Herman Miller, Inc. (MLHR)
Email Confirmation
OPEN
LAST
$
PREV CLOSE
CHANGE
VOLUME
Overview
News
People
Financials
Company Information
Brian C. Walker, CEO/President/Director
855 East Main Avenue
PO Box 302
Zeeland, MI 49464-0302
US
Map it ![]()
Portfolio.com Overview
WHAT THEY DO
Herman Miller makes office furniture sexy, with products like the iconic Eames lounge chair and ottoman, first produced in 1956, and the ergonomic Aeron chair, designed in 1994. The Zeeland, Michigan, company is currently the third-largest manufacturer of office furniture in the world.
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
The company wasn’t always known for avant-garde designs. The small outfit was producing traditional home furnishings under the name Michigan Star Furniture when D.J. DePree bought the company in 1923, renaming it after his father-in-law, who had loaned him the money to buy the firm. After nearly going bankrupt during the Depression, Herman Miller changed course. In the 1940s the company began collaborating with cutting-edge designers, including Isamu Noguchi and Ray and Charles Eames, to bring modern, innovative furniture to a mass market. The results were some of the most iconic designs of the 20th century, including the plywood-and-leather Eames lounge chair. By the 1960s DePree and his sons, Hugh and Max, noticing that a significant proportion of the American workforce was migrating from factories to offices, started to expand Herman Miller’s office design business by introducing the Action Office—i.e., the world’s first cubicles.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT—AND WRONG
The confluence of the dotcom boom and the introduction of the pricey, ergonomically designed Aeron, which became the era’s must-have workplace accessory, resulted in skyrocketing success for Herman Miller in the 1990s. But the company could not stand on one chair alone. With the ensuing bust of 2001, sales dried up, and Herman Miller plunged deep into the red.
Then-C.E.O. Michael Volkema’s unconventional decisions are credited with saving the company. When others might have slashed R&D budgets and focused on safe, established moneymakers, Volkema recognized that without major shifts in business focus, Herman Miller would go down the tubes for good. So instead, he shed deadweight while funding experimental new products. Attention-getting designs, such as a 99 percent recyclable work chair, and rebounding earnings suggest that the strategy is paying off.
The company also strives to promote social equality by furnishing secretarial work spaces with the same groundbreaking designs and high-quality materials used in executive suites—who knew building L.E.D. light fixtures and systems furniture could become a moral mission? Herman Miller has also been at the forefront of the green-design movement, using energy-efficient manufacturing techniques and incorporating recycled and recyclable materials into its products long before companies such as Wal-Mart and G.E. started positioning themselves as environmentally friendly.
WHAT’S NEXT
Herman Miller’s recent slump shows that the office furniture market is perilously dependent on the financial well-being of corporate America. When the stock market slides, sales of upmarket office furniture drop with it. And then there are the shrinking margins in manufacturing and ever-increasing competition from Chinese imports. To thrive, the company will have to continue to roll with the punches and evolve with changing times. —Liz Gunnison
Herman Miller makes office furniture sexy, with products like the iconic Eames lounge chair and ottoman, first produced in 1956, and the ergonomic Aeron chair, designed in 1994. The Zeeland, Michigan, company is currently the third-largest manufacturer of office furniture in the world.
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
The company wasn’t always known for avant-garde designs. The small outfit was producing traditional home furnishings under the name Michigan Star Furniture when D.J. DePree bought the company in 1923, renaming it after his father-in-law, who had loaned him the money to buy the firm. After nearly going bankrupt during the Depression, Herman Miller changed course. In the 1940s the company began collaborating with cutting-edge designers, including Isamu Noguchi and Ray and Charles Eames, to bring modern, innovative furniture to a mass market. The results were some of the most iconic designs of the 20th century, including the plywood-and-leather Eames lounge chair. By the 1960s DePree and his sons, Hugh and Max, noticing that a significant proportion of the American workforce was migrating from factories to offices, started to expand Herman Miller’s office design business by introducing the Action Office—i.e., the world’s first cubicles.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT—AND WRONG
The confluence of the dotcom boom and the introduction of the pricey, ergonomically designed Aeron, which became the era’s must-have workplace accessory, resulted in skyrocketing success for Herman Miller in the 1990s. But the company could not stand on one chair alone. With the ensuing bust of 2001, sales dried up, and Herman Miller plunged deep into the red.
Then-C.E.O. Michael Volkema’s unconventional decisions are credited with saving the company. When others might have slashed R&D budgets and focused on safe, established moneymakers, Volkema recognized that without major shifts in business focus, Herman Miller would go down the tubes for good. So instead, he shed deadweight while funding experimental new products. Attention-getting designs, such as a 99 percent recyclable work chair, and rebounding earnings suggest that the strategy is paying off.
The company also strives to promote social equality by furnishing secretarial work spaces with the same groundbreaking designs and high-quality materials used in executive suites—who knew building L.E.D. light fixtures and systems furniture could become a moral mission? Herman Miller has also been at the forefront of the green-design movement, using energy-efficient manufacturing techniques and incorporating recycled and recyclable materials into its products long before companies such as Wal-Mart and G.E. started positioning themselves as environmentally friendly.
WHAT’S NEXT
Herman Miller’s recent slump shows that the office furniture market is perilously dependent on the financial well-being of corporate America. When the stock market slides, sales of upmarket office furniture drop with it. And then there are the shrinking margins in manufacturing and ever-increasing competition from Chinese imports. To thrive, the company will have to continue to roll with the punches and evolve with changing times. —Liz Gunnison
News Feeds
-
Moody's lowers Herman Miller outlook to negative
AP
Nov 21 2008
-
Herman Miller lowers 2Q profit and sales outlook
AP
Nov 11 2008
Portfolio Blogs
-
TED Flash: Lessons in Creativity
Feb 29 2008
-
Fashion Breakfast: Headlines On Hemlines (And The Like)
Nov 29 2007
Press Releases
-
/C O R R E C T I O N -- Herman Miller, Inc./ Nov-11-2008, 11:12AM EST
-
Herman Miller Revises Second Quarter Guidance and Announces Cost Reduction Actions Nov-11-2008, 09:00AM EST
-
Herman Miller Office Chair Sensors Save Hewlett Packard a Bundle; The Pair Win Industry Award Nov-10-2008, 10:00AM EST
-
Herman Miller Announces Embody(TM), the First Work Chair to Support Both Mind and Body Oct-21-2008, 08:00AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
-
Moody's lowers Herman Miller outlook to negative on concerns about capital spending
(Canadian Business Online)Nov 21 2008 -
The Blotter: Something fishy at the Georgia Aquarium
(CreativeLoafing.com)Nov 19 2008 -
Like White on White
(Dwell.com)Nov 17 2008 -
$1,600 Herman Miller chair reviewed
(The Tech Report)Nov 03 2008 -
Apps Under Wraps
(Computerworld)Oct 30 2008 -
The techie's new $1,600 throne
(Fortune)Oct 06 2008 -
IBM Launches Distance-Learning Unit, Software
(Computerworld)Aug 16 2008 -
IT involvement in Sarbanes-Oxley projects lacking, auditors say
(Computerworld)Aug 15 2008 -
IT: The Engine That Drives Success
(CIO Magazine)Jul 30 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 6,292
Revenue per Employee: $308,756
Top Executives
John P. Portlock, President, Divisional/Executive VP
Charles J. Vranian, Executive VP, Divisional
Curtis S. Pullen, Executive VP/CFO
Kenneth L. Goodson, Jr., Divisional Executive VP
Joseph M. Nowicki, Divisional Vice President/Treasurer
James E. Christenson, Divisional Senior VP/Secretary
Elizabeth A. Nickels, Executive VP/President, Divisional
Andrew J. Lock, Executive VP/Chief Administrative Officer
Kristen L. Manos, Divisional Executive VP
Board of Directors
C. William Pollard, Director
Joseph M. Nowicki, Divisional Vice President/Treasurer
James E. Christenson, Divisional Senior VP/Secretary
J. Barry Griswell, Director
Lord Brian Griffiths of Fforestfach, Director
