bang & olufsen Denmark’s
apple’s european Inspiration
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By Lawrence M. Fisher • Illustrations by Bill Mayer
ong before Steve Jobs met Steve Wozniak, or Bill Hewlett met Dave Packard, Peter met
Svend and begat Bang & Olufsen from a farmhouse deep in the Danish countryside.
Founded in 1925, Bang & Olufsen has long been an icon of high tech wedded to high style, and has sustained a culture of innovation longer than Apple, longer than Hewlett-Packard, longer than just about any other company.
But even giants can stumble. By 2008, when the global financial crisis struck, B&O
was poorly positioned, with aging products and a workforce that had grown complacent from years of strong sales at high profit margins. At a time when consumption of music and
video was moving rapidly to small portable devices and mobile phones, B&O’s core audio offerings were still compact disk players, albeit beautiful ones, and large-screen televisions, which although undeniably elegant, were priced far higher than products from market leaders like Samsung. The company posted losses for several years. This was the scenario that confronted Tue Mantoni when he was plucked from B&O’s board to become president and chief executive officer. A former consultant with McKinsey 42
Q1.2013
Korn/Ferry