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Paul Stillmank

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Founder and CEO
7Rivers  |  Milwaukee

Paul Stillmank is a veteran technology executive and entrepreneur. He is the founder and chief executive officer of 7Rivers Inc., a consulting services firm focused on AI and data modernization. The startup raised an initial $4 million seed round in 2023 and an additional $2 million in 2024 to support its expansion. Previously, he founded and grew 7Summits, a Salesforce consultancy, to 200 employees and five appearances on the Inc. 5000 list before selling it to IBM in 2021.

Education: Bachelor’s, Marquette University

Would you change your career if you could: “No way! I already had that conversation with myself over a dozen years ago and it led me to launch companies like the one I’m driving now: leveraging technology on the edge to drive incredible business value for our customers.”

If you could time travel: “I would have loved to have been on a major expedition alongside Roald Amundsen when he drew the first line through the Northwest Passage or made it successfully to the South Pole before anyone else.”

Favorite Wisconsin destination: “That’s an easy one for me: just picture me sitting in a 1923 cedar and canvas Old Town canoe floating down the beautiful Bois Brule River, fly rod in hand. That river flows through northwest Wisconsin in Douglas County near the Town of Brule, Wisconsin.”

Cocktail of choice: “A Sazerac: Rye Whiskey, absinthe, sugar, bitters, lemon or orange.”

George Oliver

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Chairman and CEO
Johnson Controls | Glendale

George Oliver is chairman and chief executive officer of Johnson Controls. The company, which is based in Ireland but has its operational headquarters in Glendale, has 100,000 employees working across 150 countries. One of the largest Milwaukee-area employers, nearly 2,000 of its employees work locally.

In July 2024, Oliver announced plans to retire and that he would continue to serve in his role until a successor is named. He will remain chair of the board once the new CEO assumes that position.

Under Oliver’s leadership, Johnson Controls spun off its Power Solutions business, selling it to a group led by Brookfield Business Partners for $13.2 billion. That business is now known as Clarios.

Prior to becoming CEO in 2017, he was president and chief operating officer, with responsibility for leading the integration of Johnson Controls and Tyco following their $16.5 billion merger in 2016.

Previously, Oliver was CEO of Tyco and a member of its board of directors. He joined Tyco in 2006 as president of Tyco Safety Products and became president of Tyco Electrical & Metal Products the following year. He was appointed president of Tyco Fire Protection in 2011. Prior to Tyco, he had a more than 20-year career with General Electric.

Education: Bachelor’s, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

2022 Wisconsin 275 Profile

Manufacturing
Chairman and CEO
Johnson Controls  |  Glendale

George Oliver was named chairman and chief executive officer of Johnson Controls plc in 2017. He previously served as CEO of Tyco and was a member of its board of directors from 2012 until its $16.5 billion merger with Johnson Controls in 2016. He was responsible for leading the integration of the two companies.

He joined Tyco in 2006 as president of Tyco Safety Products and later became president of Tyco Electrical & Metal Products. He was appointed president of Tyco Fire Protection in 2011. Earlier, he spent 20 years with General Electric.

Under Oliver’s leadership, Johnson Controls spun off its Power Solutions business, selling it to a group led by Brookfield Business Partners for $13.2 billion. That business is now known as Clarios. In 2021, the company made waves when it announced it would sell its downtown Milwaukee buildings and move those employees to its Glendale campus.

Under its merger with Tyco, the multi-industrial firm established its combined headquarters in Cork, Ireland. Its primary North American operational headquarters remains in Glendale. It continues to be one of the largest Milwaukee-area employers, with nearly 2,000 employees working locally. Prior to the merger, the company had around 3,400 local employees.

Oliver serves on the board of directors of aerospace and defense company Raytheon Co. He is also a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame board of trustees and serves on the board of trustees of his alma mater, Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Education: Bachelor’s, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

 

Greg Piefer

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Founder and CEO
SHINE Technologies  |  Janesville

Greg Piefer is founder and chief executive officer of Janesville-based SHINE Technologies, a nuclear fusion technology and radioisotope production company. SHINE closed a $70 million funding round in 2023 that will allow it to complete the process of scaling up and commercializing near-term applications for its fusion technology, which is used in the industrial, defense and health care markets. Piefer, who holds a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering from UW-Madison, founded the company in 2005. Previously, he was president of Monona-based Phoenix Nuclear Labs LLC and chief technology officer for Madison-based Gillware Data Recovery.

Education: Bachelor’s and doctorate, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Highlights of the past 12 months: “Earlier this year, we became the largest producer of non-carrier added lutetium-177 in North America. We’re now shipping our best-in-class product, Ilumira, to customers all over the world, every week. This is an essential product for cancer patients, and our customers are thrilled with our product quality. What’s more is that the trajectory of our medical isotopes business, combined with our non-destructive testing business, provides a strong growth engine to fuel our long-term ambitions.”

What would you like to change about Wisconsin: “A deeper pool of early-stage and venture-stage investment capital would really help us grow our economic base.”

Definition of success: “In business, creating more value than you’ve invested. This includes time, rate of return and opportunity cost considerations.”

Cocktail of choice: “A Manhattan, but with brandy as the base vs. the traditional bourbon.”

Tom Nieman

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President
Fromm Nieman Brands Inc.

Tom Nieman represents the fourth generation at family-owned and -operated Fromm Family Foods LLC, a Mequon-based maker of dog food. The company operates dry food and treat manufacturing facilities in Mequon and Columbus and a wet food cannery in Eden. Nieman also leads affiliated business Foxtown Brewing, a Mequon-based craft brewery.

Nieman is spearheading the development of a new 28,000-square-foot, three-story building in downtown Milwaukee that will include a restaurant, taproom and distillery and dog-friendly outdoor spaces. That development, called Foxtown Landing, is planned for a vacant site adjacent to a new dog park now under construction in downtown Milwaukee. Fromm will serve as title sponsor of the park. Since 2014, Fromm has hosted Petfest, an annual family event with various pet-focused attractions and activities, on the Henry Maier Festival Grounds in Milwaukee.

In 2016, Nieman purchased a farm in northern Marathon County that previously belonged to his family and was once a center of fox fur production and the nation’s largest ginseng grower. Nieman was recognized with the U.S. Small Business Administration – Wisconsin’s Small Business Person of the Year award in 2013.

Andy Nunemaker

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CEO
Groupware Technologies  |  Wauwatosa

Andy Nunemaker is CEO of Groupware Technologies, a Wauwatosa-based health care software company that serves the care management market. Previously, Nunemaker co-founded and was CEO of Dynamis Software Corp., CEO of EMSystems, and an executive at GE HealthCare. He is chairman of the board at Sprecher Brewing Co. and serves on the board of directors for Northwestern Mutual, EmOpti, and ConsortiEX. He has been an active investor with the Golden Angels for 20 years and taught in the entrepreneurial program at Marquette University’s College of Business Administration for a decade. His current nonprofit board service includes the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce, Summerfest and the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.

Education: Bachelor’s, Valparaiso University; master’s, Georgia Tech; MBA, Harvard University

The future of your industry: “Health care and technology will both be around for quite a long time. I’m very bullish on our space.”

If you could time travel: “I’d like to spend a day traveling from Chicago to Minneapolis on the 1948 Brooks Stevens designed Milwaukee Road Hiawatha, with a four-hour stop to explore 1948 downtown Milwaukee.”

First and most recent concert: “First concert I bought tickets to was Tina Turner at Alpine Valley in 1985. Last one was Cage the Elephant in Madison.”

Favorite movie: “‘The Interview.’ It was the funniest movie I’ve seen.”

