Henderson, Nevada
February 1, 1999AgriBioTech,
Inc. announced today that as a result of the shift in Company focus from growth to
integration and operations it is making changes in both the makeup and size of its Board
of Directors. Two senior managers have been appointed to the Board of Directors and the
Company has launched a search to add three additional outside members to the Board, which
will create a new, nine-person Board with a majority being outside Directors.
Dr. Tom Rice, Vice President, Director of
Research, and Randy Ingram, Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
(CFO), Director of Business Development joined the Companys Board as Directors,
effective today. Rice and Ingram have replaced John Francis and Scott Loomis, members of
the founder management team and former Vice Presidents of the Company. Both Francis and
Loomis will remain with the Company in their current positions, Francis as Investor
Relations Director and Loomis as Director of Mexico operations, however, not as officers
or Directors.
"We thank John Francis and Scott Loomis for their
contributions to building ABT through acquisitions," said Dr. Johnny R. Thomas,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO). "Now that we have achieved a leadership
position in the forage and turfgrass seed sector, however, it is appropriate to change our
Board makeup to reflect our needs to shift to a focus on integration and operations. We
are confident that Dr. Rice and Randy Ingram, and the new outside directors expected to
join the ABT Board, will help us do that and lead the Company in its next phase of
development."
As part of that effort, Kent Schulze, President and Chief
Operating Officer (COO) announced today that the Company has retained an experienced human
resources (HR) executive to support ABTs integration efforts, which are underway.
"This will support our Company-wide integration efforts that are now moving toward
the final phases of implementation," said Schulze, "and will be important in
helping us achieve our long-term goals of achieving significantly improved operating
efficiencies and synergies to improve Company performance." The ABT integration
effort is called Project ABT. It is designed to create a single, customer-focused,
R&D-based company out of the 34 companies ABT has acquired to date.
Schulze announced that Robert Machin has
been retained as a HR advisor. Machin will be part of an integration team that will
develop, lead and implement a HR integration plan designed to organize ABT into a single,
customer-focused business entity. Machins most recent position was that of Senior
Vice President, Human Resources at RHODIA, INC. (formerly Rhône-Poulenc, Inc.). At
Rhône-Poulenc he coordinated and supervised major personnel changes associated with 14
mergers and acquisitions and company sales growth from $300 million to $2.5 billion in a
three year period. Machin has extensive senior HR management experience in leading,
designing and implementing comprehensive human resources programs, including that at
Rhône-Poulenc and in previous senior and executive HR management positions at Owens
Illinois, Inc. and General Motors.
"Our ABT integration plans will help lay the
foundation for our efforts to turn ABT into a mirror image of the value-creation process
now in place in other seed sectors," said Schulze, "and we intend to retain and
work with exceptional internal talent and recruit and draw upon outside skills as needed
to assist us in doing so."
AgriBioTech is a fully integrated full service seed company
specializing in the forage and turfgrass seed sector, complete with research and
development of proprietary seed varieties, seed processing plants, and a national and
international distribution and sales network. AgriBioTechs vision is to lead the
turf and forage seed industry in discovering its value potential.
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