logo
Marquis Who's Who Honors Ryan A. Hatfield For Sustainable Solutions and Community Impact

Marquis Who's Who Honors Ryan A. Hatfield For Sustainable Solutions and Community Impact

Yahoo16-04-2025

UNIONDALE, NY / / April 15, 2025 / Marquis Who's Who has honored Ryan A. Hatfield for his sustainable solutions and community impact. Mr. Hatfield serves as one of the leaders of SBC Solutions Group, a commercial and industrial recycling company that has grown from a small family business to an industry leader. Building on his father's vision, Mr. Hatfield continues to drive innovation in sustainable recycling solutions.
Born and Raised on a Farm
Mr. Hatfield's family comes from a long line of farmers who originally purchased real estate in Ohio in 1831. He was born and raised on the family farm that has been in the Hatfield family for almost 200 years. Growing up, he learned the importance of hard work, honesty and integrity from his parents, Lynn and Betty Hatfield.
"I'm not afraid to get dirty and run a machine if I need to teach a lesson or prove a point. We are farm boys, born and raised on a farm. We do what we have to do to get the job done. When you're a farmer, you start working when you're six. That's just the way it works," Mr. Hatfield explains.
Though Mr. Hatfield's father, Lynn, had also been born and raised on the farm, he wanted more for his children. He encouraged them to pursue academic careers. In 1992, at the age of 50, his father left the farming business and started SBC Solutions Group in a barn in Centerburg, Ohio. The company became the new family business, with Mr. Hatfield serving as executive vice president. The entire family is involved with the business, including brothers Michael Hatfield and Randy Hatfield, and the business now has two facilities, one in Centerburg, Ohio, and one in Powder Springs, Georgia.
The Evolving Recycling Business
Originally, SBC Solutions Group shredded newspapers for animal bedding. Later, the decision was made to transition to commercial recycling and shift the focus of the company from recycling newspapers and other types of paper grades to plastics. In 2017, the company began offering additional services that allowed for more sustainable and environmental solutions for their customers.
"There's a big push for manufacturers to use post-consumer recycled (PCR) material. There is a massive push in our industry for sustainability, circularity and closing the loop where you're recycling plastics and turning them back into plastics as opposed to using more oil and creating virgin plastics from oil," Mr. Hatfield explains.
In recognition of SBC Solutions Group's success, Mr. Hatfield was invited to speak at a sustainability conference held by the Solid Waste Authority of Central Ohio. There were three speakers invited, two of whom were executives from multibillion-dollar Fortune 500 companies. Mr. Hatfield was the only speaker who was the owner of a privately held business. This allowed him to provide a completely different perspective from the other executives on the recycling and sustainability industry. "When you are an owner in a smaller, privately held company, you definitely are looking at things through a different lens."
In 2025, Mr. Hatfield was honored for his advancements in recycling protocols with inclusion in Marquis Who's Who biographical volumes.
Commitment to Community
Mr. Hatfield enjoys working hard, but he is also dedicated to helping his community. As he looks toward the future, he intends to continue to make a positive impact on the world. He and his wife, Emily, both participate in their local church, and they have served in their church with their children, daughter Tristen and son Garrett. He has been involved with youth ministry since 2009. He coaches youth baseball and softball and he loves to teach and give people the tools they need to succeed, both on and off the field.
"What makes me tick is my volunteer work, helping other people. That's what makes our family tick because all of us do that. We love to pack backpacks for kids in need. We love to feed the homeless and we do Toys for Tots… The greatest thing for me is being able to help somebody else out. That's what I really want to focus on more," Mr. Hatfield says.
Mr. Hatfield hopes that when he retires one day, people will have been impacted in a positive way. "There is nothing better than being a small part of someone else's success story."
About Marquis Who's Who®:Since 1899, when A. N. Marquis printed the First Edition of Who's Who in America®, Marquis Who's Who® has chronicled the lives of the most accomplished individuals and innovators from every significant field, including politics, business, medicine, law, education, art, religion and entertainment. Who's Who in America® remains an essential biographical source for thousands of researchers, journalists, librarians and executive search firms.
Marquis Who's WhoUniondale, NY(844) 394 - 6946info@marquiswhoswho.comwww.marquiswhoswho.com
SOURCE: Marquis Who's Who
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list
Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list

The numbers are in. has released it's yearly rankings of the biggest U.S. companies that made the most money for 2025 — The Fortune 500. This year, 14 New-Jersey-based businesses made the list. The digital media outlet survey analyzed data from companies that are incorporated in the U.S., operate in the U.S. and file financial statements with a government agency. Fortune 500 companies represent two-thirds of the U.S. GDP with $18.8 trillion in revenues, $1.7 trillion in profits and $43 trillion in market value (as of March 28, 2024), and they employ 31 million people worldwide, the report stated. There are 14 companies headquarted in the Garden State that made the list. Below are their ranks. No. 42: Johnson and Johnson No. 67: Merck No. 81: Prudential Financial No. 98: Bristol-Myers Squibb No. 112: PBF Energy No. 211: Becton Dickinson No. 213: Cognizant Technology No. 228: Automatic Data Processing No. 345: Avis Budget No. 359: Public Service Enterprise Group No. 404: Burlington Stores No. 419: Campbell's No. 423: Quest Diagnostics No. 445: Zoetis Walmart Amazon Apple UnitedHealth Group Berkshire Hathaway CVS Health Exxon Mobil Alphabet McKesson Cencora This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: 2025 Fortune 500: NJ's top corporations revealed

Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list
Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Johnson & Johnson, Merck lead 14 NJ companies on 2025 Fortune 500 list