2022 Wisconsin 275 Profile

Emerging Industries  |  Technology
CEO
Groupware Technologies  |  Wauwatosa

In 2018, Andy Nunemaker sold Dynamis Software Corp, the West Allis-based sales software company he founded six years prior, to Illinois-based Applied Systems. He went on to hold a senior VP role at Applied, and today is chief executive officer of health care software company Groupware Technologies. Prior to founding Dynamis, Nunemaker was an executive at GE Healthcare and later CEO of EMSystems. In 2020, Nunemaker was among the group of investors who purchased Glendale-based Sprecher Brewing Co. from its founder; he serves as chairman of the board. He also sits on the boards of Northwestern Mutual, EmOpti and ConsortiEX. His current nonprofit board service includes the Milwaukee Art Museum, Sculpture Milwaukee and the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.

Education: Bachelor’s, Valparaiso University; master’s, Georgia Tech; MBA, Harvard University

First car: “My parents bought a Pontiac Tempest from Ernie von Schledorn the year I was born. I drove that car during high school and kept it well into my 20s.”

Favorite destination: “I love Puerto Vallarta and try to go several times each year.”

Hobby/passion: “I love photography and wish I spent more time pursuing it. In years past, I would walk 4 miles just to take the perfect photo.”

What would make Wisconsin better: “Wisconsin has so much going for it. I would love to change our election process to try to loosen the chokehold the two-party system has on our state and nation. I’ve been a public advocate for five-forward, rank choice voting.”

Blake Moret

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Chairman and CEO
Rockwell Automation | Milwaukee 

Blake Moret leads Rockwell Automation, a Milwaukee-based manufacturer of industrial automation and digital transformation products. He became CEO of Rockwell in 2016 and chairman of the board in 2018. An advocate of workforce development, Moret is vice chair for the National Association of Manufacturers’ board of directors and is a member of the Wisconsin Governor’s Council on Workforce Investment. He is also co-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Advanced Manufacturing Community of CEOs and is a member of the Business Roundtable, among other board service.

Education: Bachelor’s, Georgia Institute of Technology

Advice for first-time leaders: “Don’t be in too much of a hurry. A lot of people sacrifice their 20s on the altar of professional success, and it’s not necessary. Work hard, but not to the exclusion of other interests. It will help you keep things at work in perspective, and you will be more interesting to be around.”

Your sport if you could be an Olympian: “Rowing.”

Highlights from the past 12 months: “It was a tough year for the automation industry, after several years of post-pandemic recovery, but we grew our annual recurring revenue of software and high-value services to more than 10% of total sales, in a year when we did not make major new software acquisitions.”

Favorite Wisconsin destination: “My wife and I really enjoy Kohler. We like the American Club, and the nearby River Wildlife nature preserve.”

2022 Wisconsin 275 Profile

Manufacturing
Chairman and CEO
Rockwell Automation | Milwaukee

Blake Moret leads Rockwell Automation, one of the largest manufacturers based in Wisconsin, with about 25,000 employees. Since assuming his role in 2016, Moret has led Rockwell’s “connected enterprise” vision, a term used to describe the combination of traditional automation equipment and software with connected devices and the ability to analyze data to improve business operations. He sits on the National Association of Manufacturers’ board of directors and is a member of the national Business Roundtable.

Education: Bachelor’s, Georgia Institute of Technology

What was your first job and what did you learn from it?
“A summer intern at Rockwell’s Missile Systems Division, working in a quality team assigned to new defense systems. It was very detailed work, and success was based on the accumulated years of many experts working on difficult problems. It was a great demonstration of the power of combined subject matter expertise and technical innovation.”

What’s the toughest business challenge you’ve ever had to overcome?
“The pandemic presented our company and our customers with some of the biggest challenges to date, and the personal resiliency and responsiveness of our employees got us through, emerging even stronger than before. Early in the crisis, our technology and expertise played a key role in the production of essential goods like packaged food, personal protective equipment, and medicine. It would have been impossible for our customers to change course and make these products in necessary quantities without our products and solutions. Beyond technology, salespeople worked tirelessly to expedite critically needed products, development engineers continued to innovate despite serious impediments to following their normal processes, service engineers helped keep lines running, and our own manufacturing associates dealt with new safety processes to keep products coming.”

What advice would you give to a young professional?
“Be relentless. Nothing important is easy. Success takes persistence and a willingness to try different approaches (and sometimes fail) to achieve your goals. Also, don’t ever take a job just because you think you need to in order to get the next one. It will show. You need to have passion for what you spend so much time doing.”

What has been your/your company’s most significant success over the last 12 months?
“About a year ago, Rockwell acquired Plex Systems, the leading cloud-native smart manufacturing platform. This was our largest acquisition to date and significantly accelerated our strategy to bring the Connected Enterprise to life. The pandemic and supply chain constraints have required customers to urgently increase resilience, agility, and sustainability in their operations, and taking a leadership role in providing cloud-native solutions for related industrial applications showed that we could go on offense even during such trying times.

What would people be surprise to learn about you (fun fact)?
“I recently spent four days kayaking off of Vancouver Island in British Columbia with friends and my 21-year-old son.”

Is there a nonprofit cause that has special meaning to you?
“In 2017 Rockwell launched the Academy of Advanced Manufacturing, in conjunction with ManpowerGroup, for returning service men and women. This program includes 12 weeks of hands-on, outcome-based training to complement the instruction these people already received in the military, giving them the skills needed for technician jobs at manufacturing companies. Since we kicked off the program, AAM has placed more than 250 military veterans in highly paid, highly skilled jobs at more than 70 manufacturers. After completion of the 12-week training session, these veterans are now earning salaries of at least $60,000 – $75,000 annually. It’s a huge source of personal satisfaction to me that we stood up this program and have sustained it through the past few years.”

What piece of advice has had the most significant impact on your career?
“When I started this job, a mentor told me that managing my energy was even more important than managing my time. He was right – you never know when you will have to be at the top of your game to deal with a crisis.”

Shane Moll

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Group President
Milwaukee Tool | Brookfield

Shane Moll joined Brookfield-based Milwaukee Tool in 2007 as vice president of marketing and has since taken on increasing responsibility to become group president of the power tools, equipment and outdoor power equipment business unit earlier this year. In his role, he leads global engineering, testing and product management for that business unit, along with front-end innovation, cordless platform and system technology development, digital product management, among other areas. Previously, Moll worked for Black & Decker.

Education: Bachelor’s, Shippensburg University; MBA, Loyola University Maryland

Playlist for commute/run: “Sports podcasts and country music.”

The future of your industry: “We have earned the trust of the trades by working with them to improve their safety, productivity and quality of work. The challenges we face together are growing more complex and they won’t get any easier.”

Advice for first-time leaders: “Prioritize your people and your culture, actively seek feedback from leaders you respect, lead with questions and establish ambitious goals.”

First and most recent concert: “First concert: Beastie Boys. Most recent: Luke Combs.”

William Linton

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Founder, president and CEO
Promega  |  Madison

Over the past 46 years, William Linton has grown Promega Corp. from a startup in his garage to a global biotechnology company with revenues of $672 million. Promega is headquartered in Madison, with more than 1,400 employees, branches in 16 countries and over 50 global distributors. Linton founded the company in 1978 to provide restriction enzymes to molecular biologists. In 1984,  the company launched a joint venture to set up China’s first genetic biochemical manufacturing facility. The company now has a portfolio of over 4,000 products that support a range of life science work in areas such as cell biology; DNA, RNA and protein analysis; drug development; human identification and molecular diagnostics. Its DNA IQ kit was used to help identify victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Linton also founded the Usona Institute, a medical research organization focused on the therapeutic application of psychedelic medicine for mental health conditions. The institute opened a 93,000-square-foot center, located near the Promega campus, in 2023, where it conducts clinical research and trials related to psychedelic therapies. In 2019, Usona received authorization from the Food and Drug Administration to investigate the potential of psilocybin to treat major depressive disorder.

