When Tufan Erginbilgiç took the reins at Rolls-Royce, he didn’t sugarcoat it. The British engineering giant was a “burning platform,” he said. Eighteen months later, the company’s share price has soared more than 600%, and Erginbilgiç’s radical playbook is being hailed as one of the most aggressive corporate turnarounds in recent history.
The architect behind the comeback? A former BP executive who wasted no time firing underperforming managers, slashing costs, and rallying staff behind a sharp, metrics-driven vision. His now-famous “4 Pillar” strategy wasn’t just corporate fluff—it was a surgical blueprint for survival.
1. Operational Discipline
The first and most brutal pillar was all about cost-cutting and efficiency. Erginbilgiç axed layers of management and removed what he described as “unproductive bureaucracy.” He introduced a zero-tolerance stance on mediocrity, launching performance reviews that led to sweeping changes in leadership across divisions.
Staff who remained were asked to deliver more—with clearer KPIs and tighter oversight. For an industrial engineering company long criticized for its slow pace, this new discipline changed the tempo overnight.
2. Strategic Focus
Next, the company redefined what it would and wouldn’t do. Erginbilgiç refocused the business on its strongest sectors: civil aerospace, defense, and power systems. Projects that didn’t contribute directly to profitability were cut or paused.
The company stopped chasing blue-sky R&D and began targeting contracts with defined commercial outcomes. As seen in Millionaire MNL, this clarity resonated with investors, who began buying back into the story.
3. Culture and People
The turnaround wasn’t just mechanical—it was cultural. The CEO held open brainstorm sessions with staff, inviting ideas on where the company was falling short and how to fix it. That transparency created buy-in across the workforce.
Morale had been low after years of lagging performance and pandemic pressures. But under Erginbilgiç, employees began seeing wins. Productivity rose, absenteeism dropped, and Rolls-Royce began recruiting top-tier engineers once again.
4. Financial Resilience
Finally, the company went hard on financial reform. Debt was restructured, cash flow tightened, and pricing renegotiated across supply chains. Even small wins—like vendor discounts or inventory optimization—were scaled across the enterprise.
By the end of Q1 2025, Rolls-Royce had returned to strong free cash flow and EBITDA margins that beat analyst expectations by double digits. The stock’s 600% rise was no fluke—it was the market’s recognition of a company no longer in crisis.
From ‘burning platform’ to global comeback
In just over a year, Rolls-Royce has gone from near obsolescence to front-page success story. Its engines are flying more hours than ever, defense contracts are surging, and investors are watching one of the boldest CEO-led turnarounds in FTSE history.
With a share price six times higher than when he joined, Erginbilgiç has not only proven the skeptics wrong—he’s redefined what’s possible in legacy corporate reinvention.