is the leading import in other highly competi tive markets, notably Japan, Canada, and Australia. With its Dutch breweries producing at capacity, Heineken also licenses brewers to produce its beer in 16 countries scat tered from Norway and Ireland through the Caribbeanthe Netherlands Antilles, Martinique, Jamaica, and Trinidad—on to Singapore and South Korea. In Asia and West Africa, it works with local breweries to produce beer under different labels Gulder beer in Nigeria and Zaire, Primus in Rwanda and Burundi, Gala in Chad. Al together, Heineken will produce this year about 686 million gallons of beer in its own breweries or those under its super vision. In a break with past practice, Heineken soon will start brewing in North America. The company will make Amstel, its other Dutch brand, in a brewery recently pur chased in the Canadian city of Hamilton, near Niagara Falls. Some of the output will be exported to the U.S., possibly as an Amstel ale. The beers that Heineken sells under oth er labels vary in taste and quality. Amstel, taken over by Heineken in 1968, is brewed in Holland by its own original formula and has a heavy consistency and slightly bitter tang. (A low-calorie version, Amstel Light, has been imported into the U.S. since the start of 1980.) Many of the brews in Africa and Asia taste slightly fruity, a reaction caused by enzymes released by the yeast. If there is any secret to Heineken's proc ess, it is the special strain of yeast known as Heineken A. Freddy's grandfather, a doctor of chemistry, engaged a pupil of Louis Pasteur to isolate a special yeast in 1879. That original yeast cell, which has now multiplied itself trillions of times over, is the same one used now. Each working day, several hundred pounds are taken from the "yeast house" and air- shipped throughout the world to the brew eries owned or operated by Heineken. The advantage of this yeast is that its performance is fully known, and therefore it acts as a constant in the brewing process. But as Paul van Eerde, Heineken's chief of R&D, puts it, "Someone could pinch our yeast and still not be able to brew a Hein eken." The reason is that Heineken makes considerable and costly efforts to obtain the highest quality and pure ingredients. For example, each truckload of barley is carefully scrutinized in a Heineken labora tory before it is accepted, and a small per centage is often rejected. Malt, one of the major ingredients in beer, is simply roast ed barley. The brewing process is now almost

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The Windmill | 1981 | | pagina 3