Linton currently serves as a director for the Analytical, Life Science and Diagnostics Association; BioPharmaceutical Technology Center Institute; Bruker Biosciences; Eppendorf and Usona Institute.

Education: Bachelor’s, University of California, Berkeley

2022 Wisconsin 275 Profile

Emerging Industries | Technology
President and CEO
Promega Corp. | Fitchburg

William Linton is founder, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Fitchburg-based biotechnology company Promega Corp. Linton founded the company in his garage in 1978 to provide restriction enzymes to molecular biologists. By 1981, the company had grown to 15 employees, and three years later, the company launched a joint venture to set up China’s first genetic biochemical manufacturing facility. The company has grown to offer over 4,000 products – including reagents, assays and benchtop instruments – used by scientists, researchers and pharmaceutical companies. Notably, its DNA IQ kit was used to help identify victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks.

The company has more than 1,800 employees, about 1,200 of whom work at its Madison-area facilities. Its customers span over 100 countries, with direct sales and manufacturing branches in 16 countries. The privately held company has reported revenues of about $450 million.

In 2014, Linton founded the Usona Institute, a medical research organization focused on the therapeutic application of psychedelic medicine for mental health conditions. The institute is expected to soon open its new 93,000-square-foot building, located near the Promega campus, where it plans to conduct clinical research and trials. In 2019, Usona received authorization from the Food and Drug Administration to investigate the potential of psilocybin to treat major depressive disorder.

Linton currently serves as a director for the Analytical, Life Science and Diagnostics Association; BioPharmaceutical Technology Center Institute; Bruker Biosciences; Eppendorf and Usona Institute.

Education: Bachelor’s, University of California, Berkeley

Robert Hau

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Chief financial officer
Fiserv  |  Milwaukee

Under Robert Hau’s leadership as chief financial officer, Fiserv Inc. has grown in revenue from $5.5 billion in 2016 to over $19 billion in 2023. Hau was instrumental in the Milwaukee-based payments and financial services technology company’s acquisition of First Data Corporation in 2019, a $22 billion deal that put Fiserv among the world’s leading payment and financial technology providers. He also played a significant role in the company’s decision to move its global headquarters from Brookfield to a 170,000-square-foot space in downtown Milwaukee.

Hau has more than 35 years of experience in business and financial leadership roles, previously serving as CFO of TE Connectivity Ltd., a $12 billion global product technology company; and Lennox International Inc. He also spent 22 years at Honeywell International Inc. in a variety of financial and operations leadership roles, including serving as CFO of its aerospace business group, specialty materials business group and aerospace electronic systems unit.

Hau is a member of the board of directors of OpenText and serves on the board of Milwaukee-based nonprofit SHARP Literacy. He is also a member of the Greater Milwaukee Committee, a director of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce and a member of the President’s Advisory Council and Department of Finance Advisory Board at Marquette University, his alma mater. In 2023, he was named Marquette’s College of Business Administration Distinguished Alumnus of the Year.

Education: Bachelor’s, Marquette University; master’s, USC Marshall School of Business

Jeff Michels

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CEO
Great Northern Corp. | Appleton

Jeff Michels leads Great Northern Corp., an Appleton-based company that develops and manufactures packaging, shipping, merchandising and distribution products for industrial, commercial and retail markets. The company employs more than 1,400 people across seven states. In Wisconsin, the company has facilities in Appleton, Chippewa Falls, Oshkosh and Racine. It is 44th among Wisconsin’s largest private companies, based on revenue, according to Deloitte.

Before being named CEO, he was president of the business’s packaging and instore groups, and before that he spent 14 years as the packaging business unit manager. He’s been with the company 26 years.

