Dr. Albert Heijn
Transcription
Dr. Albert Heijn
Albert Heijn 1927–2011 Career history Date and place of birth January 25, 1927, Zaandam, the Netherlands Education Zaanlands Lyceum, Zaandam, the Netherlands Nyenrode School of Business (currently Nyenrode Business University), the Netherlands Primary business experience Migros in Zürich, Switzerland (traineeship) Allied Suppliers Ltd. in London, UK (traineeship) • 1949 – Management trainee, Albert Heijn N.V. • 1951 – Manager development self-service, Albert Heijn N.V. • 1953 – Senior Vice President Marketing, Albert Heijn N.V. • 1958 – President, Albert Heijn Retail • 1962 – President of the Executive Board of Albert Heijn N.V. and President of the Executive Board of Royal Ahold from its founding in 1973 until 1989 Other business activities • Owner and chairman of Eign Enterprises, Hereford, UK • Former Chairman of the Supervisory Board of: Reesink N.V. Transavia Airlines C.V. • Former Member of the Supervisory Board of: ABN AMRO Bank N.V. Royal Ahold AT&T GIS IFF B.V. Randstad Holding N.V. • Former Chairman of: Raad voor het Filiaal- en Grootwinkelbedrijf (RFGB), (currently Raad Nederlandse Detailhandel) Centraal Bureau Levensmiddelhandel (CBL) Stichting Ediforum International Article Numbering Association EAN in Brussels EuroCommerce and founder of EuroCommerce in Brussels Stichting Zaanse Schans in Zaandam • Former Director Food Marketing Institute (FMI) • Former Member of the Board of Green Meadow Foundation in Rüschlikon, Switzerland • Honorary Member of the Board of Trustees of Nyenrode Business University Memberships Director Hollandsche Maatschappij der Wetenschappen Member of the Rotary Club, Zaandam Awards • Knight of the Order of the Netherlands Lion • Commander of the Order of Orange Nassau • Commander of the Order of Leopold II of Belgium • Doctor Honoris Causa of Nyenrode University in Breukelen • Honorary citizen of the City of Zaanstad • Honorary Freeman of the City of Hereford • Honorary chairman: Nyenrode Business University Centraal Bureau Levensmiddelenhandel (CBL) Ediforum International Article Numbering Association EAN EuroCommerce • Sydney R. Rabb Award from the Food Marketing Institute (FMI) • Hall of Achievement Award from the Grocery Manufacturers of America (GMA) • George Washington Vanderbilt Award • Dutch American Achievement Award • Paul Harris fellow, Rotary International • Business Week Award from Erasmus University, Rotterdam After he withdrew from day-to-day business later in his life, Dr. Albert Heijn and his wife Monique Heijn-Everwijn Lange spent most of their time at their home, Pudleston Court, in the English county of Herefordshire. It was there they built a new business, Eign Enterprises, which operated hotels, restaurants, shops and farms, and was involved in other projects in and around the city of Hereford. This work resulted in Dr. and Mrs. Heijn being appointed Honorary Freeman of the City of Hereford in 2002. In his later years, Dr. Heijn transferred most of Eign Enterprises’ business activities to third parties. 2 Albert Heijn 1927-2011 “Albert Heijn was a spirited entrepreneur and a warm and committed leader. He made an enormous contribution to the growth and development of Ahold and was instrumental in so much that Ahold has achieved. We are grateful for his legacy and we will remember him with pride.” John Rishton, CEO Ahold “Albert Heijn was a pioneer who led some of the most important changes in the history of our industry. He was a visionary who transformed a family business into one of the greatest retailers in the world.” Dick Boer, COO Ahold Europe, and CEO Ahold Nederland This is a publication of Ahold Group Communications, P.O. Box 985, 1000 AZ Amsterdam, the Netherlands Concept & Realization vdbj_, Bloemendaal Project Manager Jochem van de Laarschot Editor Linda Cook Co-editors Menno de Boer, Philo Hermans, Sco Salis Art Direction & Design Studio Pollmann, Amsterdam Visual Material The Albert Heijn Historical Archives in Zaandam, private collection of the Heijn family Photographers Gerry Hurkmans, Johan Weemhoff, Dirk Buwalda References “Albert Heijn: Memoirs of an Optimist,” by J. L. de Jager (published by Uitgeverij de Prom, 1997). Interview with Albert and Monique Heijn in the RVU radio program “Spiegels” on April 7, 2003. Video film “Albert” made on the occasion of the Albert Heijn centenary in July1987. Television interview with Albert Heijn in the AVRO program “KAREL” on August 2, 1997. Interview with Albert Heijn by Arjan Visser in “Trouw” on February 17, 2001. Special edition of “Flitsen” to mark the Albert Heijn centenary in 1987. Various interviews and articles in Ahold’s former staff magazine “Flitsen.” Special thanks to Martijn Jonker, Henk Kouwenhoven, and Erik Muller for providing information and visual material. What do you do when you’re the grandson of a legend – especially a legend whose name you share? You become a legend yourself. At least that’s what Albert Heijn did. Doing what’s right for the business starts with doing what’s right for the customer. 