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Bob’s Red Mill founder who gave company to employees is still working in his 90s and loving it!

4 min read

Good Stuff
Source: Bobsredmill.com

Bob Moore is perhaps the perfect example that doing what you love for a living and sharing your wealth with employees will keep you energised and happy at a ripe old age.

Founder of Bob’s Red Mill who transferred business to workers still working at 91

When employees of Bob’s Red Mill Natural Foods thought that they would surprise their boss on his 81st birthday, he had one huge surprise of his own for them: company founder Bob Moore announced that from now on his 209 employees would own the business. Ten years on, and Bob still works full-time as the company’s president.

In 2010, Bob surprised his employees by announcing an Employee Stock Ownership Program (ESOP) that would make everyone an employee-owner. For those who know Bob, it's yet another example of his kind-hearted generosity. As Bob puts it,
Bob’s Red Mill: Proudly Employee-Owned In 2010, Bob surprised his employees by announcing an Employee Stock Ownership Program (ESOP) that would make everyone an employee-owner. For those who know Bob, it’s yet another example of his kind-hearted generosity. As Bob puts it, “Setting up an ESOP was just the right thing to do. I have people that have worked with me for over 30 years and each and every one of them deserve this.” Source: Bobsredmill.com

Moore’s dedication to growing Bob’s Red Mill over the past four decades has paid off

Bob Moore, who turns 91 this month, founded the whole grain flours and cereals company Bob’s Red Mill in 1978 with his late wife, Charlee. Bob still works full-time as the company’s president, having handed over the CEO title two years ago to his chief operating officer. 

"I like business no matter how hard I have to work. I would rather do this than anything," Moore told CNN Business in a phone interview.

Today Bob’s Red Mill makes over 400 products, which are sold worldwide. The company wouldn’t share its current revenue numbers, but confirmed that Bob’s Red Mill generated more than $50 million in annual sales in 2018. The company now has nearly 600 employees, three times the number it had a decade ago.

Perhaps surprisingly, Moore was 49 when he launched the company. He had already had a varied career that included jobs working for others and eventually working for himself. Among his entrepreneurial ventures, he ran two gas stations in California—going broke on the second, as he tells it—and later a dairy goat farm.

Along the way, he developed an intense interest in stone-grinding mills, which went hand-in-glove with his and his wife’s philosophy of back-to-basics healthy eating. Charlee was the first to educate Moore on the benefits of eating wholesome foods and, together with their three sons, the family adopted a whole grains diet in the 1960s. They even bought a small mill in Redding, California, in the early 1970s that they named Moore’s Flour Mill. The flours the family produced there were sold locally. Two of their sons still run the mill today.

Source: CNN

Bob and Charlee met on a blind date in 1952. Twenty-six years later they founded Bob’s Red Mill together as a labour of love. It was Charlee who first inspired the couple’s whole grain adventure when, in early 1960s, she decided to create a healthier life for her family by feeding them wholesome, natural foods—fruits, vegetables, beans, and whole grains
Charlee and Bob Moore founded Bob’s Red Mill in retirement. Bob and Charlee met on a blind date in 1952. Twenty-six years later they founded Bob’s Red Mill together as a labour of love. It was Charlee who first inspired the couple’s whole grain adventure when, in early 1960s, she decided to create a healthier life for her family by feeding them wholesome, natural foods—fruits, vegetables, beans, and whole grains Source: Forbes

For 30 years staff have received monthly profit-sharing checks on top of their regular pay

By 1978, Moore decided to change direction completely. He retired to Oregon with Charlee to study the Bible in Hebrew and Greek.

However, within a few months of enrolling in seminary, he saw an old stone-grinding flour mill for sale while out for a walk and knew he had to go back into business. Charlee was a little surprised. "I can still hear her. My wife said, ‘But I thought we were going to read the Bible,’" he recalled.

Bob’s Red Mill grew quickly. After three years in business, Moore decided to start a profit-sharing plan for his employees. "The Bible says, ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,’" he noted. And he figured if he were an employee, he would want a piece of the profits he was helping to create.

Initially, payouts weren’t regular because profits weren’t always high enough, he said. But for the past 29 years, Moore’s employees have been receiving monthly profit-sharing checks on top of their regular pay.

"I wanted everyone to share in the profits of the company. It has increased paychecks by a nice amount. I’m more proud of that than anything," Moore said.

Moore and his wife took on a handful of partners over the years. By 2010, Moore and his four partners at the time, which included Charlee, were all close in age and some were contemplating retirement from the business. As for Moore, he was trying to plan for the time when he would no longer be around. He knew he didn’t want to sell the company, despite numerous offers to do so, he said.

So he and his partners decided to give employees an ownership stake in the business by granting them sharesthrough an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP). The company pays employees for their shares five years after they leave the company or at retirement age, whichever comes first.

Today, the employees own nearly two-thirds of Bob’s Red Mill. And plans are in the works to increase their share to 100% in the coming months.

After all, Moore said, "You can’t take it with you." 

Apart from wanting to reward his teams’ hard work, which has made the company a success, Moore says he likes that a profit-sharing plan and an ESOP let employees see a direct benefit from their efforts and teach them to think like a boss. "The harder they work, the more they get."

Source : CNN

Bob's Red Mill: What it means to be an Employee OwnerSource: YouTube/Bob’sRedMill
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