Wendy Harris

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Regional Innovation Officer
Wisconsin Biohealth Tech Hub  |  Madison/Milwaukee

Following a three-decade-long career with GE Healthcare, Wendy Harris was appointed in 2023 as the regional innovation officer of the Wisconsin Biohealth Tech Hub, where she’s responsible for leading a consortium of 18 member companies and 30 supporting entities in the state’s biohealth Industry. Harris played an influential role in securing the national “Tech Hub” designation for Wisconsin, which netted $80 million in funding for project-based work in July 2024. Harris previously spent 25 years of her 33 years with GE Healthcare in executive leadership. She serves on the UW-Madison industry advisory board for the College of Engineering and is vice chair of the board.

Education: Bachelor’s and MBA, University of Wisconsin-Madison

The future of your industry: “The biohealth industry has had high growth over the past years of 10.6%, and we are forecasting continued growth in the state of Wisconsin. Biohealth is one of the strongest growth industries.”

Favorite Wisconsin destination: “‘Up North’ – Manitowish Waters is my favorite. Even in the winter!”

Thing to learn this year: “I would like to learn more about genetics and radioisotopes. And, of course, golf!”

Favorite part of the workday: “The end of the day. I make my list for the next day, then I try to forget about it until then.”

John W. Mellowes

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CEO
Charter Manufacturing | Mequon

John W. Mellowes is CEO and a fourth-generation family owner of Charter Manufacturing Company Inc., a Mequon-based group of metals manufacturing businesses. Under Mellowes’ leadership, Charter Manufacturing and its businesses have acquired Lokey Metals, Cobra Metal Works, Aarrowcast Inc., and Niles Iron & Metal Co. In 2023, Charter Steel broke ground for a 55-acre solar array at its Saukville plant, which is expected to offset its reliance on the grid by 8%. The company reports annual sales of nearly $2 billion.

Education: Bachelor’s, Princeton University; MBA, The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania

What would you like to change about Wisconsin: “Fostering a more civil and constructive political environment. A focus on responsible problem-solving over divisive rhetoric would greatly enhance our ability to tackle the pressing issues of our time.”

Favorite Wisconsin destination: “Lambeau Field. As a lifelong Packers fan, there’s nothing quite like experiencing a game at this iconic venue on a warm Sunday afternoon in the fall. The energy, the tradition and the community spirit make it my favorite Wisconsin destination.”

Playlist for commute/run: “I regularly listen to podcasts during my commute or free time. My go-to choices include insightful discussions on business and technology as well as updates on my favorite sports teams.”

Favorite movie: “’The Dawn Wall.’ It’s a powerful true story about rock climber Tommy Caldwell, who overcame tremendous adversity to achieve something extraordinary.”

2022 Wisconsin 275 Profile

Manufacturing
CEO
Charter Manufacturing Inc.
Mequon

John W. Mellowes assumed leadership of Charter Manufacturing Inc. in 2013, succeeding his father in that role. Mellowes represents the fourth generation of family leadership of the Mequon-based metals manufacturing businesses; he is the great-grandson of Charter founder Alfred Mellowes.

The Charter family of companies includes Charter Steel, Charter Wire, Charter Dura-Bar and Charter Aarrowcast. Its customers include automakers, automotive suppliers and off-highway equipment manufacturers. The company has more than 2,500 employees. In 2022, it ranked No. 25 on Deloitte’s Wisconsin 75 list of the state’s largest private companies, based on sales revenue. The company’s revenue has exceeded $1 billion in recent years.

Under Mellowes’ leadership, Charter Dura Bar acquired iron distribution business Lokey Metals in Fort Worth; Charter Automotive acquired assets of Cobra Metal Works; and Charter Manufacturing acquired Aarrowcast Inc., a Shawano-based maker of gray and ductile iron castings.

It has also consolidated operations. In 2020, Charter Automotive exited its U.K. facility, consolidating business and assets into its Milwaukee and Changzhou, China, operations. The following year, it divested of its Charter Automotive China operations.

Mellowes serves on the board of regents of the Milwaukee School of Engineering and is a former board member of the YMCA of Metropolitan Milwaukee.

Education: Bachelor’s, Princeton University; MBA, The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania

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