Difference between revisions of "Albert Thornbrough"

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|description=US [[businessman]] who pioneered multinational production chains who attended the [[1968 Bilderberg]].
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'''Albert Thornbrough''' was a US [[businessman]].<ref>http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9500E3DF1639F93AA2575AC0A9629C8B63</ref>
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'''Albert Adam Thornbrough''' was a US [[businessman]] who expanded the overseas markets and pioneered multinational production chains for the farm machinery manufacturer [[Massey-Ferguson]].<ref>http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9500E3DF1639F93AA2575AC0A9629C8B63</ref> appointed as president of [[Massey-Ferguson]].<ref name=time>https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,873658,00.html</ref>.
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He attended the [[1968 Bilderberg meeting]], where one of the topics was ''The Internationalization of Business: The Social Aspect''.
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==Career==
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Massey-Ferguson was struggling with a stagnating domestic market when it was bought in 1956 by Argus Corp. Ltd. an aggressive Canadian investment trust.
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''[[Time Magazine]]'' tells how "Argus, after getting a controlling interest in the company, put in as president Albert A. Thornbrough, a onetime farm boy from [[Kansas]]. Thornbrough promptly set the company on a new course. North American farms, he reasoned, were now so heavily mechanized that they must be considered a "mature" market. The real growth opportunity lay in the rest of the world, where [[agriculture]] was still heavily dependent on human labor.<ref name=time/>
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But Thornbrough thought that M-F could make more money and keep better control of its product if it built its own manufacturing organizations around the world. In 1959 M-F took over Perkins. Ltd. of Peterborough, [[England]], a company from which it had been buying 160,000 diesel engines a year. It quickly followed that with the purchase of the Standard Motor Co's tractor factories, in [[Coventry]]. England, and in [[France]], then expanded into [[Italy]], [[South Africa]], [[India]] and [[Brazil]]. By 1962, the company operated 26 factories in nine countries, manufactures 80% of what it sells v. only 25% in [[1956]]. Design has been so meticulously standardized, says Thornbrough, that "we can get an engine from Peterborough, transmissions from Coventry, rear axles and hydraulics from France and fit them in with other parts in [[Detroit]], [[India]] or [[Brazil]], and make a completely assembled [[tractor]] to specifications."<ref name=time/>
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The result of Thornbrough's accent on overseas markets has been spectacular: Massey-Ferguson is now No. 1 in farm implement sales in [[Britain]], [[France]] and [[Scandinavia]] and accounts for virtually the entire tractor market in such emerging nations as [[Ghana]], [[Ceylon]] and [[Nigeria]]".<ref name=time/>
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 23:54, 22 February 2024

Person.png Albert ThornbroughRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(businessman)
No image available (photo).jpg
BornAlbert Adam Thornbrough
September 1912
Died8 September 2004 (Age 92)
Cause of death
stroke
NationalityUS
Alma materKansas State University
SpouseVirginia Thornbrough
US businessman who pioneered multinational production chains who attended the 1968 Bilderberg.

Albert Adam Thornbrough was a US businessman who expanded the overseas markets and pioneered multinational production chains for the farm machinery manufacturer Massey-Ferguson.[1] appointed as president of Massey-Ferguson.[2].

He attended the 1968 Bilderberg meeting, where one of the topics was The Internationalization of Business: The Social Aspect.

Career

Massey-Ferguson was struggling with a stagnating domestic market when it was bought in 1956 by Argus Corp. Ltd. an aggressive Canadian investment trust.

Time Magazine tells how "Argus, after getting a controlling interest in the company, put in as president Albert A. Thornbrough, a onetime farm boy from Kansas. Thornbrough promptly set the company on a new course. North American farms, he reasoned, were now so heavily mechanized that they must be considered a "mature" market. The real growth opportunity lay in the rest of the world, where agriculture was still heavily dependent on human labor.[2]

But Thornbrough thought that M-F could make more money and keep better control of its product if it built its own manufacturing organizations around the world. In 1959 M-F took over Perkins. Ltd. of Peterborough, England, a company from which it had been buying 160,000 diesel engines a year. It quickly followed that with the purchase of the Standard Motor Co's tractor factories, in Coventry. England, and in France, then expanded into Italy, South Africa, India and Brazil. By 1962, the company operated 26 factories in nine countries, manufactures 80% of what it sells v. only 25% in 1956. Design has been so meticulously standardized, says Thornbrough, that "we can get an engine from Peterborough, transmissions from Coventry, rear axles and hydraulics from France and fit them in with other parts in Detroit, India or Brazil, and make a completely assembled tractor to specifications."[2]

The result of Thornbrough's accent on overseas markets has been spectacular: Massey-Ferguson is now No. 1 in farm implement sales in Britain, France and Scandinavia and accounts for virtually the entire tractor market in such emerging nations as Ghana, Ceylon and Nigeria".[2]


 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/196826 April 196828 April 1968Canada
Mont Tremblant
The 17th Bilderberg and the 2nd in Canada
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References