Michael A. Volkema, Chairman of the Board/Director
Mary Vermeer Andringa, Director
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 09/2008 | 06/2008 | 03/2008 | 12/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 316.7 Mil. | 338.1 Mil. | 325.4 Mil. | 314.7 Mil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 162.4 Mil. | 181 Mil. | 170 Mil. | 191.2 Mil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 56.6 Mil. | 66 Mil. | 61.7 Mil. | 81.5 Mil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 51.4 Mil. | 71.1 Mil. | 57.1 Mil. | 66 Mil. |
| Total Net Income | 33.4 Mil. | 39.5 Mil. | 38.3 Mil. | 41 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 0.6 | 0.71 | 0.66 | 0.67 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 0.6 | 0.71 | 0.65 | 0.67 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 09/2008 | 06/2008 | 03/2008 | 12/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 147.8 Mil. | 155.4 Mil. | 81.4 Mil. | 74.2 Mil. |
| Total Assets | 488.8 Mil. | 493.2 Mil. | 437.8 Mil. | 416.8 Mil. |
| Total Liabilities | 274.8 Mil. | 310.5 Mil. | 290.7 Mil. | 294.3 Mil. |
| Total Capitalization | 426.3 Mil. | 398.9 Mil. | 376.9 Mil. | 339.4 Mil. |
| Cash Flow | 09/2008 | 06/2008 | 03/2008 | 12/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | NA | NA | NA | 87.7 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | NA | NA | NA | -19.7 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | NA | NA | NA | -73.7 Mil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | NA | NA | NA | -2.2 Mil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 1.31 Bil. | 1.23 Bil. | 1.12 Bil. | 978.9 Mil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 698.7 Mil. | 687.1 Mil. | 616.4 Mil. | 536.7 Mil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 246.6 Mil. | 239.3 Mil. | 199.8 Mil. | 169.8 Mil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 262.8 Mil. | 200.7 Mil. | 161.6 Mil. | 126.8 Mil. |
| Total Net Income | 152.3 Mil. | 129.1 Mil. | 99.2 Mil. | 68 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 2.58 | 2.01 | 1.46 | 0.97 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 2.56 | 1.98 | 1.45 | 0.96 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 155.4 Mil. | 76.4 Mil. | 106.8 Mil. | 154.4 Mil. |
| Total Assets | 493.2 Mil. | 384.7 Mil. | 390.2 Mil. | 434.2 Mil. |
| Total Liabilities | 310.5 Mil. | 284.5 Mil. | 299.4 Mil. | 284.9 Mil. |
| Total Capitalization | 398.9 Mil. | 328.5 Mil. | 314.2 Mil. | 351.5 Mil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | NA | 137.7 Mil. | 150.4 Mil. | 109.3 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | NA | -37.4 Mil. | -47.6 Mil. | -40.1 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | NA | -131.5 Mil. | -151.4 Mil. | -106.6 Mil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | NA | -30.4 Mil. | -47.6 Mil. | -34.8 Mil. |
Related Companies by Market Cap
Company Name
Price
Change
Market Cap
1.65 Bil.
1.39 Bil.
1.39 Bil.
1.86 Bil.
Company Profile Change Request
The data provided in our company profiles comes from third party information providers.- To request a change please click here
Also in Portfolio.com
Most Read
Most Emailed
Recently Commented
TOP 5
(Daily)
A smart take on the top stories shaping the business world.
Executives & Careers
(Tuesdays)
A weekly guide to the personalities and ideas that are transforming the business world.
Inside Portfolio.com
(Wednesdays)
Our roundup of the week's best from Portfolio.com.
Culture & Lifestyle
(Fridays)
A weekly guide to the best ways to spend your time - and money.
In This Issue
(Monthly)
Be the first to know when the latest issue of Condé Nast Portfolio magazine is online.



