SKANEATELES, N.Y. — A man who has worked for Tessy Plastics since 1997 is now serving as the manufacturing firm’s new president. Stafford Frearson most recently was VP of engineering for the Skaneateles–based injection molding company. Roland Beck, who owns Tessy Plastics and has been serving as president, now transitions to CEO, per the firm’s […]
SKANEATELES, N.Y. — A man who has worked for Tessy Plastics since 1997 is now serving as the manufacturing firm’s new president.
Stafford Frearson most recently was VP of engineering for the Skaneateles–based injection molding company.
Roland Beck, who owns Tessy Plastics and has been serving as president, now transitions to CEO, per the firm’s Sept. 19 announcement.
“I am excited to work beside Stafford to continue building on our success,” Beck said in a Tessy Plastics release. “I am confident that he will continue to lead the company towards the sustained growth we have had our first 50 years in business.”
Beck is the son of Henry Beck, one of the original founders of Tessy Plastics. Henry Beck started the family business in 1973 and served as Tessy’s president for nearly 30 years. In 2002, “the elder Beck finally convinced his son” to move into the role of president, the company said.
As Tessy explains it, the new company president grew up in Barnstable, England, and after graduating from college in the United Kingdom in 1997, Frearson relocated to Syracuse and joined Tessy Plastics.
“Throughout my career I’ve been privileged to work alongside some of the most talented people in the injection molding industry. Watching, listening, and learning alongside an amazing group of people has helped shape not only my career, but also me personally,” Frearson said. “I am excited for the next chapter in my career with Tessy and to continue building on the success of both Henry and Roland.”
As president, the company says Roland Beck led Tessy’s growth to more than $500 million in annual sales and has grown the business to eight facilities in Central New York; three in Webster in Monroe County; one in Erie, Pennsylvania; one in Meadville, Pennsylvania; and two in Shanghai, China.