GERMANY — German food ingredients solutions provider Mühlenchemie has named Peter Steiner as the new global head of business unit.

Peter contributing over 30 years of experience in the international functional ingredients industry will structure and gear services to customers’ needs in a volatile and globalized market.

“With Peter Steiner we have acquired a wealth of know-how for Mühlenchemie in respect of strategy, change management and team formation.”

Dr. Matthias Mose – Managing Director Food Ingredients Division of the Stern-Wywiol Gruppe

According to reports by World Grain, the focus of his work will be on extending consultancy and digitalizing the company’s offers.

Mühlenchemie also develops customized flour treatment concepts for the milling industry and offer comprehensive services and consultation.

“With Peter Steiner we have acquired a wealth of know-how for Mühlenchemie in respect of strategy, change management and team formation.

“By perfecting these competences, we are raising our philosophy of ‘Understanding Flour’ onto a new level,” said Dr. Matthias Moser, the Managing Director responsible for the firms and brands of the Food Ingredients Division of the Stern-Wywiol Gruppe.

Every year, Mühlenchemie standardizes more than 100 million tonnes of wheat for the milling industry in over 130 countries.

The requirement for this always has been to maintain close relations with over 2,000 customers and develop tailor-made solutions.

Teams of experts in Mexico, Singapore, India, China, Russia, Turkey and Nigeria offer services to the local mills on the spot, thus helping them to achieve optimal flour quality.

“We intend to preserve and develop the values that have made our company the global market leader in flour treatment and apply them to meet the demands of our time,” Steiner said.

To do so, Mühlenchemie will take on additional personnel and also adjust itself more closely to the culture of the target markets with new employees in product management.

“We want to understand our customers better, encourage internal and external communication and offer more personal consultancy,” Steiner said.

This will also entail more investment in business development, trend scouting and market research by the company as it thinks in terms of whole strategies so that the mills can achieve growth in a dynamic market environment.

“We will collect, analyze and share more data-driven information from the start, from the raw materials and procurement markets, in order to find more individual and quicker solutions for our customers,” Steiner added.

The focus of development will still be the group’s SternTechnology Center in Ahrensburg, near Hamburg.

The trial bakery enables 100 research scientists and applications technologists to simulate processes and test the efficacy of enzymes and other active ingredients.

From the cereal grain to the baked foods, the company can represent all stages of production with the use of sophisticated technology. Within a short time, the results can be applied to commercial processing and conveyed into the target regions.

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