高管访谈:通过公平贸易帮助他人:与Come Together贸易公司的Terry Marshall的对话

J. Cater
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摘要

特里和塔米·马歇尔在德克萨斯州泰勒拥有并经营一家名为“团结贸易”的公平贸易零售店。马绍尔夫妇是公平贸易联盟的成员,这是一个促进美国公平贸易发展的组织。公平贸易联盟(FTF)由北美地区只销售公平贸易产品的零售企业和批发商组成。FTF是全球公平贸易运动的一部分,其主要目标是建立公平和可持续的贸易伙伴关系,并创造减轻贫困的机会。该组织于1994年以北美替代贸易组织(NAATO)的名义成立,次年更名为公平贸易联盟。FTF从1994年成立之初的17个成员发展到2015年的250多个成员。FTF要求其成员采用完全(或专门的)公平贸易商业模式,要求公平贸易零售商只从FTF成员批发商处购买商品,以确保公平贸易商品的合法性。特里·马歇尔(Terry Marshall)出生在得克萨斯州奥斯汀,在达拉斯上过公立学校,后来为几家汽车经销店工作,后来加入父母的一家休闲车经销店。特里为他的父母工作了四年,很喜欢做家族生意。然后,他的父亲提出帮助特里和他的妻子塔米在德克萨斯州坎顿建立他们自己的休闲车公司,坎顿位于达拉斯以东约100英里的20号州际公路上。同样来自达拉斯的塔米·马歇尔(Tammy Marshall)有零售背景,曾在一家名为World Bazaar的进口公司工作。马歇尔夫妇已经结婚27年了,他们有一个女儿叫泰勒。这对夫妇与一名员工开始了房车生意,拥有并经营了17年的经销店。在鼎盛时期,马歇尔家族有12名员工,年销售额达数百万美元。后来,房车行业陷入困境,马歇尔夫妇在2009年卖掉了他们的生意。作者:请描述一下你离开休闲车行业的决定。Terry Marshall:我一直是一个企业家,很少为别人工作。它始于2007年,当时几家大型制造商,如Holiday Rambler和Fleetwood,已经经营了五六十年,倒闭了。我相信超过75家制造商倒闭了。有很多经营这个行业多年的家庭经销商,但经济真的伤害了这个行业,因为它是一种奢侈品。我们的市场主要是那些开房车上班或者非常富有的人。一夜之间,需求下降了一半。作者:什么事件对你影响深远?泰瑞·马歇尔:我们和国际同情组织一起旅行——我们从来没有出过国,除了乘船去坎昆之类的地方。2009年,我们决定与国际爱心组织一起去非洲的肯尼亚旅行,不是作为富人去野生动物园,而是去亲眼看看贫穷。我们去看一个年轻人,我们资助他上大学。我们被邀请参加这次旅行,我们认为是时候这样做了。我们的心在那里,因为我们的信仰,我们想去看看,得到一个更大的世界观。记者:那你卖掉房车业务了吗?Terry Marshall:我们还没有卖掉它。我们想把它卖掉。我们已经试探了一些较大的连锁房车经销商。我组装了一个包裹。我们于2009年1月开始旅行,并于2009年4月结束业务。回到家后,我们和一位先生谈了卖生意的事,并敲定了一份协议。作者:你很幸运能这么快就卖掉一家公司。Terry Marshall:非常幸运。我们的心被触动了,我们在寻找一些商业上可以帮助人们的东西。我们的心已经不在房车生意上了。我听说Dale Earnhardt, Jr.说过:“你最好真的喜欢你所做的,否则你就会赚钱。”…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Executive Interview: Helping Others through Fair Trade: A Conversation with Terry Marshall of Come Together Trading Company
Terry and Tammy Marshall own and operate a fair trade retail store called Come Together Trading in Tyler, Texas. The Marshalls are members of the Fair Trade Federation, an organization which fosters the growth of fair trade throughout the United States. The Fair Trade Federation (FTF) is comprised of retail businesses and wholesalers that sell only fair trade products in North America. The FTF is part of the global fair trade movement and its main goals are to build equitable and sustainable trading partnerships as well as creating opportunities to alleviate poverty. Formed in 1994 as the North American Alternative Trade Organization (NAATO), the group changed its name to the Fair Trade Federation in the following year. The FTF has grown from 17 members at its inception in 1994 to over 250 members in 2015. The FTF requires its members to employ an entirely (or dedicated) fair trade business model that requires fair trade retailers to purchase goods only from FTF member wholesalers to insure the legitimacy of fair trade merchandise.Born in Austin, Texas, Terry Marshall attended public schools in Dallas and then worked for several car dealerships before joining his parents in a recreational vehicle dealership. Terry worked for his parents for four years and enjoyed the family business. Then, his father offered to help Terry and his wife, Tammy set up their own recreational vehicle business in Canton, Texas, which is about 100 miles east of Dallas on Interstate 20. Tammy Marshall, who is also from Dallas, had a retail background working for an import company called World Bazaar. The Marshalls, who have now been married for over 27 years, have a daughter named Taylor. The couple started the RV business with one employee and owned and operated the dealership for 17 years. At its peak, the Marshalls had 12 employees and did several million dollars in annual sales. Then, hard times fell on the RV industry and the Marshalls were able to sell their business in 2009.Author: Please describe your decision to leave the recreational vehicle business.Terry Marshall: I have always been an entrepreneur and rarely worked for anyone else. It started in 2007 when several of the big manufacturers, like Holiday Rambler and Fleetwood, that had been around for 50 and 60 years, went out of business. I believe over 75 manufacturers went out of business. There were a lot of mom and pop dealers who had been in the industry for years, but the economy really hurt that industry because it was a luxury item. Our market got down to people who were using RVs for work or were extremely wealthy. The demand dropped in half overnight.Author: What event had a profound effect on you?Terry Marshall: We took a trip with Compassion International-we had never been outside the country, except for cruises to Cancun and things like that. We decided in 2009 to take a trip to Kenya, Africa with Compassion International, not as wealthy people who go on a safari, but to see poverty first hand. We went to see a young man that we were sponsoring to go to college. We were invited to go on this trip and we thought that it was time to do it. Our hearts were there because of our faith and we wanted to go and see and get a bigger world view.Author: Had you sold the RV business then?Terry Marshall: We had not sold it yet. We were trying to sell it. We had put out some feelers to larger chain RV dealers. I put together a package. We went on the trip in January 2009 and closed on the business in April 2009. After we got home, we had a meeting with a gentleman to sell the business and hammered out an agreement.Author: You were blessed to sell a business that quickly.Terry Marshall: Very blessed. Our hearts were stirred and we were looking for something to do business-wise that would help people. Our hearts were not in the RV business any more. I heard that Dale Earnhardt, Jr. said, "You really better enjoy what you do or make money". …
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