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Executive Suite: A Story of Corporate Success and Succession
by Edward W. Younkins

For over a quarter of a century, Cameron Hawley had two simultaneous successful careers—as a businessman and as a writer of short stories in magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, McCall’s, and Good Housekeeping. For several years, he was an advertising executive in Minneapolis. This was followed by a 24-year career at Armstrong Cork Company in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he worked in marketing, product development, and product testing. He published his best known business novel, Executive Suite (1952) a year after retiring from Armstrong. He wrote three more business dramas: Cash McCall (1955), The Lincoln Lords (1960), and The Hurricane Years (1969).

Cameron Hawley provides an honorable and favorable account of the majority of businessmen in his excellent, suspenseful, and engaging 1952 novel, Executive Suite. A 1954 film adaptation of the book stays rather close to the novel but is a bit more negative in its depiction of people in business. Both the novel and film have a Randian feel reminding one of an Ayn Rand novel. Overall, both versions provide a realistic and positive image of the businessman, show the actual machinations and politics of corporate life, communicate the drama and romance of business, and make excellent business school case studies.

The story begins with Avery Bullard, president of Tredway Corporation, in New York to determine if an outside person would be right for the vacant position of executive vice-president. Bullard was 56 years old in the novel but only 53 in the film. He had just met with Bruce Pilcher and Julius Stiegel, president and chairman of the board, respectively, of Odessa Stores to discuss this position.

Bullard had lacked sufficient foresight to create a succession plan and to select an executive vice-president soon after the death of executive vice-president, John Fitzgerald. Many months had gone by without appropriate actions being taken. It had taken pressure from investment fund executives for Bullard to give serious attention to the development of a succession plan. He had been too busy building the company to have given consideration with respect to who was going to run it after he had retired.

After meeting with Pilcher and Stiegel, Bullard wires his loyal and professional secretary, Erica Martin, in Millburgh, Pennsylvania, and asks her to call an executive meeting for six o’clock that evening. Bullard had decided to present a new business proposition at this meeting to see how his various vice-presidents reacted to it. Based on their respective performances, he was going to select one of them to be his executive vice-president. The efficient Erica Martin notifies the executives of a last minute meeting. Perceptive of office politics, she adeptly handles the dilemma of the order in which she informs the executives of this meeting.

As Bullard hails a taxi, a catastrophe occurs—he suffers a cerebral hemorrhage just outside of Pilcher’s building. Bullard is not identified immediately because his wallet had been picked up by a passerby who took the cash it held and discarded it. All that is known to the authorities is that there is a John Doe with the initials A.B.

In the film version, it is George Caswell, Tredway board member and head of a stock brokerage house, who witnesses Bullard’s death. He decides to sell Tredway Stock short with the intention of repurchasing it at a lower price after Bullard’s demise became publicly known. The success of Caswell’s scheme depended upon Bullard’s passing being announced after Caswell borrowed and sold Tredway shares but before the news of Tredway’s strong quarterly earnings report (of which he is aware) is announced to the public. The use of such knowledge is indicative of insider trading. Only then could he buy back and replace the borrowed stock at a price lower than the one at which he had sold it. It is interesting to note that in the movie it is Bruce Pilcher, rather than Caswell, who first sees Bullard’s dead body and who schemes to sell Tredway stock short. Pilcher, a candidate from a competing company who Bullard has been considering for the executive vice-president position, is severely chastised by his colleague, Julius Stiegel, for this devious stock scheme.

At the six o’clock meeting, no one knows yet that Bullard is dead. In the film, it is Caswell who phones a number of hospitals and eventually finds a short article in the Friday evening paper about a John Doe with the initials A.B. in the morgue. Caswell then phones the police and informs them that Avery Bullard is the unidentified man in the morgue. However, in the novel, the woman who picks up Bullard’s wallet feels guilty and calls the police after she reads the small piece in the paper. Either way, news of Bullard’s death spread as the evening goes on. With the death of the king and the lack of a succession plan, the story shifts to the jockeying that takes place among five executives vying for the throne: Loren P. Shaw, V.P. and Comptroller; Frederick W. Alderson, V.P. and Treasurer; Don Walling, V.P. for Design and Development; Jesse Grimm, V.P. for Manufacturing; and J. Walter Dudley, V.P. for Sales.

Loren P. Shaw, vice president and comptroller, takes the lead to establish his power immediately after finding out about Bullard’s passing. He takes it upon himself to release positive financial information to the press and to set a date and time for Bullard’s funeral. Shaw’s quick thinking keeps Tredway stock from declining. Because the company has until Monday, quarterly financial reports are sent out in Saturday’s newspapers, thus ensuring that Tredway’s stock price would not fall. Shaw’s immediate action gains favor throughout the company as well as with customers and suppliers.

Alderson and Walling are proactive but not as much as Shaw is. When they arrive at Tredway Tower they are surprised to find that Shaw had already released a statement to the press and the financial statements for the last quarter so that the stockholders would not lose faith in the company with the death of Bullard and sell their stock. Shaw’s plan worked and, as a result, Caswell (in the film) was unable to repurchase the stock that he had sold short.

When Alderson and Walling arrive to find Shaw making such decisions without consulting the rest of the board, Alderson is infuriated because he knows that Shaw disrespects Bullard. Alderson and Walling are in agreement in not wanting Shaw to be president. Shaw is a planner and is excellent in the areas of cost control, finance, budgeting, and so on. He seems to have an answer for almost every situation. He is concerned with the company’s profits and with satisfying stockholders. He is not concerned with the quality of the products and argues that the (low) priced merchandise has an important place in Tredway’s profit structure. Shaw is unimaginative and not particularly concerned with the morale of the plant employees. He lacks long-term vision and does not see the big picture for the company. Alderson and Walling blame Shaw, the efficiency expert, for making Bullard recently lose sight of the Tredway tradition of quality products.

Shaw is a skilled, calculating, ambitious, and politically-astute businessman who is relentless in his efforts to climb the corporate ladder. In the film he is depicted as a ruthless and manipulative schemer who blackmails Caswell and Dudley. Shaw makes a deal with Caswell that if Shaw is elected, then Caswell will get back the Tredway shares he sold short at the price at which he had sold them. In addition, having spied on Dudley, Shaw catches him in an affair and blackmails Dudley for his vote. In the novel, there is no reason to blackmail Caswell and Shaw merely contemplates blackmailing Dudley for his vote.

Walling initially champions Alderson, Bullard’s right-hand man for a great many years, for President. Alderson has the most tenure of the various vice-presidents but he does not believe that he will be able to defeat Shaw. Although he has the background, he does not think that he is the right fit to be president. Alderson says that a younger man should take over. Alderson, Tredway’s longest-serving executive and Bullard’s perennial second-in-command, does not think that he has the passion and drive to succeed as president. He also firmly believes that he is incapable of performing the job as well as Bullard had done. The seasoned Alderson had been with Bullard from the beginning.

Before Avery Bullard was president of Tredway, Oliver Tredway had been the head man. He had built a large corporate office building, Tredway Tower, in Millburgh, Pennsylvania, a small city where Tredway was the major employer. Its carillon rang loudest in its executive suite. Bullard took over as president after Oliver Tredway committed suicide because of impending financial disaster. After Bullard assumed the presidency, the people of Millburgh looked at the tower with admiration and respect. In Millburgh, everything seemed to center around Tredway Tower, the tallest building in town.

Avery Bullard began at Tredway as a salesperson, but he also became a designer and a production specialist. He was an insightful man of superlative talent and keen business sense who had a commanding presence and the loyalty, admiration, and respect of his employees. Luigi, the elevator operator and Bullard’s best friend, idolizes him, as does executive secretary, Erica Martin, as well as most of the vice-presidents. All of the vice-presidents were affected by him as he was personally involved in each of their areas. As a hands-on president, he desired what was best for each of his vice-presidents. Bullard had assembled a team of executives by capitalizing on their individual strengths and by keeping each vice-president focused on his own special area. He was a one-man-show who did not share his views and thoughts with the entire executive committee. Although each executive knew about his particular areas and what Bullard wanted from him, there was no brainstorming among the executive team members. The executive committee was not a team. Each vice-president wanted Bullard’s approval but was not concerned with what the other VPs thought of their performance.

Bullard had selected vice-presidents who had strengths and abilities in their specialties. He, on the other hand, as president, had to have knowledge and make decisions with respect to all of the areas of the business. Each VP had in-depth knowledge of his own area but none of them understood the company as a whole. Although Bullard was highly intelligent, charismatic, and had a powerful personality, he could perhaps also be looked at as manipulative. A master of psychology, he knew each of his VP’s talents, ambitions, motivations, desires, and personalities so as to be able to predict their reactions and behaviors and, at times, to play them off against one another. Most of the time, however, he simply kept each VP focused on his area of specialization.

Bullard, as the “one man” in the operation, valued building the business more than he valued personal relationships, marriage, family, etc. His affair with Julia Tredway, daughter of Orrin Tredway, had ended badly as Bullard could not balance the challenges of work life and personal life. Julia had broken down after her father’s suicide. She is now embittered because Bullard loved the company more than he loved her.

