Hilti
Company type | Aktiengesellschaft |
---|---|
Industry | Manufacturing |
Founded | 1941 |
Headquarters | Schaan, Liechtenstein |
Key people | Martin and Eugen Hilti |
Products | Power Tools, Anchors, Diamond Drills, Laser Products, Firestop and Fire Protection |
Number of employees | 32,000 worldwide (2022)[1] |
Subsidiaries | Aeropro Eurofox, Den Beste Sykkel, Verbund, Ammann Group, Intelligent Construction Tools, LLC |
Website | www |
Hilti Corporation (Hilti Aktiengesellschaft or Hilti AG, also known as Hilti Group) is a
Hilti, a registered trademark of the various Hilti corporate entities, is the family name of the company's founders.
History
1941–1946
In 1941, the Hilti company Maschinenbau Hilti OHG was founded by Martin (1915–1997) and Eugen Hilti (1911–1964),
Immediately after its founding, Hilti delivered to the
1947–1963
After the war, there was a sharp decline in sales and the company was close to bankruptcy. To make ends meet Martin Hilti signed sub-contracts as diverse as grey cast iron parts for the Swiss textile industry, machining eggcups melds, or lighters and pencil sharpeners.[8][9] In the late 1940s Martin Hilti found a technology that would allow setting nails into concrete or masonry, and he acquired the original designs and the patents rights of what would later become Hilti's Direct Fastening first tool. Although promising, the technology proved to be immature, and required significant development. In the meantime, through the early 1950s, Hilti produced its own line of household products, which included a cigarette lighter, and a water-powered kitchen mixer called "Ello", which enjoyed considerable success. In 1952, with a solution that proved mature to be marketed, Hilti launched its first construction-related product, a manual tool to drive threaded studs into steel. In 1953 the company introduced its first power-actuated high-velocity fastener that allowed setting nails into concrete, called Perfix.[10]
At this time Hilti opened offices in Italy, Belgium, Poland, Finland, Norway, Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, Portugal, Austria, France, Australia, Canada, and the USA. In 1963 Hilti was present in 23 countries, with a turnover of over 400 million Swiss francs.
1964–1994
In 1964 Hilti started marketing a drill that also had a chiselling function, made by the Kocher Company, in Basel, under the name "Torna 765". After receiving customer feedback Hilti started a product development and improvement project under the name "Torna Entwicklung" (German for "Torna Development"), or "TE" for short, which has since then become the standard name for all Hilti electropneumatic tools. In 1967 the company introduced the TE17, a fully electropneumatic rotary hammer drill which featured a safety clutch, and it was shipped to customers in Hilti's first distinctive red toolbox.
The global expansion continued throughout the 1960s and by 1971, Hilti's global turnover was 376 million Swiss francs across 45 countries, including new production facilities in Austria and in Germany.[11]
In 1974 Hilti started to develop and market anchor bolts, and in 1977 Hilti introduced its first chemical anchor product line. Two more production facilities were opened, a plastic manufacturing plant in Germany purchased in 1975 and a plant in England acquired in 1978. In 1979 the company opened another production facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, to produce anchors. During the 1980s Hilti formed market region centres for America, Europe, Africa and Asia, to improve the proximity to their customers.
1995–present
In 1995 Hilti opened its first Chinese manufacturing plant in Zhanjiang; this plant was expanded to 55,000 square meters in 2005. Another manufacturing plant was opened in Shanghai in 2004. This plant employs 470 people.[12]
Basics
Hilti is based in Schaan, Liechtenstein, and is the principality's largest employer. The company employs around 30,000 people worldwide.[1]
Hilti North America (HNA)
Hilti has over 3,000 employees in the United States. HNA's headquarters had been located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, since 1979,[13] although it has employees in all 50 states.[citation needed] It moved its North American headquarters from Tulsa to Plano, Texas, by June 2015 and opened a research and development center in Irving, Texas.[14]
HNA developed an employee
Hilti Northern Europe
Hilti Northern Europe is headquartered in the Hilti Limited office in Manchester, Great Britain. The Hilti (Gt. Britain) office oversees a staff of over 1,000 in roles such as sales, engineering, marketing, finance, HR, IT, procurement and customer services.
Hilti India
Hilti India is headquartered in the Hilti India Pvt Ltd office in
Literature
- Franco Ruault (2017): Geschäftsmodell Judenhass: Martin Hilti – »Volksdeutscher« Unternehmer im Fürstentum Liechtenstein 1939–1945 (Verlag Peter Lang, Bern). doi 10.3726/978-3-653-06597-8
See also
References
- ^ a b "Hilti Company Profile". Hilti corporate website. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
- ^ "Hilti Corporate website". Hilti Group. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
- ^ Hilti: Company Milestones. Archived 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Protocol of juristical investigation in the aftermath of WW2, dated 1946-05-14
- ^ M. Hilti's role as editor in chief Archived 2018-10-05 at the Wayback Machine in the party journal "Der Umbruch" from "Volksdeutsche Bewegung in Liechtenstein"
- ^ Hilti: Company. Archived 2007-08-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Bollag, Peter (2017-06-06). "Braune Jugendsünden". Jüdische Allgemeine (in German). Retrieved 2023-09-16.
- ^ Hilti Corporation (September 2016). Ready for the future. Schaan, Liechtenstein: BVD Verlag + Druck. p. 19.
- ^ Peter Geiger et al.: Frage zu Liechtenstein in der NS-Zeit und im Zweiten Weltkrieg: Flüchtlinge, Vermögenswerte, Kunst Rüstungsproduktion. Vaduz, Zürich 2005.
- ^ Hilti Corporation (September 2016). Ready for the future. Schaan, Liechtenstein: BVD Verlag + Druck. p. 21.
- ^ Hilti Corporation (September 2016). Ready for the future. Schaan, Liechtenstein: BVD Verlag + Druck. p. 43.
- ^ Hilti Production locations
- ^ Kyle Arnold, "Turning 30 rocks at Hilti", Tulsa World, August 8, 2009.
- Dallas Morning News, October 14, 2014.
47°10′50″N 9°31′27″E / 47.18056°N 9.52417°E