2013 AEM Hall of Fame Inductees 
  Words:  Dan KamysThe Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) announces the 2013 inductees  into the AEM Hall of Fame, which recognizes and celebrates outstanding  individuals in the off-road equipment industry, and their legacy of innovation,  service and leadership.
 
 Their vision and hard work have been critical to advancing global economic  and social prosperity; their legacy strengthens continued industry contributions  to improving our quality of life, and serves as an inspiration for tomorrow’s  leaders.
 
 The 2013 inductees into the AEM Hall of Fame are:
  
 - Dipl.-Ing. Dr. h. c. Helmut Claas, CLAAS KGaA mbH 
- Ray O’Connor, Topcon Positioning Group 
- Friedrich W. Schwing, Sr., Schwing GmbH
 AEM Hall of Fame inductees have been evaluated by an independent panel of industry  experts on five criteria that are vital to the health of the off-road  equipment manufacturing industry: 1) innovation, 2) industry contributions, 3)  leadership, 4) corporate citizenship/social responsibility and 5)  sustainability.
 
 For more information on the AEM Hall  of Fame and all  its inductees, go online to the AEM Hall of Fame section of the AEM website, www.aem.org/HallofFame.
 
 About the 2013 Hall of Fame inductees
 
 Below are summaries for each of the 2013 honorees with some of the reasons  they were selected for induction.
 
 Dipl.-Ing. Dr. h. c. Helmut Claas (CLAAS KGaA mbH)  
Helmut Claas, an engineer by education and with in-depth  and hands-on farming experience, has dedicated his professional life and  engineering talents to agricultural crop production sustainability. He joined  CLAAS in 1957, was named managing director of technology in 1962, and later  became CEO. He initiated or co-designed many CLAAS innovations, including the  DOMINATOR Series combine harvesters, JAGUAR forage harvesters and XERION  tractors.
 
 Much of CLAAS’s success can be attributed to Helmut Claas’s leadership and  belief that progress comes only if companies are willing to invest in often  uncharted territory for the sake of advancing equipment technology and  innovation. He also recognized the importance of building coalitions, oftentimes  with competitors, for the good of the industry. Under his leadership, the  company has successfully established manufacturing facilities in many world  regions, generating total turnover of approximately $5 billion with about 10,000  employees worldwide. Founded by his father, August Claas, 2013 marks the  company’s 100th year in business.
 
 A firm believer in fostering development of the next generation, Helmut Claas  established the CLAAS Foundation in 1999, which promotes education and research  and development in agricultural technology and related engineering and economic  disciplines.
 
 In recognition of his contributions, he has received honorary doctorates and  professorship from prestigious universities in Germany, Great Britain, Russia,  Hungary and Bulgaria. His awards and other high decorations include the  Profesor-Niklas-Medal of the German Ministry of Agriculture, Order of Merit of  the French Ministry of Agriculture, and Order of Merit of the British  Association of Agricultural Engineers.
 
 Ray O’Connor (Topcon Positioning Group)
 
 Ray O'Connor joined Topcon in 1993 as the only employee dedicated to laser  products. O’Connor had one goal: automate the construction industry. Today, with  the joining of imaging, GNSS, scanning, and software technology, there are few  construction sites or farms that do not use automated positioning. To meet the  global requirement of positioning automation, he developed a ring of technology  centers where the brightest geospatial engineers in North America, Europe, Asia  and Australia create the next generation of products.
 
 O'Connor mandates that every product for every market segment supports the  theme of “time": saving it by increasing productivity, minimizing the disruptive  footprint of a project and reducing use of renewable and non-renewable  resources.
 
 Recognizing the importance of educating future generations of end users,  O’Connor helped implement the Topcon Educational Partnership Program, which  provides a full range of educational tools to more than 500 universities and  associations worldwide.
 
 O’Connor is the 2006 recipient of Toshiba Corporation's Business Performance  Award (the first recipient of non-Japanese descent) for "his superior leadership  and performance." In 2012, Pompeii, Italy honored him for supporting  “preservation and renovation" of the landmark city; the University of Naples  awarded him an honorary doctorate degree for his efforts. O’Connor also received  an honorary doctorate from The Dublin Institute of Technology for his "global  leadership in precision measurement technology." Geospatial World magazine named  him Business Leader of the Year in 2013.
 
 Friedrich W. Schwing, Sr. (Schwing GmbH)
 
 Friedrich Schwing, Sr., founder of Schwing GmbH, has more than 1,200 patents  relating to innovations in material handling and construction equipment. Most  notably, the Schwing all-hydraulic, twin-cylinder concrete pump design powers  the majority of modern concrete pumps.
 
 This invention established a new method  for moving concrete through a pipeline resulting in structures that could not  have been built prior to the modern concrete pump. His invention resulted in  construction efficiency without the manual labor and with extraordinary speed of  placement never before achieved by other methods.
 
 His engineering expertise was not only aimed at product performance but also  operator safety. Schwing helped establish the American Concrete Pumping  Association (ACPA), which has safety as a key focus. Schwing’s corporate policy  directed resources towards safety guidelines, safety seminars, safety materials  and hundreds of hours of donated employee time on industry committees and  boards.
 
 Schwing led by example with a work ethic and modesty that meant he wore the  oldest suit and drove a 20-year-old car. His leadership style was to delegate  functions better left to his employees, so he could pursue solutions through  engineering. Schwing also had a penchant for sustainability before it was  popular. Another of his innovations was a ready-mix reclaimer introduced in the  1980s to convert returned concrete to its components of sand, aggregate, cement  and water. This system provides 100-percent recycling of these materials for  economic and environmental benefits, especially less water use and excess  concrete dumping.
 
 Nominations for the next AEM Hall of Fame will open in spring 2014.