Fmc Leadership
Fmc Leadership
BACKGROUND
FMC Corporation is based out of Chicago. In 1989, sales stretched over five major businesses totaled $3.4 billion. The five major businesses that FMC operates are: Industrial Chemicals, Performance Chemicals, Precious Metals, Defense Systems, and Machinery and Equipment. The company specializes in the production of military equipment, a variety of industrial chemicals, gold and other precious metals, agricultural chemicals and a selection of specialty chemicals, and an extensive range of specialized machinery and equipment for the material-handling, petroleum and food industries. When FMC Corporation won a bid with the U.S. Navy to build and supply surface-ship missile launching canisters, they decided that a new plant should be built to fulfill the contract.
FMC Green River
The Green River, Wyoming facility of FMC Corporation, first opened in 1948, supplies sodium-based chemicals to over 100 worldwide customers in the detergent industry, the glass industry, and large commercial chemical plants. The resources are obtained from a large underground mine and numerous plants. The underground mine produces trona ore (a mixture of bicarbonate of soda and soda ash). Two refining plants turn out various grades of soda ash every year. The Green River facility also runs the largest sodium tri-polyphosphate plant in the world. The United Steel Workers of America organizes the 1,150 employees of FMC Green River.
Kenneth Dailey has been the site manager for FMC Green River for 18 months. In the past, there were separate managers for the mine and for the surface plants. However, Dailey reorganized the complex and now has a manager for the soda ash business on both below-surface and surface facilities, a manager to supervise the three new plants under construction and another manager to look after all of the services required at the plants.
While Dailey believes that his management style is interactive, he would like to consider a much more open management style where employees take ownership of their positions, the company and themselves. He already has a high regard for the flow of information and the process of decision-making, but feels that it could be improved upon. The union that organizes the labor force is considered progressive and Dailey believes that they might be open to a change in the management style and changing the old standard job descriptions.
The largest obstacles that will hinder a management style change are the union and the current infrastructure of the Green River FMC plant which was built decades ago and was set up to isolate managers from the employees.
FMC Aberdeen
FMC’s Aberdeen, South Dakota, plant was built to facilitate a U.S. Navy contract to build surface-ship missile launching canisters. Originally the missile canisters were going to be produced at FMC’s Naval Systems Division (NSD) headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota. However, because the canisters are viewed as a volume product with a fixed-price contract, NSD felt that the new operation was much more commercial, unlike the cost-plus government contracts that NSD usually worked with. Therefore, after researching business environments in the region, NSD suggested that they relocate the new division to Aberdeen, South Dakota, because of tax regulations, community support, labor pools and favorable wage rates.
Bob Lancaster was chosen as the manager for the new plant. During early negotiations with Ron Weaver, NSD’s director of