Skip to main content

DEUTZ streamlines organisational structures

Engine manufacturer DEUTZ is reconfiguring its organisational structures to deal with the effects of the global recession. Having launched its comprehensive MOVE action programme last year to secure its future and profitability, it now plans to take further steps to realign its structures. Following the reduction of the company's management board from four to three in March, the organisational level immediately below the board is being significantly streamlined. In future, 17 executives at this level will r
July 13, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Engine manufacturer 201 Deutz is reconfiguring its organisational structures to deal with the effects of the global recession.

Having launched its comprehensive MOVE action programme last year to secure its future and profitability, it now plans to take further steps to realign its structures. Following the reduction of the company's management board from four to three in March, the organisational level immediately below the board is being significantly streamlined. In future, 17 executives at this level will report directly to the management board instead of the 25 who currently do so.

The key aspects of this structural realignment are that the various operational functions at the Cologne and Ulm sites in Germany will be merged to form a single function at each plant that has full responsibility for quality, delivery reliability and costs.

The three current sales regions will be pooled with the service functions and the back-office sales management functions to establish one unit with global responsibility. The marketing and public relations, corporate development, quality management and product management units will be amalgamated to create the new corporate management function. Investor relations will be integrated into the finance function.

Heading the merged sales regions will be UK-born Robert Mann, 53, who will be based in Cologne, and who has worked for DEUTZ in the US for 16 years, the past nine as head of its US subsidiary, DEUTZ Corporation, in Atlanta.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New strategies will help boost road safety worldwide
    November 4, 2013
    *Martin Heath, the Chair of the IRF Group of Experts working group on Engineering Measures for Infrastructure Safety, examines the expected impacts of the new ISO 39001 The excitement and enthusiasm generated by the 2011 launch of the Decade of Action for Road Safety is gradually receding amidst the gloom of an interminably slow global economic recovery. However, a fresh and challenging impetus is about to be given to international road safety management following the publication of a new quality management
  • UK’s M6 tolled motorway for sale
    June 21, 2016
    For sale: one UK toll motorway along with operating business. Well maintained. Price negotiable. David Arminas looks at what is on offer As if right on cue, a French articulated truck starts to back up along the hard shoulder at an exit area of M6toll. The manoeuvring is watched from an office inside the nearby M6toll headquarters. Inside, Andy Pearson, chief executive of M6toll, glances over his shoulder and interrupts his presentation to World Highways. “He’s probably missed the dedicated wide-load
  • MIRA builds on reputation for transport excellence
    October 3, 2012
    MIRA in central England has begun a huge redevelopment of its 830 acre site that will see the renowned centre for transport technologies expand its capabilities while, at the same time, create the largest transport research and development technology park in Europe. Guy Woodford reports This is all very impressive,” said Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg in April 2011 on hearing a presentation of MIRA’s ambitious expansion plans. As succinct appraisals go, Clegg’s view of MIRA’s plans to develop its brand of
  • Normet to invest over €7 million
    April 4, 2012
    Underground construction in the world is increasing, metal ores are mined deeper, and there is an ever-growing demand in emerging countries for metals, infrastructure and energy.