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Noritake

Noritake
Leadership team

Mr. Hiroshi Kato (Pres & Representative Director)

Yoshimasa Nakamura (Exec. Officer, Group Deputy GM of Corp. Admin. and GM of Fin. & Accounting Dept)

Mr. Makoto Okabe (Managing Exec. Officer and GM of Sales Division & Industrial Products Group)

Products/ Services
Machinery Manufacturing, Manufacturing
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
Nagoya, Aichi, Japan
Established
1917
Net Income
20M - 100M
Revenue
Above - 1B
Traded as
TYO:5331
Overview
Location
Summary
Noritake Co., Limited with its subsidiaries, provides industrial, ceramic and material, engineering, and tabletop products in Japan and internationally. The company offers grinding and polishing tools comprising grinding wheels, CBN wheels, diamond tools, coated abrasives, coolants, and recycled products; ceramics and materials, such as vacuum fluorescent display, electronic ceramic powders, thick film circuit substrate, decoration materials, engineering ceramics, electronic paste, gypsum, and dental materials. It also provides engineering products comprising heating furnaces/kilns, actuator-less line mixers and related equipment, cutting machines, and filtration systems; and tabletop products, including chinaware for family table, gift, and ornament, as well as tableware for professional and institutional use. Noritake Co., Limited was incorporated in 1904 and is headquartered in Nagoya, Japan.
History

In 1876, Ichizaemon Morimura VI and his brother Toyo founded Morimura Gumi with the intent of establishing overseas trading by a Japanese company. By 1878, Toyo had established a business in New York selling Japanese antiques and other goods, including pottery. The company was renamed Morimura Brothers in 1881. By the 1890s, the company had shifted from retail to wholesale operations and started working on design improvements for the pottery and porcelain ware, which had become one third of its business. By 1899, all of the pottery and porcelain decorating factories in Tokyo and Kyoto had been consolidated in Nagoya, and the company started research on creating European style hard white porcelain in Japan.In 1904, key members of this trading company created the Nippon Toki Kaisha, Ltd. in Japan. A new factory was built in Noritake, near Nagoya . In 1914 the company succeeded in creating their first Western style dinner set, called "Sedan", to compete with European porcelain companies. Nippon Toki wares were mostly aimed at the European Market. This forerunner of the modern Noritake Company was founded in the village of Noritake, a small suburb near Nagoya, Japan. Most of the company’s early wares carried one of the various “Nippon” back stamps to indicate its country of origin when exported to Western markets. Today, many collectors agree that the best examples of “Nippon-era” hand painted porcelain carry a back stamp used by "Noritake" during the Nippon era.

By 1923, Nippon Toki was looking to streamline its paperwork using machines to handle large orders coming in from the United States, and was impressed by the Hollereth tabulating machines manufactured by the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company . In May 1925, Morimura-Brothers entered into a sole agency agreement with CTR to import the Hollerith machines into Japan. The first Hollerith tabulator in Japan was installed at Nippon Pottery in September 1925, making Noritake IBM customer #1 in Japan.In 1939, Noritake started selling industrial grinding wheels based on its porcelain finishing technology. It now provides ceramic and diamond grinding and abrasive solutions for many industries. Other products currently manufactured by Noritake, also derived from its core tableware manufacturing technologies, include thick film circuit substrates, engineering ceramics, ceramic powder, and vacuum fluorescent displays, as well as heating furnaces and kilns, mixing technology, filtration systems, and cutting and grinding machines.Although consumers and collectors alike have called the tableware, "Noritake" since the late 1920s, the Japanese parent company did not officially change its name to the Noritake Co., Limited until 1981. Evidently, since Noritake is the name of a place, the company was initially prohibited from registering the name as a trade name.

Mission
Our mission is to create innovative and high-quality products that improve the lives of our customers, partners, and employees around the world.
Vision
Our vision is to become one of the most respected and trusted brands in the world.
Key Team

Mr. Akira Higashiyama (Representative Director & VP)

Mr. Akira Nagata (Managing Exec. Officer and Group GM of Devel. & Engineering Group)

Ms. Yuko Fuma (Managing Exec. Officer & Director)

Mr. Masahiko Horie (Managing Exec. Officer)

Mr. Shuji Shite (Sr. Managing Exec. Officer)

Mr. Hiroshi Yorita (Managing Exec. Officer and Group GM of Ceramics & Materials Group)

Hiroyuki Murai (Managing Exec. Officer)

Recognition and Awards
Noritake has won numerous awards over the years, including the Reddot Design Award, Good Design Award, and the iF Design Award, among others.
References

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Noritake
Leadership team

Mr. Hiroshi Kato (Pres & Representative Director)

Yoshimasa Nakamura (Exec. Officer, Group Deputy GM of Corp. Admin. and GM of Fin. & Accounting Dept)

Mr. Makoto Okabe (Managing Exec. Officer and GM of Sales Division & Industrial Products Group)

Products/ Services
Machinery Manufacturing, Manufacturing
Number of Employees
1,000 - 20,000
Headquarters
Nagoya, Aichi, Japan
Established
1917
Net Income
20M - 100M
Revenue
Above - 1B
Traded as
TYO:5331