Massachusetts Family Business Magazine Premier Issue
Transcription
Massachusetts Family Business Magazine Premier Issue
Premiere Issue Official magazine of the Family Business Association, Inc. Getting The Guarantee Star Of The Family The 401(k) Conundrum Generation XX Handing The Family Business To A Daughter’s Leadership Plus: Five Ways To Kick Start Family Business Revenue A Supplement to Banker & Tradesman ® Massachusetts Family Business Official magazine of the 12 Generation XX Handing The Family Business To A Daughter’s Leadership Increasingly, the next generation of family business leadership has a different set of chromosomes from the preceeding one. See how a handful of women are taking the reins – sometimes reluctantly – from their fathers. Cover Photo: Gary Goodman 4 a new edition Welcome to the newest offering from the Family Business Association, Inc. 5 stand and be recognized It’s not too late to be nominated for this fall’s biggest event, the Massachusetts Family Business Awards 6 getting the guarantee How to tactfully approach family members when the bank wants everyone’s personal guarantee. 8 (re)building the business plan In this troubled economy, family businesses need to take a hard look at their business plan – if they can even find one. 10 6 8 9 10 16 18 the 401(k) conundrum Don’t let the economy keep you down. Here are five ideas to immediately bring some life back into your sales cycle. 11 family meetings A collection of events of interest to family-owned businesses. 16 turning off auto-pilot Family-owned car dealerships in Massachusetts are putting on their thinking caps as they find new ways to keep their companies on a profitable road. 18 star of the family When it makes sense to showcase family executives – and how to handle things when one member becomes the public face of the firm. letter from the president | by edward tarlow A New Edition To The Family W elcome to the inaugural issue of Massachusetts Family Business, an official publication of the Family Business Association, Inc. The FBA is a non-profit, independent, state-wide organization created for the purpose of providing service to and recognizing the invaluable contribution of family-owned and operated businesses. We are very excited about the opportunities this quarterly publication will provide to family business members, their partners and employees, and their trusted advisors. Family businesses are not creations of our modern business climate, but instead date back to the very first communal enterprises. Still, it E dward Ta r l ow seems as if only recently that family businesses have begun to truly receive the scope of recognition approaching the level of importance they have in our economy. Some say that as many as 90 percent of businesses had their beginnings as family businesses. Companies such as Ford Motors, Comcast, and Zildjian Cymbals (a Massachusetts company with its origins going back to the 17th century) had their origins as family-operated businesses. As most Americans work for familyrun organizations, the families that run them are representative of what American self initiative and independence is all about. Today, they are the key to our returning economic stability and to ensuring that the great values that made this country will continue. We believe the FBA and this magazine will help to secure these goals by supporting the economic viability and future continuation of these businesses. The Family Business Association will use this publication as a vehicle to provide its readership with a spotlight into certain family businesses, advice from experts, practical guidance, interesting stories about situations to which all family businesses can relate, and much more. With such an exciting new venture, there are many people to thank. First of all, thank you to my fellow FBA directors, who have worked with me over the past years and have come together this year to form the FBA. First of all my law partner Al DeNapoli, Brian Nagle of BNY Mellon, and Jeffrey Davis of Mage, LLC. Furthermore, FBA Vice Presidents, Michael Lynch of Mage, LLC and Cathy Watson, of Tarlow Breed Hart & Rodgers, P.C., contributed invaluably. I also wish to thank the Warren Group and, in particular, our Editor, Vincent Valvo, for creating this exciting new forum for family businesses. The FBA is also very excited about the Massachusetts Family Business Awards, which will be held on October 15, 2009, at the Royal Sonnesta Hotel, Cambridge. Thank you, also, to the sponsors of these Awards, many who have been with us for three years, who recognize the value of family businesses and the importance of shining the spotlight on them through the Award program. Further information about the Massachusetts Family Business Awards may be found on page 5 of this magazine. Further, demonstrating the pervasiveness of family businesses many of our Award sponsors had their beginnings as family-owned businesses: The “Mellon” portion of BNY Mellon was established in 1869 by retired Judge Thomas Mellon and sons as “T. Mellon & Sons Bank”; Gray, Gray & Gray was founded in 1945 by Robert Gray, who was shortly joined by his brothers, Milton and Mervin; Bessemer Trust Co. has been owned and operated by the Phipps family for over a century; and Wolf & Company, P.C., established as Edwin L. Pride and Co., in 1911, was founded by Edwin Pride, who was succeeded by his son E. Ober Pride. Moreover, our publisher, The Warren Group, is a fourth-generation familyowned business, going back to 1872. I thank you for sharing our passion for and pride in our family businesses, and ask if you have any thoughts, suggestions, or comments about the magazine and/or family business in general to please contact me directly. We are looking forward to sharing these and many other exciting opportunities with you. n E dward Ta r l ow is president of the Family Business Association, Inc . 