Benjamin "Tad" Edwards IV
CHAIRMAN, CEO & PRESIDENT; BENJAMIN F. EDWARDS & CO; CLAYTON, MO.
SOUND BITE: "The most important thing is we are a client-first firm. Employees come second and shareholders third. It's kind of like the Golden Rule — a very simple do-unto-others philosophy. If you do those first two things right, the shareholders will be rewarded."
Benjamin F. Edwards & Co. is a startup, but out of the box it has something that takes most companies years to build: brand and culture.
"We're not a new venture," notes Tad Edwards, the great-great grandson of A.G. Edwards, who founded the famous St. Louis-based brokerage that endured under family leadership for 120 years. "There were some people early on who asked how we were going to build something from scratch. The answer is: We didn't."
Edwards, 54, launched the firm in August — a little more than two years after Wachovia bought A.G. Edwards for $6.8 billion. At the time, Edwards, who was deeply opposed to the merger, was a member of the firm's board and the sixth generation in his family associated with the historic firm. Eighteen months later, Wells Fargo bought Wachovia in a deal secured by the government to prevent Wachovia's collapse.
But those are yesterday's headlines.
As Edwards puts it: "I would have written the script differently, but the exciting news is that we are doing this. And what we have is pretty special."
By the end of last year, six months after its launch, Benjamin F. Edwards & Co. had opened five branches across the country. Its advisors? A.G. Edwards alums. The financial consultants are supported by a home office, headquartered just outside of St. Louis in Clayton, Mo., by a team comprised of A.G. Edwards veterans. Meanwhile, the firm's advisory panel consists of over 50 people, the majority of whom had senior-level roles with the defunct firm they called home for an average of 30 to 40 years.
Laura McBride Waidmann, an advisory panel member who worked at A.G. Edwards for over two decades, jokes: "We've all drunk the Kool-Aid." In fact, the culture was so deep that after a non-family member took over the firm's leadership in 2001, she says employees and former employees gathered often to ponder the unthinkable: What if we could start it up all over again?