Ever
since the days of Sinclair Lewis, whose novel Main
Street depicted the middle western small town as an
emotionally and culturally sterile place, and Babbit,
which portrayed the middle western businessman as
a crude, shallow hustler, an unfortunate stereotype
of business life in the heartland has haunted America’s
imagination. Sad to say, no novelist with Lewis’
ability ever used as a model of any of the mend who
combined the best of the region’s progressive
business spirit with the sound human values based
upon a deep religious commitment. One such man was
Gust E –or “Brick” as almost everyone
called him – Lundberg. Brick Lundberg is remembered
by his friends and fellow Kewaneeans as many things
– as a kind and generous man who cared about
every employee, customer and fellow citizen; as a
positive thinker who rarely had anything negative
to say about anyone; as a motivator who could persuade
people to accomplish things they never dreamed of;
as a business genius who could have been a millionaire
many times over (and who probably would have given
it all away every time!). Brick Lundberg’s career
provides an inspirational model for those who look
for outstanding management methods, for those who
wish to understand the energy of small town America,
and for those concerned about the moral bases of life
in the twentieth century.
Brick
Lundberg was born in 1920 in Kewanee, Illinois, where
his father, Gust E. Lundberg, Sr., was a local auto
dealer. The senior Lundberg had given much though
to the relationship between business and life. In
high school, he and two friends had pooled their resources
to buy an encyclopedia in the belief that the self-improvement
they would accomplish through knowledge would allow
them to accomplish great things. The two other boys,
through exclusive dedication to business, eventually
became founders of major American corporations. But
the senior Lundberg believed that business was an
important part, but only one part of life, and raised
his sons in the same belief.
After
graduation from high school, Brick Lundberg enrolled
at the University of Illinois, where he earned part
of his expenses by working for the Elmo Roper survey
organization. He found this work to be so interesting
that he decided to work full time for Roper in New
York as soon as he graduated.
World
War II and military service, however, interrupted
these plans. Upon graduation Brick received a commission
in the Air Force and married Eleanor Miller of Cairo,
Illinois a few days later. During the war Brick was
an adjutant with the 387th bomb group. He was partially
responsible for the organization’s outstanding
sense of cohesion and spirit – a spirit so strong
that for thirty years after the war the group held
annual reunions organized by Brick and the group’s
flight surgeon.
The
duration of the war gave Lundberg some perspective
on the career plans he had formulated in college,
and the glamour of working for Roper in New York began
to fade. Perhaps because of his father’s influence,
Lundberg began to think more positively about business
in a small town and when the group’s flight
surgeon, Dr. Harry Schwartz, came through with an
offer of financial backing, the two decided to become
partners.
In
1946, Lundberg and his partner began acquiring a series
of Culligan Soft Water franchises in Kewanee and Macomb,
Illinois and Kenosha, Wisconsin. In 1948, however,
the death of Brick’s older brother forced him
to return to Kewanee to help his 73-year old father
liquidate an automobile dealership, necessitating
the sale of Lundberg’s shares in the Culligan
dealerships in Macomb and Kenosha. Remaining in Kewanee,
he put up a large Culligan building with a shop in
back where his father could indulge his love for mechanical
tinkering. The shop, in turn, gave Brick the idea
of forming a company to market some of his father’s
inventions. The business, named Kewanee Rite, sold
a number of products successfully and gave young Lundberg
his first real experience in merchandising.
During
the same period, Lundberg became an active civic leader.
His devotion to Kewanee’s industrial development
efforts and other projects led the Kewanee Junior
Chamber of Commerce to name him Outstanding Young
Man of the Year in 1951 and again in 1955. In the
latter year, he received the same award for the State
of Illinois. Lundberg’s achievements were many
during this period –which also included an unsuccessful
campaign for mayor – but none so dramatically
illustrates his ability to motivate people and his
dedication to the community as his work for the local
National Guard unit and its armory.
