Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast we welcome Peter Herschend. Peter and his brother Jack built one of the largest family entertainment organizations in the world, but their story didn’t start with theme parks, acquisitions, or millions of guests. Peter shares how Silver Dollar City grew from a 5,000-visitor cave operation into a nationwide portfolio of parks and attractions that now serve over 15 million people across over 40 properties. Some of their brands include Dollywood, the Harlem Globetrotters, many resorts, additional theme parks, and more. In this episode, Peter walks through the decisions, values, and convictions that shaped an entire company culture. Peter talks through Christ being at the center, a deep commitment to loving employees, and a long-term view of stewardship that spans generations. Join us as Peter unpacks the principles that have guided decades of leadership, and why servant leadership is the only way to build something that lasts.
Peter Herschend
Silver Dollar City Origins
0:00
How did it go from Silver Dollar City,
0:02
Tennessee to Dolly World?
0:04
Because of Dolly Parton.
0:05
Yeah.
0:06
You know, it's really very very simple.
Podcast Introduction
0:14
Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast,
0:16
we welcome Peter Hersand. Peter and his
0:19
brother Jack built one of the largest
0:20
family entertainment organizations in
0:22
the world. But their story didn't start
0:24
with theme parks, acquisitions, or
0:27
millions of guests. Peter shares how
0:29
Silverd Dollar City grew from a 5,000
0:31
visitor cave operation into a nationwide
0:33
portfolio of parks and attractions that
0:36
now serve over 15 million people across
0:38
over 40 properties. Some of their brands
0:41
include Dollywood, the Harlem Globe
0:43
Trotters, many resorts, additional theme
0:46
parks, and more. In this episode, Peter
0:49
walks through the decisions, values, and
0:51
convictions that shaped an entire
0:52
company culture. Peter talks through
0:55
Christ being at the center, a deep
0:57
commitment to loving employees, and a
0:59
long-term view of stewardship that spans
0:01
generations.
Peter Herschend Welcome
1:02
Peter, thank you for joining us on the
1:04
Servant Leadership Podcast.
1:05
Chris, I am honored and delighted to be
1:08
here.
1:09
I just told you this before, but when
1:11
people were asking me about starting the
1:13
podcast, multiple people asked, "Who is
1:16
the one person you'd want on the
1:17
podcast?" And the first person that came
1:20
to mind was you.
Peter's Humble Response
1:22
Oh my goodness. um you you need help.
1:26
You you got to get more friends.
1:28
You have been so influential. So I want
1:30
to say thank you. And when people look
1:32
at you from the outside, they obviously
1:34
see a lot of worldly success, but they
1:36
also see you are in charge of or have
1:39
been in charge of or been a part of
1:41
starting many of the world's most
1:44
recognized entertainment brands out
1:46
there. How did this all get started?
Marvel Cave Beginnings
1:48
Well, it's very very simple answer. It
1:51
started with a cave. It started with a
1:54
hole in the ground here in Missouri.
1:57
That cave was called and still is called
2:00
Marvel Cave. And uh today it sits under
2:04
Silver Dollar City. But that was the
2:07
genesis.
2:08
That was the the alpha. Uh my mom and
2:12
dad, Hugo and Mary Hersand,
2:15
came to the Ozarks in the late 1940s,
2:20
4 uh 89.
Herschend Family's Move
2:24
Um dad was an amateur uh botonist. He
2:29
loved flowers and an amateur
2:31
ornithologist. He loved birds.
2:35
And the Ozarks had a lot of both. And so
2:40
he loved this area uh from coming down
2:44
from Chicago. There were a lot more
2:46
birds and flowers here than there were
2:48
in Chicago. Anyway, um in that wandering
2:54
around in the hills, uh looking uh at
2:58
the birds and flowers, uh mom and dad uh
3:03
met two remarkable ladies, Miss Miriam
3:08
and Miss Genevieve Lynch. Miss Miriam
3:12
and Miss Genevieve happen to own Marvel
3:15
Cave.
Marvel Cave Acquisition
3:16
Uh they inherited really from their
3:18
father who had put it in commercial
3:21
service a long time ago. 1894
3:25
to be exact.
3:27
Now commercial service meant that there
3:30
were some tours.
3:33
Um by today's standards not much. Uh if
3:37
they did uh 50 people a month they would
3:41
have been busy uh back in those days.
3:46
Bottom line, uh, Miss Mariam and Miss
3:49
Genevie, we always address them that
3:51
way.
3:52
Miss Mary, Miss Genevie
3:55
were getting on in years and they wanted
3:59
to u have retirement. They wanted to
4:04
retire from the cave business. Dad on
4:07
the other hand looked at Marvel Cave and
4:10
he saw an opportunity for yes for his
4:14
retirement
4:16
uh but for a business that could grow.
4:20
And so long story short, in 1950
4:26
uh we took over Marvel Cave
Early Challenges
4:31
and that was
4:34
the very very beginning
4:38
of who we are today. It was a
4:42
marketkedly different picture
4:45
uh then and now. Um, the first year,
4:50
first year we were in business, Chris,
4:53
we had a grand total of 5,000 visitors
4:59
go through the cave. Uh, we charged a
5:02
dollar and a quarter.
5:04
So, uh, you're quick. You can work that
5:07
out in your head. I just gave you the
5:09
entire balance she profit and loss
5:12
statement of of the operating company in
5:16
that in that year. Needless to say,
5:19
you're not getting a very good return on
5:21
your investment
5:23
at that point. Dad um continued to he
5:27
worked for the Electrolux Corporation
5:31
and he continued to work for them. He
5:34
became the funding stream.
