The strong values and principles of a family company shape the corporate culture at Endress+Hauser.
Although Endress+Hauser is in great shape, the company must continually change to stay successful. In an interview, Supervisory Board president Matthias Altendorf and CEO Peter Selders discuss the dynamic between continuity and transformation.
Simon Weidenbruch has come up with a totally new way of generating high voltage. Here he explains why that makes a radiometric level measuring device more sustainable.
Throughout his life, Dr Georg H Endress took the initiative and moved things forward. A hundred years later, the entrepreneur’s legacy is still visible and tangible – in the family-owned business he built up and far beyond.
Klaus Endress, who shaped Endress+Hauser for decades as CEO and president of the Supervisory Board, is retiring. From now on, Steven Endress and Sandra Genge will represent the shareholding family on the Supervisory Board. In an interview the trio discusses stable values, corporate responsibility and celebrating Christmas together.
Nearly every Endress+Hauser instrument is developed with the help of computer simulation. That not only leads to outstanding product characteristics but also takes the innovation process to a new level.
When Endress+Hauser began building a centralized instrument database 20 years ago, the Internet of Things was still a distant vision. Michael Herzog, a founding father of the Common Equipment Record, explains how it came into existence and why the huge volumes of data are a genuine treasure trove today.
Katrin Hartlieb and her team brought factory acceptance tests into the virtual space.
Saara Huomolin spends most of her free time in the forest. At Endress+Hauser Finland, she gives her best to fulfill customers’ wishes.