Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His "Employee Family" Built Sargento, a Billion-Dollar Cheese Company

This candid and inspiring memoir shares the secrets that made Sargento Cheese a household name and the key managerial strategies that empower entrepreneurs to succeed in business and life.

Leonard Gentine operated a financially challenged mortuary business for 16 years. Yet, by the time he died, he stood at the helm of Sargento Foods Inc.-a profitable, nationally recognized cheese company. How does one go from a struggling funeral director to a competitive force in the natural cheese category? TREATED LIKE FAMILY is that full, untold story. Leonard believed in a simple philosophy: Hire good people and treat them like family. Yet that belief, admittedly foundational to the company, proved to be only one of many tenets underlying his success. It is the story of Sargento but also of its employees who, empowered by the Gentine family, took a vision and nurtured it into a formidable company.

The narrative is based on over 150 interviews-the collective voices of the company's employees, retirees and friends. This is an unvarnished portrait of Sargento, its management, and the trials leading to its influential place in the cheese industry. Within the pages of this story lie key concepts for others seeking to replicate Leonard Gentine's entrepreneurial success: the importance of a corporate culture based on the value of its employees, servant leadership, and the belief that a company's ownership is not narrowly defined to its shareholders or by its products.

1126941715
Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His "Employee Family" Built Sargento, a Billion-Dollar Cheese Company

This candid and inspiring memoir shares the secrets that made Sargento Cheese a household name and the key managerial strategies that empower entrepreneurs to succeed in business and life.

Leonard Gentine operated a financially challenged mortuary business for 16 years. Yet, by the time he died, he stood at the helm of Sargento Foods Inc.-a profitable, nationally recognized cheese company. How does one go from a struggling funeral director to a competitive force in the natural cheese category? TREATED LIKE FAMILY is that full, untold story. Leonard believed in a simple philosophy: Hire good people and treat them like family. Yet that belief, admittedly foundational to the company, proved to be only one of many tenets underlying his success. It is the story of Sargento but also of its employees who, empowered by the Gentine family, took a vision and nurtured it into a formidable company.

The narrative is based on over 150 interviews-the collective voices of the company's employees, retirees and friends. This is an unvarnished portrait of Sargento, its management, and the trials leading to its influential place in the cheese industry. Within the pages of this story lie key concepts for others seeking to replicate Leonard Gentine's entrepreneurial success: the importance of a corporate culture based on the value of its employees, servant leadership, and the belief that a company's ownership is not narrowly defined to its shareholders or by its products.

27.0 Out Of Stock
Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His

Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His "Employee Family" Built Sargento, a Billion-Dollar Cheese Company

by Rafik Dhejlij
Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His

Treated Like Family: How an Entrepreneur and His "Employee Family" Built Sargento, a Billion-Dollar Cheese Company

by Rafik Dhejlij

Hardcover

$27.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

This candid and inspiring memoir shares the secrets that made Sargento Cheese a household name and the key managerial strategies that empower entrepreneurs to succeed in business and life.

Leonard Gentine operated a financially challenged mortuary business for 16 years. Yet, by the time he died, he stood at the helm of Sargento Foods Inc.-a profitable, nationally recognized cheese company. How does one go from a struggling funeral director to a competitive force in the natural cheese category? TREATED LIKE FAMILY is that full, untold story. Leonard believed in a simple philosophy: Hire good people and treat them like family. Yet that belief, admittedly foundational to the company, proved to be only one of many tenets underlying his success. It is the story of Sargento but also of its employees who, empowered by the Gentine family, took a vision and nurtured it into a formidable company.

The narrative is based on over 150 interviews-the collective voices of the company's employees, retirees and friends. This is an unvarnished portrait of Sargento, its management, and the trials leading to its influential place in the cheese industry. Within the pages of this story lie key concepts for others seeking to replicate Leonard Gentine's entrepreneurial success: the importance of a corporate culture based on the value of its employees, servant leadership, and the belief that a company's ownership is not narrowly defined to its shareholders or by its products.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478992868
Publisher: Center Street
Publication date: 04/10/2018
Pages: 352
Sales rank: 204,492
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 1.50(h) x 9.50(d)

About the Author

Tom Faley, as a 29-year employee of Sargento, had the opportunity to share numerous, private conversations with the founder, Leonard Gentine, before his passing. As a long-term veteran of Sargento, Tom speaks on a large portion of the corporate history from first-hand experience. Holding an MBA in Marketing, Tom played active roles in shaping Sargento, including starting and developing many departments within the company: marketing, consumer research, consumer promotions and new product development. In addition, he holds a patent in his name for Sargento. For over eight years, he has written a blog as well as weekly essays underscoring the company's culture.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews