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Leadership


Inside out



How Gerry Salontai made internal changes to drive external growth at The Kleinfelder Group

By Leslie Stevens-Huffman


Smart Business San Diego | February 2009

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Gerry Salontai’s greatest lesson as the president and CEO of The Kleinfelder Group Inc. is that successful change initiatives always begin within the organization. When Salontai first attempted to reposition the nearly 50-year-old engineering and consulting firm to meet the emerging needs of global clients, he launched a rebranding effort targeted toward changing the external perception of the firm. But the firm’s internal perception never changed, and employee owners continued to make autonomous decisions about which of the firm’s vertical markets, such as energy and education, they would support in each of the firm’s offices. Ultimately, the rebranding strategy failed. Then the firm’s largest client, Exxon Mobil, declared that it would reduce its contracted consulting firms from 50 to 15, and Salontai once again initiated change in order to meet the shifting customer needs. But this time, he started inside the firm.

“Given the changing needs of our customers, the obstacles to our long-term growth strategy soon became apparent,” Salontai says. “We’d be better off focusing on fewer markets, fewer clients and provide them with a wider array of services, but we didn’t have the service model to compete with larger firms. We really needed to build our technical capabilities and our employee owners’ disparate vision of our firm was an impediment to growth.”

Salontai faced the challenge of negotiating the most radical change in the history of the firm. Given the employee ownership structure, the only way to sustain growth at the then-$80 million firm was to work through the firm’s existing staff in forging a new vision of the firm as well as a new business plan and model.

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