here - Wortham
Transcription
here - Wortham
W ortham is the largest insurance broker headquartered in Texas and one of the largest independent insurance companies in the United States. With more than 500 insurance professionals in five statewide Few companies can lay claim to 100 years of history. Wortham proudly crosses offices placing insurance with more than that threshold in 2015. How did we reach this milestone? If you know anything about the people of Wortham, that’s an easy question to answer. There is a special distinction about the way Wortham conducts business, and our abiding integrity and tenacity can be traced directly to our founder, Gus S. Wortham. Armed with a vision, and supported by the best professionals in the business, he launched a success story that has endured for 100 years – and counting. To mark our Centennial, we prepared the following summary to introduce you to our history and our accomplishments. These pages chronicle our growth into one of the nation’s largest independent brokers, and they help define the character of more than 500 employees and Managing Directors who today serve Wortham clients throughout the world. Many things have changed over the past 100 years, but some elements remain constant. Wortham people have always been the best at what they do, and their professionalism is matched by their total commitment to answer client needs with superior solutions and service. Today, as always, our clients know they can count on Wortham. To Our Friends And Valued Clients 300 underwriters across the globe, Wortham is a recognized leader in insurance, risk management Please join us in celebrating our Centennial. and employee benefits. Each year, Wortham places more than $1.2 billion in premium for clients that include Fortune 100 companies, public and private firms of all sizes, and high-net-worth individuals. Known as the “Flag of the Republic,” this distinctive banner flew over the independent country of the Republic of Texas from 1836 until U.S. statehood in 1845. With deep roots in the Lone Star State, Wortham salutes the powerful spirit of freedom and independence that continues to inspire our company and our people to this day. Richard M. Blades Chairman 1 Turn back your clock to July 1915, and make yourself known to the secretary occupying one of four desks in Room 416 at the Union National Bank Building. The hand-painted letters on the glass doorway proclaim the offices of John L. Wortham & Son. After noting your name and purpose of your visit, the kindly secretary (who earned a weekly wage of ten dollars) introduces you to the partners laboring to get their fledgling company up and running. Rocky Mountain National Park established. Babe Ruth hits first home run. Wortham Insurance: The Early Years Patent granted for Raggedy Ann doll. HMHS Britannic (sister ship to RMS Titanic) takes to seas. Boston Red Sox win World Series. First stop sign installed in Detroit. The title of the firm’s namesake founder – John Lee Wortham – was a mark of honor rather than military rank. Col. Wortham was a well-connected farmer and businessman in Limestone County in Texas. After a successful tenure directing the recently established Texas prison system, Col. Wortham earned key political appointments, serving as Texas Railroad Commissioner and Secretary of State for Texas Gov. Oscar B. Colquitt. These political offices launched enduring friendships that the colonel and his son Gus would parlay into an insurance agency they planned to launch in downtown Houston. Born: Billie Holiday, Orson Welles, Ingrid Bergman. Average cost of a gallon Congress establishes of milk: U.S. Coast Guard. $0.36. Cost of a U.S. stamp: $0.02. 2 Wortham Timeline of Key Events History records the first client of John L. Wortham & Son as John C. Williams, a Houston attorney who purchased a policy for insurance on household goods. The $12.50 premium earned the partners a princely commission of one dollar and eighty-eight cents. One hundred years later, the firm founded by Col. John L. Wortham and his son Gus would direct annual premium placements of more than one billion dollars and stand as one of the nation's largest independent insurance brokers. Col. John L. Wortham Gus Sessions Wortham 1912 1915 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1923 State Insurance Board of Texas hires Gus Sessions Wortham. The Austin office includes E.R. Barrow, Tom Barrow, Marvin Collie and B.F. Carruth. (All would play key roles in Wortham’s career.) Armed with his early insurance training, Wortham arrives in Houston to work at John R. Young Insurance Agency. Monthly pay: $100. JULY 26: Gus and his father establish John L. Wortham & Son with $5,000. Gus tells Col. Wortham: “Let me have the benefit of your name, influence and prestige – and I will do all the work.” B.F. Carruth joins the company as a one-third partner in John L. Wortham & Son. Gus Wortham volunteers for service in the Great War, but myopic eyesight prevents