Cover Story


Clear priorities



How Dan Wilson and the employees at Belron US perfected the art of giving back

By Nancy Byron


Smart Business Columbus | August 2008

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Talk about a close call.

When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in late August 2005, Dan Wilson must’ve been holding his breath. After all, his Columbus-based auto glass replacement company had just opened a new warehouse in the area.

“The water came within two feet of the facility. Two feet,” says Wilson, who retired last month as president and CEO of Belron US Inc., the parent company for Safelite AutoGlass. “That’s about as close as you want to get. And the facility we had just moved out of was underwater.”

Still, it was a mixed blessing. Even though the new warehouse escaped water damage, many business functions had to be relocated temporarily due to the poor conditions in New Orleans following the storm surge and mass levee failures. In addition, at least 30 of Safelite’s 75 employees in the area were left homeless by the flooding.

“So we not only felt it from a business standpoint, we understood it from a personal standpoint,” Wilson says. “Many people lost everything. It was a calling on the company to see what we could do.”

Safelite set up a donation pool for employees impacted by the hurricane and seeded it with $40,000. Then Wilson put out a plea for help across the company. The response was immediate. Employees volunteered space in their own homes to take in displaced associates. Some traveled to New Orleans. Others offered clothing, school supplies, blankets, towels or dishes. Still others wrote checks.

“The $200, $300, $400, $500 checks people were writing to help individuals get back on their feet was amazing,” Wilson says. “It really described a lot about the culture and the heart of the company.”

In fact, the outpouring of generosity by employees served as a catalyst for the company to establish an ongoing vehicle through which the company and its employees now give regularly: the Safelite Charitable Foundation.

Here’s how Wilson created a culture of philanthropy at Safelite AutoGlass — and why giving away nearly $700,000 as a company last year could just be a start.

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