Sidney Mortimer Harman (August 5, 1918 – April 12, 2011) was a Canadian-born American engineer, businessman, manager and philanthropist active in electronics, education, government, industry, and publishing.
Harman made “high-fidelity sound a part of American life".
Harman's career highlights include: co-founder, CEO and Chairman Emeritus of Harman/Kardon, Inc, President of World Friends College, U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce, Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciences, board member of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, Isaias W. Hellman Professor of Polymathy at University of Southern California executive board chairman of Business Executives for National Security, member of the Council on Foreign Relations and CFO-owner of the Newsweek Daily Beast Co.
Harman was active in business until his death at 92 years old. He died one month after being diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia.
Harman was a graduate of Baruch College of the City University of New York in 1940, earning a BA in Business Administration and later earned a Ph.D. in social psychology from the Union Graduate College in Schenectady in 1973. His doctoral thesis was titled "Business and Education - New Experiments, New Hope".
Harman was a Jewish entrepreneur and philanthropist.
In his 2003 autobiography, Harman explained “The object was to persuade sentries at enemy listening posts that a significant activity was under way, coming at them from the direction of the broadcast, while in fact the real action was from a different direction".
During his 14-year tenure at Bogen, Harman moved from engineer to sales manager. He was later named general manager of the firm. "Sidney Harman, 1918-2011", Bloomberg Businessweek, Obituary April 14, 2011, April 18–24 edition, page 24.
Recognizing a nascent high-fidelity industry, Harman lobbied the Bogen company to develop improved audio systems for American consumers. Bogen wasn't interested so Harman left in 1953, taking Kardon with him.
1954 their first products were the 7 tube A-100 AM - FM tuner featuring automatic frequency control, priced at $70.50 () and the Festival D-1000 receiver, the world's first integrated hi-fi receiver priced at $189.50 (). Advertised as having "all the critical electronic elements of a deluxe high-fidelity system on one compact, controlled chassis", the unit included a wide bandwidth FM radio tuner, a pre-amplifier and 20-watt amplifier with automatic loudness control all in a complete chassis.
The partners had created an advanced audio receiver that could be used to play radio programs and records at home with high audio fidelity by simply attaching speakers. Listeners were amazed. “We knocked the hell out of them; they were trembling with Shostakovich's Fifth” Harman said. “Nobody had heard anything like that in his living room”, Harman recalled.
By 1956 Harmon/Kardon was worth $600,000 (). Kardon retired in 1957.
1958 Harman introduced the Festival TA-230, the first high fidelity simulcast stereo receiver. Harman steadily grew his company into a consumer audio juggernaut in the home, professional, and automotive markets producing speakers, amplifiers, noise-reduction devices, video and navigation equipment, voice-activated telephones, climate controls and home theater systems.
Harman repurchased the company in 1980 after leaving government service, saying “There are two ways to get rich, one is to sell your company to Beatrice Foods. The other is to buy it back.”
In 2002, Harman was awarded the Electronic Industries Alliance (EIA) Medal of Honor for "outstanding contributions to the advancement of the electronics industry". The EIA said Harman's "unwavering commitment to excellence, innovation, and human development, both in the electronics industry and the greater community" and his "commitment to progressive management at every level, his promotion of the arts as integral in business, and his remarkable vision in anticipating, interpreting, and giving life to the opportunities in digital technology" were the reasons for the
award.
HARMAN International corporate customers in 2007 included Apple, Inc., BMW, Land Rover, DaimlerChrysler, General Motors, Hyundai/Kia Lexus, Mercedes-Benz, Mitsubishi Group, Porsche, Peugeot, Rolls-Royce, Saab Automobile, and Toyota.
As of June 30, 2007 the company held 1,885 trademark registrations and 294 pending trademark applications around the world. The company also held 1,695 United States and foreign patents and 2,172 pending patent applications covering various audio, infotainment and software products.
Harman retired as chairman in 2008 and was elected Chairman Emeritus. He was also one of the first inductees into the Consumer Electronics Association's Hall of Fame.
In 1970 a labor problems surfaced at a Harman automotive parts plant in Bolivar, Tennessee. Harman said "Our plant was aging and old-fashioned. If Charles Dickens had visited us in Bolivar, he would have felt he had never left the grimier parts of London.... I realized then that the way I ran the plant in Bolivar and at other Harman factories was in contradiction to everything I was doing at Friends World College where". Harman began changing the way the factory was managed.
In 1972 Harman met Irving Bluestone, vice president of the United Automobile Workers union while testifying before a United States Senate subcommittee about factory worker anger and frustration. Harman said he felt the main problem was corporate America treating employees like replaceable pieces of machinery. Bluestone asked Harman "Are you for real?" when they were introduced. Bluestone decided to work with Harman to address worker dissension at the Bolivar plant.
Supported by the Ford Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the National Commission on Productivity and Work Quality, the project was initially a success. Managers had to set a quota of one group visit per week to limit distractions due to so many corporate and labor union leaders wanting to visit the plant.
The program included a company provision for child day care for employees as well as early shift ending times earned by teams meeting daily production quotas ahead of schedule. Management didn't fully support the project despite comments to the contrary. Harman later said "I didn't recognize soon enough how critical a role the managers have to play, You don't go anywhere unless you get those guys to passionately sign on." "You overlook the middle managers at your peril".
Nevertheless, the project has become a model for American industry and is a principal case study at United States business schools and abroad.
After he left government in 1978, President Jimmy Carter Letters - The American Presidency Project - Letters- October - 1978 he reacquired a number of businesses of Harman International he had sold to Beatrice. The company continued its growth plan with a string of acquisitions throughout the 1980s that pushed Harman International's sales from about $80 million in 1981 to more than $200 million by 1986, and then to more than $500 million by 1989.
Harman served for three years as president of LIU Global, a worldwide, experimental Quaker College.
Harman was chairman of the Program Committee of the Board of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and a member of the Board of the Carter Center of Emory University.
He was a philanthropist and a member of Washington, D.C.’s Shakespeare Theatre Company Board of Trustees. The Company's new Harman Center for the Arts is named for his family with a performance space, Sidney Harman Hall, named for him.
Each semester distinguished poets, playwrights, novelists, journalists and essayists are invited to participate in the program's workshops, classes and conferences. The Harman hosts guest readings and offers participants a weeklong residency. The program also sponsors creative writing competitions and literary internships for Baruch College students.
On July 24, 2012, the Harman family only held a minority stake in Newsweek.
A memorial celebration for Harman was held on May 25, 2011, at Sidney Harman Hall in Washington, D.C. Bill Clinton, US Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, journalist Andrea Mitchell and Yo-Yo Ma were among the attending dignitaries who shared anecdotes of Harman's life.
Clinton recalled visiting a Harman factory in California, and how Harman gave recently laid-off workers the opportunity to use space inside the factory to make items and sell them, keeping the profits. Clinton said "That tells you something about his values and his creativity... he was a young man at 92 because he never forgot what mattered".
Breyer spoke of Harman's love of Shakespeare and his ability to recite large portions of plays from memory. Breyer said Harman felt those "literary gems shed light on contemporary problems... but he did not live in the past" but used "the past to inform the future".
Andrea Mitchell said of Harman "There was no one better at making a toast and he never needed a note—or a teleprompter. He was always smarter, funnier, and better company than anyone else in the room".
• 2002 - Electronic Industries Alliance Medal of Honor recipient
• 2003 - Aspen Institute Award for Corporate Leadership
• 2007 - Entrepreneur of the Year - USC Marshall's Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies
• 2007 - Washingtonian of the Year
• 2008 - First Judge Widney Professor of Business at University of Southern California.
Sold and repurchased Harman/Kardon
HARMAN International Industries
Retired from HARMAN International
US desegregation supporter
The Bolivar Project experiment in worker empowerment
US government service
Supporter of education
Harman Professorship in International Science, Public Policy, and Human Development
Baruch College Harman Writer-In-Residence program
Academy for Polymathic Study
Publisher
Newsweek
Philanthropy
Harman Center for the Arts
Personal life
Later years
Death and memorial celebration
Bibliography
Awards
External links
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