A Tribute to An American Dream in
Idaho
by James Clarke as published in the UV Standard Journal May 30, 2015
As a young
boy growing up in Rexburg, I often dreamed of being a Ferguson.
Our family
moved to Idaho the winter of 1978. My
father had been an insurance adjustor when he received a call from his sister—my
aunt—offering a job in a start-up diet business. When we arrived to Rexburg, the snow piles
reached the roofs and drifts had made fences invisible between homes. I thought we had arrived at the North
Pole.
Instead of
finding Santa Claus, in my 6-year old mind, I remember meeting my aunt Sybil—a
thin—but suitably Christmas-esque alternative character with her kind, happy
and giving way. My family stayed that
first night at her white colonial home on Maple Drive, backing up to the new
Madison Memorial Hospital. I had never
seen such a beautiful home, let alone stayed in one. Even as a small boy, I wanted to know more
about this woman.
As I started
school that year and made new friends, everyone seemed to know my wonderful Aunt. I was shocked by this. We didn’t share the same name, but somehow
people always knew her and would bring her up to me in conversation. As I went through school, it seemed that
nearly everyone had a tie to her, either through business, but most oftentimes
it was by something generous she had done for them.
When I
started middle school, I, along with what seemed like the half the town that
didn’t farm or work at the college, worked for her at the diet company. My first after-school-job was at her print
shop located in her former home on Main Street situated just next to the school. Later, at Madison Junior High and High
School, Aunt Sybil donated sounds systems, lockers and even an entire football
stadium to the students. Her generosity
knew no bounds. Each Christmas she held
a company party—the likes of which I have still never seen at any level—with
bonuses and over-the-top gifts for every employee and most importantly, every
single child. For me personally, every additional
holiday brought with it a crisp $100 bill or exotic gifts from her global travels.
Never would
a high school dance approach that Aunt Sybil wouldn’t call weeks earlier and
offer me the chance to drive one of her cars from the stable of German autos so
foreign to our farm town. My summers were
often interrupted by impromptu calls asking, “What are you doing this week?”,
to which I immediately thought with a grin, ‘I’m doing whatever you tell me I’m
doing’. She would then proceed to give
me specific instructions including a place to meet her pilots at a certain
hangar that would fly my younger brother and me off to her playground on the
lake or her oasis in the Arizona desert.
On one trip she even instructed the pilot to fly the helicopter past my
school—while in session—so that my friends and classmates could see for
themselves the fun we were having.
As I grew
older and decided on my own career, no other choice but entrepreneurship ever
entered my mind. Aunt Sybil made sure of
that. Not that she insisted on any sort
of career or educational path, but her example was enough for this Idaho boy. It wasn’t about the lifestyle of the career as
much as the joy that she created in her giving. It was her generosity that
defined her and ultimately led me on my own path.
That
business was Diet Center—the predecessor to Jenny Craig, Weight Watchers and Nutrisystem
and my dear Aunt was Sybil Ferguson.
Sybil
Ferguson passed away during this Memorial Day weekend. Surrounded by her family, it was a timely and
appropriate exit for someone so extraordinarily memorable. While she had not been a member of this
southeastern Idaho community for some time, she would always call it home.
Rexburg has certainly grown in the years since the sale of that company in the
late 1980s. Many wouldn’t even know that
their town had once served as the international headquarters to the largest
health and diet company in the nation, yet no one who knew Sybil Ferguson will
ever forget her.
Her death
marks a sweet reunion between her partner in business and life—her dear Roger
and another hero of mine—who had died just two years earlier. In a world where qualified political
candidates and honest Wall Street winners are seemingly vilified for their
success, both Roger and Sybil personify the goodness of the main
street ‘American Dream’ and what makes our country and this community
great.
To me, they
were the most important part of inspiring what I now spend my life doing—building—not
just companies, but building people. Today
I embrace my own last name, but it is the example of that beloved ‘Ferguson’
woman to whom I owe the creation of thousands of jobs in my own organizations,
a passion for every person and an aspiration of someday becoming as generous to
others as she was with me.
James Clarke is a Rexburg native, chairman
of international corporations, a university trustee, an alumnus of Ricks
College, BYU, Harvard Business School and Oxford University.
http://www.uvsj.com/page_2/a-tribute-to-an-american-dream-in-idaho/article_fe0dfdc2-065f-11e5-97b8-7bd844538109.html#axzz3blGvvJZv
http://www.uvsj.com/page_2/a-tribute-to-an-american-dream-in-idaho/article_fe0dfdc2-065f-11e5-97b8-7bd844538109.html#axzz3blGvvJZv