(FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 2/23/15) 
   By Tripp Mickle 

Susan Cameron, chief executive of Reynolds American Inc., is skilled at bringing two companies together. She proved that in 2004 when she guided Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc. and Brown & Williamson through a $3 billion merger. She led the combined companies for seven years and retired in 2011.

Reynolds's board asked Ms. Cameron to return last year to oversee the company's $25 billion acquisition of Lorillard Inc. The deal is awaiting Federal Trade Commission approval, but she is pushing ahead with preparations to bring Lorillard's top brand, Newport, into Reynolds, which will make the Winston-Salem, N.C.-based company a stronger rival to market-leading Altria Group, Inc., which makes Marlboro.

The Wall Street Journal talked to Ms. Cameron about the factors that go into a successful merger, the ability to recruit young workers to a tobacco company and the future profile of cigarette smokers. Here are edited excerpts from that interview.

WSJ: What are the keys to combining two companies?

MS. CAMERON: Making sure you have a plan that all parties have agreed to is essential. We set up planning teams right after this transaction was announced.

A customer wants to order Newports from us, day one.

WSJ: How do you achieve that?

MS. CAMERON: You appoint people, and it's their full-time job for two years. Somebody who is the project manager for the manufacturer integration -- that is [his] job. You don't leave it to chance.

WSJ: What mistakes have you made in previous mergers that you want to avoid?

MS. CAMERON: In the first merger, I was convinced we could create the new company's culture in three years. That was ridiculous. I think it took seven or eight.

WSJ: Why does it take that long?

MS. CAMERON: It's generational. If you have managed a certain way and you have been successful, by the time I get you to change, you've probably now retired. And the next group is excited and ready to manage people in the new way.

WSJ: How do you recruit employees to work in a stigmatized industry like tobacco?

MS. CAMERON: People in their 20s and 30s are different from people growing up in the '90s who watched these clowns up there swearing nicotine was good for you. Ever since they have known about tobacco, it's clear that it's bad to smoke. For this generation, it's either they will or they won't. When we post a job, I felt much worse in the '80s or '90s than I do today. It's different.

WSJ: E-cigarettes are reshaping the tobacco industry. How do you deal with a disruptive technology?

MS. CAMERON: Now the consumer doesn't expect to get a line extension every three years; they want a new iPhone every year. We've had to address that in the structure and the timetable to make sure we can operate at a better speed to market.

WSJ: In the case of Reynolds's e-cigarette Vuse, what did you do?

MS. CAMERON: Almost every company ordered [e-cigarettes] from China. We took the punt that ours would work better and deliver more satisfaction if we would do it here. We put a big, bold goal out there that we would get this out the door in 18 months. It put tremendous strain on the company. It's motivating people and realizing this isn't your wheelhouse, so we probably need a new wheelhouse.

WSJ: What does the smoker look like 10 years from now?

MS. CAMERON: The analysts always ask: What happens to traditional combustibles? Honestly, it's too early to say. People who would have started smoking combustibles, will they never smoke a combustible and smoke an e-cigarette? The outcome of this will be largely related to the consumers' ability to make educated choices.

WSJ: What did you think of e-cigarettes when you first saw them?

MS. CAMERON: We were actively looking at whether we should buy [a company] in the space. A lot of other companies did. I asked our R&D guys. They said we can make our own better. At the end of 2011, they had prototypes.

We saw it coming. There were patents for vapor that go way back. But the interest for vapor was really brought to this market by [shopping-mall kiosks] and the Internet. I'd like to think we were the first large player developing in-house, because we're still the only player that developed in-house.

WSJ: What challenges does vaping face?

MS. CAMERON: The problem is that all the science isn't in. We have decades of epidemiology on combustibles. There's no epidemiology on vapor. But everybody understands what's in that vapor and what's not in that vapor -- burning plant. I'm hopeful that education process will help people make choices. A decade from now, you could have people only vaping.

WSJ: Is that the world you see?

MS. CAMERON: I would love to see a world where people who would like to enjoy or desire to use nicotine could change the curve of public health on that choice. That would be exciting for me. These kinds of changes can be influenced by different things. Our decision is we're giving consumers choices along that whole continuum.

WSJ: Combustibles still deliver the majority of company revenue. How much skepticism do you run into pushing vapor?

MS. CAMERON: What's nice about the strategy is that over time we are very confident we will be able to have the same margin in vapor as we have in combustibles. We can actually have a win-win strategy in terms of being able to continue the revenue stream with a different product category. We're not just making a strategy that sounds good for the environment but is actually going to put us out of business.

In house, we spend a large amount of time on the combustible space. It's by far and away the largest profit generator, and there are 42 million consumers out there smoking combustibles in this country. While they desire to have a better alternative, until they're actually making that choice, staying out in front of it and offering choices we believe is the right thing to do.

WSJ: Do you run into employee skepticism around vapor?

MS. CAMERON: No. Employees love the vapor. They're proud they're offering these alternatives. Our sales force, for instance, there are a lot of people out there who have been offered Camel and may have rejected that opportunity. Now they [the sales force] have something else to offer.

---

Mr. Mickle is a Wall Street Journal reporter in Atlanta. He can be reached at tripp.mickle@wsj.com.

Access Investor Kit for Lorillard, Inc.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US5441471019

Access Investor Kit for Reynolds American, Inc.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US7617131062

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires