General Mills is eliminating the position of international chief operating officer and will cut up to 600 jobs as a result of a global restructuring.
The move consolidates more responsibility under Jeff Harmening, whom many believe will be the next chief executive, while reducing costs to meet the General Mills' profit targets.
The food company said Monday it will not fill the top international position after Christopher O'Leary leaves the company at the end of the year. Instead, General Mills will divvy up the job among four group presidents. Jon Nudi will lead North American retail, Bethany Quam will lead Europe and Australia, Christina Law will be responsible for Asia and Latin America while Shawn O'Grady will lead convenience stores and food service.
All four will report to Harmening, the company's president and chief operating officer, who will take on international operations upon O'Leary's departure.
Jobs will be lost in the U.S., possibly including the company's headquarters in Golden Valley, and abroad — though the company declined to provide more details. About half of General Mills' approximately 40,000 employees work outside the U.S. and about 3,000 people work at the company's Twin Cities corporate campus.
It is the latest in a series of sweeping cost-saving initiatives taken by the maker of Betty Crocker cake mixes and Nature Valley granola bars. Since 2014, the company has eliminated or announced plans to cut about 5,000 jobs.
The company has told investors it intends to achieve growth through improved sales as well as trimming costs. But with stubbornly slow sales growth, solutions depend increasingly on cost-cutting initiatives given titles like "Project Catalyst" and "Project Century."
"We continue to prioritize both growth and returns," said Harmening in a statement. "The structural changes announced [Monday] will help us unlock global growth opportunities and go after them by efficiently restructuring our teams and processes. In addition, the capability investments and savings generated by these changes will help us deliver our fiscal 2018 adjusted operating profit margin target of 20 percent."