Despite his immense intelligence, Bullard overlooked the importance of having a corporate succession plan. If a succession plan had existed, then we would have had a very different story or perhaps no story at all. Bullard thought he would be with the company for nine more years. If he had named a successor or had a succession plan he would have, in a sense, been able to control, to a certain degree, what happened to Tredway even after his demise.

Alderson and Walling had noticed a recent progressive weakening of Bullard’s drive for constant improvement. He recently lost his way and was losing ground to the competition by producing a low quality line of furniture compared to that which was previously produced.

At first, Don Walling had wanted to support Alderson for president but Alderson declines. Walling, a family man, initially considers himself to be too young for that position. As an engineer, he is more interested in developing new ideas, manufacturing processes, and innovative products.

Alderson and Walling then turn to production man, Jesse Grimm, one of Bullard’s favorites, but they learn that he intends to retire soon. Grimm had decided to retire prior to Bullard’s death and had planned on announcing it the following week at a board meeting. Grimm was selected by them because Alderson believed that Dudley and Caswell would choose Shaw due to their business relationships and friendships. Grimm, who considered himself to be a “real production man,” was ready to take early retirement and hated Walling, the young production man and “boy wonder,” for trying to be like Bullard. He tells Alderson that he will vote for any of Alderson’s recommendations except for Walling. When Grimm had originally built his factory in Millburgh, he had been worried that Bullard would permit Walling to interfere. What happened was that Bullard detained Walling in Pittsburgh and Grimm was left free to build the factory his way. Recently, Grimm takes delight when Walling’s experiments fail. Walling attributes his failed experiments to the absence of proper equipment that is a consequence of Shaw’s cost-cutting measures.

J. Walter Dudley, the affable and social sales and people person, knows how to entertain and is the most-liked executive in the firm. He is cheating on his wife and is not a serious candidate for president. Even if he were, at least in the film version, he is being blackmailed for his vote by Shaw who catches Dudley having the affair when he was supposed to be on a business trip to Chicago. In the film, Shaw informs Dudley that nothing will be mentioned if he supports Shaw for the top job.

Walling was initially uninterested in gaining the presidency. He would rather develop new products and more efficient manufacturing methods. In addition, Walling’s wife, Mary, resented Bullard’s influence over her husband and wanted him to leave the company. Walling did not want to work for Shaw and came to realize that only Walling, himself, had the pride and passion to run the company. His wife tries to talk him out of vying for the presidency and urges him to go out on his own. Walling explains to his wife Shaw’s focus on cost-cutting and the bottom line at the expense of the company’s quality, innovation, and creativity. Walling tells her that his new process finally works but that it cannot be implemented because of a budgetary directive issued by Shaw. Shaw’s decisions keep Walling from implementing his design concepts. Walling wants to improve existing products and to research new designs.

Throughout his career, Walling has kept a balance between work life and family life and has toiled alongside the plant workers. He takes pride in his work and is concerned about the well-being of the employees. He listens to the factory workers who are dissatisfied with the quality of the products they are producing. He knows of long-time factory employees who refuse to work on Tredway’s low-quality furniture line and take a pay cut to avoid working on that line. He knows that people are motivated by pride in their accomplishments and not solely by money. He wants all of Tredway’s employees to take pride in selling quality products to loyal customers and to stand behind these products. Walling wants the company to reinvest profits to develop quality products that elicit the pride of the employees. He wants to relive his earliest experiences with the company by building the best possible products. This approach will benefit customers, employees, and shareholders alike.

Walling realizes that the key to victory is the vote of board member Julia Tredway. He approaches her to seek her support by convincing her that he is the right man for the job. The unstable Julia does not seem to care about money, stock, or the future of a company that has torn her life apart and has caused her so much sadness. Walling’s plea convinces Julia to support him in the novel but not in the film version. Unfortunately, in the film version, she had already given her proxy to Shaw thus empowering him to vote her shares at the board meeting. Shaw’s fatherly sympathy easily persuades the fragile and emotional Julia who is devastated by the death of Bullard. Just before the meeting, although angry and grieving, Julia changes her mind, tears up the document she had given to Shaw, and goes to the meeting in executive suite to vote her shares for herself.

In the film, Alderson phones Walling’s wife and asks her to let Walling know that he has been detained while picking up Grimm at the train station and wants to have the vote postponed until the two of them arrive. She nearly sabotages her husband’s chances by not giving him the message. Feeling guilty, she later goes to executive suite to support her husband’s desire to be president and to ask him to forgive her.

Shaw begins the meeting without all of the board members present because he fears that they may have plotted against him just as he has plotted against the others. Dudley nominates Shaw and the first ballot is inconclusive because one member has abstained. The first vote leaves Shaw one vote short because Caswell (not Julia) has abstained.