3 Left: Albert on the beach in Bergen, where the family had a country home. Above: The advertising campaign that gave Albert his nickname: Boffie. Below left: As a child Albert dreamed of a naval career and joined the Sea Scouts. Below right: A bust of Albert’s grandfather, founder Albert Heijn, was unveiled at the company's 50thanniversary celebrations, held in the new recreation building at the Zaandam head office. The building was a gift from Albert Heijn senior to his employees (1937). 4 A long with his brother, father, uncle and grandfather, Albert Heijn built what is today the largest supermarket chain in the Netherlands and helped turn Ahold into a prominent multi- national food retailer. That was no mean feat, but Albert was always modest about his part in the achievement. Even when he was President and CEO of Ahold, Albert listed his profession as “grocer” in his passport. This was typical of Albert, or “Ab,” as his friends called him. That was also what people called his grandfather, a man Albert closely resembled, especially in terms of personal philosophy. They were both down-to-earth and passionate about the business and both men had a knack for seeing things from the customer’s perspective. He dreamed of joining the navy, but polio put an end to that idea. EARLY MEMORIES In the book Albert Heijn: Memoirs of an gave him the nickname “Boffie” – a refer- he bore the name of a major company. The Optimist, Albert described his grandfather as ence to an early Albert Heijn advertising Heijn family lived next door to the Verkades, “a friendly old chap who, when in company, campaign with the slogan “Daar komt and just around the corner from the Honigs, seemed to take the greatest pleasure in his Boffie met de koffie” (Here’s Boffie with Bruynzeels, Duyvises, and Simon de Wits. cigar and dram.” He also fondly remembered the coffee). The young Albert saw this as his own parents as people who remained true a compliment, because Boffie was a very ACADEMIC LIFE to themselves despite the growing success of popular character at the time. His home In 1939, Albert enrolled at the Zaanlands their business. This was something Albert life was full of people with famous names, Lyceum, a local high school. The country’s greatly admired. It took some time before he since the Heijns were friends with some of economic crisis was just ending at that time, realized just how remarkable his family was. the country’s best-known enterpreneurial but political tension was running high. When As a grade-school student, Albert’s classmates families, so he was unfazed by the fact that World War II broke out and the Netherlands 5 BUSINESS BASICS After graduating from Nyenrode in 1949 at the age of 22, Albert went to work in the family business, learning from the ground up. Those were interesting times at Albert Heijn, which had just been listed on the Dutch stock exchange the previous year. Albert first completed an extensive program of internships to learn the basics of the business. He joined the staff of the Albert Heijn store on the PC Hooftstraat in Amsterdam, where he picked up the fine art of ration stamp sticking. Many Dutch people were still dependent on government assistance after the war, and ration stamps were required for many prod- Albert learned the family business from the ground up. ucts. Albert also learned other basics of the supermarket business at the time, such as how to fold and seal a bag of sugar. He went on to complete several internships outside the family business, working at Pearks & Maypole in London and at Migros in Switzerland. was occupied, the Heijn family was forced could no longer run or play sports. to accommodate several German officers A talented athlete, this was a heavy blow. in its home. On top of this, Albert woke He had also dreamed of joining the navy, THE BIG LEAGUE up one morning in September 1944 to but polio put an end to that idea. After Albert returned to the family business in 1951 as find that he was paralyzed. He had been the war, Albert studied economics at manager in charge of self-service development. stricken with polio. It was the start of a the University of Amsterdam. He com- Albert Heijn was not the first chain of Dutch long process of recovery and the first of pleted the first two years of his degree, stores to introduce self-service. However, the many hardships Albert would overcome. but was plagued by doubts and, after company was the first to pursue this shopping Six months later, just before the coun- taking a vocational test, enrolled at the format on a broad scale, developing it into the try was liberated, Albert was discharged Nyenrode School of Business in the town supermarket formula. from hospital. He could walk by then, but of Breukelen. In 1958, Albert was appointed Chief Executive 6 Above: Albert was a talented athlete, who spent his childhood rowing, swimming, skating, sailing, and practicing judo. All this came to an abrupt end when he contracted polio at the age of 18. Right: The Albert Heijn store on the PC Hooftstraat in Amsterdam, where Albert completed one of his first internships. Below: Albert (seated far right) at the beginning of his career at Albert Heijn. Below right: Albert checks his watch at a meeting. 