Family Turmoil Aside, the Incentives Business Has Proved Rewarding for Maritz
Bad blood spans generations at Maritz Inc., but the firm has remained a major player with its programs aimed at helping clients reach their business goals.
By Sheree R. Curry
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it comes to keeping workers happy, loyal and believing that their employers are
appreciative of their efforts, St. Louis-based Maritz Inc. prides itself on being the
silent partner of thousands of companies who run a variety of incentive and
recognition programs. Maritz, a $1.2 billion reward and recognition provider and
market researcher, counts among its clients 28 of the world’s largest organizations.
With 4,000-plus employees worldwide, more than half of whom are
in the St. Louis area, the family-owned, privately held company operates seven
related businesses, including Maritz Rewards, Maritz Incentives, Maritz Travel and
Maritz Loyalty Marketing. Many of Maritz Incentives’ clients, including American
Express and Marriott International, have been listed among the best companies to work
for by Fortune magazine.
Under its own roof, Maritz employees are treated to some of the
best incentive programs around, and the St. Louis Business Journal has ranked
the company as one of the best places to work at in that community.
But that good feeling does not necessarily hold for some people
with the Maritz surname. Almost from the beginning of its history, Maritz has been
marked by family-ownership tensions, and they persist to this day. The company also
underwent an internal shake-up in January 2004 with the departure of Brian
Fitzpatrick, president of the incentives division, and some 30 other employees.
Internal bumps notwithstanding, Maritz is a significant player
in the incentives and recognition industry, with total revenues that have hovered
between $1.2 billion and $1.5 billion in any given year, according to the company.
Forbes’ lists of the 500 largest private companies in the U.S. put Maritz at No.
166 in 2003, with $1.4 billion in revenue. For the 2005 fiscal year, it slid to 227,
with $1.2 billion in revenue.
While revenue was down last year, the company had a 10 percent
increase in year-over-year earnings in 2005.
"We made more money in fiscal year ’05 than in all the previous
years we’ve been in business," CFO Jim Kienker says. Revenue dropped because of a
decline in corporate travel after the Sept. 11 attacks and because Maritz sold three
of its businesses in March 2004: Delve, Maritz Research’s data collection unit; TRBI,
Maritz Research’s London subsidiary; and TQ3 Travel Solutions, its corporate travel
subsidiary.
New leadership
Maritz says its incentives business is taking shape under the
direction of Jane Herod, who was named president of Maritz Incentives in August,
replacing Fitzpatrick.
"Under Jane Herod’s leadership, Maritz Incentives is focusing
on identifying and targeting reward and recognition solutions and awards to a
company’s particular objectives (because) companies are dealing with a lot of change
in today’s business climate," says Paula Godar, director of marketing communications
at Maritz Incentives.
"What family business hasn’t
had
their problems? Keeping everybody happy and everybody speaking is
not easy. A lot of private companies
go through this."
--Jean Hobler, middle sibling of the Maritz clan
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Maritz vice president and managing consultant Rodger Stotz says
that while there have been decreases in some corporate budgets in the past three to
five years, clients during that time have become increasingly interested in extending
incentives beyond their traditional use with the sales force. They want to use them
for employees in nonsales positions too.
"They are concerned about the employees feeling stressed or not
feeling that the corporate culture is supporting them to the degree that they would
like," says Stotz, who works from a home office in Connecticut when not traveling.
To meet that challenge, Maritz looks at more than just
incentives, he says.
"We get involved with the learning aspects of organizations.
And we utilize the Internet and Web-based applications for monitoring, measuring and
communicating the incentive plan, as well as providing faster feedback to the
participants of incentive plans."
With such technology underpinning its business, Maritz today is
a far cry from the company’s beginnings in 1894 as a fine jewelry maker.
The family patriarch, Edward Maritz, died in 1929, the year of
the great stock market crash. The business nearly crumbled. Holding on were sons and
co-CEOs James and Lloyd, who were left in the desperate situation of having to sign
over the equity in their homes in order to secure loans to keep the business afloat.
In 1950, their children James Jr. and his cousin Lloyd Jr.
split the company in two after a dispute, leaving James Jr. running the 20-year-old
sales division that sold watches, jewelry and other merchandise to companies as
incentive awards. This comprises the Maritz Inc. that is best known today.
