Introduction
IT鈥橲 A RAGS-TO-RICHES STORY, OF SORTS.
The middle son of a Turkish shopkeeper travels to America to learn English and earn a master鈥檚 degree in mechanical engineering. Ten years later, he returns home and transforms the tiny family business into one of Turkey鈥檚 most successful global enterprises, with offices in 50 countries and employing more than 12,000 people.
Growing up in the city of Samsun on the Black Sea in Turkey, Y眉ksel Yildirim worked at his family鈥檚 small construction materials and building supply shop after school and during the summers. He and his two brothers loaded and unloaded trucks, hefted bags of cement, and carried lengths of rebar for customers who came into the cramped storefront for construction materials. The work was hot, dusty, and difficult.
鈥淪ometimes, I would drop a bag of cement, and it would break open, and my father would get mad,鈥 Yildirim said during a recent visit to his alma mater, 精东影视 State. 鈥淚 have never forgotten those days because they helped me understand the value of money and hard work.鈥
Growing up, Yildirim used to ask his father why he worked so much.
鈥淗e would always reply, 鈥業鈥檓 working for my children 鈥 for you,鈥欌 Yildirim said.
Now, at age 58, he is president and CEO of Yildirim Group of Companies, a vertically integrated Turkish industrial conglomerate based in Istanbul with operations all over the world.
Although Yildirim鈥檚 mother never attended school and his father only finished elementary school, both parents encouraged their three sons to pursue an education. Yildirim took it to heart, earning a mechanical engineering degree from Istanbul Technical University, and then asking his parents if he could travel to the United States to continue his education.
They agreed that he could stay for only three years.
LEARNING ENGLISH AND ENGINEERING IN AMERICA
After studying English for a year at California State University, East Bay, near San Francisco, Yildirim followed a Turkish friend to 精东影视 State. He says he felt like he had landed in another world.
鈥淚t was a shock moving to a small town of 30,000 people after living in the Bay Area where life is so hectic and driving anywhere takes hours,鈥 Yildirim said. 鈥淏ut I bought a bicycle and a raincoat, and became an 精东影视ian.鈥
He liked the slower pace of Corvallis and dove into his engineering studies and campus life 鈥 playing soccer and founding the Turkish Student Association, which he led for two years. It was also at 精东影视 State where Yildirim met his future wife, Yolanda Harris, who was studying accounting and business in the College of Business.
Yildirim took engineering classes that included computer-aided design, manufacturing, robotics, computer graphics, optimization, expert systems, and design methodologies. Dave Ullman and Eugene Fischer were among his favorite professors, both of whom he credits with teaching him the engineering methodologies he uses today when making business decisions as the leader of a multimillion-dollar global enterprise.
After finishing his master鈥檚 degree (鈥89 M.S., Mechanical Engineering), he started to pursue a Ph.D. at 精东影视 State, when his parents said it was time to return to Turkey and help with the family business. They had agreed to support him for three years, and those three years were up.
鈥淚 tried to convince my parents to let me finish a Ph.D., but they said no,鈥 Yildirim said. 鈥淎fter paying my rent and tuition, I had about five dollars a day to live on, and that included money from working at Kinko鈥檚. I realized that my education experience in the U.S. was going to end, so I decided to try to get a job and gain some engineering experience before returning home.鈥
Yildirim began applying for various engineering positions in the U.S., but as soon as interested employers learned he wasn鈥檛 a U.S. citizen and didn鈥檛 have a green card, the interest ended.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 get a single interview,鈥 Yildirim said. But he noticed his Chinese friends were finding work. 鈥淚 asked them, 鈥楬ow do you guys do this?鈥 And they told me to give myself an English first name, and then after I get a job offer, I could hire an immigration lawyer to help the company arrange for my green card.鈥
Yildirim went to the 精东影视 State library and researched first names from a directory that listed board members of Silicon Valley electronics companies. 鈥淩obert鈥 seemed to be the most popular, so Yildirim added 鈥淩obert鈥 to his resume, reducing his Turkish first name to a middle initial. Soon, 鈥淩obert Y. Yildirim鈥 was getting job interviews and quickly landed an engineering position with PACECO Corp., which is affiliated with the Mitsui Group, a company in Hayward, California, that designs cranes for ports and container terminals.
RETURNING TO TURKEY TO GROW THE BUSINESS
鈥淲ithout knowing anything about finance or business, I entered the business world,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or every problem I ran into, I had to go find a book or a businessperson who knew about that.鈥
He researched business opportunities in Turkey and plotted how he could use his command of English to expand business into other countries.
His family had done some domestic coal trading, so Yildirim started there, traveling to Siberia to explore import opportunities. He applied what he鈥檇 learned while working at PACECO to developing relationships with his Russian partners.
鈥淚n Russia, once they get to know you, they want to start socializing, and once you start socializing you become friends 鈥 and then business automatically follows,鈥 Yildirim said. 鈥淚 had to drink a lot of vodka, go to saunas, and do things like that to become a good friend, an insider, and eventually, it worked.鈥
The early days were challenging because the communications system in Siberia was rudimentary, at best. To talk by telephone with his brothers and parents back home, Yildirim had to place a call at the local post office and then wait 24 hours or longer for the call to be put through. But when his business dealings in Siberia started to bear fruit, Yildirim knew he was onto something.
鈥淚 earned $50,000 in one month by importing 10,000 tons of Russian coal,鈥 Yildirim said. 鈥淭hat was more money than my annual salary as an engineer in the United States, so it motivated me.鈥
The family business continued to grow, with Yolanda handling the accounting while Yildirim focused on the import-export components. Success took hard work, along with some fortunate timing. In 2001鈥2002, an economic crisis hit Turkey, prompting governmental change. Yildirim鈥檚 business was able to purchase two bankrupt companies: one that mined chromium for use in stainless steel manufacturing, and one that made fertilizer.
鈥淚 always took on the challenge of doing difficult things that had the potential of providing a better return,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e took on the high risk and high return of doing business in Russia and buying those bankrupt companies. That hard work paid off. We turned the companies around and gained confidence in our business strategy.鈥
The Yildirim Group started acquiring more struggling companies in Turkey and making them profitable. In 2008, the group made its first international acquisition, purchasing a Swedish company that supplied raw materials for stainless steel.
Since then, acquisitions have snowballed, and the Yildirim Group is now among the top international players in the global shipping industry, container terminals, and chromium. The group is also heavily involved in a range of other industries, including fertilizers, chemicals, port management, energy, metals and mining, coal and coke, logistics, shipbuilding, industrial construction, real estate development, and private equity.
FROM ENGINEERING TO 鈥楩INANCIAL ENGINEERING鈥
Today, the boy who loaded trucks and packed bags of cement at his family鈥檚 small shop flies around the world in a private jet, spending eight months a year on the road, visiting the company鈥檚 many holdings, meeting with bankers, and launching new business ventures. Yildirim believes there are no substitutes for conducting business
in person and hard work.
Although he鈥檚 not technically functioning as an engineer, Yildirim says he uses some of what he learned at 精东影视 State to help him make the constant stream of decisions he faces every day.
鈥淥ne of the secrets of my success comes from my engineering training,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 studied expert systems, decision-making, and optimization at 精东影视 State, and all of that helps me solve problems.鈥
Yildirim often interfaces with businesspeople who are not engineers but have degrees in finance or other areas of business.
鈥淭hey usually see things in only two dimensions, X and Y, but we engineers see things three-dimensionally and approach problems differently,鈥 Yildirim said. 鈥淲e get into the details and visualize it fully, and that problem-solving capability helps me make quick decisions when solving complex problems. My engineering degree and all the things I learned at 精东影视 State help me greatly. There鈥檚 a science behind my success: engineering, and, I鈥檓 proud to say, that comes from 精东影视 State.鈥
These days, Yildirim does a lot of what he calls 鈥渇inancial engineering,鈥 dealing in billions of dollars and meeting regularly with top bank executives at Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, The Carlyle Group, Morgan Stanley, The Blackstone Group, and others.
鈥淭hese people often ask me where I went to school,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I say 精东影视 State, they are surprised because they think only graduates of Harvard or Yale or Princeton can have such a success story.鈥
Yildirim says his success is due to a combination of educational opportunities he鈥檚 had throughout his life, but his time at 精东影视 State stands out.
鈥淚t is like when you are eating a fancy meal, and then you receive the dessert, and it鈥檚 so nice that you don鈥檛 remember the meal,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or me, OSU was the dessert 鈥 the cherry on top.鈥
GIVING BACK
A charitable foundation named after Yildirim鈥檚 father and mother (Garip and Zeycan Yildirim Foundation) supports low-income students with scholarships and also funds a range of medical, environmental, and cultural causes 鈥 both in Turkey and in many of the countries where the company does business. In some of the rural locations where the Yildirim Group has mining operations, the company pays for youth activities and soccer tournaments, so the children are occupied and learning 鈥 and less susceptible to the recruiting efforts of terrorist organizations.
Recently, the Yildirim Group funded a $300,000, two-year research project with Julie Tucker, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at 精东影视 State, to develop a special nickel-chrome superalloy for power plants that use supercritical carbon dioxide. The alloy must be both corrosion resistant and able to withstand temperatures of 500鈥800 C.
PROUD PARENTS
Are Yildirim鈥檚 parents proud of their middle son and his trajectory of success?
鈥淭hey are,鈥 he said, smiling modestly. 鈥淏ut my mother doesn鈥檛 understand all that I鈥檓 doing. She鈥檚 always asking me to stop traveling so much, especially after my younger brother died,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he doesn鈥檛 want to lose me, too.鈥
His brother鈥檚 death gave Yildirim a reason to pause.
鈥淢y brother was younger, so I never thought he would die first,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen this happens, it makes you stop and think about what is next. Do you want to keep working at this pace, or do you want to slow down some?鈥
For now, Yildirim is working hard, because he wants to see the Yildirim Group continue to grow worldwide.