4 Massachusetts FamilyBusiness Official magazine of the Family Business Association. Inc. 101 Huntington Ave., Suite 500 Boston, MA 02119 www.massfamilybusiness.com President Edward D. Tarlow, Tarlow, Breed, Hart & Rodgers, P.C. Directors Jeffrey S. Davis, Mage, LLC Al DeNapoli, Tarlow, Breed, Hart & Rodgers, P.C. Brian Nagle, Bank of New York Mellon Vice Presidents Michael Lynch, Mage, LLC Catherine Watson, Tarlow, Breed, Hart & Rodgers, P.C. A Family-Owned Business Since 1872 Vincent Michael Valvo Group Publisher and Editor-in-Chief 280 Summer Street, Boston, MA 02210 Phone 617-428-5100 Fax 617-428-5119 www.thewarrengroup.com Timothy M. Warren Chairman Timothy M. Warren Jr. CEO & Publisher David B. Lovins President Finance & Administration Jeffrey E. Lewis Controller / Director of Operations Creative Services John Bottini Creative Director Scott Ellison Senior Graphic Designer Advertising & Circulation George Chateauneuf Publications Group Sales Manager Jason Long Account Manager Lisa Wright Account Manager Emily Torres Advertising Coordinator Katie Drowney Circulation & Marketing Coordinator ©2009 The Warren Group Inc. All rights reserved. The Warren Group is a trademark of The Warren Group Inc. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. When you are managing a growing business, you need a bank that represents a sound inves Boston Private Bank & Trust Company. At each of our offices, we offer a full range of persona management and trust services with the individual attention that makes private banking with u mortgages to cash management and direct deposit accounts, to commercial, industrial and real will find that we are a private bank with a difference — one that can give you and your growing b a The Family Business Association, Inc. (FBA), a non-profit created to honor the achievements of multigenerational family businesses in Massachusetts, is hosting its annual statewide awards program on October 15, 2009 at the Royal Sonesta Hotel in Cambridge, Mass. As the only independent statewide awards program, the 2009 Massachusetts Family Business Awards program will recognize excellence in and celebrate the success of Massachusetts family businesses. The 2009 Massachusetts Family Business Awards will honor five finalists in three categories based on size, as well as one company excelling in community involvement and one that has successfully overcome a recent adverse situation. Any multi-generational, family-owned business based in Massachusetts that has transitioned ownership from one generation to another and whose business prac- tices have had a positive impact on business and the community is eligible. All applications are confidential and will be judged independently by a panel of academic, business and management experts. Previous award winners include some of the state’s most recognizable family businesses, including New England Cof- fee, Bernie & Phyl’s and the Zildjian Cymbal Company. To apply for the awards or nominate a company, please visit www.massfamilybusiness.com. About FBA, Inc. The Family Business Association, Inc. is an independent, non-prof- it organization designed to promote family businesses and family business achieve- ments in Massachusetts. Its goal is to promote the development of creative ideas, services, products and expertise to family-owned businesses. The annual awards program honors excellence in business management, growth, community service and business transition within family businesses. For more information, please visit www.massfamilybusiness.com. Media Sponsors Please contact Mark Thompson, CEO & President, at (617) 912-1919 or [email protected] www.bostonprivatebank.com Member of Boston Private Wealth Management Group hands on | advice and news for running your family business Getting The Guarantee How To Ask Family Members To Sign On For A Company Loan The most important thing is this: keep family members informed. Family businesses have been the backbone of our economy for generations. Yet for the owners of family businesses, a number of issues can arise when there is an obvious distinction between the members who are directly involved with the day-to-day operations of the company and those who clearly are not. One such challenge becomes evident when the issue is financing. Let’s presume, for example, that you are the successful CEO of a family-owned business and have dedicated your career to ensuring the profitability and growth of the company. After making the decision to apply for a loan, you submit the company’s business plan, financial statements and loan application to your financial institution. Soon, the lender says that the loan will in fact be approved subject to the personal guarantee of your silent partner, who is coincidentally your only brother. When it comes to requesting business loan guarantees from family members, even the most Su sh il K. Tu li successful CEO will often need to ponder the most effective approach. Though individual situations should always be taken into account, there are two important factors to take into consideration when asking family members to support a loan on a family-owned business, the first of which is quite simply family discussion. The sharing of a vision or detailed idea can often be enough to open the Su sh il K. Tu li is president of Leader Bank in Arlington. 6 minds of family members who do not have daily interaction with the operations of the company. Explaining, for example, how the loan will be used and what it will accomplish will provide a level of comfort and reassurance that could perhaps not otherwise be attained. Step Two However, a vision alone (no matter how theatrical and promising it might be) should not take the place of providing hard evidence that the company is in a financial position to accept the terms of the loan. It is important that all members who have a financial stake in the family business recognize the actual condition of the business before they take personal responsibility for a new loan. As the successful CEO of your family-owned business, for example, you might effortlessly receive the personal guarantee of your brother by presenting to him the same required financial documentation that enabled the business to qualify for the loan in the first place. The most important thing is this: keep family members informed. Keep them informed of your goals for the company, the ideas of upper management who assist you in day-to-day operations, and the financial strength and economic standing of the business that can be used as evidence of stability. To do this, set up regular meetings where family members can be kept updated on the status of the company. Making access to information readily available will drastically increase the chances of overall success for the company and will assist in avoiding situations where requesting loan guarantees from family members requires an overabundance of contemplation. n 7 Plan Of Attack Why Your Family Firm Needs To Get Back To Its Business Plan by michael ferraro We often turn to our family in difficult times for support, guidance, and comfort. The depth and length of the current recession certainly qualify these as difficult times for many. However, family businesses face additional challenges. Members of a family business do not enjoy the ability to separate their professional and personal lives as most of us do. In particular, family business leaders are managing their businesses in uncertain times while struggling to nurture the relationships that are at the core of every family. To overcome this weak economy, family business managers and owners need to write new business plans and act upon them. Revisiting your current business plan or developing a new one will help you identify new ways to beat the challenges of the day. Family business managers and owners seek to maximize the wealth of shareholders; however, they also strive to create sustainable businesses that will provide for the family in good times and bad. So, prior to developing a new business plan, remember that the following elements are often key to developing and Michael Ferraro maintaining a sustainable business. Sustainable companies are: Purposeful. Your company’s purpose should easily fit on the back of a business card. Focused. Customers will buy a product or service when it provides clear value to them. Agile. Companies with stealth and speed will win over their larger competitors. Frugal. Spending only on what’s critical to the success of the business will maximize the wealth of the family. With the above in mind, you are ready to write your business plan. In your business plan, present as much information in as few words as possible. By using this discipline, you will enhance your and your organization’s ability to execute upon your plan. The first thing to do is to look at your firm’s relationship to its external environment. You need to understand your firm and its potential by completing a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis. Follow this by de- scribing the market, including size as a factor, in which your firm operates. You should outline your firm’s financial strength, profitability, and its ability to grow. Then assess the attractiveness of the markets, including size as a factor, in which your firm may operate. List your company’s current and potential competitors, including their competitive advantages. Next, you need to clearly illustrate your company’s purpose. Define the business in a single declarative sentence using the results of the above analysis. You need to understand what will drive potential customers to buy from you. So the next step is to describe the current and potential needs of your customers. Outline how your current or potential customers address their needs today. Demonstrate your company’s value proposition to make the customer’s life better. Describe your product or services. Include information on their form, functionality, and features. Then define recent trends that make your solution possible or sustainable. Identify any significant intellectual property that enhances the value of your product or service offering. Business Model You’re not going to be able to drive your firm to success if you don’t know how to make the pedals work. Describe the firm’s revenue model. Articulate your pricing policy and strategy. Describe your business development and distribution model. This will help you focus on the important elements you need to keep at top of mind. Similarly you should evaluate the ownership and management structure of the firm. The idea is to create a shared future vision of the firm for its various stakeholders. Part of knowing where you’re going is knowing where you’ve come from. That means that you should analyze your firm’s historical financial statements to understand the key drivers of historical profitability and growth. You’ll need that to develop projections that reflect the various elements of the business plan. Once you have finished your plan, have confidence in it and carry it out with determination. Update it when your or your family’s conditions change. The business planning and the initial execution stages are some of the most exciting times when running a business. n Michael Ferraro is Vice President at C aturano and C o. P.C . in Boston. 8 5 2 513 4 Ways To Perk Up Revenue | The Fast For many family businesses, generating revenue is more dependent on the relationships you have built than simply the products or services you offer. Yet even some of these relationships have been strained as competitors begin offering their products or services at much lower costs and tempting your customers to change. At that same time, your customers are probably spending less than usual, therefore each sale is immensely important. So how do CHR IS D iCE NSO you combat these economic and competitive challenges? Here are some simple yet effective recommendations. by christopher dicenso priced sales, often of “older” product, but the concept works. Complement the Sale: When customers are buying one of your products or services, do you offer alternative or complementary products? A simple example is a customer buying a hammer. She could probably use some nails, a belt holder, safety glasses and other complementary products. Increase Your Share of Wallet: Identify how much of your products or services your customers buy from you then try to increase it by selling more of what they are buying now or identifying other products or services to sell them. Have Lunch: Deepen your relationships with a select set of your customers rather than blasting communications to all of them. One effective way to do this is through an informal lunch where you intentionally don’t sell. Have it be a reward for being a good customer. The sales will follow. Quantify Your Difference: What are the top three reasons your customers buy from you? How do you know? Conduct an exercise to rank the top reasons customers buy from you, then ask your customer to do the same thing. Through this process you’ll identify specifically why they buy and have opportunities to sell them more. Cut It In Half: Offer select promotions that encourage customers to buy. Some companies offer half As with all recommendations, it’s not knowing what you can do, it’s doing it that counts. n Ch ristop h er D iCenso is managing director of Growth Strategy Partners in Marshfield. Hand over a healthy business. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS VISION • DIRECTION • SUCCESS Westwood • Framingham 781.407.0300 www.gggcpas.com Will you be able to proudly pass along a company that is on solid financial footing? Call us today to find out how we can help you keep the “family” in your family business. 9 The 401(k) Conundrum Does cutting the match cut into a company’s family values? by bob clark G FAMILY FINANCES Why is the 401(k) plan a common target for cost savings? There are a host of reasons: • It is a deferred benefit, so there is no immediate impact to employees’ wallets/ pocketbooks • It is easy to stop and easy to reinstate • The savings are easy to quantify; both the amount and the timing • As a general rule, employees don’t value the retirement plan as much as current compensation and health related benefits (medical, dental, etc.) • It makes a difference • Others are doing it. SOURCE: Bostonian Group iven the current economic crisis, most companies in America have been contemplating any and all cost-cutting measures to bolster the bottom line or salvage the enterprise. One prime target: the company 401(k) plan. In the first three months of 2009, for example, more than 80 public employers announced plans to reduce or suspend contributions to their defined contribution retirement plans. Many employers have followed suit in the second quarter, While B ob Clark others are still contemplating this strategy. Family-owned businesses are equally impacted by the current economic state. But some face a unique set of challenges. Many family-owned businesses are not managed by family and do not employ family members. These businesses tend to act more like their industry peers, facing the same challenges and contemplating the same strategies with a similar mindset. Other family-owned businesses are run by family and employ family members. These organizations are confronted by similar challenges and explore similar strategies, but they tend to have a slightly different culture. Many of these family-owned businesses tend to have a bias toward saving jobs during tough economic times. Their culture is more family-oriented and their focus is not so much on “shareholder value”. Take, for example, a local retail business that has multiple stores and employs 1,000 people, of which a few dozen are family members. As the financial meltdown began, they knew they would need to dramatically reduce cost. They began to manage inventory more closely. They implemented a hiring freeze. They reduced travel. They deferred pay increases and reduced bonus payments. This all helped, but as the recession deepened, they needed to cut costs even more deeply. The 401(k) match presented an easy target for saving hundreds of thousands of dollars. After much debate and anguish, the family owners decided to reduce the match. The thought was that as the market recovered, they could increase the match to the previous level. If their business thrived during the rebound, they could provide a profit sharing contribution to make up for the lost match. Difficult as it was to reach concensus about cutting the match, it was a far more palatable option than cutting jobs or implementing layoffs. Harboring Change But what are the implications of cutting the 401(k) match? Early indications show that this strategy may result in some employees reducing or stopping their deferrals. This can have a profound impact on nondiscrimination testing, since most employees that have cut or stopped contributing are non-highly compensated. This will likely be especially challenging for sponsors that offered a Safe Harbor contribution formula, since many had gone this route because they could not pass the ACP test without limiting contributions of the highly compensated. The long-term implications may be more profound. The loss of the match in the near-term, compounded by investment returns, will have a limited impact if the match is resumed as economic conditions get better. But what if employees that have stopped contributing don’t resume? This will likely create another pocket of the population that will never save enough to enjoy a financially comfortable retirement. Talk The Talk Communication is critical. Let employees know how valuable they are. Let them know your plans relative to resuming the match. Some family run businesses are contemplating strategies to make up the lost match over time with special discretionary contributions or enhanced matches during good economic times. Some are planning profit sharing allocations based on company performance. In any event, communicate your plans with your employees to let them know you’re in this together. This will go a long way toward helping solve the 401(k) conundrum. n B ob Clark is managing director of the Retirement Services Practice at The Bostonian Group, in Boston . 10 Family Meetings A Collection Of Events Of Interest To Family-Owned Businesses JULY AUGUST outlook greater boston 2010 Sponsor: Mass. Lodging Association Date: July 9, 2009 Time: 8:00 a.m. Location: Sheraton Boston Hotel, Continental Ballroom, 39 Dalton Street, Boston annual summer reception Sponsor: Boston Chamber of Commerce Date: Wednesday, August 5 Time: 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Location: Taj Boston, 15 Arlington Street, Boston business showcase Sponsor: Boston Chamber of Commerce Date: Wednesday, July 15 Time: 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Location: Back Bay Events Center Dorothy Quincy Suite, 180 Berkeley Street, Boston poolside reception Sponsor: Massachusetts Restaurant Association Date: Monday, July 20, 2009 Time: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Location: The Colonnade Hotel, Boston picnic in the park Sponsor: Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield Date: Jul 24, 2009 Time: 10:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m . Location: Six Flags New England, 1623 Main St, Agawam 7th annual tanglewood wine and food classic Sponsor: Tanglewood Date: August 8, 2009 Time: 12:00 p.m. Location: Tanglewood Grounds, Lenox OCTOBER mass. family business awards Sponsor: Family Business Association, Inc. Date: Oct. 15 Time: 6:00 p.m. Location: Royal Sonesta Hotel, Cambridge your g re at, g re at, g re at g r a n dc h i l dr e n w i l l t h a n k you. we’d all like to be remembered long after we’re gone. and not as the one who squandered the family fortune. at Bessemer trust, we believe maintaining wealth from generation to generation is the true art of wealth management. So we have a team of specialists targeted at precisely that. we meet with each client and create a plan based on their family’s goals. that vision drives everything. our Family wealth Stewardship advisors help prepare the next generation to responsibly guide your wealth. and our legacy Planning team puts the tools in place to help them do it. our tax Strategists help fend off the largest threat to your wealth. we have specialists to help you manage real estate. Family businesses. insurance. even philanthropy. and while our focus is long term, our returns are in the top quartile of the lipper Balanced Fund universe.