him from pursuing his dream of being a pilot. Gus Wortham achieves the rank of 2nd Lieutenant while commanding an aerial repair squadron. He recounts how his war experience “enabled me to uncover an ability of which I seemingly had been unaware, to work with men – to lead them, to gain their respect, to inspire them, to make things go.” Gus Wortham returns from the war and rejoins John L. Wortham & Son, which has doubled its office space and now includes a bookkeeper and typist. The firm establishes an accounting department equipped with the novelty of a mechanical bookkeeping machine for general ledger entries. Offices are moved to the Bankers Mortgage Building (Pictured here on page 2). Also on the same floor: offices occupied by J.W. Link, Sr. and J.W. Link, Jr. – both of whom would play key roles at John L. Wortham & Son. 3 With John L. Wortham & Son acting as the organizer, Gus Wortham and his investment partners launched the American General Insurance Company in 1926. After the “Black Thursday” crash, Wortham guided both firms safely through the Great Depression. 4 Insurance was one of many business interests of Col. Wortham, but from seed capital of only $5,000, it ultimately provided the bedrock for the family’s fortunes. Father and son had good cause to question their timing after a massive hurricane devastated the Gulf Coast in 1915 shortly after the firm opened for business. But while the natural disaster decimated many businesses, it proved a boon to the new company. Courtappointed custodian work on behalf of a number of claimants yielded commissions valued at more than $1,000. Hurricanes rarely provide a silver lining, but the ill winds of the 1915 disaster helped get John L. Wortham & Son up and running. Within months, the Worthams were joined by B.F. Carruth, who gained a one-third share of the business, and moved their firm to larger offices. Years later, Gus Wortham credited Carruth as "the smartest insurance man I've ever met." Connections forged through friendships led to the firm writing its first surety bond, a $165,000 guarantee for McKenzie Construction Company, and the firm had enough business to open a San Antonio office. The growth plans were interrupted in 1917 when America entered Early in the 1920s, the Worthams and Carruth developed a new fidelity bond to insure the employees of 12 Federal Land Banks established throughout the country. The work earned the partners a sizeable $10,000 commission – a record amount for a Houston insurance bonding agency – and provided the financial base for starting an insurance company that would eventually write multiple lines of coverage. Col. Wortham did not live to see this vision realized (he died on Nov. 5, 1924), but his son and Carruth pressed ahead with the plan. Assisted by E.R. Barrow (who joined the firm in 1924 and would become Gus Wortham's closest associate) and backed by Houston leaders such as Judge James A. Elkins, J.W. Link Sr. and J.W. Link Jr., the vision became a reality on May 8, 1926. From Austin, Judge Elkins sent a telegram with only four words – THE BABY IS BORN – to alert his partners that the State of Texas had officially chartered the American General Insurance Company. The figurehead on the new company’s stationery was George Washington, the nation's first general (and, as some noted at the time, a leader who just happened to share the same initials as Gus Wortham). the Great War, and B.F. and Gus were eager to enlist. But Col. Wortham noted that B.F. was married and had a family, which made Gus the logical choice to leave the firm and head to Europe. By war’s end, he would earn the rank of 2nd Lieutenant in leading ground support for an aerial squadron based in France. Wortham Insurance: Growth Milestones With the Armistice signed, Gus Wortham returned to his brokerage desk in Houston and devoted full energy to growing the firm. The decade of the soon-to-be-roaring '20s saw John L. Wortham & Son handle work for Kirby Lumber Company, Houston Lighting & Power, and the interests of Jesse H. Jones, one of the recognized architects of Houston’s growth. Property insurance for the city's well-to-do represented the bulk of the firm's early business. B.F. Carruth If you scanned the newspaper for advertisements, you would find one noting John L. Wortham & Son’s new offices at the Bankers Mortgage Building at Main and Capitol and its specialization in “all forms of insurance, fidelity and surety bonds." The building would remain the company’s home for nearly four decades. The “birth” of American General launched a unique arrangement that would last for nearly 40 years. Under the terms of a management contract, John L. Wortham & Son would manage the affairs of the new insurance company. At the time, American General was owned by many shareholders in Houston and throughout Texas – but technically did not have any employees. Anyone doing work for American General received a paycheck from John L. Wortham & Son, which was financed by