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Rix and Rollits unite to explore more than 300 years of cultivating a corporate culture

Hull giants explore importance of the right workplace environment as part of Humber Business Week

Aqua-culture? Diana Taylor, Harry Rix and Caroline Neadley at The Deep for the Humber Business Week event.(Image: Ascough Associates Media and Public Relations)

Two companies with a combined history stretching back more than 320 years joined forces at Humber Business Week to trace the roots of their corporate culture.

Rollits LLP, which dates back to 1841, invited the 150-year-old Rix Group to share the stage at The Deep and explore why corporate culture matters and how to build it.

Introducing Caroline Neadley from Rollits and Harry Rix from the Rix Group, facilitator Diana Taylor, managing director of Future Humber and Bondholders, said both speakers demonstrated the journeys that they are taking with their companies. She also set the scene by emphasising the importance of a good culture when it comes to recruiting and retaining staff, with lack of trust, loss of reputation and low engagement among the perils lying in wait for those businesses that fail to build their own corporate culture.

Read more: Rix swoops for East Yorkshire plumbing and heating firm to extend renewables roll-out

Harry, the chief digital officer of Rix Group, charted the development of the company from 1873 to the modern day with a £525 million turnover and an organisation of 17 different brands employing 800 people. Activities including shipping, fuel and renewables, leisure homes, property, vehicles and software development. But it all started with Robert Rix as a merchant who worked on the Tees and then returned to Hull.

Harry said there is much more to the Rix culture now than the “graft and determination” of their founder and the leadership which he demonstrated from the outset.

The current senior leadership team set a vision designed to overcome the difficulties of managing the culture of so many varied businesses and to protect their autonomy which was essential to their success.

This process, including getting input from staff, led to a vision of building a stable business for future generations, setting a mission to create an environment in which people flourish and the businesses thrive, and values including curiosity, passion and responsibility.