In
the late 1940’s the National Guard unit at Kewanee
was so seriously undermanned, that it faced the loss
of this Federal charter. Local officials petitioned
the State of Illinois for a new armory in hopes that
the new facility would encourage recruitment. But
the state’s response reversed the order of things.
If, and only if, the community could bring its unit
up to strength would the new armory be built with
state funds. Meeting the challenge was discouraging.
A series of company leaders turned to Lundberg. The
story of how Lundberg, at a sacrifice in reserve rank,
revitalized the unit and brought Kewanee its armory
is vividly recalled by Ted Vlahos (One of the recruits):
 “They
had one company commander after another and they
 couldn’t
get anybody to do any recruiting. So that got good
ol’ Brick Lundberg ..He    had
to resign his commission as a lieutenant colonel and
go as a captain… and I think in about
 three
or four months he filled up the one company with a
hundred and sixty-five men, and then he  started
another company, a medical company, which was like
a hundred men …which led to the  State
of Illinois building not a single unit armory but
a double unit armory.
Vlahos’
recruitment into the Guard was the beginning of a
friendship and business relationship that was to last
a lifetime. It demonstrates dramatically Brick’s
care and concern for everyone he come into contact
with, whether they were Sandy’s employees or
National Guard recruits. In this particular case,
Lundberg sensed the coming of the Korean war and sought
out Vlahos:
 “He
said,’We’re gonna’ have another
war’ … and I was a
 sergeant
at the time … and he said, ‘ I would like
to see you
 try
and get a commissioin. You’re gonna’ have
to face it
 sooner
or later, and you might as well go as an officer than
 as
an enlisted man.’ So again, I became an officer
because
 of
Brick Lundberg.”
Vlahos
was not so lucky in Korea, however. He was seriously
injured; his back barely permitted him to walk, and
he returned to Kewanee to find his business in ruins.
Ted Vlahos was depressed and bitter when, once again,
he ran into Brick Lundberg:
 “
I was hurt in the service and I went from 205 pounds
to 128.
 And
I didn’t have any clothes that fit. So I borrowed
a neighbor’s
 car
and went downtown to buy some clothes … and
a car pulled
 up
and there was Brick Lundberg.”
The
two were celebrating their reunion with a drink when
Brick hit his friend with a new responsibility: to
command and reorganize the local guard unit. It was
the last thing from Vlahos’ mind:
 “I
said, ‘ Brick, I’ve lost my business,
I’ve got a bad back, I’ve
 got
some other problems,’ and he said, ‘ what
have you done
 for
your country?’ I said, ‘ Brick, I was
in the Army yesterday,’
 and
he said, ‘ What have you done for your country
today?’ “
Lundberg
stayed with his friend and drove him to Rock Island
for dinner to try to cheer him up. But he realized
that sympathy would not work in this case; it could
not motivate a man to pull his life back together.
As they drove home that evening, Vlahos recalls:
 “He
said,’I thought you were a bigger man than what
you are:
 you
have a back back; … you’ve lost your business
… But if
 you’d
stop feeling sorry for yourself and get off your duff
and
 get
to work …’ By the time we got back to
Kewanee he had
 me
so mad that if I could have I would’ve hit him.
He just
 had
me in a rage! (We got home and ) I’m sitting
in the car
 and
he says, ‘ I’m not gonna’ help yo!
You’re waiting for me
 to
get out and help you to the door –to Hell with
you! You’re
 feeling
sorry for yourself! You’re a crybaby! I’ll
see you
 again,”
and just sat there, and I crawled up the steps …
 and
I started the way back.”
Clearly,
Brick Lundberg knew just the sort of “medicine”
his friend needed.

“ It took me 45 minutes to walk
a block …(but) today I can
 walk.
Brick … gave me love and help and then said,
‘Hey,
 you’re
feeling sorry for youerself,’ and kicked me
in the
 tail
… I went to work that next morning; I dragged
myself
 up
and down to whiskey row, trying to get guys to join
the
 Guard,
which I did. I got enough guys to join the Guard to
 get
our charter reinstated.”
The
National Guard experience – including Brick’s
role in the rehabilitation of a good friend –
represents a major achievement in Lundberg’s
life, but in another sense is only typical. In all
his activities, Brick Lundberg demonstrated a remarkable
ability to motivate people which sprang from a genuine
compassion for others.
The
establishment and development of the Sandy’s
fast food chain (ancestor in the Midwest to Hardee’s)
represents Lundberg’s most dramatic accomplishment
as a businessman. More important, however, is the
fact that this business achievement demonstrates once
more the success of Brick Lundberg’s personal
outlook and philosophy – that a genuine concern
for the well-being of every employee and customer
can be the key to a successful and profitable enterprise.
The
Sandy’s story really began in California in
the early 1950’s where a milkshake mixer salesman
by the name of Ray Kroc bought the franchising rights
to a fast food restaurant operation from two brothers
by the name of McDonald. Paul White, a friend of Lundberg’s
and a fellow Kewaneean, learned of Kroc’s plans
while vacationing on the West Coast. White brought
the news back to Kewanee where he and Lundberg, together
with Robert Wegener and W.K. Davidson, decided to
buy the right to open McDonald’s restaurants
in the central Illinois territory. In June, 1956 they
opened their first unit in Urbana, Illinois, the third
McDonald’s restaurant to open outside of California.
The
choice of Urbana proved a good one. Brick knew the
city well from his college days, and in 1956 the city
held the largest university population in Illinois.
The university’s graduate and professional schools,
together with an influx of Korean War veterans and
their families, meant a large population of busy young
families on limited budgets – the ideal market
for the convenience and thrift offered by McDonald’s.
The Urbana store proved so successful that the Kewaneeans
decided to open additional stores in Decatur and Peoria,
Illinois.
At
this point, however, troubles with Ray Kroc began.
First, Kroc informed the partners that Peoria was
not included in what he considered to be the central
Illinois territory. Unfortunately, Brick and his friends
had already made a substantial investment in the Peoria
site. The land had been acquired and construction
of the building had begun. A second problem involved
a change in the relationship between Kroc’s
corporation and its franchisees. Kroc decided that
all leases would be held by the corporation, which
in turn would sublease to the franchisee, a percentage
of the profit being added to the terms of the sublease.
This action made Brick and his partners angry; it
was a violation of the original agreement and an unwelcome
additional cost.
As
a result of these differences the Kewaneeans decided
to establish their own fast food chain. A number of
Scottish names which suggested a thrift theme were
considered –Scottie’s, Highlanders, and
Bonnies’ were among them – but “Sandy’s”
was the final choice. The first Sandy’s unit
opened in Peoria on August 8, 1958.
The
menu (including a 15 cent hamburger, a 20 cent milkshake
and a 10 cent bag of fries) was similar to chains
like McDonald’s. What made Sandy’s different,
however, was its organization. While the four founders
regarded the new enterprise as an investment, none
wished to apply the decades of total dedication it
would take to turn the chain into a huge corporate
empire. Brick, however, saw the operation as an opportunity
to put together a unique organization of people who
shared his values and beliefs – what he later
called a “people-oriented organization whose
members worked hard but also had some fun while earning
a legitimate profit.” --and agreed to devote
most of his time to getting the chain started.
The
resulting organization differed from other fast food
chains in several ways. First, the operators of most
restaurants owned their stores and did not lease the
from the corporation. Second, operators could purchase
their own supplies – meat, for example –
as long as the supplies measured up to standards.
Other chains purchased the supplies themselves and
re-sold them to operators for a profit. Third, Brick
Lundberg, as president of Sandy’s, made every
effort to visit every store periodically and become
personally acquainted with every employee. Between
1959 and 1966 he drove thousands of miles, seeking
new franchisees (Brick avoided investors who would
no put their labor behind their money and thereby
become an active part of the organization) and visiting
with employees in established stores. One employee
recalls Brick’s visits as follows:
 “He
would come into a Sandy’s and shake everybody’s
hand.
 And
he was happy to meet ‘em because they were all
part of
 Sandy’s.
They’d see other people come in big Cadillacs
and
 Lincolns,
and not talk to ‘em, then there would come Brick
 Lundberg,
Chairman of the Board and President of Sandy’s
 in
his little Rambler. He’d pull in the lot, get
out, pick up a
 cup,
pick up a wrapper, come in the store, dispose of the
 paper
products he found in the lot that shouldn’s
have been
 there
(and he’d get a message across without saying
a word:
 your
lot’s dirty!), and he’d walk in and shake
everybody’s
 hand;
he was really happy to see ‘em all!”
Not
only did Brick care for his employees during those
years; his impact on them is something they still
remember. Chuck Clark, a Hardee’s Vice President,
recalls meeting Brick when Clark first came to McDonald’s
in Urbana as a young married student looking for a
part-time job: “ Brick met me and showed me
around and gave me such a tour, I got so excited about
the work that I came back and told my wife that in
a few years I though I’d be running the place.
He got me so enthused about the whole thing from the
very beginning, just by paying attention to me and
treating me right.” Ann Bower remembers: “In
working with the board, I used to have to do cash
flow, project sales, percents of increases…and
I really didn’t think I could do it…(but)
Brick came down and talked to me one day, and I thought
(afterwards) I could do six times more than what he
wanted me to do …He gave me the determination
and made me feel that I was a chosen one; I really,
really (felt) chosen.” And a janitor remembers
that Brick extended the same courtesies to him as
to others, making him feel an important part of the
organization. Clearly, Brick’s personal touch
had much to do with the success of the organization:
every employee was made to feel capable; every employee
could believe he or she was making an important contribution.
Despite
a continuing lawsuit with Ray Kroc (which ended only
with an out of court settlement in 1965), Sandy’s
continued to expand rapidly. From just 7 stores in1959,
the chain grew to 18 in 1960, 36 in 1961, 53 in 1962,
70 in 1963, 82 in 1964, 101 in 1965 and 121 in 1966.
Although Lundberg had conceived of a gradual expansion
from central Illinois, stores soon appeared in Indiana,
Kansas, South Dakota, Pennsylvania and Arizona (Where
two Peorians wanted a business excuse to travel!).
The home office staff grew from Brick alone, operating
out of his Culligan building in Kewanee, to two in
1960 (when Eileen Fristad joined the organization
as a part-time secretary and bookkeeper) to several
in 1961 (including Jack Laughery, who was so impressed
with Lundberg’s operation that he left a successful
insurance practice to join Sandy’s).
By
1966, Brick and his wife decided it was time for a
change. The past seven years had been ones of incredibly
hard work, with Brick often driving 3,000 miles or
more a month and having little time for his family,
his community or himself. Seven years of his life
and energy had gone exclusively to the Sandy’s
operation, and it was time to redress the balance.
In 1966, therefore, Brick stepped down as president
of Sandy’s – retaining the title of Chairman
of the Board – in order to devote his time and
energy to other ends.
The
middle sixties in Illinois were a time of the expansion
of the community college system. In Kewanee, community
leaders tried for some time to bring a community college
into the area, only to have referendum after referendum
voted down. Because of his profound belief in equal
opportunity in education, Brick decided to turn the
situation around. As soon as he began his “retirement”,
Brick began a year of intensive effort to make the
community college a reality. To provide land, he led
a drive that raised more than $200,000; for other
support, several other communities joined in a consortium.
The consortium soon evaporated, however, as some of
the communities broke away and joined other community
college districts. Lundberg was not deterred by this
setback, however, and soon came up with an alternative
plan. It was suggested to Blackhawk College President
Alban Reid that Blackhawk (located in Moline, Illinois),
open a branch in Kewanee. Within six months, Blackhawk
agreed and classes were scheduled to be held in the
armory. Once again, Brick’s leadership ability
and persuasive power had succeeded where others had
failed. When a permanent Blackhawk campus was established
in Kewanee, Brick’s achievement was recognized
when the library was named after him.