7 Left: Albert and Monique at their home, Pudleston Court. Above: During a photo session in celebration of the company centenary in 1987, Albert and Gerrit-Jan Heijn pose in front of the museum store on the Zaanse Schans. Below left: In May 1996, Albert attended the presentation of the Albert Heijn tulip at the Keukenhof gardens. Below right: At the unveiling of the plaques for Albert and Gerrit-Jan Heijn at the Ahold head office in Zaandam in the late 1990s (left to right: Albert’s wife Monique Heijn, Albert himself, his son Ab, and Hank Heijn, the widow of Gerrit-Jan Heijn). 8 Officer of Albert Heijn. Four years later, he became President of the Board of Managing Directors, which became Ahold in 1973. Albert enjoyed the challenge of introducing customers to new products and helped influence the culinary development of the Dutch household. From the early 1970s onwards, Albert Heijn supermarkets succeeded in making products such as wine, sherry and kiwifruit – to name just a few – popular among the broader public. Around that time, Ahold took its first steps across the Dutch border, opening a super market chain in Spain. The first Cada Día store opened in a suburb of Madrid in 1976. The company’s activities abroad continued when it took over the BI-LO chain in the United States, moving for the first time outside Europe. After that, Ahold grew even faster than it had before. When Albert first joined the company it was generating sales Albert took great pleasure in life, always making the best of whatever happened. of approximately 40 million guilders (€18 million). By the time he retired from Ahold in 1989, turnover had reached history. Naturally, Albert was thrilled with he said, success would follow as a matter 17.7 billion guilders (€8 billion). Ahold’s financial success, but he always saw of course. It was therefore fitting that, on the company’s employees and customers his retirement, Albert presented a special as its true capital. He firmly believed – and statue to Ahold. Fondly dubbed “Beppie,” Albert showed that sometimes there is no demonstrated for 40 years – that doing it depicts a typical supermarket customer, truth in the old adage: “The first generation what is right for the business starts with and has a plaque that reads: “Lest we forget inspires, the second generation inherits and doing what is right for the customer. He for whom we work.” It is a lasting reminder the third indulges”. As a representative of the regarded bad service as unforgivable and of the spirit that motivated Albert Heijn third generation of the family company, he insisted that making the customer happy throughout his career. proved to be an inspired leader and oversaw was the best way to grow the company and growth that was unprecedented in Ahold’s build value. If the customer was satisfied, INSPIRED LEADER 9 Shortly after his retirement, Albert and Monique’s hotels ranked among the top ten in England. service or felt that an employee wasn’t doing his or her best. During such outbursts, there were few who dared contradict him. Albert always recounted such incidents with irony and a twinge of embarrassment. But most of the time he was a gentle soul. He took great pleasure in family life, particularly in his later PLAIN SPEAKING WHAT RETIREMENT? Even after his retirement, Albert stayed close One thing was clear: despite his departure around a table with family and friends, enjoy- to Ahold. He watched as, after its signifi- from Ahold, Albert was still very much a ing good food, drink, and humor. He often cant growth in the 1990s, the company was part of the business. He physically detached remained in the background, laughing jovially faced with a dramatic setback in 2003. On himself from the company in 1995, moving at the jokes of others. Albert took great pleas- February 24 of that year, Ahold’s share price to Herefordshire, England, together with ure in life until the end, always making the dropped to half its original value over the Monique but he did not sit back to best of whatever happened. Despite course of one day. Although Albert had not quietly reminisce about his hectic years at many hardships, he remained undaunted and been active in the company for some time, the Ahold. Together with Monique, he went to optimistic, continually seeking and finding news rattled him. On the day of the dramatic work in the town of Hereford, opening two ways to overcome obstacles. “I