| The
Quill Corporation
Jack Miller created the Quill Corporation.
By the 1980s Quill had become the world's largest
mail order business specializing in office supplies.
It subsequently merged with the giant store-based
office supply company Staples.
Jack did not create Quill alone. His brothers, Arnold
and Harvey, share the credit for Quill's success.
But in the beginning the Quill Corporation was a one
man operation and that man was Jack Miller.
Career Ladder
Jack graduated from the University
of Illinois in 1950 with a major in advertising and
no idea of what to do with his life. He financed his
college education by digging ditches,washing dishes,
modeling for art classes, and performing an acrobatic
act at various public events, night clubs and theaters.
Following graduation he took a job with his father
in a Chicago retail chicken store near Wrigley Field.
There he waited on customers, slaughtered birds and
cleaned the premises.
Tiring of that work he left for Oregon with visions
of becoming a lumberjack. But he changed his mind
en route and returned to Chicago where he got a job
selling advertising for a suburban newspaper. He soon
quit that job and went to work in a chicken store
owned by his brother Arnold.
One Saturday an uncle who owned a successful specialty
food manufacturing firm stopped in the store. Seeing
Jack mopping the floor, he asked," What kind of job
is this for a college graduate?" He offered Jack a
job in sales with his company. Jack accepted. For
the next few years Jack traveled throughout the United
States calling on food wholesalers.Those years taught
Jack much about distribution in the United Stgates
and he used that knowledge later in his own business.
At the end of the fourth year as a traveling saleman
Jack married and soon began to look for work that
would allow him to be home more often. He eventually
left his uncle and took a job selling brief cases
in Chicago.
In 1956 Jack decided to start his own business selling
office supplies through direct calls on Chicago businesses.
He found an office supply wholesaler who would sell
to him if he put up a $300 deposit. It was agreed
that his wife would work to support the family until
the business began to pay.A $2,000 loan was obtained
from his father-in-law. A business telephone was set
up in his father's chicken store; and Jack began calling
on potential customers with the wholesaler's catalog
under his arm.
Growth of the Business
It took a year and a half for Jack
to build the business to a size large enough to support
his family. Then he risked that modest success by
bringing in his brother Harvey as a partner. They
opened an "office" in the basement of a relative's
two-flat and six months later hired their first employee
- a part-time secretary.
In an effort to boost sales Jack began experimenting
with mail order on a very small scale. He began sending
penny post cards to 153 accounts. The first mailing
touted 5 special items and generated enough order
to encourage Jack to continue the practice. By 1960
the periodic mailings were generating more business
than the personal calls and a decision was made to
concentrate exclusively on the mail order side of
the business. Money was borrowed from a bank to finance
the first catalog and the backup inventory and in
1963 the mail order business began.
A cash flow crisis occurred when the first catalog
failed to produce adequate sales. A family meeting
was held. Jack and Harvey were advised to give up
on the idea and return to personal selling. But Jack
insisted on sticking with mail order . His judgment
was vindicated as catalog sales slowly rose to the
breakeven point.
With a survival level of sales achieved, the company,
named the Quill Corporation, entered into a period
of steady growth, culminating in a 1973 move to a
modern plant in Northbrook, Illinois. By then Quill
had 60 employees and had reached a critical point
in the company's history - the choice between continued
but modest growth or the "fast track."
Jack and Harvey chose the fast track. They brought
in their brother Arnold as third member of the top
management team; they made rapid growth their goal;
and they began to train the managers needed to sustain
that growth. Over the next decade Quill's sales grew
thirty-fold; employment rose to over 300 full-time
employees; and Quill a position as a leader in its
industry. During this time the company moved again,
this time to a state-of-the art facility in Lincolnshire,
Illinois. Also during this time they brought the third
brother, Arnold, into the business.
The Family Farm in Modern Form
One of the distinguishing features
of Quill under Jack's leadership was its success as
a family business. The three brothers managed to work
smoothly together by taking separate areas of responsibility.
Jack was responsible for advertising, merchandising
and promotion; Harvey handled production and purchasing;
and Arnold handled financial matters. The brothers
took titles because corporate law required it - Jack
was president, Arnold was treasurer and Harvey was
secretary. But they truly ran the business as a team.
The family team was expanded when Jack's father died.
His mother needed something to do and the brothers
brought her into the business to work in the mail
room. In addition all of the brothers' children worked
at Quill at one time or another as did Jack's wife
Audrey. To the nuclear family Quill was more than
a source of livelihood. As Jack once put it, " This
business has been absolutely fabulous. It brought
the whole family together. It used to be common for
a whole family to own a farm. It was their center,
their core. That's what this business is for us. It's
our fun. The best game in town. I'm a tough handball
player, but the business is more fun than that."
The Quill Culture
From the customer's viewpoint Quill's success was
built on outstanding merchandise lines, attractive
prices, excellent service and highly effective communication.
Jack Miller believes that a deeper explanation for
Quill's success was what he refers to as "The Quill
Culture." He describes that culture in terms of the
following ten components:
1. WE CAN MAKE GOOD THINGS HAPPEN
(We have the power and the responsibility to creat
our own future)
2. WE MUST CONSTANTLY DEDICATE OURSELVES TO THE PURSUIT
OF EXCELLENCE
(...aggressively, pursuing superior performance in
every area of the business. Success will follow.)
3. WE MUST CONCENTRATE OUR EFFORTS
(Great results can be achieved by concentrating our
abilities and resources on carefully defined objectives).
4. WE MUST ALWAYS STRIVE FOR SIMPLICITY
(The simplest way is usually the best).
5. WE BELIEVE STRONGLY IN THE VALUE OF HARD WORK
(Hard, consistent effort and pride in our work can
achieve great results).
6. WE BELIEVE IN BEING VERY AGGRESSIVE YET CONSERVATIVE
(Conservative does not equate with timid. It means
careful analysis and careful preparation and not letting
greed and hopes override reality and judgment).
7. INTEGRITY IS THE GLUE THAT HOLDS EVERYTHING TOGETHER
(We should always deal honestly with all people and
with ourselves ).
8. KEEPING A LEAN, HANDS-ON ORGANIZATION IS CRITICAL
TO SUCCESS
(Fat clogs the arteries and reduces efficiency in
people and organizations. It has to be avoided).
9. WE BELIEVE THAT NO COMPANY HAS A DIVINE RIGHT TO
SURVIVE AND PROSPER
(It's a right that must be earned ... year in and
year out).
10. WE CARE
(About our customers, our suppliers, our fellow workers
and ourselves).
*Copyright 2002. The American National Business Hall
of Fame. All rights reserved. No portion of ANBHF
may be duplicated, redistributed or manipulated without
the expressed permission of the ANBHF.
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