In the film, Alderson and Grimm arrive in time to hear Walling’s passionate and motivational oration. In the novel, Alderson uses the drive time to clear up a misunderstanding that Grimm had about Walling. Walling is a dynamic character who has changed and developed into a creative, charismatic, strong, decisive, and visionary leader with a future-orientation, much like Bullard had been. Walling now displays characteristics that had been descriptive of Bullard.

Walling’s impassioned speech applauds high quality production, recognizes the importance of employees, and promises growth of the company. He says that men do not work for money alone. They require work they can take pride in. In his speech, Walling speaks of Bullard and how he had changed over time. He says that the pride of one man is not enough to run a company. He believes that Tredway is currently sacrificing quality and failing to take pride in its products. He wants to get back into the business of building quality furniture. He says that the plant workers want to do their best and to take pride in their work. Men have to take pride in what they are doing. In the film version, he shows his dissatisfaction with the low-cost KF line by picking up a table and breaking it, thus making a compelling argument against producing sub-par products. He argues that the men in the factory need pride and that the company should not compromise the furniture’s beauty, function, and value. Walling observes that Grimm wants to take pride in craftsmanship and that Dudley wants a quality product to sell. Walling wants to bring the company back to its former greatness.

Walling shares his recollections of Bullard in this excerpt from this boardroom speech in the novel:

“He was never much concerned about money for its own sake. I remember his saying once that dollars were just a way of keeping score. I don’t think he was too much concerned about personal power, either—just power for power’s sake. I know that’s the easy way to explain the drive that any great man has—the lust for power—but I don’t think that was true of Avery Bullard. The thing that kept him going was his terrific pride in himself—the driving way to do things that no other man on earth could do. He saved the company when everyone else had given up. He built a big corporation when everyone said that only small corporations could succeed. He was only happy when he was doing the impossible—and he did that only to satisfy his own pride. He never asked for applause or appreciation—or even for understanding. He was a lonely man but I don’t think that his loneliness ever bothered him very much. He was the man at the top of the tower—figuratively as well as literally. That was what he wanted. That is what it took to satisfy his pride… He never realized that other men had to be proud, too—that the force behind a great company had to be the pride of more than one man—that it had to be the pride of thousands of men.”(332-333)

Toward the end of the film, Walling explains it like this to Julia Tredway:

“The force behind a great company has to be more than the pride of one man. It has to be the pride of thousands. You can’t make men work for money alone. You starve their souls when you try it. And you can starve a company to death the same way. Avery Bullard must have known that once, but he’d become a little lost these last few years. The company had been saved; there was no more battles to win. Now he had to find something else to feed his pride—bigger sales, more profits, something. And that’s when we started doing things like this—the KF line.”

In his closing speech in the film he says:

“We’ll have a line of low-priced furniture, a new and different line—as different from anything we’re making today as a modern automobile is different from a covered wagon. That’s what you want, Walt, isn’t it—what you’ve always wanted? Merchandise that will sell because it had beauty, function, and value—not because the buyer likes your scotch or think that you’re a good egg. The kind of stuff that you, Jesse, will feel in your guts when you know it’s coming off your production line. A kind of product that you will be able to budget to the nearest hundredth of a cent, Shaw, because it will be scientifically and efficiently designed. And something you will be proud to have your name on, Miss Tredway.”

Walling’s speech wins the hearts and minds of all of the board members, including Shaw, Walling chooses Shaw to be his executive vice-president and to help him keep his feet on the ground. Both Walling and Shaw are right and they need one another. The company can both have a quality product and produce it in a cost-effective manner. Walling and Shaw shake hands and become working partners with each bringing his specific strengths and perspectives to the boardroom.

Until the company’s succession crisis, Tredway’s executive group had never acted as an effective team. Because there was no executive vice-president to take charge, they were forced to come together and ultimately to work as a team.

The idea of the importance of time constraints, pressures, and deadlines in business permeates Executive Suite from beginning to end. The film begins with the ominous ringing of the chimes in Tredway Tower above the streets of Millburgh, Pennsylvania. Perhaps they were tolling for Bullard who was experiencing his last moments of life on earth. In the novel, the date and time are given, thus counting down the last minutes of Avery Bullard’s life and leadership of his company. He had let months go by without adopting a succession plan or appointing an executive vice-president. The short-selling of Tredway stock depended upon the timing of the sale and repurchase of it. When Shaw immediately takes the reins and issues favorable financial information, the stock price does not go down. There is great time pressure to find a successor for Bullard. The film version ends as it had begun, with the ringing of the chimes of the bells of Tredway Tower. This time, however, the ringing was hopeful of a great future for this company.

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