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Banking & Finance


Even keel



How to fill your organization with winners

By Matt McClellan


Smart Business St. Louis | December 2008

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Frederick Van Etten<BR />president, Popular Equipment Finance Inc.
Frederick Van Etten
president, Popular Equipment Finance Inc.

Frederick Van Etten believes every word of the old saying, “A rising tide floats all boats.”

“Anyone can manage in a good time,” he says. “We saw that in the 1980s [with] the dotcoms, before the bubble went through. You could buy a stock, and it would just go up. It didn’t have to be a good company, it didn’t have to be a company with any revenue or any net income; [it was] just because the market was going up, and so everybody looked like geniuses.”

Van Etten believes it takes a crisis to determine whether a manager can lead in good times and bad. Van Etten faced that test when he became the president of Popular Equipment Finance Inc., the equipment leasing arm of Banco Popular North America, at a time when the company just couldn’t win. So he cleaned house and started over, helping to increase sales volume from $140 million in 2006 to $178 million in 2007.

Smart Business spoke with Van Etten about how to make it through the crucible and how to find employees who are winners to help you succeed.

Bring in winners. As a leader, the first thing when I took over this company two-and-a-half years ago was to replace all the direct reports that came into me and bring in people who I felt truly shared the vision of where we wanted to take it.

I played high school and college sports. Sometimes you’re on a team that just can’t win. For years, this company didn’t win. It just could not win. It had management problems, it had credit problems, it had vision problems, and it didn’t have the right products. Ultimately, it came down to lack of management knowledge and vision.

When I replaced all those people, each person I brought in was brought in from a winning organization, and they were used to winning.

When we brought in the new management team, initially, the people they managed were questioning whether or not this was just more of the same. But when we began to win and we began to change the policies and procedures — even the way we treated our customers — then all of a sudden the results started to go up.

You can take a bunch of people who have never won before, and once they start winning, you can just see the encouragement and the attitude change in the company.

All of a sudden we have the most engaged number of people I’ve ever worked with. We have 100 people here who would run through walls for us. For years, they were all afraid they’d get terminated. They were afraid this subsidiary might get shut down, and then, all of a sudden, when we started to win, then they feel like they’re really part of the reason for the success.

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