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Career Ladder

Career Ladder: Michael Okoroafor

Polymer research took this packaging innovator from academia to industry

by Alexandra A. Taylor
January 2, 2017 | A version of this story appeared in Volume 95, Issue 1

 

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Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor
A photo of Michael Okoroafor as an undergraduate.
Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor

1971
Life on the farm

 

Michael Okoroafor was the youngest of four siblings growing up in eastern Nigeria. His mother was a subsistence farmer, and his father was a railroad engineer. Each day on his way home from school, Okoroafor and his siblings would meet their mother at the farm to help out before going home to study. “Education was very important for the family because that is the reason my dad got the kind of job he had.” One day, his high school chemistry teacher pulled him aside and advised him to major in chemistry. “When it became time for me to go to college, that one seed that my chemistry teacher planted in me was what drove my mindset.”

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Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor
A photo of Michael Okoroafor standing in a parking lot.
Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor

1975
Finding love in the lab

 

Okoroafor decided he wanted to be a polymer chemist after taking an elective during his senior year at the University of Nigeria. He then moved to the U.S. to earn his master’s degree at the University of Detroit, Mercy (UDM). He and his wife, whom he had met in a freshman-year chemistry lab in Nigeria, were later accepted to Michigan State University to earn their Ph.D.s—he in polymer chemistry and she in analytical chemistry.

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Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor
A photo of Michael Okoroafor graduating from his Ph.D. program.
Credit: Courtesy of Michael Okoroafor

1988
Starting out in industry

 

After completing his doctorate, Okoroafor was hired by the UDM Polymer Institute as an assistant professor. At a conference, Bausch & Lomb spotted him and invited him to conduct polymer research for their eyewear group. “They basically doubled my salary. It was a no-brainer.” Okoroafor later moved to PPG Industries to work on Trivex Transitions lenses and attended Kellogg Business School’s executive development program at Northwestern University. Since then, he has moved into food and beverage packaging and has worked on numerous projects for companies such as Coca-Cola, Heinz, and McCormick. One of his favorites was the Coca-Cola Freestyle soda fountain that allows users to blend custom drinks. “The packaging was so onerous, so challenging, that I am really proud we were able to pull that one off.”

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Credit: Mitch Jacoby/C&EN
A photo of Michael Okoroafor today.
Credit: Mitch Jacoby/C&EN

Today
Expanding his reach

 

Okoroafor is the vice president of global sustainability and global packaging innovation at McCormick, where he has worked since 2015. Part of his position requires him to understand farming communities like the one he was raised in. He says that watching his family work hard on the farm as a young person has taught him the importance of supporting these communities so that they can provide a better life for their children. “It motivates you to appreciate the value of hard work. It also tells you that getting an education will probably allow you to approach your work differently.”

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