Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutNEW BELGIUM BREWERY, PROCESS WATER FACILITY - PDP - 1-95D - MEDIA -0 Young Professionals V. Richard Haro/Th a Coloradoan BEER BARONESS: New Belgium Brewing Co. CEO Kim Jordan poses next to tanks in the company's brewhouse Thursday. This fall, Jordan will become the first woman to chair the Brewers' Association of America. u New Belgium CEO stands behind brewery's mission By ROBERT BAUN i -6 -.2 1 RobertBaun@coloradoan.com It might seem that Kim Jordan was groomed to be a brewing maestro. This fall, she'll become the first woman to chair the 60- year-old Brewers' Associa- tion of America. As chief executive officer of New Belgium Brewing Co., she's helped to guide the business from a two -person basement operation 10 years ago to its current status as a craft brewing icon with 135 employees. "She's a very strong, ac- tive, industry leader," said Daniel Bradford, president of the Brewers' Association of America. Still, the 42-year-old Jor- dan runs New Belgium like a social worker - she was a case worker at the time she started the brewery with her husband, Jeff Lebesch — as much as a captain of indus- try. That's all by design. From the recycled rubber in her office desk to the wind power that electrifiesilthe brewery, Jordan's social philosophies are etched into New Belgium's organization. "In the very broadest sense, everything we do here contributes to New Belgium Brewing Co.," Jordan said. "It's recyclable carpet squares ... to trying to make the grounds pleasing to the eye." Indeed, Jordan's the an- tithesis of the old boy, slap - on -the -back stereotype that's associated with the beer business. Jordan traces her business style to her upbringing. Her father was once press secretary to California Gov. Pat Brown. She later moved to the Washington, D.C., area, and grew up attending a Quaker school in suburban Maryland. becoming a commercial brew- 19m Jordan er. She couldn't know ch' f al Age: 42 Bush New Belgium Brewing Co. Title: Chief executive officer, co-founder. Hobbies Soccer, gardening, bicycling. In the very broadest sense, everything we do here contributes to New Belgium Brewing Co. Lebec s recipe or amber -I- Age: now called Fat Tire — would become the core of a multi -million dollar enterprise. The humble basement be- ginnings are retold by Jordan in a New Belgium promo- tional letter that greets cus- tomers in the brewery lobby: "We had a neighbor paint watercolors that we printed up as beer labels. Jeff would brew, we would bottle to- gether with some help from our son, Zack, then I would call accounts and deliver the beer." Even in those early days, Jordan and Lebesch estab- lished a mission statement that still defines the compa- - Kim Jordan "I grew up in a liberal fam- ily," she said. "I think that did shape what money means to me and what being a commu- nity means to me," Jordan said. Finishing high school at age 16, she soon joined the 1970s rush to Colorado. Over the ensuing decade, she worked a six-pack of jobs: waitress, bartender, school bus driver, U.S. Fish and Wildlife ranger, volun- teer firefighter and academic adviser at Aims Community College. Jordan eventually com- pleted a social work degree at Colorado State University in 1988 and later worked as a case manager and interim di- rector for Project Self -Suffi- ciency in Fort Collins. Jordan also met Lebesch in 1988, and the couple was en- gaged the next year. At the time, Lebesch was a full-time electrical engineer and a. part-time — but pas- sionate — home brewer. Jordan soon became aware that Lebesch was dreaming of ny. One of New Belgium's commitments, for instance, is to make 20 percent of its technology purchases on un- proven, leading -edge equip- ment. "We expect 50 percent of that to fail," Jordan slid. "That's a choice." Bradford said New Bel- gium's loyalty to its mission statement, which includes environmental- and employ- ee -friendly policies, are re- flected in the brewer's suc- cess. "They have a clear vision of how things should be,,` Bradford said. "That echoes in every single element every detail of their busi- ness." Bradford calls Jordan "one of the industry innovators" and said she's unperturbed by being a woman in a large- ly male domain. "She doesn't play in the male beer industry world," he said. "She's charting a course. I think it reflects her personal convictions and her sense of integrity ... Always, at every minute of the day, she will be Kim Jordan."