Choose your friends wisely

When Fred H. Lerner was working to get Ritz Interactive Inc. off
the ground in 1999, he was very careful about who he asked to
invest in the new company.

“It’s not that difficult to get money,” Lerner says. “It’s difficult to
get money and keep control so you can implement your business
plan and your model. It is better to have a strategic investor who is
interested in your success rather than a financial investor that is
only interested in making money.”

Lerner chose wisely, and the e-commerce service provider has
grown its revenue from $33.1 million in 2001 to $99.1 million in
2006 with 50 employees.

Smart Business spoke with the co-founder, president and CEO
of Ritz about how his core values of persistence and determination have helped him grow his company.

Q: How do you keep attuned to your employees?

The best people to tell you what goes on in your business are
your very own employees, if you bother to ask them. What a
wonderful thing if you can communicate with them on a regular
basis to your superiors.

I’m not very supportive of many meetings. I’m more of a oneon-one manager. A lot more can be accomplished
in one-on-one communication rather than in a group discussion.
People are more likely to communicate their true feelings, their
real thoughts, one on one rather than in a group situation.

Q: How do you keep good employees?

Create an appropriate workplace. Very rarely do people leave
just for money. People who feel they have a best friend at work
very rarely leave their job.

Obviously, some of the factors of fair pay and fair treatment go
along with it. But if you create an environment where people can
develop relationships, it helps in terms of people being happy
where they are.

One of my roles, I believe, is to try to mentor others. Talk to
them, listen to them and see if they have an interest in growing.
If they seem to be responsive, I continue to work with them.

We have an advantage today because of e-mail. Periodically, I’ll
send out an e-mail blast to all our employees telling them, ‘My
door is open most of the time. Feel free to drop in or send me an
e-mail if you have some thoughts you’d like to communicate.’

Q: How do you create that environment?

Shut up and listen. If you’re talking, you can’t learn anything. The
only way to learn something is by listening to others.

If you’re a parent or a spouse, being an active listener and engaging another individual comes with a commitment, and it comes
with practice.

It’s the Socratic method. The best way of listening is to ask questions. When you ask a question, it typically elicits a response. If
(you) ask the right question, you can engage virtually anyone.

Q: What other tips can help a CEO succeed?

There was a very famous quote by Calvin Coolidge. It’s called persistence and determination. What Calvin Coolidge said in a rather long
quote is, ‘The world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.’

When I was growing up in business, the thing that I observed
from my mentors was a passion for the job and their ability to keep
trying to accomplish their goals and objectives regardless of the
obstacles.

After observing that, I came across the philosophies of others,
which just reaffirmed in my mind that it’s persistence and determination and never, ever, ever giving up that are the cornerstones
of success.

To me, it’s rather simple. If you love your work, then it’s no longer
work.

Q: How can a leader get through tough times?

A leader cannot be tied to the past. I came across another definition and I don’t know who to attribute it to. It was a definition of a
CEO as an agent of change.

Any CEO will tell you that the thing they do best is change. I have
an expectation that tomorrow when I walk in, I’m going to see
what things we can do better and different than we do today. I do
that every day of my life.

I think it’s just called growing up. We all go through that. You’re
different today than you were three years ago, and you’ll continue
to grow and evolve. We all should grow and evolve.

Management is a little bit like a marriage. Half of all marriages
fail. But everyone starts off a relationship in business or in their
personal lives with an expectation of success. Through time, you
see whether it will be successful or not.

HOW TO REACH: Ritz Interactive Inc., www.ritzinteractive.com