* let’s face it. history is littered with family names once associated with great wealth that now are mere footnotes. everything we do is designed to keep you from becoming one of them. contact Stephen kistner, Managing director, or Pamela Murray, Principal, at 617-279-4080, or visit www.bessemer.com. Minimum relationship $10 million. *January 1, 2005 to March 31, 2009. Past returns are not indicative of future performance. lipper Balanced Fund returns and rankings are before the deduction of fees and expenses. 11 Kristin Sundin Brandt and her father, Roger Sundin, at their Natick advertising agency. 12 Generation XX Photo: Gary Goodman More women are taking over the family business from dear old Dad by scott van voorhis Kristin Brandt had only a vague understanding growing up what her father did for work at his Natick advertising and marketing agency. Christa Hagearty left to pursue her own career – until she came back to help out the family’s South Shore dry cleaning business after the death of a beloved uncle. By contrast, Aviva Sapers grew up in greater Boston working alongside her father in the family insurance and financial services business. While the details of their stories are different, all three women are part of a fast-growing trend – daughters taking the reins of the family business. Continued on Page 14 13 Generation XX Continued from Page 13 The opening up of new opportunities across the business world for women has also opened the door to a traditional path to success in which sons, not daughters, were heavily favored. As many as 30 percent of family businesses will now consider a daughter for the top job, according to a key Babson College survey, up from just 10 percent back in the 1990s. Still, the climb to the top can be tricky for women across the corporate world, and especially so when it comes to family businesses. No overnight transition, the transfer of power often comes after a years-long evolution in which father and daughter carve out a new, and sometimes unfamiliar role – that of workplace colleague. Pop Rocks “I have a lot of people who ask me ‘how do you work with your dad?”’ notes Brandt. But it “has given us a relationship we not have had.” “When it’s good, working with a family business can be awesome,” she said. While more daughters may be taking over the family business, as in the case of Brandt, there’s not necessarily any long-term succession plan at work. Even after graduating from Wheaton College, Brandt was more interested in pursuing a career in the publishing business in the PRESSED HER SUIT: Christa Hagearty showed her father that she could grow Dependable Cleaners. (Top Left) EARNED INCOME: Aviva Sapers had to prove to her father, Bill, that she was qualified to become president of the family investment management firm. (Bottom Left) Contributed Photos Meaty Job At Agar, a daughter shows how it’s done by scott van voorhis K aren Bressler dreamed of a career in international business, of striking out on her own. But she has made her mark in the local business world as chief executive of one of the region’s largest food service and meat distributors, Agar Supply Co. Bressler is the third generation of her family to run the business and yet another example of a daughter who took the reins of the family business. Throwing her entrepreneurial energy into the family business, she has helped transform Agar from a respected local meat company into the largest, family-owned food service 14 distributor in New England. Still, it was not an outcome she would have envisioned growing up. The gritty meat distribution business started by her grandfather Karl, in Chinatown and built into a major local player by her father, Alan, had little glamour or appeal. “It was a volume meat distributor,’’ Bressler said. “It was dirty. Nobody grows up and says I want to go into the meat business.’’ And for several years, it appeared Bressler would not be following in the footsteps of her grandfather and father. After earning a master’s degree in inter- national business, Bressler spent six years working in the import/export side of the toy business. It was only when she was looking to make a career change in the early 1990s that she met with her father, who was also looking to make a change of his own and step back from the business. Bressler decided to take a chance on the family firm. She took a job as a credit manager and started working her way through the company in different posts. Unexpected “I have two sisters. None of us were ever Big Apple – and roller skating down busy Manhattan streets – than in working for her father’s advertising and marketing business. It was only after a heart-to-heart talk from her mother that Brandt took a serious look at the idea of working for the business her family owns jointly with another. “I said ‘can I leave?”’ Brandt recalled of her initial job negotiation with her father. “And [he] said if you are bad at it, I can fire you. With that we had a good agreement.” More than a decade later, Brandt has become a key player at Sundin Associates, which provides marketing and ad services for About 30 percent of family businesses will now consider a daughter for the top job. small and mid-sized banks. The Natick firm’s resident tech guru, she helped the firm stay ahead of the curve with the latest in e-marketing while taking on ever greater responsibility on key accounts. That means helping banks with everything from setting up and managing their websites to newsletter marketing campaigns. That’s in addition to the firm’s bread and butter business of overseeing ad and marketing campaigns, often through local print and electronic media. “Our competition has something called a website,”’ Brandt recalls of a call from a panicked banker in the early days of the web. “We need one.” On the side, she’s even launched her own podcast aimed at young mothers, Manic Mommies! The podcast has netted corporate sponsors – including General Motors – interested in finding new ways of