During
the latter half of the sixties, Lundberg continued
devoting his time to family, church and community.
Although he was involved in many community organizations,
Brick was always concerned about individuals as well.
Ted Vlahos remembers this “helping” spirit
well:
 “
I know there are many people in town he gave money
 to,
who were down on their luck…Brick gave ‘em
money
 or
found them a job … A fellow would come in and
say,
 ‘Brick’I
don’t have a job and I don’t have any
qualifications,’
 and
Brick would find him a job. I know several times he
 would
pay their way to another town.”
During
this period there was time for family vacations in
Michigan and Wisconsin – even these, of course,
were regarded as self-improvement activities. One
of the Lundberg sons recalls that Mrs. Lundberg would
read out aloud about the various places visited so
that the trip became a lesson in history and geography.
While
Lundberg continued his retirement from the business,
the fast food industry began to change in ways that
would eventually threaten Sandy’s profitability.
Competition, for one thing, became stiffer as both
independents and huge corporations like Pillsbury
(Burger King) and General Mills (Burger Chef) were
building new stores everywhere. A combination of inflation
and competition drove up costs of land, materials
and labor, cutting into profits. McDonald’s,
meanwhile, launched a national television advertising
campaign aimed at early evening family audiences;
the red-haired clown, Ronald McDonald, became as familiar
to children as Santa Claus. And while advertising,
competition and inflation were driving up the costs
for the fast food operators, the industry itself was
changing from a drive-in concept to dual store sites.
Business magazines began to predict that many of these
companies would fail, and the predictions came true
quickly. The Minnie Pearl fried chicken franchise,
for example, was launched in 1967 with a huge public
stock offering and sold 1,840 franchises the first
year. But within a few years the entire operation
was shut down.
At
Sandy’s where Brick and his partners owned 70
percent of the stock, people began o wrry and it became
apparent that Brick himself would have to take an
active hand. In the resulting reorganization, Brick
returned to work full time while Jack Laughery became
president.
Brick went to work
immediately to solve problems that emerged in the
organization. One was communication, which lent itself,
obviously, to Brick’s personal expertise. Another
was the number of marginal stores which were unable
to turn a profit. This, too, was dealt with quickly.
Between 1970 and1972, 20 marginal stores were closed.
But
a third problem was more serious. Sandy’s lacked
capital – money, that is, that would allow the
chain into the expensive new network television advertising
race. The ratio between assets and liabilities had
already become dangerously low in order to finance
expansion; ready cash was simply not available. An
obvious solution would be another sale of stock, but
a sluggish stock market meant that a stock offering
would have to wait.
But
another strategy suggested itself – a merger.
Jack Laughery had an acquaintance, Leonard Rawls,
who had founded an East Coast hamburger chain named
Hardee’s. Rawls’ chain and Sandy’s
operated in different territories and were not competitive,
and Hardee’s had plenty of ready capital. Rawls
was both eager to expand and impressed with Sandy’s
“Lundberg approach” to management. After
a series of meetings, the logic of a merger became
apparent to everyone and on November 30, 1971, a Hardee’s
purchase of all of Sandy’s stock was announced.
Lundberg then retired temporarily from the hamburger
business once more. In 1972, he returned once more
to help persuade the Sandy’s franchisees to
change their stores to the Hardee’s name and
then retired for good.
Although
Lundberg had retired for good, he left behind an organization
which bore his unique personal stamp. Leonard Rawls
had build the Hardee’s organization with great
financial and marketing skills, but he had never been
able to create the kind of spirit de corps and effective
communication that distinguished Sandy’s. Although
it grew spectacularly, Hardee’s had always been
plagued with management turnover. But after the merger,
the Sandy’s “people touch” became
the Hardee’s philosophy. And so it was that
Brick Lundberg could live out the last few years of
his life with the satisfaction of knowing that the
organization he created would live on and that his
own ideas and philosophies would live on with it.
Brick Lundberg died in 1977. |