| Born in Pocahontas, Arkansas
in 1898 (p. 3), Marion Wade's mother left his father and
took Wade to Oak Park, Illinois to live with her parents.
He graduated from high school in 1912 and in 1918 began
working for a minor league baseball team. Wade then married
and began looking for a new career.
Wade first sold insurance, but disliked
the unethical practices of the business. Next Wade sold
aluminum pots and pans door to door. In 1926 his sales decreased
and "At one point he was broke and living in a substandard
apartment" (p. 4-5) where his three-year-old daughter "became
ill and died" (p. 5). Wade blamed her death on "his inability
to provide for the family" (p. 5), so he "increased his
selling effort and his earnings improved" (p. 5).
Wade's sales were so good that he was promoted
first to assistant manager in St. Louis and then manager
of sales in Cleveland. Wade quit two years later when "the
company had introduced an inferior product line for sale
by retail stores. Wade thought it unethical to lower the
quality and to sell in direct competition with the company's
direct sales force" (p. 5).
Next Wade sold "home mothproofing services on a commission
basis" (p. 5). The company went bankrupt in 1930 and he
decided to continue the business on his own. Wade "became
a Christian" (p. 6) in 1930 after hearing a sermon that
"dealt with the Bible as a source of inspiration and a source
of rules for good living" (p. 6). Wade "made a commitment
to Christian living" (p. 6).
Wade did not incorporate his religious beliefs into his
business until an accident in 1944 left him temporarily
blinded. He spent several months recovering in a hospital,
and came to the conclusion that, "I was trying to personally
honor God, but I had never tried this with my company because
I had been trained in the school of competition which attests
that religion and business don't mix" (p. 7). Wade decided
that in his company "Every employee, from top to bottom,
do his job for the glory of God" (p. 7). His employees found
that they were able to resolve disagreements better and
generally had better attitudes about their job and each
other.
Wade then made several policy changes, including "a decision
to discourage competition among employees" (p. 9). He stated
that "An employee is hired at a specific salary to do a
specific job, and as the company prospers, so does he, but
if he is willing to work a little harder only when he is
baited by bonuses he really isn't doing his job in the first
place" (p. 9).
Wade also carefully selected his employees. He said, "I
now consider it my prerogative and my duty to learn as much
as I can about a man before sending him out to represent
a company that is dedicated to the Lord" (p. 9).
"A third policy was the delegation of responsibility and
the freedom needed to exercise it" (p.10). Wade said, "We
make our plans and set the policy at staff conferences,
then each man goes back to his office to do his job, using
his own brains and his own skills to make decisions" (p.
10).
After World War II, "Wade moved the business office to a
store near Belmont Avenue in Chicago" (p. 11). He also hired
Ken Hansen "as a salesman-financial manager" (p. 11). Hansen
preached at a local church and "Wade was convinced that
Hansen possessed the sales and management skills as well
as the service attitude, which Wade's growing company would
need" (p. 11).
"It was during this period that Wade decided to add a rug
cleaning service to his business" (p. 11). While expanding
this business, Wade met Bob Wenger. In 1947 Wade, Wenger
and Hansen started a new company "offering mothproofing
and rug cleaning services" (p. 12). Every employee was offered
stock in the company "to make them feel that, 'they had
a piece of the action'" (p. 13).
Next company-owned branches were opened and franchises were
established. The company was renamed ServiceMaster because,
as Wade explained, "As individuals and as a company we were
working for the Lord-we were servants of the Master" (p.
15).
"In 1956 Marion Wade experienced a heart murmur that put
him face-to-face with the prospect of death" (p. 16). He
moved Ken Hansen "to the position of president and chief
executive officer" (p. 16). Wade served as chairman of the
board, "and he continued to do many of the things he had
been doing when he was CEO" (p. 16).
Wade also "became deeply interested in developing a succession
policy" (p. 23). Wade read about one company’s succession
policy and decided to implement it. The company "had a policy
of identifying successor chief executives and putting them
at the head of the firm long before the incumbent was mentally
or physically ready to retire" (p. 23). The policy was implemented
and executives at ServiceMaster were "responsible for finding
and training their successors" (p. 24). Marion Wade died
in 1973.
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