reaching desirable demographics. raised thinking we were going to go into the business,’’ Bressler said. “He never raised us to think this would be our legacy.” The family business, however, had grown more sophisticated and soon Bressler found herself helping plan and oversee a major shift and expansion. After years focusing solely on meat distribution, Agar expanded into a full-scale food distributor, with an array of dry goods, from ketchup to frozen fish and paper products. The company saw its customer base grow as well to include a full range of restaurants, hotels and institutions. That growth led to another big jump in 2000 – the decision to leave its traditional Boston base and build a new, 275,000 square foot warehouse and office complex in Taunton. The first year was a tough one, with the company losing employees in the move and having to adjust to a new computer system. Manic Mommies has built a following of 1,500 moms, making it a top parenting podcasts. Brandt has also been talking to clients and industry groups about how they might use new marketing vehicles like Manic Mommies to reach clients. “Manic Mommies is an experiment that has grown far beyond being an experiment,” she said. And while her father, Roger Sundin, has no immediate plans to retire, when that day comes, Brandt will take a leadership role in the family business that she has grown to love. In an era when marketing is rapidly changing, Sundin, an engineer by training himself, notes with pride his daughter’s enthusiastic embrace of the latest in technology “To me it’s one thing to talk about it,” Sundin notes. “It’s a whole other thing when you are doing it, and she is doing it.” Twist Of Fate Like Brandt, Christa Hagearty also had plans of her own that did not involve her father’s dry cleaning business. While she helped out with the business growing up, Hagearty opted to pursue her own career after he left college, going to work for Plymouth Rock Insurance. That came in part as the result of the prompting of an uncle, who, while heavily involved in the family business, told Hagearty not to feel obliged to work with him but to pursue her own interests. But after the uncle’s sudden death a few years later, Hagearty came back to help out her father and never left. Working with her father, she came up with a strategy to expand Quincy-based Dependable Cleaners, with a focus on improving customer service, creating a top-flight management team and boosting same store sales. She bought the company from her father in 1996 and over the years has expanded the number of locations to 16 from 12. The But the new and larger complex helped set the stage for a dramatic growth spurt, one that more than doubled the company’s revenue to $560 million and came close to doubling its head count to 430. Bressler by than had moved up the company’s ranks, and, in 2001, took the job of chief executive. “I then sort of realized the business would be what you would make it to be,’’ Bressler said. And while family is important, Bressler said she has learned the importance of making sure the business and its needs come first. Too many family businesses fall into the trap of piling relatives on the payroll, creating a heavy financial burden, she notes. “We are a family business, but Agar is the baby,’’ Bressler said. “If I can’t take care of the baby, there isn’t anything else to take care of.’’ n Continued on Page 22 SURPRISE CEO: Karen Bressler never expected to be top dog at Taunton-based Agar Supply Co. 15 by kay metcalfe Stalling Can Family-Owned Car Retailers Make It In The Bay State? For family-owned auto dealerships across Massachusetts, the last few months have been like being in a Nascar race with a gasoline shortage. Many of them are going to make the finish line, but some are sputtering and watching their dreams of glory stall. Car sales are down across the board, and that’s forcing many of the state’s dealerships to scale back significantly. But dozens of others are in danger because of the woes of General Motors and Chrysler Corp., both of which are yanking franchises out from under owners. the Boston Better Business Bureau - yes, we will remain in business,” was the comment from a member of the Stagg family, whose Cape Cod Chevrolet dealership appeared on Chrysler’s list of 789 dealerships nationwide that the ailing automaker vowed to close. “We are not closing our business as ... has been implied incorrectly. We will continue servicing our very loyal customers and have expanded our service department by servicing all makes and models including most imports. We are a Chevrolet dealer and have always sold more pre-owned vehicles than new,” said Peter Stagg, owner of Stagg Chevrolet/ Chrysler, in a statement. “I am getting the next generation ready to get involved with the business.” Ernie Boch Jr. s Ernie Boch Jr. at one of his Norwood dealerships. He says he’s selling less than before, but he’s still looking forward to a fourth generation leading the company. 16 For the Dimopolous family, the economic downturn meant the end of the line for its Seacoast Motors in Salisbury. Although it was one of 12 dealerships in Massachusetts on Chrysler Corp.’s list of franchise terminations, patriarch George Dimopolous said the end was already in sight. The dealership just couldn’t survive with sales levels so low that it lost more than $1.5 million over the last couple of years. But most of the state’s family-run dealerships say they plan to fight to stay in business. “After 32 years of A+ business practices rated from A Pile-Up But dealerships not selling GM or Chrysler products, too, are affected by the mega-corporations’ meltdown. “Business is down around the world,” said Ernie Boch Jr., president and CEO of Boch Automotive. “The problem with the auto industry isn’t that we’re facing harder times than anyone else, because we’re not. Everyone’s having troubles. The problem is that our troubles are plastered across the front pages of newspapers everywhere you look.” Out? Boch said that while his company sells foreign automobiles, they are still affected by GM’s woes. “The bankruptcy of GM is hurting our business,” he said. “With Chrysler and GM in trouble, people say, ‘it must be great for Honda, Nissan and Toyota [dealers] because now there’s less competition,’ but that is not the case. Without GM spending money on advertising they’re not spurring that competition to keep the market alive. People aren’t getting excited to buy new cars, they’re scared and