| Published
January 18, 2005 |
Volume
13, Number 1
|
Roger Barnett Brings Vision, Experience,
and Ambition to Shaklee
By Jay Hipps
NETWORK Editor
Roger Barnett’s resume sounds like someone’s dream, such is the wealth
of opportunity and experience that it shows.
“When
I grew up in New York, I spent my senior year at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering trying to work on leukemia research, then I went off to
do animal behavior research in Kenya, then I went to Yale, then I
studied wheat genetics in Israel, then I went to Yale Law School,” he
begins. “In between I worked as a lawyer in Paris and Hong Kong and
then I went to Harvard Business School. I worked as an investment
banker in London, and then I graduated and went to work for an
investment banking firm in New York City, working on international
transactions.”
That remarkable personal history isn’t on his mind these days, however,
as his matter-of-fact retelling indicates. His focus now is exclusively
on Shaklee, the company that Activated Holdings–his family’s holding
company–purchased along with Ripplewood Holdings last May for $310
million.
“I am incredibly excited about Shaklee,” he says. “I think that
Shaklee, from an investment standpoint, is the single greatest
opportunity that I have ever seen.”
He points to five different ideas to support that conclusion. “Number
one, the health and wellness industry is projected to quadruple over
the next six years, to $1 trillion. Number two, Shaklee is the pioneer
of natural nutrition with a 49-year history. Three, we’ve invested $250
million in making sure that we have the best natural products in this
industry, and four, that gives us the inside pole position in the
growth that will happen. Five, our plan is to take advantage of this on
a global basis. We are now a $500 million company in five countries and
we intend to go into 50 countries over the next ten years, which should
allow us to achieve a $5 billion market.”
It’s an ambitious plan but one that also reflects Barnett’s experience.
While working as an investment banker, he identified Arcade Inc., best
known now for inventing the technology that allows advertisers to
include scent samples on product packaging and advertisements, as an
investment opportunity. The Barnett family acquired control of the
company, installing Roger as president and CEO, and over the course of
six years Arcade became the largest sampling company in the world as he
expanded the company internationally. Barnett was also the founder,
chairman, and CEO of Beauty.com, an opportunity which gave him
first-hand exposure to the cosmetics and personal care industry. Not
coincidentally, that’s an area where Shaklee offers a number of
products as well.
In fact, there are aspects of everything he’s done so far that are
reflected in Shaklee and Barnett sees his opportunity there as the
culmination of all his prior experience. “All of my interests have come
together at Shaklee. (I’m interested in) understanding how to improve
the lives of other people, and Shaklee is the number one natural
nutrition company in the United States. Most importantly, we use these
products not only to help people’s health but to offer people a better
life through our distribution channel where we offer independent
distributors, of which we have over 700,000 around the world, an
opportunity to earn income while sharing the gift of health with people.
“So for me, my scientific background and international background and
my desire to act philanthropically all come together in this one
business, Shaklee.”
He also believes that the timing is right for the company’s rapid
growth. He points to the company’s founder, Dr. Forrest C. Shaklee, as
a visionary not only in terms of his philosophy of providing natural,
environmentally-friendly products and their ability to promote their
users’ well being but also as an innovator in business, where he
eschewed the traditional structure of manufacturer-wholesaler-retailer
to create a network of distributors who could sell Shaklee products
from their homes.
“Dr. Shaklee was an incredible visionary because not only is the
product positioning and philosophy, which is exactly what he set up 50
years ago, so on target today, it’s even more relevant today than it
was then. The form of having a distributed model of distribution was so
far advanced and ahead of it’s time, it’s mind-blowing. He was just
incredible. And we’re reaping the benefits of it. For 50 years, the
company has just pursued perfection in those areas and now the market
has caught up to it in a way which is almost unprecedented.”
Barnett is sincere in his desire to help others. His mother spent her
entire career in public interest law and his great uncle, who started
what became a $9 billion company by selling clocks door-to-door, gave
substantial amounts of money away to charity. To Barnett, part of
Shaklee’s appeal is that it provides an answer to the quandary of
working to make money or to benefit the public.
“I always thought that you had to choose, but Shaklee is unique and
appealing to me because you can do both at the same time,” he says.
“The only way in which our distributors earn a financial return is if
they help other people live a better life. Making the money is
dependent upon helping other people and that was a critical component
to it for me. It offered an opportunity to do both at the same time,
which I think is so unique and so compelling.”
The company reflects Barnett’s personal philosophy in other ways as
well. The willingness to look at the world and make sense of it in
one’s own way, as demonstrated by Dr. Shaklee, is a trait he has as
well.
“I try to learn every day from every experience that I have,” he says.
“I learned things today that are equally important to what I do as I
have over the last 25 years of my business career. It’s just a constant
learning experience.
“I think that if you’re an aware individual and you’re open to learn,
there are people all over the world that you can learn from at all
levels. That’s what I try to do – that’s my philosophy. I always try to
improve myself and to learn new skills and to learn from each mistake
that I make. Mistakes are an opportunity to learn and success in
business is a way of dealing with all the challenges which arise on
your way to taking advantages of the opportunities.
“If you develop that kind of philosophy, you can deal with the issues
and the obstacles and the problems which are an inevitable part of
every business. But for every problem there’s an opportunity if you can
solve it.”
Right now, those problems and their associated opportunities have
everything to do with Shaklee. He’s confident that the ingredients are
there for success, both in terms of the company’s products and its
dealers.
“At Shaklee, we have so much opportunity ahead of us–it’s just exciting
to be in a position to try to help take advantage of it, in partnership
with our incredible distributors.”
|