By Dan Catchpole
SEATTLE (Reuters) โ Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg told employees on Wednesday the company needs a more open culture where employees are encouraged to speak up and communicate across divisions, according to a partial transcript of a company-wide meeting seen by Reuters.
โWeโre very insularโ and โwe donโt communicate across boundaries,โ he said during the all-hands meeting webcast from St. Louis, Missouri, the headquarters of its defense and space division.
Teams within the sprawling company, which also includes commercial airplanes and global services divisions, โdonโt work with each other as well as we could,โ he said. โAnd the power of the Boeing Company is in us all kind of rowing the boat together.โ
Ortberg said a cultural change would boost morale for the company, which has more than 160,000 employees globally, and โthe results will show in the marketplace.โ
Boeing declined to comment on his remarks.
The company lost nearly $12 billion in 2024, and it has struggled to stabilize production of its best-selling 737 MAX, its 787 and several fixed-price defense programs, including two replacements for the U.S. presidential jet, Air Force One.
Previously, Ortberg, who came on as CEO in August, has said the company has lost its โiconicโ status and that resolving its safety and quality problems requires changing Boeingโs culture.
Ortberg said on Wednesday his diagnosis of Boeingโs issues was informed in part by a culture working group composed of employees from across the company that was looking at its values and โprobably more importantlyโ the companyโs behaviors.
He said he planned to put together an action plan based in part on an employee survey conducted in February that received responses from 82% of staff.
Of the results, he said: โI think theyโre going to be brutal to leadership, quite frankly.โ
Asked by an employee about developing better managers, Ortberg said the company was โgoing to step up the leadership development activityโ and urged managers to listen to and care about their staff.
In October, Ortberg announced plans to reduce the companyโs workforce, then about 170,000, by 10%. The company issued at least 5,000 layoff notices in the U.S., mostly in November and December, based on publicly available records.
Ortberg on Wednesday praised Boeing employeesโ commitment to the company through its years-long struggles.
โYou know, to be honest with you, the fact that we donโt have huge attrition in the company, given what weโve been through, is shocking,โ he said. โBut itโs because people are like, I want to be a part of turning the company around, I want to be a part of getting Boeing back to the reason I joined the company.โ
โThe thing I wish I could change is how we deal with each other,โ he added.
(Reporting by Dan Catchpole; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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