it hurts us.” Boch Automotive began in the mid-1940s. Ernie Boch Sr. took over the company from his father in the late 1950s and garnered fame for his over-the-top marketing campaigns, which included smashing a car windshield with a sledgehammer to illustrate the company “smashing prices.” Boch Jr. inherited the catch phrase, “Come on down!” and the business from his father, after Boch Sr. passed in 2003. “It’s the time to look back to the business basics of the past,” he said. “It’s time to be making sure management is trained right and to be really taking care of our customers better than we have been doing. It’s the time to make sure customers feel safe.” Boch’s empire of dealerships, concentrated mostly along the “Automile” on Route 1 in Norwood, is still showing and selling more cars than any other dealership group in the state, he said. “But, yes, we are selling fewer cars than we were a year ago. I feel like we are the tallest midget. We’re doing more business, but it’s a bigger piece of a smaller pie,” he explained. As for making sure the business stays a family affair? “Yes, I am getting the next generation ready to get involved with the business,” he said. “I have an eight-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son. I am trying to have my son take over the business. I’ve been asking him if he will do it since he was four. I’m working on my daughter, too.” If that fails, Boch said he also has plenty of nephews and nieces to fill his shoes if necessary. Passing Lane Over at the Honda Cars of Boston dealership in Everett, the Giacchino family isn’t even sure if the business will continue with the next generation. Salvatore J. Giacchino started the business in the late 1960s. Sons Gene, Paul and Rob got involved when they were in high school, working part-time and during summer breaks. The brothers got more involved as they got older, and in 2004, five years after their father’s passing, took over running the dealership completely. “We’d really like to see the business stay in the family,” Gene Giacchino said. “It will definitely be a challenge because there are 10 offspring right now between us all. We don’t know what will happen. We’ll have to wait and see.” The greatest challenge for the Giacchinos right now is keeping their business viable. “We’ve definitely been feeling a strain on our business as the country has gotten deeper into the recession,” Giacchino said. “Consumers are a lot more cautious about making a commitment on large purchases such as new cars.” On the other hand, the business has seen improvements in the service and maintenance side of business as well as pre-owned car sales, according to Giacchino. “We think the family business will be in good standing once the economy turns back around,” he noted. n “We’ve definitely been feeling a strain on our business as the country has gotten deeper into the recession.” Gene Giacchino 17 18 Contributed Photo star family of the It’s a Saturday night, and at Nebo, a hot eatery in Boston’s North End, the joint is jumping. Customers are lining up for tables, and Carla Pallotta is calling the shots. She runs the front of the house, dealing with reservations, planning parties and maintaining order during peak dining hours. To most customers, Carla is the face of the restaurant. After all, she’s the one they see most. What they don’t see is her sister, Christine, who’s clearly in charge in the kitchen. There, she’s expediting orders, making sure food is coming up the way patrons have requested, keeping an eye on the costs and the quality. “We’ve never understood jealousy.” s Carla Pallotta Sisters Christine (left) and Carla Pallotta run Nebo in Boston’s North End. It’s the kind of set-up that could bring on family tension, like the lead singer in a band getting all the attention when it’s really a team effort. But the Sisters Pallotta say they’ve got it all worked out the way it should be. “It’s very important that we have different jobs and that we know each other’s strong points,” Carla Pallotta says. “Mine is in the hospitality and the front of the house, and Christine’s is definitely in quality control and working in the kitchen.” “Christine is literally the eyes in the back of my head,” she adds. Christine Pallotta agrees. “We play our own roles by kay metcalfe How some family businesses decide who should be the public face of the business and know our own weaknesses. I stay away from the staff and the reservation book. Carla stays out of the kitchen when we’re slammed.” Facing Facts In any enterprise, there needs to be some employees who are the public face and some who work behind the scenes. But in family businesses, that dynamic could be especially prickly if it brings up issues of favoritism. The key, say family executives who’ve successfully navigated these waters, is to make sure everyone feels that their contribution is important and valued. Norton-based Bernie & Phyl’s Furniture is the largest, privately-owned furniture retailer in the Bay State. The company grew from a small mom-and-pop Weymouth storefront in 1985, to now operating six stores across Massachusetts and New Hampshire. The furniture retailer has become a household name with help from TV commercials featuring the founders, Bernie and Phyl Rubin. The ads showcase love seats, recliners, end tables and more, coupled with the presence of Bernie & Phyl, as well as a catchy jingle that almost anyone who has lived in the state can recite: “Bernie and Phyl’s! Quality, comfort and price! That’s nice!” Since the early stages, sons Larry and Robert have helped out with the family business, working behind the scenes while their parents took center stage. Robert joined the company in the mid-1980s when the business started, and Larry followed soon after in the early 1990s. “We’ve been involved for a long time, but were never in the commercials until more recently,” notes Larry Rubin, now president of the company. The reason for the new faces in the commercials? “We’re in a transition period now,” Rubin exContinued on Page 20 19 Contributed Photo From left are brothers Filippo, Damian and Dante de Magistris, owners of Restaurant Dante in Cambridge and Il Casale in Belmont. Star Of The Family Continued from Page 17 plained. “We decided a couple of years ago to introduce Rob and myself in the commercials gradually, and more recently we’ve also begun to involve our sister, Michelle. My parents are getting older and we all thought it would make sense now to start transitioning to the next generation.” The transition period for a family business, especially when the business bears the name of one or two family members, is an important one to undertake and the Rubins intend to keep the namesake of their parents when the transition is complete. Public On Purpose Sometimes the decision of who should be famous comes down to the marketing decision to actually make someone a star. For brothers Dante, Damian and Filippo de Magistris, owners of Cambridge hotspot Restaurant Dante, the decision to name the restaurant after one of them was a tough one. “Naming the restaurant was a really difficult process,” said Head Chef Dante de Magistris. “All we started out knowing was that we wanted it to be a chef-driven restaurant so that when people would hear about us, they would know our chef and could know to expect good food… Well, that’s the theory.” Dante already had a following in Boston, according to Damian, so it only made sense for the brothers to stick with and build on that positive 20 momentum. Damian and Filippo fill their own important roles in the restaurant, Damian is in charge of the front of the house and Filippo manages the wine program. “Arguments may get a little more heated between us because we’re family, but they dissipate faster too,” Filippo de Magistris said. “There are never any real grudges held between us.” “It really helps that we’re all in the field working,” Dante de Magistris says. “We’re all working for the same thing: have each fill a different role. In the end, it all evens out and all gets done. It always comes back to trust in the end.” “We’re not all chefs,” says brother Damian. “If we were, it would be a different story. We’d be fighting all the time!” The de Magistris must be doing something right. They just opened their second restaurant – Il Casale – recently in their hometown of Belmont. Sibling Support The Rubins of Bernie & Phyl’s say the move to introduce all of the family now as faces of the company is a business decision, not a personal one – and certainly not because anyone had hard feelings. They know they’ve all got important contributions to make to the company. That’s the same kind of tone struck by the Pallottas in their restaurant. The sisters admit to small fights, but maintain that jealousy has never been an issue at any point in their lives. “We’ve never understood jealousy,” Carla Pallotta said. “We’ve always been happy for each other with whatever the other one does.” n The family that runs Bernie & Phyls Furniture. Daughter Michelle Pepe and founders Phyl and Bernie Rubin are in front. Sons Rob Rubin (center) and company president Larry Rubin are in back. 21 Contributed Photo Generation XX Continued from Page 15 company also offers delivery service in more than 20 towns. Annual revenue has tripled to $15 million. “It was that crisis that brought me back to talk to my father,” Hagearty recalled of her uncle’s death and her decision to return to the family firm.”For a time I thought I was coming back for a year to help my father. My father was semi retired. By the end of the year, we had both fallen back in love with the business and figured out how to work with one another.” Aviva Sapers’ decision to carve out a career in the family business also came after much reflection. She spent long hours alongside her brothers working in the family business, Sapers & Wallack insurance and investment management. But before going to work for the family firm, Sapers decided she needed to work for another firm first. Money doesn’t grow on trees, but Jackson Lumber has been making profits in the lumber industry since 1946. As their key business advisor, Caturano has helped grow those profits by providing direction on critical decisions…strategy…growth and expansion…succession planning. Need the right materials for a solid foundation for growth? Caturano is New England’s largest regional full-service CPA, consulting, and wealth management firm. Connect with a partner: 617-912-1242 [email protected] what you call us has changed... what you call us for hasn’t. www.caturanoandcompany.com Assurance • Business Risk & Controls • Tax Management & Technology Consulting • Wealth Management 22 Her Own Footing After graduating from college, she then threw herself into the insurance business, winning entry into the million dollar sales club back in the early 1980s at one firm. It was only after reaching success on her own that Sapers decided she was comfortable coming back to the family firm. Still, Sapers’ ascent was far from overnight. When her father decided to step back, Sapers underwent a year evaluation by her father and other employees before she won the top job. That was more than a decade ago and Sapers never looked back. With the Baby Boom generation rolling into retirement, Sapers has overseen a push by the firm into money management and financial planning. Bill Sapers, her father, has carved out a new role as head of a charitable division that helps nonprofits manage their assets. While each of these daughters rose to the top by a different path, each notes the importance of finding ways to separate the business side of their lives from the family. Sundin Brandt has learned to compartmentalize – sometimes in a way that leaves other family members a bit mystified. “When I am talking about him in a work context, it’s Roger, but in a family context, it’s Dad,” she notes. One universal rule that has seemed to work – banning shop talk from the dinner table or patio during family gatherings. When Sapers and her father are at family gatherings and business comes up, they will often take the conversation into another room rather than talk it out at the dinner table. “We try and keep the family stuff family,” she said. And it can mean work for the fathers as well as the daughters, who are forced at times to step back and get out of the way. In the years that his daughter was working her way up the ranks of the business, as well as the son of one of the firm’s founders, Bill Sapers recalls having to walk a fine line. “We deal with a lot of family businesses. We have watched some of them destroy the family,” Sapers noted. “As a father it is my responsibility to be perceptive as to what is going on and make sure things stay on line while they take control.” n The Kelliher Group Skittish about investing? If market volatility has shaken your confidence about investing, then it’s time for a fresh approach. 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