(FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 3/27/15) 
   By David Kesmodel 

Five decades ago, a young Texas Instruments Inc. accounting manager named Pete Pyhrr pioneered a technique to help businesses shave costs. It led to a book deal, a People magazine interview and some consulting gigs, including as an adviser to then-Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter.

Then things mostly turned quiet for Mr. Pyhrr and his arcane tool, known as zero-based budgeting, until the Brazilians behind private-equity firm 3G Capital Partners LP came along.

3G's embrace of the system -- a centerpiece of the firm's strategy to reshape the U.S. food industry through deals like this week's proposed $49 billion takeover of Kraft Foods Group Inc. -- has thrust Mr. Pyhrr's method into the spotlight after years in which it struggled to gain traction among Fortune 500 firms.

"I think it's great in my old age to say something that was a major part of my life many, many years ago is being adopted -- hopefully successfully," the 73-year-old Texan said in an interview on Thursday, his first in many years.

Zero-based budgeting is a "tremendous" tool, Mr. Pyhrr said, "especially in times of economic problems, when you need to make reductions, or when you have significant and rapid technological change."

3G and companies it controls, including Burger King parent Restaurant Brands International Inc. and H.J. Heinz Co. -- which it plans to merge with Kraft -- have used the technique to slash costs in everything from jobs to corporate jets and the use of color photocopies. Some such cuts seem obvious, Mr. Pyhrr said, but the tool goes deeper than that, he said. On corporate travel, "it's really saying: Why are we going to all these places and how many of us are going?"

In zero-based budgeting, managers plan each year's budget as if starting their department from scratch -- a contrast with the prevailing method of adjusting the previous year's spending. The system calls for managers to break programs or activities into individual "decision packages," including all associated costs, to help identify how funds are used. The technique forces them to justify the costs and evaluate benefits every 12 months, and to scrutinize whether dollars should be shifted from less-profitable to more-profitable projects.

It is unclear if anyone used a similar technique before him, but Mr. Pyhrr is widely credited with pioneering it in the corporate world. He developed the concept in the research department at Texas Instruments, using it to help prioritize which of scores of projects should be pursued and how much capital they should get each year. "We funded a lot of new technology projects, and we did it by taking the money from existing operations" that were targeted for cost cuts, he recalled.

In 1977, Mr. Pyhrr said, "We discovered to our horror that many programs [at Texas Instruments] were not analyzed every year, and that many were just funded as a matter of course -- without a conscious decision being made by anybody."

Mr. Pyhrr has run his own companies since the mid-1970s. Today he is president and owner of Magnetic Ticket & Label Corp., a 250-employee Dallas company that manufactures printed airline tickets, airline bag tags and other products. The firm isn't big enough to require a formal zero-based budgeting process, he said.

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