CFO Studio Magazine with Craig Steeneck, CFO, Pinnacle Foods
A SUCCESSFUL IPO, ANUNSOLICITEDTAKEOVEROFFER, AND A $163MILLIONWINDFALL YIELDED A VERYMEMORABLE YEAR FOR PINNACLE FOODS’ CFO F or anyone who works at Pinnacle Foods, the six weeks that began on May 12, 2014, are unforgettable. During this stretch, the future of the company hung in the balance, as the fate of the Parsippany, NJ–based producer, marketer, and distributor of such American dining staples as Birds Eye frozen vegetables, Duncan Hines baking products, and Log Cabin syrup was kicked around far off in Chicago. It started with an unsolicited offer fromHillshire Brands, a Chicago-based food company, to acquire Pinnacle. “That was a really dark day in Pinnacle history,” says Craig Steeneck, Pinnacle’s 57-year-old chief financial officer. Fourteen months earlier, Steeneck and his finance team had borne the lead role in taking Pinnacle public. The takeover news ate at his sense of accomplishment. “It felt a bit like being a victim of our own success,” he says. Now asked to lead the integration with Hillshire (whose brands include Jimmy Dean sausage and Ball Park franks), Steeneck believed that would be his last act for Pinnacle Foods. Conventional wisdom has it that CEOs and CFOs don’t usually hang around after an acquisition. “The prospect of leaving behind all that the Pinnacle team built was unsettling,” he says. For nine years, he’d put his considerable talent into helping shape, grow, and define the business. Disheartened, he made the trip to Chicago to “lay out the shell of what the integration plan would look like.” Two weeks later, everything changed. Pilgrim’s Pride (a chicken producer, processor, marketer, and distributor) announced a bid to buy Hillshire. A couple of days after that, another shift occurred, when Tyson Foods (a global chicken, beef, and pork producer) topped Pilgrim’s offer for Hillshire—and a bidding war ensued. It soon became clear that the sausage maker, Hillshire, would be bought out by the highest bidder, which ended up being Tyson, and that Hillshire would not acquire Pinnacle. Still, Pinnacle had accepted a legally binding offer that had not been officially withdrawn by the Hillshire Board, so the company was bound to the deal and continued to play along, so as not to jeopardize a significant break-up fee. “It was very disruptive,” says Steeneck. “We had to keep people focused on continuing to deliver the business. We carved out all the Hillshire activity and noise to a small group of people, so we weren’t distracting the rest of the team.” But the Wall - BY JULIE BARKER - Photography by Matt Furman COVER STORY PRESSURE COOKER IN THE 8 WWW.CFOSTUDIO.COM 3rd QUARTER 2015
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