the 15% override that the firm received on all American General income. “When our company was awarded the contract to build the San Jacinto Monument in 1936, our founder, Warren S. Bellows, went to see Gus Wortham about a surety bond. With the support of John L. Wortham & Son, W.S. Bellows Construction built this landmark monument dedicated to those who fought for Texas' independence on this key battleground. Thus began a steadfast relationship with Wortham that continues to this day. Beyond our respective 100-year histories, I believe that W.S. Bellows Construction and Wortham Insurance share something equally remarkable and enduring: namely, an abiding, time-honored commitment to quality and customer service. Happy 100th Anniversary to our longtime friends at Wortham.” Laura D. Bellows President and Chairman of the Board W.S. Bellows Construction Corporation (founded in 1914) 1924 1926 Mid-1920s 1929 1939 1940 1942 1946 1949 1952 1953 Col. John L. Wortham dies on Nov. 5 at the Rice Hotel. Acting as organizer for noteworthy investors who included the Links, Jesse H. Jones and the law firm of Vinson, Elkins, Sweeton and Weems, John L. Wortham & Son obtains a Texas charter for American General Insurance Company. From Austin, Judge Elkins marks the event with a four-word telegram to his partners: “THE BABY IS BORN.” Under a contract that remains in effect until 1965, John L. Wortham & Son receives a 15% override as underwriting manager for American General. John L. Wortham & Son expands nucleus of key employees to include E.R. Barrow, Tom Barrow, Carle Aderman and T.F. Smith – all of whom gain ownership shares. OCT. 24: The New York Times credits “Black Thursday” as the “most disastrous decline in the biggest bad broadest market in history.” Houston remains relatively unscathed. Gus Wortham’s expense account records his first airplane ticket: St. Louis to New York City for $49.84. B.F. Carruth sells 30% interest in John L. Wortham & Son, with Link & Company assuming ownership. Gus Wortham retains 55% interest. Employees of John L. Wortham & Son don uniforms and go to war. Others assume patriotic duties at home, including service as air raid wardens. American General enters postwar years as the only firm in the South to write all forms of insurance. Owners learn that a 1% interest in John L. Wortham & Son is valued at $15,000. Total payroll at John L. Wortham & Son includes 241 employees – most of whom perform work for American General. Gus Wortham elected director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a post he would hold for five years. 5 As the Great Depression gripped America, Texas fared better than many states, and Gus Wortham employed "special agents" to sell shares in American General to insurance agencies throughout the region. In a report to shareholders, he called 1934 a watershed year for the company because it proved that American General had passed "through the formative stage" and "established itself as a permanent factor in the business." In the middle of the decade, a letter distributed to Houston homeowners encouraged them to do business with “a Houston institution.” The letter folded out to a skyline panorama that highlighted a score of buildings insured "wholly or in part by Houston's Own Fire Insurance Company." Luminary properties included the Gulf Building, Rice Hotel, Houston Chronicle Building, several banks and government buildings, the electric company, the City Auditorium, two movie theaters, three department stores and the 6 Farmers Market. The mailer noted that American General was a company run by a group of "conservative, dependable Houston businessmen who take a keen personal interest in the affairs of the company." Directors were the city's elite: John Henry Kirby, Jesse H. Jones, Col. Joseph W. Evans, and Judge James A. Elkins. When the Houston Chronicle in 1934 reported Gus Wortham's election as president of the Houston Chamber of Commerce, it lauded him as a "thoroughgoing Houstonian." In his address to Chamber members in 1935, Gus Wortham ticked through the biggest projects on his agenda. Topping the list was promoting the Centennial of Texas and the opening of the San Jacinto Monument being completed by W.S. Bellows Construction Corporation. the boards of the Houston Symphony and the Rice Institute, and prophesied that the city “could build something unique which will attract international attention.” He even helped ensure his prophecy by eventually co-chairing an effort to secure funds for what became the Astrodome. Gus Wortham took a keen interest in the design of a new building to house both John L. Wortham & Son and American General. Opened in 1965, Wortham Tower continues today as the headquarters for a global leader branded under a single name: Wortham. Gus Wortham’s company was unscathed by the “darkest years” of the Depression, when the number of businesses in Houston flourished rather than declined. Remaining profitable during World War II, Wortham