5:37
uh his income was the funding stream
5:40
that kept um the lights on. We had a
5:45
grand total of three employees
5:48
um Bert, Lester, and Rex. Uh and uh Bert
5:52
and Lester and Rex, all wonderful
5:54
people. They also needed to be paid.
5:57
And that's where dad's work came in. He
6:01
became the the banking
6:04
uh backup. It was
6:07
tough sledding. It was really I mean we
6:11
counted
6:12
every penny. Uh we and we literally we
6:17
could not afford a cash register. Uh we
6:20
used a an old cigar box was our was our
6:24
best cash register in that first year.
6:28
It was difficult but it didn't stay
6:30
difficult. We started building up the
6:33
cave attendance and um by the time 1959
6:40
had rolled around, we built that cave
6:42
attendance from 5,000
6:45
up to 80,000.
6:46
Wow.
Silver Dollar City Launch
6:47
Now that's
6:49
that's a good number. It's not great,
6:52
but it's it's way way better than five.
6:56
Wow. So a lot of people don't realize
6:58
that that was even the start of what
7:00
became Silver Dollar City, you know, and
7:03
Oh, absolutely.
7:04
That was where you really, this is where
7:06
you got your start in getting involved
7:08
in so many brands. So, how did Silver
7:10
Dollar City come about for the case?
7:12
Um, I said 1959 because that was the
7:17
last year before we started Silver
7:20
Dollar City. How did Silver Dollar City
7:22
come about is the is the fair question.
7:26
And um there was a man, his name was
7:30
Russ Pearson. He walked into our life,
7:35
literally walked into our life one day
7:38
in uh uh about midsummer of 1959.
7:45
And uh he quite a character. Quite a
7:49
character.
7:51
He looked like he wanted to be a movie
7:54
cowboy.
7:56
Uh, dressed in western gear, hat and
8:01
boots and and all. But
8:05
unlike a lot of people who can put hat
8:08
and put a hat on uh but they're all hat
8:12
and no cattle. Uh Russ was smart and he
8:16
came to us and he said literally to the
8:20
three of to Mary
8:23
uh and Jack and myself, "Why don't you
8:27
on the other side of the parking lot
8:28
over there build a small little town
8:33
and people will come and enjoy the town
8:37
and you'll get more people going through
8:38
Marvel Cave."
8:41
Hm. Remember, we're in the cave
8:42
business. We're not in the silver dollar
8:45
city business at that time. Um, that
8:49
changed quickly. Well,
8:52
uh, we did that. Um, we borrowed every
8:57
penny that we could scrape up from
9:01
everywhere and the local bank, uh, lent
9:05
us a few thousand.
9:09
really speculative because, you know,
9:11
they're they they're they're going to
9:13
lend us money on a business that doesn't
9:16
exist and hope it does well, but they
9:19
had some confidence in us.
9:22
And so in 1960,
9:25
first year we opened this place called
9:28
Silver Dollar City.
Success and Growth
9:32
and Chris, it was
9:36
God had his hand in what we were doing.
9:40
Um, I don't think Well, as a matter of
9:43
fact, I know that Jack and I didn't
9:47
didn't think much about God then. We do
9:51
now, but we didn't think much about God
9:53
then. We're just grateful that all of a
9:56
sudden there were a lot of people coming
9:58
out because we would do some really
10:00
really corny shows at Silver Dollar City
10:03
and we but people loved them.
10:05
Mhm.
10:06
And uh uh and then we would get we were
10:09
getting now we're getting more people
10:11
through the cave. Remember we're in the
10:13
cave business. We're not the silver
10:15
dollar city business. The city was built
10:19
to attract more people to go through
10:21
Marvel Cave, not the other way around.
10:25
And it worked for Marvel Cave. We went
10:28
1959, 80,000 visitors. 1960,
10:32
120,000 visitors.
10:35
That's a substantial change.
10:38
That summer,
10:41
Jack and I
10:44
had a meeting. We sat out
10:48
uh we laughingly call it our first board
10:50
meeting, meaning there were two stumps
10:54
and uh a couple of 2x2s
10:59
spread across them and uh we sat on the
11:03
board and we had our board meeting and
11:07
we we said in effect, now it's not
11:11
verbatim, but you know But
11:15
we just changed something here.
11:20
We were in the cave tour business. We
11:24
are no longer there. We are now in the
11:26
entertainment business.
11:29
And Chris, those are fundamental
11:32
recognitions that you
11:35
transition points. uh because everything
11:38
you do from that point forward is aimed
11:42
at being in the entertainment business.
11:45
How can we do a better job of
11:48
entertaining our guests?
11:51
Um
11:53
not how can we get more tours through
11:56
Marvel Cave. We did we did get a lot
11:59
more tours through Marvel Cave,
12:02
but that's not what we were there for.
12:05
How will people enjoy themselves more?
12:08
Or will they enjoy themselves more? Or
12:11
is this an expenditure that we got to
12:13
make that they'll never know we made uh
12:18
on deep wells or parking lots? Public
12:22
doesn't give you any any credit for um a
12:26
parking lot. It's not entertaining. It's
12:29
something to get off of.
12:31
Um
12:33
but that's okay.
12:35
uh we were in the entertainment business
12:38
and that mantra
12:41
has been part of who we are ever since.
Expansion and Diversification
12:47
Well, in along the way that led to many
12:50
other entertainment businesses that you
12:52
got involved in getting involved in the
12:54
Globe Trotters, getting involved in
12:56
water parks, hospitality businesses,
12:58
getting involved in Dolly World. talk
13:00
about how you made the decision. At some
13:02
point, Silver Dollar City had blown up
13:04
and gone crazy and now you were getting
13:06
into other businesses as well.
13:08
Uh, it was defensive. It was a defensive
13:11
decision.
13:12
We mid 1980s.
13:16
Um, some of your audience who's old
13:18
enough will remember the Arab oil
13:21
embargos.
13:23
Um, I remember them. I don't remember
13:26
them fondly, but they were they were
13:28
very very real. And uh uh there were two
13:32
of them. But they they triggered and
13:35
this is what I mean by defensive.
13:38
They triggered in us a realization
13:40
Silver Dollar City was doing okay.
13:43
Uh sure. Sure. better than we ever
13:46
dreamed it would be.
13:50
But we are highly dependent
13:54
on the ability of people to get in their
13:58
automobile
14:00
and come see us.
14:03
The air oil embargo
14:06
really pointed out we we did okay. We
14:10
business was off. It was all for
14:12
everybody, but we only lost we had some
14:15
counter measures that we went through uh
14:17
to get around it. But uh uh we we lost
14:22
5%.
14:24
Most businesses
14:26
uh who were equally dependent on uh
14:30
automobile travel were in the 20 and 30%
14:33
loss.
14:34
Wow. during those during those times.
14:38
But it pointed out to us that we silver
14:42
dollar city
14:44
I wouldn't trade our location on it for
14:49
anything. But
14:52
it's not there's not a population
14:54
density
14:56
that means anything. As a matter of
14:58
fact, if you go west
15:01
from Silver Dollar City, you get into
15:03
Oklahoma and Kansas and uh eastern
15:07
Colorado. And the dense population
15:09
density is microscopic.
15:12
Mhm.
15:13
So, we said we just need to be where
15:16
more people are so we can have a more
15:19
it's easier for people to get to where
15:23
we are.
15:25
uh wherever that may be.
15:28
And that's how we ended up in Tennessee
15:32
with in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. That's
15:36
where Dollywood is now. It didn't start
15:39
out to be Dollywood. Obviously, it was
15:42
Silver Dollar City, Tennessee.
15:45
And uh but it met the criteria because
15:49
you can draw a 360 circle around
15:55
So with Dollar City, Tennessee, and
15:58
there's population in all four
16:00
quadrants,
16:01
meaningful population within a 2 to
16:06
three hour drive. And that's kind of the
16:09
base criteria.
Dolly Parton Partnership
16:11
How did it go from Silver Dollar City,
16:13
Tennessee to Dolly World?
16:16
Because of Dolly Parton.
16:17
Yeah.
16:17
You know, it's really very very simple.
16:20
The the you asked the right question. 40
16:23
years ago this year we made the
16:26
transition. Dolly Parton
16:31
amazing amazing person person and
16:35
personality.
16:37
But Dolly was from Pigeon Forge,
16:40
Tennessee, which is where Dollywood is
16:44
now.
16:46
And she had for years
16:49
after she had became famous in her own
16:52
right, she had talked on and off saying,
16:57
you know, I
17:00
I'd like to do something
17:04
for my people. meaning not not her
17:07
family but all the people in in East
17:12
Tennessee
17:14
call it Appalachia. Yeah, you'd be
17:17
correct. In other words, these are
17:19
people who are
17:22
besieged by poverty. Mhm.
17:25
Uh and uh the
17:30
travel industry has for them become
17:34
u mana from heaven
17:37
uh because it's provided good
17:38
employment. But she didn't look at it
17:41
that way. She just wanted to do
17:42
something that would make life better.
17:45
Well, she didn't know what that was. And
17:48
so we listened and went on about our
17:51
business. We were just silver dollar
17:53
city Tennessee.
17:56
And then all of a sudden
17:59
she says,
18:03
"I think I'd like to build a theme park
18:07
here in Pigeon Forge."
18:09
Well, that'll get your attention when
18:11
Dolly Barton says that. And now credit
18:14
my brother, my brother Jack with with
18:18
being um
18:21
amazingly
18:23
um bold and stepping out.
18:27
First of all, you you don't just pick up
18:29
the phone and call Dolly and say, "By
18:31
the way, would you like to be in
18:33
business?"
18:34
You're you're not going to get very far.
18:36
So, it took a little bit of uh working
18:40
uh around to uh finally for Jack to have
18:45
a meeting with Dolly.
18:48
And in that meeting, he really only said
18:51
one thing. He said, "Dolly,
18:56
you want to put in a park
18:59
and because your name is Dolly, it'll do
19:02
very well. you'll do about 750,000
19:06
visitors.
19:08
And you know what? We already have a
19:11
park. And that's what we're doing now.
19:14
What we're doing now.
19:17
And so we'll we'll we'll hit 750,000
19:21
visitors.
19:24
Dolly,
19:26
why don't we combine our talents? Your
19:30
name
19:32
and this is what he said to her. Your
19:34
name and our operating excellence.
19:40
And together
19:42
we can create an entire new product,
19:47
one that nobody has heard of. Everybody
19:50
would be amazed with it.
19:55
And in essence,
19:58
she said, "Yeah, let's do it." Wasn't
20:02
quite that simple, but Dolly, for her
20:04
part,
20:06
uh, she says yes to something.