hope to be stock slump, he expressed his anger in a tel- hotels, a restaurant, and several delicatessens. remembered as an optimist,” he once said, “an evision interview. Albert was explicit about All were successful. Within several years, their optimist who couldn’t help but be one”. his opinion on the matter and, as was typical hotels ranked among the top ten in England. of how direct he could be, he said that he felt “shafted.” However, he remained dedicated AN OPTIMISTIC SPIRIT to the company, and was one of Ahold’s most Though most knew Albert as a mild-man- vocal supporters as new management planned nered gentleman, he could react quite and executed its successful recovery strategy. passionately if he saw a lapse in customer 10 years. He liked nothing better than to sit Three generations of Heijns Albert Heijn Sr. Neeltje Heijn-de Ridder May 27, 1887 – Albert Heijn Sr. and Neeltje Heijn-de Ridder open their first store in Oostzaan. 1899 – There are now 10 stores, supplied by the “parent” store in Oostzaan. That same year an operational center is set up in Zaandam, to simplify distribution. Albert Heijn stores mushroom all over the country. Albert Heijn and his family outside their first store on the Weerpad in Oostzaan. 1920 – The company becomes a public limited company, and Albert Heijn Sr. transfers management to his sons (Gerrit and Jan) and son-inlaw (Johan Hille). January 25, 1927 – Grandson Albert (son of Jan Heijn) is born. Gerrit Heijn November 12, 1945 – Albert Heijn Sr. passes away at the age of 80. The company he founded now has 250 stores. Three generations of the Heijn family on the banks of the Zaan. 1948 – Albert Heijn becomes a public company, with shares listed on the exchange. 1949 – Albert joins the company. Jan Heijn 1954 – Albert’s brother, Gerrit-Jan, joins the company. 1973 – The company’s name is changed to Ahold N.V. The Albert Heijn supermarket chain continues under the umbrella of the holding company Ahold. 1987 – The Albert Heijn concern celebrates its centenary. Gerrit-Jan Heijn September 9, 1987 – Gerrit-Jan is kidnapped and murdered. 1989 – Albert Heijn retires from Ahold’s Corporate Executive Board. 1997 – Albert Heijn retires from Ahold’s Supervisory Board. Albert Heijn Jr. Albert and Gerrit-Jan at the museum store on the Zaanse Schans. Friends and colleagues on Albert Heijn: “He may have been a bit of an extrovert, but I got to know him as an intensely private person during the period when his brother was abducted, and as somebody who had to work through the pain on his own.” Peter van Dun, “He was fond of etiquette, but on the day he retired he stepped into the lift and as the doors were closing, suddenly said: ‘Bye bye Betty!’ It’s been Betty ever since.” Betty McKay, Former Personal Secretary to Albert Heijn Former Ahold Corporate Executive Board member “Ab was a wise man. Somebody who could listen exceptionally well, who got to the point quickly and held people in high esteem.” Hans Wiegel, Chairman of the Dutch National Health Insurance Scheme, politician and honorary member of the VVD “For him, the customer was king. The statue of the customer with the two shopping bags that he donated to the Ahold corporate office upon his retirement was typical of the man. That was Mr. Albert.” Tiny Plooijer, Former head of Ahold Public Relations “He was a man who could listen and an amiable discussion partner. He took you as you were.” Cor Schoon, Former Chairman of the Ahold Works Council “He loved his job, his stores and helping his people to do and feel their best.” Krijn Dorsman, former Senior Vice-President Commercial Affairs for Albert Heijn “He was direct, didn’t beat about the bush, and was someone you could rely on at all times.” Neelie Kroes, “Albert Heijn was a pioneer who led some of the most important changes in the history of our industry. He was a visionary who transformed a family business into one of the greatest retailers in the world.” Dick Boer, COO Ahold Europe, and CEO Ahold Nederland “Public Relations? He invented the discipline. That too was one of his many talents. He dared to express his weaknesses, and that made him strong.” Erik Muller, Former head of PR for Ahold and Albert Heijn, and personal friend of the Heijn family European Commissioner “He was a man who stood clearly and visibly at the helm of Ahold. He did a lot for the sector and worked hard to boost the position of our institute to a higher plane.” Theo Roos, Director of the Central Food Retail Trade Institute “He was never a loose-tongued type; he was too clever for that. And he rarely put all his cards on the table.” Peter van Bakkum, Former editor of the Economics desk of “de Volkskrant” and former Corporate Communications Director at Royal Vendex KBB “Only now and again do you meet a truly wise man. Ab Heijn was wisdom personified.” Peter van Rooijen, Executive Director International Civil Society Support