entered the decade of the 1950s determined to grow American General via business mergers. The strategy worked – and in 1958, American General directed a life Gus Wortham’s additional priorities for the Chamber included support for the Fat Stock Show (precursor to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo), and a comprehensive flood control program for Buffalo Bayou. A colleague summed up Gus Wortham's ability to mesh business, friendships, connections and politics: “Mr. Wortham...got things done that nobody else could.” Gus Wortham sat on operation reaching from coast to coast with “insurance in force” of nearly $2 billion. The Federation of Insurance Counsel named Gus Wortham its Insurance Man of the Year in 1958 – validating the national standing of both the man and his business pursuits. In 1963, Gus Wortham began pursuing the Maryland Casualty Company, one of the largest companies in the fire and casualty industry. Observers likened the proposed transaction as “a minnow attempting to swallow a whale,” but Gus Wortham believed Maryland Casualty was exactly the type of operation that would boost American General to true national prominence. After business negotiations failed in December 1963, Wortham quietly orchestrated the first hostile takeover of an insurance company in U.S. history. For much of the next year, a blackboard mounted in the 10th floor coffee room of John L. Wortham & Son offices kept a running tally of the number of Maryland Casualty shareholders who favored a business merger with American General. When the smoke from the takeover effort cleared, American General owned 97.4 percent of the outstanding stock of its much larger Baltimore-based competitor. In the wake of the Maryland Casualty merger, Gus Wortham was convinced that American General needed wider access to capital markets to succeed in the competitive property and casualty industry – and he put plans in motion to cancel the management contract between the insurance company and John L. Wortham & Son. In 1965, the board of American General terminated the contract by paying John L. Wortham & Son more than $1.5 million. At that point, the 26 managing directors of the brokerage firm faced a true “fork in the road” in their careers. After due deliberation, the team split neatly in half – with 13 electing to remain brokers with John L. Wortham & Son, and 13 moving forward as employees of American General under the direction of Gus Wortham. The net effect was to clear the way for both American General and John L. Wortham & Son to pursue their core business strengths – and for John L. Wortham & Son to focus exclusively on brokerage work for a fast-growing list of clients. 1958 1959 1963 1964 1965 1967 1972 1976 1986 1987 Gus Wortham named Insurance Man of the Year by the Federation of Insurance Counsel. Gus Wortham donates a 1.5% interest in American General to the Wortham Foundation, a private entity he creates to support cultural activities and parks development in Houston. Gus Wortham begins earnest pursuit of Maryland Casualty Company, one of the giants of the U.S. fire and casualty industry. Merger discussions end abruptly in December. After Gus Wortham leads the first hostile takeover of a major U.S. insurance company, American General gains a 97.4% ownership in Maryland Casualty – and opens the door to new sources of capital. The board of American General votes to pay $1,515,018 to cancel the contract with John L. Wortham & Son. Half of the 26 partners elect to remain with John L. Wortham & Son, and half – including Gus Wortham – elect to continue their careers at American General. John L. Wortham & Son opens a satellite office in the Clear Lake area to serve NASA and provide personal lines of insurance for the nation’s original astronauts. New clients include Houston Natural Gas – which later changes name to Enron. Gus Wortham – revered as “a builder of Texas” – dies on Sept. 1 in Houston Methodist Hospital. Firm moves away from “concentrated ownership” to a new broad-based business model practiced by leading law firms. Chairman Fred Burns summarizes key advantage: “The value of offering outstanding people ownership opportunities is key to the acquisition of the best talent available.” Juilliard String Quartet plays first public concert (Mozart, Bartok and Beethoven) at the magnificent new Wortham Theater Center. 7 Emerging from the management contract with American General and setting its own course put John L. Wortham & Son – now known simply as “Wortham” – on the path to becoming what it is today: a nationally recognized firm, serving clients around the world who represent almost every business sector. From energy, retail and construction to healthcare, technology, sports and entertainment, Wortham is recognized as one of the country's most innovative leaders in the insurance industry. Clients range from local, regional, global and Fortune 100 companies, to individuals looking to protect personal assets and provide a financial legacy for future generations. Although they no longer shared a balance sheet, the two companies remained in close contact, and a number of John L. Wortham & Son partners served on the board of American General. In 1965, the employees of both firms moved into a new 24-story, 300,000-sq.-ft. building on Allen Parkway facing “the recently beautified Buffalo Bayou,” according to the Houston Chronicle. In a special section, the newspaper lauded “the powers” behind the successful enterprises occupying the new building, and cited Mssrs. Wortham, Barrow, Woodson, Link and Judge Elkins for building not only an insurance giant but also the City of Houston. Into the Modern Era The underpinning for Wortham’s remarkable growth is as vital today as it was in 1915: namely, the process of sharing ownership in the firm with the business professionals who contribute to its success. In its 100-year history, fewer than 200 individuals have served as Managing Directors (Wortham’s official name for its owner partners), and more than 120 remain active today. The stability of the firm’s ownership is unrivaled in the insurance industry, and the depth of experience and tenure among Wortham’s professionals helps promote long-standing client relationships that are often measured in years or even decades. A leading example is Bellows Construction, a century-old firm which is now under the fourth-generation leadership of Laura Bellows. Bellows Construction is responsible for many of Houston’s most notable structures, including the San Jacinto Monument, Wortham Theater Center and Texas Children’s Hospital – and has been a Wortham client since the 1930s. Gus Wortham officially announced his retirement during an American General board meeting on November 2, 1972. One year later, Houston Mayor Louie Welch designated “Gus Wortham Day.” Now requiring constant use of oxygen to combat emphysema, the insurance patriarch focused on fine-tuning the charter of his Wortham Foundation to support local civic and cultural groups, including funding a feasibility study to create a parkway through downtown along Buffalo Bayou. On Sept. 1, 1976, Gus Sessions Wortham died in Houston Methodist Hospital. The man credited as “a builder of Texas” is buried in the small Magnolia Cemetery near the Wortham Tower and the Gus Wortham Memorial Fountain along Allen Parkway. 8 Zero-Gravity Insurance Rockets with thousands of pounds of thrust may have propelled NASA original astronauts into space – but it was Wortham that kept things grounded with personal lines for the “Mercury Seven” and their families. More recently, Wortham’s long association with NASA included arranging coverage and marine surveys to help make the Space Shuttle Trainer a permanent part of Space Center Houston. Stability and continuity are also visible in the leadership of the company. During its 100 year history, only six people have served as leaders of the company: Gus Wortham, J.W. Link, Jr., Allen H. “Buddy” Carruth, Fred C. Burns, Robert B. Hixon, and Richard M. Blades. 1992 1999 2000 2001 2004 2007 2007 2008 2011 2015 TODAY George Harvey painting of “Downtown Houston – 1915” acquired for the Wortham headquarters. Austin, Texas: Consolidated Insurance Agency, Inc. merges with Wortham, expanding the firm’s footprint beyond Houston. Fort Worth, Texas: the Brants Company and Fringe Benefit Management Inc. merge with Wortham. San Antonio, Texas: Eichlitz Dennis Wray & Westheimer Insurance Agency Inc. merges with Wortham. Wortham establishes office in Dallas, Texas. San Antonio-based Crosby, Bigelow, Fitzgerald Insurance Associates Agency, Inc. joins forces with Wortham. Dallas, Texas: Texas AGA Explosives, Inc. merges with Wortham. Hurricane Ike devastates Houston area and inundates Wortham’s headquarters on the top floors of Wortham Tower along Allen Parkway. Working from a satellite-assisted emergency facility, Wortham’s team quickly handles client claims. Houston-based RBK Services, LLC, specializing in employee benefits, joins forces with Wortham. To mark its Centennial, Wortham makes the largest corporate gift in its history to establish the Wortham Insurance Visitor Center at Buffalo Bayou Park along Houston’s Allen Parkway. Wortham remains a private partnership and now stands as the largest insurance broker headquartered in Texas, with more than 500 insurance professionals in five statewide offices placing insurance with more than 300 underwriters across the globe. Wortham is a recognized leader in insurance, risk management and employee benefits, with clients including Fortune 100 companies, public and private firms of all sizes, and high-net worth individuals. 9 Freed from its connection to American General in the 1960s, Wortham built momentum as a retail insurance agency and began to form distinct practice areas to serve specific industries. (See summaries starting on page 16.) With headquarters in Houston, “energy” became a significant source of the firm’s revenue growth. Clients seeking Wortham’s counsel and expertise came from every sector of the industry: from downstream, midstream, power generation and upstream companies to sole-proprietor wildcatters and broad-based global giants. Energy-related clients have accounted for a sizeable portion of the firm’s revenues in the modern era, but Wortham is remarkable for its expertise across a wide swath of businesses. The company is a recognized leader in construction, manufacturing, marine, professional services and employee benefits consulting. As a full-service broker, Wortham offers its wide range of clients a full menu of services. Any diagram of the growth of the energy industry will include sharp ups and downs that reflect the sector’s volatility. Wortham, with its strong ties to energy clients, endured repeated boom and bust cycles along with other firms with headquarters in Houston, the energy capital of the world. In a bid to expand service to new industries that were driving the regional economy, the firm’s management under Chairman Fred Burns pursued a new strategy of diversification. The business model that emerged saw the firm actively pursue statewide expansion by merging with leading independent brokers throughout Texas who had built strong reputations in servicing middle-market companies in a wide range of industries. In effect, the diversification would move the firm horizontally (across multiple industries) and vertically (within specific industries, such as energy). Although the firm had previously opened small satellite offices during the Gus Wortham era, these offices remained open for a short time only to serve specific clients. During recent times, Wortham has built a cohesive network of offices that share resources and collaborate on key assignments. Using a modified “growth through acquisitions” strategy 10 employed by Gus Wortham, Wortham added new capabilities and forged a statewide network of offices by merging with recognized leaders throughout the state. Additions to the Wortham team included: Austin Fort Worth San Antonio Dallas Houston Consolidated Insurance Agency The Brants Company & Fringe Benefit Management Inc. Eichlitz, Dennis, Wray & Westheimer; Crosby Bigelow Fitzgerald Texas AGA Explosives, Inc. RBK Services (Benefits) Houston When Gus Wortham petitioned his father to join him in a new insurance venture, he envisioned an agency that would serve companies driving Houston’s growth. One hundred years later, the nation’s fourth-largest city has cemented its reputation as the “energy capital of the world” while building a robust regional economy fueled by a wide range of industries and businesses, many of which maintain headquarters in Houston. One of these firms is Wortham, which houses its statewide command center in the 24-story Wortham Tower along Allen Parkway. Surveying the bustling complex and its 2 million sq. ft. of commercial space today, it’s hard to imagine the skepticism that greeted news in the 1960s that John L. Wortham & Son planned to move its headquarters from downtown Houston to a largely undeveloped area two miles west of the central business district. To mark the building’s dedication in March 1965, both the Houston Chronicle and Houston Post published special sections that lauded Gus Wortham and other business leaders for the roles in promoting Houston’s continued growth. Nearly 50 years later, the firm’s headquarters was severely tested when Hurricane Ike decimated the region on Saturday, Sept. 13, 2008. The storm caused billions of dollars in damage, and it rendered offices in the Wortham Tower a tangled mess of useless computer equipment and waterlogged paper files. Thanks to an emergency preparedness plan and a satellite-assisted mobile facility, it was business as usual for Wortham on the Monday after the devastating storm as Wortham professionals assisted clients with storm-related claims. The cover headline in Leader’s Edge magazine later summarized the Wortham team’s performance: “When Ike struck, Wortham was ready.” 11 Austin Stephen F. Austin reportedly was not an early fan of the “remote location” chosen for the capital of the Republic of Texas. But statehood in 1845 changed the war hero’s mind – and started Austin on the road to becoming the thriving metropolis it is today, complete with 1.5 million residents and the corporate headquarters of industry giants such as Dell Inc. and Whole Foods Markets, Inc. The roots for Wortham’s Austin office trace to 1928, when Jack Chiles and Artie McCallum founded a firm that grew into Austin’s largest independent insurance agency. In 1960, the duo joined 12 Dallas forces with another market leader – Heidrick, Bowman & Wommack Insurance – to form the Consolidated Insurance Agency. Under the leadership of its founding principals and the management of Tommy Wommack and Bess Roberts – whose client service spans five decades – Consolidated forged enduring relationships with clients such as Austin White Lime, Louis Shanks Furniture