The numbers are in. has released it's yearly rankings of the biggest U.S. companies that made the most money for 2025 — The Fortune 500. This year, 14 New-Jersey-based businesses made the list. The digital media outlet survey analyzed data from companies that are incorporated in the U.S., operate in the U.S. and file financial statements with a government agency. Fortune 500 companies represent two-thirds of the U.S. GDP with $18.8 trillion in revenues, $1.7 trillion in profits and $43 trillion in market value (as of March 28, 2024), and they employ 31 million people worldwide, the report stated. There are 14 companies headquarted in the Garden State that made the list. Below are their ranks. No. 42: Johnson and Johnson No. 67: Merck No. 81: Prudential Financial No. 98: Bristol-Myers Squibb No. 112: PBF Energy No. 211: Becton Dickinson No. 213: Cognizant Technology No. 228: Automatic Data Processing No. 345: Avis Budget No. 359: Public Service Enterprise Group No. 404: Burlington Stores No. 419: Campbell's No. 423: Quest Diagnostics No. 445: Zoetis Walmart Amazon Apple UnitedHealth Group Berkshire Hathaway CVS Health Exxon Mobil Alphabet McKesson Cencora This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: 2025 Fortune 500: NJ's top corporations revealed

Companies are dialing back their Pride Month celebrations — and angering both the left and the right
Companies are dialing back their Pride Month celebrations — and angering both the left and the right

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Companies are dialing back their Pride Month celebrations — and angering both the left and the right

Pride Month seems a lot quieter this year in the face of cultural and political pressure. Companies that show half-hearted LGBTQ+ support risk backlash from all sides. Advertising pros tell BI there aren't a lot of great options, but the worst move is to flip-flop. Corporate Pride is looking a little less proud this year. Companies seem to have followed a common Pride Month playbook for the past several years. The checklist included changing social media avatars to rainbow logos, sponsoring parade floats, making donations, or casting ads a little differently from the rest of the year. This June, corporate Pride seems quieter amid a combination of cultural and political pressure against DEI in general, and the LGBTQ+ community in particular. Brands have been dropping out of sponsoring Pride parades across the country, Pride merchandise collections are getting smaller, and Fortune 500 social-media avatars appear largely unchanged. More broadly, companies have pulled back on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, or at least calling them DEI. The shift has stirred up criticism from both liberals and conservatives. "We're sort of facing a tidal wave of backlash against something that many companies have said they support," Ike Silver, a marketing professor at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business, told Business Insider. This has made Pride Month a bigger balancing act for companies this year, particularly those that have openly embraced it in the past. "There's a little bit of a damned if you do, damned if you don't sort of element to this," said Graham Nolan, a PR professional who cofounded Do the Werq, a platform for queer representation in the marketing industry. Pride Month had evolved over the past decade into something that companies perhaps felt obligated to participate in at the risk of appearing out of step with societal norms, Silver said. "It's really more about jumping on the bandwagon," he said, "if you're not getting a boost from it, you might as well not court the backlash." But as reactions to Target — and more recently BarkBox — have shown, brands that have openly embraced Pride Month in prior years face considerable risk stepping back (or even appearing to pull back) from it. Target was one of the most prominent major consumer brands supporting LGBTQ+ Pride. Two years ago, it included Pride merchandise across its stores, but this year and last, it offered a smaller, gentler selection in about half of its locations. A company spokesperson said Target also sponsors local events. "We are absolutely dedicated to fostering inclusivity for everyone," the spokesperson said in a statement to BI. BarkBox found itself in hot water this month when an employee's internal communication suggested the company pull promotions for its Pride merch, comparing them to MAGA products. The leaked message sparked outrage and an apology from founder and CEO Matt Meeker, who said the company stands by its Pride products. Pride Month, Nolan said, became "more a checklist of corporate fears than it was a checklist of consumer desires." People never asked for brands to add rainbows to their logos, for example, Nolan said. Some companies have faced pressure from more left-wing groups that accused them of "rainbow washing," or capitalizing on LGBTQ+ people without providing a tangible benefit to the community. Pride Month became more of a minefield in the last two years as conservatives took aim at Bud Light's partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, and followed quickly by Target facing blowback for its 2023 Pride merchandise collection. While Bud Light and Target walked back their LGBTQ+ campaigns, the retreats didn't exactly earn them goodwill from either side of the political spectrum. The division between the sides has only grown more pitched under Donald Trump's second presidency. For brands, it can feel like consumers "who oppose the stance see any whiff of support as negative, and those that support the stance will only give you credit if they think that you're really in it," Silver said. "They won't sort of reward these soft steps." Nolan said crafting the right message is increasingly difficult, especially since the very act of speaking to one group can de-emphasize another. "When it's not perfect, what you get is conservatives who are angry about the fact that the work exists, and then you've got liberals who go, 'Yeah, this is a nice ad, but I know this about your hiring practices,'" he said. Beyond the growing political polarization, the issue is further complicated for companies by the threat of government pressure. Trump has shown a willingness to go after companies because of their diversity policies. While taking a stand in the face of real risk can make a company's motives seem more sincere (think Costco or Ben & Jerry's founders, which have defended their stances on diversity), Silver said consumers don't typically punish companies that remain truly neutral. Whether they choose to publicly embrace Pride Month or not, Nolan hopes companies will strategize behind the scenes about strengthening their relationships with the LGBTQ+ community year-round. With shoppers weighing in on social media and scrutinizing companies' moves over the past months, it's clear that shifting positions in either direction can be risky. "When you flip-flop, you lose the people who supported you when you are taking a position," Silver said. "And you don't necessarily regain the people who are against your position." Read the original article on Business Insider

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store