20:11
It's a handshake.
20:13
It's done. Do you have to go through the
20:16
legal nicities?
20:18
Yes, of course you do. any
20:21
that goes without saying
20:23
um contracts and and leases and so on.
20:29
But the base agreement
20:32
is a handshake.
20:35
Wow.
20:35
Then and now, she is a remarkable
20:39
partner. And is she a a a an asset from
20:44
a business standpoint?
20:46
you you'd have to be in some other world
20:48
to to say no to that question.
20:51
She has been
20:54
as rem as
20:56
great a partner
20:59
as you could hope to find.
21:02
That's awesome.
21:03
That there's just nobody like her.
Company Growth and Reach
21:06
So, you talked about when the caves were
21:09
first acquired doing about 5,000 people
21:11
a year.
21:12
Yeah. Yeah. Now, when you look at all
21:15
the different business units you have
21:17
across the country, Dollywood, Silver
21:19
Dollar City, everything, how many people
21:22
are engaging with your entertainment
21:24
brands?
21:25
How many guests do we have?
21:26
Yeah.
21:27
All product 15 million.
21:29
Wow.
21:30
Uh that's a ballpark number. Yeah.
21:32
Cuz you know, I I don't know. We just
21:35
were fortunate enough to acquire uh some
21:39
new properties this calendar year. M
21:41
um I don't know what the full impact of
21:45
those properties will be, but we have
21:46
some projections. So 15 million,
21:50
that's amazing.
21:50
Plus plus or minus a few million
21:54
uh will be a good enough number.
Acquisition Strategy
21:56
Well, and we've talked in the past about
21:59
uh every year you're acquiring new
22:01
properties uh or most years you're
22:03
acquiring a substantial number of
22:05
properties.
22:06
Seems that way. Yes. How do you go about
22:08
deciding this is a good property? This
22:11
is something we should we might be
22:13
interested in, but we decide not to.
22:15
What's the decision-making process look
22:16
like?
22:17
The answer is very carefully and very
22:21
slowly.
22:23
Um
22:26
we just um two weeks ago announced uh
22:32
the acquisition of our last property for
22:35
this year. Uh
22:38
uh but we've been talking with the
22:42
ownership at that property for over two
22:45
years.
22:47
Um first of all, it has to feel right.
22:52
And you you know um you hear the phrase
22:56
uh I'll know it when I see it. I can
22:58
walk into a property or our management
23:01
team, the leadership can walk into a
23:04
property and I can tell you right away
23:06
uh whether it physically
23:09
will be a good fit. That's what that's
23:11
that that answers what question and
23:14
that's a kind of listing of assets and
23:16
uh uh how much property is there and
23:20
what the buildings that's what
23:24
we'll pay a lot more attention to who
23:29
the property is who who are the who are
23:34
the people who are running it now
23:35
because we don't have any intention
23:38
of this new property I just mentioned We
23:40
have no intention of coming in and
23:43
cleaning house. It would be the dumbest
23:45
move in the world.
23:48
It's a successful business and it's been
23:50
successful for 40 years. Why in the
23:53
world would we want to change that? And
23:56
the answer is we don't.
23:58
Mhm.
23:59
So there's there's the the obvious
24:03
questions, Chris, have to be answered.
24:05
Some of them are financial.
24:07
uh a new potential new property has got
24:10
to have the got to have we don't we
24:13
don't buy losers.
24:14
Mhm.
24:15
Are we perfect in that perfect in that?
24:17
No. By the way, we've made some mistakes
24:20
but not many. So, we'll go go through
24:23
the financial side of a new business.
24:27
Uh but I think more important, we'll go
24:31
through the operating side.
24:33
How do these folks operate? This year
24:36
also
24:38
uh we uh made a major major purchase of
24:44
the all the operating assets of a
24:48
company from Europe in the United
24:50
States.
24:52
All their operating properties here in
24:53
the US. 21 properties.
24:57
Wow.
24:58
All in the entertainment business
25:01
at one level or another. some very well
25:04
known, some lesser known.
25:07
Of the 21,
25:10
we opted to keep 10.
25:13
Uh 11 of them didn't fit for whatever
25:16
the reason. It wasn't that they were bad
25:19
properties or good properties.
25:21
So, they've all been sold
25:23
to happy buyers.
25:26
The 10 10 we kept we have spent
25:30
hours of time with their people. Not
25:34
some not not inspecting buildings.
25:39
Well, there's some bean counters can do
25:41
that and that's that's okay. But where
25:44
we spent our time is in listening
25:48
to
25:50
these men and women who ran a successful
25:53
business.
25:56
How'd you do that?
25:58
How'd you guys get that done? And uh our
26:01
our our CEO, corporate CEO, Andrew
26:05
Wexler,
26:07
he said in board meeting uh a few weeks
26:10
ago, he said, "You know what we found
26:14
with listening, and this is an important
26:16
point, what we found with listening to
26:18
these people is that they have some
26:22
really, really good practices
26:25
and ideas.
26:27
And we're we are bringing several of
26:31
their good ideas,
26:33
making them into our corporate folio.
26:38
How we are going to do we're we're
26:40
changing because of them,
26:42
not the other way around. Nor normally
26:44
in acquisitions, you know, the the
26:46
senior company, you guys got to do it
26:49
our way.
26:51
Um,
26:53
I don't think that's the wisest move
26:59
the the
27:02
business of
27:05
um cultural
27:08
blending is what I'm really really
27:10
talking about. That is as it is more
27:13
important to me than the financial
27:16
statement.
