birthdays

Looking Back from 68 

by Mark Leibman, President

Fifty-six years ago, I got my first paper route.

Forty-seven years ago, my first license to work with financial products.

Thirty years ago, the beginnings of what became the enterprise that serves you today.

Looking back from age 68, I realize that delivering something of value for money was at the heart of that first entrepreneurial endeavor—and remains core to our work at 228 Main.

I’ll never forget the speaker I once heard at a business conference, the one who began with a visualization exercise. Exactly how much money did we want to be making three years from now, he wanted to know. He told us to write the number down and to look at it morning, noon, and night.

His second point was about the importance of being client-centered.

I thought, “Hmm. You can only be ‘centered’ on one thing, and this fellow is centered on money.” Then I walked out.

From the vantage point of my 68th birthday, I see the compounding miracle of being focused on your outcomes. The better off you are, the better off we are—it is a win-win situation. And who knows how that arrangement might continue to build between now and my retirement at age 92? (Only 24 more years to go until that retirement party!)

Some financial types pander to people’s fears, so that they can “save” their clients with right “solutions” (which often happen to be their own products and services). We have always sought to build your confidence to invest successfully, to grow your buckets. Fear shuts down our ability to think—which is one of the reasons positivity pays, in our opinion. If we can keep our heads while all about us are losing theirs, we are in a contest of wits with unarmed opponents.

I still can’t envision walking away from the best clients in the world. If it doesn’t feel like work, is it really a job? And my associates are the best teammates in the world. We’ve built an enterprise; our capabilities as a team are vastly greater than what I had to work with at the kitchen table, back in the last century.

Thank you all, for everything, to this point. Here’s to the next 24 years. That retirement party will be in May 2048, details to follow.


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22, 44, 66: My Life in Thirds

My birthday is approaching, and I’m ruminating about the meaning of another year in the life—but you already know how much I like to take a step back, get the big picture, and imagine the long view.


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A Birthday Approaches

photo shows a carousel with a city in the background

My birthday is approaching, and I’m ruminating about the meaning of another year in the life—but you already know how much I like to take a step back, get the big picture, and imagine the long view.

22, 44, 66—or, my life in thirds.

I’m thinking about my life in thirds: 22 years of getting ready, 22 years of gaining experience, and 22 years building this lovely enterprise at 228 Main. That’s right, I’m turning 66, wondering what the next 22 years will bring.

It feels like the years ahead will be about growing the team that runs the firm, building capabilities and capacity, putting the next generation in position to do better work than ever for you—and for the coming generations, too.

While we work to refine our methods and strategies and tactics, we’ll honor the same principles we always have, and we’ll live by the same values: the better off you are, the better off we will likely be. So the center of our work will always be about striving to grow your buckets, to focus on your outcomes.

I’m down to my last 26 years now… Mark your calendars for the retirement party: May 27, 2048!

I appreciate you for being with me on this journey thus far. Thank you. I would not trade my spot with any of the other 7 billion of us, it’s been so good.

Stop in and see us, anytime.


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Play the audio version of this post below: