Retail-Wholesale
winner:
Schiller
International retains edge as worldwide marketer of German
cranes
Related
stories:
This year's Fantastic 50
(intro)
The 2002 Fantastic 50 (chart)
Highest Overall Growth Rate: RGI
- Robinson Gareiss
Manufacturing winner: Parker
Compound Bows
Retail-Wholesale winner: Schiller International
Service winner: The
Cube Corp. Technology winner: TechBooks
by Brett Lieberman
Click
image to enlarge
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The
giant cranes that tower over ports and construction
sites around the world are engineering marvels, and
few people know them better than Heinz Schiller. In
a career that spans more than four decades, Schiller
has designed, built and sold these massive machines,
and along the way built a thriving business of his own.
The
Hampton-based Schiller International, founded in 1979,
is a leading seller of cranes worldwide and one of Virginia's
fastest-growing businesses. Revenues in 2000 reached
$40.6 million, a 383 percent increase over four years,
the highest among retail-wholesale firms in the Fantastic
50. It is the second year the company has led the category,
yet Schiller is modest about his success. "It's
like boasting and I don't want that. We are proud, but
we are not arrogant," he says.
Schiller's
long relationship with the German crane manufacturer
Liebherr is a key reason for the company's success.
Schiller, a native of Germany, joined Liebherr in 1959,
after earning engineering degrees at the College of
Darmstadt and the University of Berlin. He moved to
the United States in 1968 when Liebherr entered the
North American market, and served as president of Newport
News-based Liebherr Crane Corp. before launching his
own firm in 1979.
Schiller
has known Liebherr owners Willi and Isolde Liebherr
for 43 years, and the two companies share a strong bond,
he says. "Liebherr and Schiller, we are one unit
in the way we think," he says. The relationship
has been good for both companies: Schiller International
is now the top worldwide marketer of the German cranes,
selling about 100 cranes a year for an average of $1million
each to rental firms around the country. Schiller, in
a thick German accent, calls them the Mercedes of cranes.
"[They are] regarded in the industry as the best
product," he says.
What
makes the cranes unique is their technological advances.
Computers inside the cab show the operator the weight
load and how much more he can lift at that moment. Lifts
can also be preprogrammed so that construction crews
can save time and improve safety by figuring out in
advance how they will do a lift and where a load will
go.
Despite
five years of impressive growth, there was a time when
the company fought to survive. Schiller struggled for
15 years to sell the Liebherr cranes. The cranes sold
well elsewhere, but they were a tough sell in the U.S.
because they exceeded state highway weight limits, which
made it difficult to transport them between jobs.
But then Schiller accomplished what might be considered
his biggest success. He persuaded the Liebherr family
to modify their crane designs to meet U.S. regulations,
making them easier to transport to job sites. Sales
took off. "The overnight successes in this business
take some time," Schiller says.
Schiller
also attributes a great deal of his success to the team
he's built around him. Family is increasingly taking
a role as the company, which now employs 68 people,
continues to expand and plan for the future. Schiller's
son, Ingo Schiller, earned an engineering degree from
the University of Virginia and joined the company in
1992. He is now president of Schiller Service Corp.,
a unit of the company that handles crane repairs. Schiller's
daughter, Hedy Schiller Watson, joined the company in
1996 after earning an MBA from George Mason University.
She is in charge of business development. "If you
have a good team and a good leader, you can do impossible
things," he says. "Alone you can't do anything."
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