Servant Leadership Insights
27:17
It's interesting when people look at
27:20
everything you're doing,
27:22
people are often like, "Wow." It seems
27:25
like they often strike gold. You know,
27:29
and and we talk on this podcast a lot
27:31
about servant leadership, as you know.
27:33
Mhm. And sometimes I think from the
27:36
outside when people look at you uh from
27:39
a servant leadership standpoint they
27:41
might see well because he's been
27:42
successful what makes him a great
27:44
servant leader is his extreme
27:45
generosity. One of the things that I've
27:48
experienced personally is your
27:50
generosity of time and also wisdom. Uh,
27:54
I remember we were a few years into
27:56
starting our business and we were
27:59
sitting at one of your other offices and
28:01
I had always heard this concept of
28:04
values and the importance of a strategic
28:06
plan but we had nothing as a company. We
28:08
were a few years in and we were making
28:10
money and doing that but we had no
28:11
values. We had no strategic plan and you
28:14
pulled out a one-page piece of paper and
28:16
you said let's look at this together and
28:18
you went through your values and you
28:20
went through your strategic plan. So
28:22
you're talking about a lot of your team
28:25
in a great way is learning a lot in
28:28
bringing it over and making Hersian
28:31
Family Entertainment and all the brands
28:32
you work with better, but you also have
28:34
a really solid base that even enables
28:38
that type of environment. Talk about how
28:40
you created an environment where it's
28:42
just the values, the strategic plan,
28:44
everything that you're doing that even
28:46
sets that up to work so well. I wish I
28:48
could say to you, ah, what you have to
28:51
do is read these four books and it will
28:54
tell you exactly uh how to do it and
28:57
you'll be set for life. We learned from
28:59
our mistakes. M
29:02
uh
29:04
I I
29:06
I would be way out of line if I tried to
29:10
give you the impression that everything
29:12
we do is just easy and works works
29:17
beautifully. We've made plenty of
29:19
mistakes
29:21
uh in what we thought was right and then
29:24
it turned out to be not right. You learn
29:27
from that. You learn um you learn to
29:32
listen.
29:33
You learn to listen. That's that's what
29:36
I'm talking about with Andrew Wexler.
29:39
He when he would when he has been
29:42
meeting with the operating teams at
29:45
these 10 properties we kept it isn't
29:48
just Andrew but it's a a management team
29:51
going in there.
29:53
Uh but these are listening sessions.
29:56
They aren't uh selling sessions. We're
30:00
not there to sell them on how good we
30:02
are. We're there to learn from how how
30:07
do you do things? And that's how we have
30:11
evolved to where we are. Have we done
30:13
taken training? Of course.
30:16
All the way back to Dale Carnegie. I
30:18
mean, uh, uh, and the seven habits, you
30:22
know, we we've done all of those things,
30:27
and I think they're all valuable and
30:29
important,
30:31
but it's the sum of what
30:35
what you appropriate, what we
30:37
appropriate to ourselves
30:41
uh, and formulate into
30:44
uh, that those two pieces of paper
30:47
to one-sided piece of paper which have
30:50
everything that we are
30:53
uh on two pages.
30:55
Mhm.
30:56
Um
30:57
full full summary and I think that's
31:01
really important that our for our
31:05
company we still use them still use same
31:07
same two pages. Uh but any anybody
31:14
really needs to get to the point where
31:16
their values where they they have
31:19
something hard hard copy if you would
31:23
that says this is who we are.
31:25
The reverse is u companies that go into
31:29
business
31:32
and they don't know what business
31:34
they're in.
31:37
companies that go into business and they
31:40
don't know what their morals quote is,
31:46
how well they treat people. that I'm not
31:49
talking about moral well I'm talking
31:51
about all morals but the the the the
31:54
morals of taking care of the men and
31:58
women who work with you
32:02
how do you treat them and are in our
32:05
case how do you love them
32:08
key word key word we learned that we
32:13
learned that
32:18
And part of it is intuitive. We've been
32:21
doing it for
32:23
uh because that's the way Hugo and Mary,
32:26
mom and dad were.
32:28
They they they loved the men and women
32:31
who Bert, Lester, and Rex, those first
32:34
three, they loved them.
32:36
Those three guys from the hills, but
32:38
they were a salt of the earth.
32:41
Um,
32:43
how do you how do we show
32:46
and with
32:48
22,000 employees,
32:52
how do we
32:55
share that we love them or is that
32:57
important? And the answer is, you bet
32:59
it's important, at least for our
33:02
company. Because if you don't if you
33:05
don't have that codified,
33:07
if you don't have it in your head and
33:11
black and white somewhere,
33:14
then you're going to forget
33:16
is what what's going to happen. You're
33:18
you're you're you're
33:22
a compass with no true north.
33:25
And so anything that comes along can
33:32
can any wind can change the set of your
33:35
sail.
Maintaining Core Values
33:37
How did you keep it? Love has always
33:40
been at the center of it. And I know
33:41
Joel Manby talked a lot about that when
33:43
he was here too, but you've had multiple
33:46
transitions of different thankfully
33:49
amazing leaders, you know, throughout
33:51
all the different things you've done. uh
33:54
how have you worked on keeping that
33:56
consistent across different leaders who
33:58
have different methodologies and who
34:00
have been brought up in different
34:01
experiences?
34:03
There is a really really good question
34:06
and the answer I believe uh is all of
34:11
the senior leaders, the CEOs of the
34:15
company
34:17
are dedicated Christians.
34:21
They love the Lord. They're not We're
34:24
not a church.
34:26
Far from it. And they are not church
34:28
people. They aren't pastors. But they
34:31
know what the Lord's love means in their
34:35
own life
34:36
and are able to therefore trans transmit
34:44
that same love to the men and women who
34:48
work for them. That's sounds so super
34:51
simple, but at its basics, that's
Leadership and Faith
34:54
what's
34:56
happening.
34:58
Leadership
35:02
uh to work here at the company, you
35:05
don't have to be a Christian.
35:10
We do
35:12
all of the CEOs that have walked through
35:17
our doors.
Christian Leadership Thread
35:21
That's that is the common thread.
35:26
They've all been solid believing
35:30
Christians.
35:33
Wow,
35:35
that's an amazing thread. And you can
35:37
see the difference. Uh
35:42
I believe so.
Effective Leadership Qualities
35:46
Unbelievable.
35:49
Yeah,
35:54
I believe so. I believe that that that
35:57
thread
36:00
um
36:03
uh is is like perfect seasoning.
36:10
It just permeates the company. our
36:12
senior leadership here in Missouri, our
36:17
senior leadership in Tennessee,
36:22
uh,
36:24
both men,
36:27
amazingly effective leaders,
36:31
and able to love tough. I've had people
36:35
say, "Well, that's just that's kind of
36:39
wimpy.
Leadership Transition
36:42
Don't cross one of these guys.
36:46
uh don't do something that you know you
36:50
shouldn't be or or you'll you'll be on
36:54
your ear
36:56
because they won't put up with it.
36:58
You're in an interesting season now. You
37:02
and Jack have been able to hand off a
37:06
lot of what you've done and now you're
37:10
thinking about leadership and maybe
37:14
servant leadership a little bit
37:18
differently. How are you now thinking
37:22
about what it looks like to lead well
37:26
from where you are personally? and share
37:30
a little bit about how involved you
37:34
still are and what maybe you aren't
37:38
involved in as well.
Stepping Away from Operations
37:41
What what Jack and I are not involved in
37:46
is day-to-day operations. That's where
37:50
we cut our eye teeth. Uh but we made we
37:56
made a decision.
38:00
Oh, that's
38:05
15 years now or maybe a little longer. I
38:10
have to pull the calendar up and take a
38:14
look. We made a conscious decision.
38:18
um that a we weren't going to be the
38:22
kind of we were we were the two
38:26
operating senior guys. He was CEO and I
38:31
was executive VP and everything in the
38:36
company ran through ran through us is a
38:41
little bit of an overstatement but we're
38:46
the top two positions.
Planning for Succession
38:50
Mhm. What we didn't want to do
38:54
for the sake of the company was
38:58
die at our desk with our boots on.
39:02
Because if you do that,
39:06
if you do that,
39:10
who's who's behind you to take over?
39:14
Pick up the reigns.
39:18
It was not a matter of family
39:22
inheritance
39:26
in the sense of uh our our children
39:30
aren't aren't automatically united uh to
39:34
be the new CEO. It doesn't work that way
39:39
and there's
39:43
we just had a meeting on that and never
39:47
was brought up. Never was brought up.
Avoiding a Leadership Ceiling
39:51
But what we didn't want to do was
39:55
stay in the office so long that nobody
39:59
come there was a a a wasn't a glass
40:03
ceiling. It was a steel ceiling. Nobody
40:07
could break through. No, there's no way
40:11
because Jack and Peter are up there
40:16
and uh control would be the wrong word,
40:21
but blocking
40:25
would be the right word. Blocking
40:29
opportunity.
Stepping Out of Operations
40:33
So, we made a conscious decision to step
40:37
out of operations, both of us. We did it
40:41
uh took it uh three three to four years
40:45
for us to do that.
40:49
Um
40:51
and we stepped out of operations
40:55
uh and served only the only active place
40:59
where we were was on the board of
41:03
directors.
41:07
But that's not an operating position.
41:11
It's not an operating board. It's a
41:15
policy board. Um, that was good because
41:19
that freed up the company to bring in
41:23
men and precisely at that point that's
41:27
where Joel Manny came from.
Leadership Transition Success
41:31
He was on our board at the time and uh,
41:36
Jack and I had both stepped away and the
41:40
board looked at Joel and said, "Would
41:44
you would you take the job if offered?"
41:49
And long story short, yes.
41:53
Uh,
41:57
and we've never looked back.
Importance of Succession Planning
40:51
Wow.
40:54
I think it's imperative
40:57
for a company if you want the company to
41:01
go on.
41:05
Um,
41:07
I know too many men, mostly men, uh,
41:11
some women who are are convinced that
41:15
nobody can run the company but them.
41:19
And that's just absolutely bologoney.
41:23
Mhm. because when they die, somebody's
41:27
going to and and it seems to me to be
41:31
logical that you want if you want the
41:35
company to be successful
41:39
after you, Mr. CEO,
41:43
are gone, then you better
41:47
have qualified men in the position
41:51
already,
41:53
not waiting until you decide not to show
41:57
up anymore. Anyway, that was that's how
42:01
we transitioned
42:05
and uh we've been that way ever since
42:09
uh with outside
42:13
leadership. I think I mentioned to you
42:17
earlier uh uh we have a rule an
42:21
operating rule in internal rule uh that
42:25
only two members of the family can be on
42:29
our board of directors at any one time.
Family and Board Dynamics
42:33
Um why do we do that? Well, honestly, we
42:37
did it to protect the company because I
42:41
can picture I can picture a time down
42:45
the line after Jack and Peter are gone
42:49
where somebody might well say, "Gee, I'd
42:53
like to have more money.
42:57
I'd like to have a bigger dividend." You
43:01
people who are listening to this podcast
43:05
are nodding their head and saying,
43:09
"Yeah, I understand that." and you load
43:13
the board with family members
43:17
and get a plurality of family members.
43:21
They can vote a new a new dividend
43:25
structure.
Risks of Family Control
43:29
That's fatal.
43:33
That's fatal to the certainly fatal to
43:37
the economic health. It's also extremely
43:41
selfish but because you're penaliz
43:45
you're benefiting but you're that
43:49
money's coming out of somebody's pocket
43:53
and it's either come out of out of
43:57
operating wages or capex
44:01
one of the two
44:05
no other place for it to be.
Generational Transition
44:09
Wow. How do you deal with all that?
44:13
Because now as you've transitioned onto
44:17
the board, you've transitioned out of
44:21
operating daily operations, families
44:25
getting in the business, you're thinking
44:29
about the next generation, the third
44:33
generation, the fourth, fifth, sixth,
44:37
you're thinking about future gener
44:41
generations. How do you think about
44:45
that?
44:49
Uh we think about it a lot. And the way
44:53
we deal with it may not be the best, but
44:57
the way we deal with it is uh
45:01
intentional
45:05
relationship building
45:09
at the younger generations
45:13
because the further you get away from
45:17
the founding fathers, Jack and Pete, I
45:21
mean, we're not going to be here, you
45:25
know.
Building Relationships with Youth
45:29
Don't don't come back and do a
45:33
rebroadcast 10 10 years from now. I'm
45:37
otherwise employed. Um but the further
45:41
families are generationally are away
45:45
from
45:49
uh the godfathers if you would
45:53
in the founding the less
45:57
empathy they have, less understanding
46:01
they have for what all this how all this
46:05
came to be. They can't have it. They
46:09
weren't there.
46:13
Mhm.
46:17
So what do you do to counter that? And
46:21
that's when I say we we work to educate,
46:25
we work to bring
46:29
these uh calmly younger generations. Uh
46:33
in our case, some of the younger
46:37
generations are now uh in their u uh mid
46:41
and late uh 20s
46:45
and they are the next cadray of
46:49
ownership.
Educating Future Owners
46:53
Not of leader, but of ownership. And
46:57
hopefully
47:01
we have spent enough time over the
47:05
course of their lifetime
47:09
to have infused in them an understanding
47:13
of how the company got where it is
47:17
and what it is to be an owner as opposed
47:21
to an operator.
47:25
and and a fundamental understanding
47:29
of um finance.
47:33
What happens? What happens if you
47:37
increase the dividend? Well, you know,
47:41
the quick answer is I have more money.
47:45
That's right. Where'd it come from? And
47:49
walking through that that process with
47:53
them, not once, but several times over
47:57
over this transition process. We start
48:01
when a youngster is five years old.
Engaging Young Family Members
48:05
Wow.
48:09
We're not giving college education how
48:13
to read a P&L.
48:17
At 5 years old, they really are not
48:21
going to do that.
48:25
But we really want them at age five, 6,
48:29
7, 8, and up to
48:33
really enjoy
48:37
being part of
48:41
what they will come to see as ownership.
48:45
5 years old, he doesn't care anything
48:49
about ownership. He wants to know what's
48:53
fun. Mhm.
48:57
Well, if it's fun
49:01
to be at these gatherings put on by this
49:05
company that didn't even understand,
49:09
but he knows every time they do it, it's
49:13
a really good thing. And I get to see
49:17
all my cousins.
Fostering Positive Company Image
49:21
What's happening?
49:25
You're building a relationship in their
49:29
mind that this this company's pretty
49:33
good.
49:37
And as they get older, they come to
49:41
realize it's not only pretty good, it's
49:45
pretty darn good. And it's been really
49:49
beneficial to them. We need to protect
49:53
it.
Importance of Education
49:57
And real quick, I'd love and this is a
50:01
change of change of gears. You talk
50:05
about the importance of educating family
50:09
members and bringing them up in that
50:13
way. I know education for you has been
50:17
something that you have gotten involved
50:21
in very heavily.
50:25
Yes.
50:29
Talk about your journey of why education
50:33
became so important to you and also
50:37
maybe share some of the cool stuff you
50:41
do. I've heard about Dollywood with
50:45
employees and other things. Just how
50:49
you've highlighted education.
Personal Education Journey
50:53
Well, uh my involvement with education
50:57
came about very honestly and very very
51:01
surprising to me. Uh my oldest daughter
51:05
was u running track here in Branson
51:09
Elementary School, middle school, middle
51:13
school, and she fell on the track and it
51:17
was what's called a red dog cinder.
51:21
You I don't think they even exist today,
51:25
but it was a cinder cinder track and you
51:29
her knee was not a pretty thing to
51:33
behold.
51:37
And uh so I we got that taken care of,
51:41
you know, made sure it was okay. Uh but
51:45
I started thinking
51:49
why why do we have that? Why why because
51:53
rubberized track
51:57
the way layman's term rubber tracks
52:01
they're not rubber but they're
52:05
way better were just starting to be
52:09
known. So, I went to the local board of
52:13
education, said, "If I raise enough
52:17
money, will you put one in for Branson?"
52:21
And uh they kind of scoffed at me and
52:25
said, "Yeah, but you know, it's 100,000
52:29
bucks." And I said, "Okay, if I raise
52:33
100,000 bucks, you'll put one a decent
52:37
track in for Branson Schools." And they
52:41
said, "Yes." And I did. And they did.
Genesis of Education Involvement
52:45
And that got me started because I
52:49
started seeing how education leadership
52:53
is or isn't.
52:57
And that that was my the the genesis
53:01
experience
53:05
on education. Uh I've since become um
53:09
fixated on the importance of core
53:13
education, reading, uh math,
53:17
science and social science.
53:21
Uh,
53:25
education
53:29
so often today gets lost in social
53:33
issues and uh uh uh the the questions of
53:37
gay rights will dominate a board meeting
53:41
uh as opposed to how well the kids are
53:45
learning how to read.
Focus on Core Education
53:49
Um
53:53
are the other issues important? Of
53:57
course they are. Mhm.
54:01
But they aren't what we're here for.
54:05
So
54:09
that
54:13
I'd like to think that uh that same
54:17
level of enthusiasm
54:21
for helping our men and women throughout
54:25
the company um to grow. Uh evolved into
54:29
um some practices that are in place
54:33
today. Uh if you work for the company
54:37
and you want to go to college,
54:41
as long as you're doing okay gradewise,
54:45
uh uh company's got you books and
54:49
tuition.
Supporting Employee Education
54:53
What's that?
54:57
Period.
55:01
And uh we're just now starting a uh
55:05
career ad. I'm talking about for the
55:09
trades, the trades,
55:13
uh,
55:17
critically. I, matter of fact, I'm more
55:21
excited about that for more people than
55:25
I am for a college degree
55:29
because, uh, I'm going to need a lot
55:33
more plumbers than I am people who are
55:37
well-versed in philosophy.
55:41
Uh,
55:45
I'm going to need electricians. I'm
55:49
going to need carpenters
55:53
in my life. and you are too.
55:57
So, uh, we we we're working on that.
56:01
We're starting to make that happen.
Rapid Fire Questions
56:05
Wow. Well, I want to finish the last 60
56:09
seconds with 10 rapid fire questions
56:13
where you just say the first thing that
56:17
comes to mind and there is no right
56:21
answer. Maybe there's some wrong ones,
56:25
but maybe not. Who's the first person
56:29
you think of when I say servant
56:33
leadership?
56:37
My brother. M
56:41
Jack is great. Uh favorite author or
56:45
book?
56:49
Um
56:53
Stephen Ambrose. Undaunted courage.
56:57
Five words that most describe you.
57:01
outward
57:05
um Christian
57:09
um
57:13
husband
57:17
um
57:21
caring
57:25
um
57:29
in love.
57:33
Love that. Favorite food?
57:37
Barbecue.
57:41
You do some amazing stuff out here as
57:45
well.
57:49
I've done some.
57:53
Uh you spend a lot of time on that. Um
57:57
favorite thing to do in your free time?
58:01
fly fishing.
58:05
All right. What's a surprising fact
58:09
about you?
58:13
That I'm 91 and uh uh still still going
58:17
strong. Uh no, that that's
58:21
being 91 is wonderful.
58:25
That's a surprising fact.
58:29
All right. Where's favorite place you've
58:33
been
58:37
ever?
58:41
Yeah, ever.
58:45
My my ancestral home in Denmark.
58:49
Wow. Is there anywhere in the world that
58:53
you want to go that you have not been
58:57
to?
59:01
Antarctica.
59:05
Wow, that'd be amazing. All right.
59:09
What's the best advice you've ever
59:13
received?
59:17
Scripture.
59:21
Love one another as I have loved you.
59:25
Wow, that's great. Uh, and finally, and
59:29
really, you were one of the deepest
59:33
inspirations for the podcast, too. Why
59:37
do you think a podcast like this on
59:41
servant leadership is important for
59:45
other people? I love to share.
59:49
I love to share what I have been given.
59:53
I've been given so much.
59:57
It's not a one-word answer, but
60:01
uh I've been given so much
60:05
and I want to give it away.
60:09
I I want I want other people to not not
60:13
emulate me. That's not what I'm saying.
60:17
But I've learned so much from others,
60:21
from men like yourself,
60:25
uh,
60:29
over the years that if I can use a tool
60:33
like a podcast
60:37
to reach
60:41
hundreds, thousands
60:45
of other men and women
60:49
uh, who
60:53
might might be able to use just a little
60:57
bit
61:01
of what I have. I don't think I have the
61:05
answer. I know I don't have the answers.
61:09
But maybe I have a way to get to the
61:13
answer.
61:17
If I can do that, then that's that's
61:21
what makes a podcast worthwhile.
Podcast Closing
61:25
That's so good. Well, Peter, I just want
61:29
to say thank you for being on the
61:33
podcast uh and for your influence on me
61:37
and the stuff we're doing. Chris, a
61:41
blessing to you, my friend. I appreciate
61:45
you.
61:49
Thank you for listening to this episode
61:53
of the Servant Leadership Podcast. If
61:57
you enjoyed what you heard, please give
62:01
it a thumbs up and leave a comment
62:05
below. Don't forget to subscribe and hit
62:09
the notification bell to never miss an
62:13
update. Be sure to check out the
62:17
servantleershippodcast.org
62:21
for more updates and additional bonus
62:25
content.