When James Maritz died in 1981, James Jr. and younger brother
Bill became co-CEOs, while James Jr. also served as chairman. Bill doubled as
president, a title that his brother, six years his senior, held 20 years earlier.
According to a Wall Street Journal report, Bill decided in
January 1983 that he no longer wanted to share the top position with his brother. But
it was unclear who should have the CEO job. Middle sibling Jean Hobler, who evenly
controlled one-third of the stock with her brothers, reluctantly chose a consultant
to select the best leader. The consultant picked Bill, and soon after, Jim’s share
was bought out. After 37 years at the company, Jim retired. The two brothers never
spoke again, the Journal reported.
Now a former Maritz board member who sold her stake in the
company in 1994, Hobler, at 79, has outlived her feuding brothers only to see her
nephews carry on the dueling tradition.
"What family business hasn’t had their problems?" she asks in a
phone interview in early June. "Keeping everybody happy and everybody speaking is not
easy. A lot of private companies go through this."
In 1998, Bill Maritz turned the CEO title over to middle son
Steve, who began at the company in 1983 as an account manager for the former Maritz
Motivation Co. By February 2000, Steve’s older brother Peter and younger brother
Philip were removed from the board seats they had held since 1994.
Peter and Philip retain their total 40 percent stake in the
company, versus Steve’s 60 percent, but the two have for years been embroiled in a
lawsuit against Maritz Inc.
A revised suit filed in spring 2004 asks for Maritz to be
dissolved and that the proceeds from the liquidation be used to buy out their
holdings, according to the St. Louis Business Journal. Peter Maritz says he
prefers not to discuss the lawsuit.
In a written statement, the company said the minority
shareholders’ claims are "completely without merit."
"The litigation is just the latest tactic in their
long-standing campaign to coerce the company to buy their shares for an exorbitant
price," the statement continues. "Our legal position is very strong and we will
defend the case vigorously."
Keeping tabs
While family issues buzz at lesser or greater volume in the
background, Maritz goes about its business.
On the incentive side, many clients consolidate their rewards
and recognition programs and have them accessed, monitored and managed via an online
portal.
An important aspect of online reporting is that it helps
executives keep better track of how their managers use rewards. One company knew
managers were dipping into the rewards budgets, but really had no idea who was being
awarded prizes, why they won, or what they actually received as prizes. With online
reporting, that information can be tracked.
Also with online reporting, Maritz or an in-house awards
coordinator can see who is racking up points but not redeeming them, or who is not
recording their sales in order to automatically qualify for points. Those employees
can be reminded via e-mail or online notices to use them or lose points before they
are zeroed out at the start of the next quarter, or even to enter their sales so that
they can claim an award.
Business link
Incentive programs need to support business goals, and with
Maritz’s help, Bank of America Corp. has been able to strengthen connections between
the two.
"When I look back to where our programs were several years ago,
there were some great things being giving out to associates, but they weren’t
necessarily consistently tied to the results the business is trying to achieve," says
Rick Bradley, senior vice president and manager of the recognition and awards program
for Bank of America.
With 175,000 associates and 22 different lines of business
across 29 states and about as many countries, Bank of America had multiple reward
systems in place prior to Maritz helping it implement the Bank of America Spirit
Awards program three years ago.
Under the old system, an employee from the small-business
division, one from the mortgage company and one from personal banking--all working
out of the same center--were being rewarded differently, Bradley says.
One associate might have received a bank-branded T-shirt or
coffee mug, while another may have received a leather portfolio or something more
significant for the same type of performance, he says. And since employees talk, the
inconsistent reward structure defeated its purpose in many cases.
Maritz brought an infrastructure that allowed employees to
choose a reward by simply accruing points and cashing them in for items in an online
catalog.
Perhaps the ultimate test for an incentive provider is how it
treats its own employees.
Maritz began rewarding its nonsales employees in the 1970s,
long before it became a trend among its clients, says Stotz. It has a number of
programs and uses cash and non-cash rewards and recognition to cite employees for
jobs well done.
Workforce Management, July 2005, pp. 74-75 --
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Sheree R. Curry is a freelance writer based in Maple Grove, Minnesota. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.
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