and the law partners of what is now Graves Dougherty Hearon & Moody. With Austin’s growth came increasing demands for wider access to more insurance markets and deeper technical expertise. Peter Pincoffs, who succeeded Wommack as managing partner of Consolidated in 1989, had gained a first-hand appreciation for Wortham’s technical skills when he began his insurance career in 1974 in Wortham’s Houston office. When Wortham’s Fred Burns and Bob Hixon approached Pincoffs and his partners about a potential merger, the combination made perfect sense. “We saw it as a good match of independent firms that shared a common approach to serving clients’ interests,” Pincoffs says. Consolidated joined the Wortham partnership in 1999, and Rob Bridges now serves as managing director of the Austin office. Grinning beneath his signature hat, J.R. Ewing always painted Dallas as a special place for doing business. The television myth was definitely grounded in reality, because Dallas has long been a center of commerce for energy companies and other firms of every size and specialty. When Wortham began building its regional network of offices, it went looking for merger candidates among established Dallas firms. “For various reasons, we never found a firm that matched our criteria. That’s when we decided to improvise, and start a Dallas office from the ground up,” recalls Randy Schuler, a member of Wortham’s executive committee who led the search effort. The key to Wortham’s grassroots strategy proved to be John Deal, a top producer Schuler and Wortham Chairman Fred Burns recruited from a competing broker in Dallas. With Deal at the helm, Wortham opened the doors to its newest office in November 2004 – and soon attracted noteworthy clients such as James Avery Craftsmen and one of the nation’s top developers of commercial real estate. Four years later, Wortham merged with Dallas-based Texas AGA Explosives, adding a large book of explosives-related business to the Dallas office. Today, even competing brokers direct their clients to the unique set of explosives-related skills offered by Fred Bangs and Texas AGA, which continues to operate under its original name. The Dallas office continues to maintain long-standing relationships with a long list of clients that includes Whole Foods Markets, Inc., a Fortune 250 foods behemoth that relies on Wortham for multiple lines of coverage. Regardless of industry specialization or insurance challenges, clients know they can depend on Wortham’s Dallas office for superior service – and much, much more. 13 Fort Worth 14 As World War I came to a close, Harry Brants of the Royal Canadian Air Force parked his biplane in its revetment and pondered what he would do in civilian life. Recalling the time he spent training at Camp Bowie just west of Fort Worth, Brants decided to return to the city. In 1926, he opened an insurance agency and was soon joined by his two brothers and two other entrepreneurs. The Brants Company took flight as an independent broker representing commercial accounts in the Fort Worth area and throughout west Texas. The firm established a reputation for quality in serving bellwether clients such as TP Coal & Oil, Rowan Drilling Company, Kimball Foods and Buddies Supermarkets. Harry Brants managed the agency until his death in 1968, when the Fort Worth Star-Telegram printed an obituary noting Brants “had arrived in town as a brash WW I airman and left as a respected business leader who will be dearly missed.” Under the direction of Bob Ferguson, who joined the firm in 1972, The Brants Company continued to grow and became the first tenant in City Center’s landmark Sundance Square project in 1981. In 1999, Wortham approached Ferguson about joining forces. “What stood out for me was the way both of our firms were independent companies committed to long-term relationships with their clients,” he says. Clients of The Brants Company San Antonio included not only a strong stable of energy firms but also local hospitals, Berkshire Hathaway’s Acme Brick Company, supermarket chains and wholesale food operations. The firm joined the Wortham partnership in 2000; two years later, Leo Taylor joined the firm after serving as a senior officer at one of The Brants Company’s large public clients. Taylor now manages the Fort Worth office, serves on Wortham’s executive committee, and oversees the company’s employee benefits consultancy that works with over 1,000 clients statewide. The flight plan for success in Fort Worth remains unchanged: provide clients with superior service, and good things will continue to happen. Wortham’s San Antonio office was founded on a long history of independence forged by several firms with deep roots in the Alamo City. The tale starts before the Civil War when E.A. Florian established the first insurance agency in San Antonio that eventually became The Eichlitz Company. When the regional economy recovered from the war years, other insurance companies opened their doors – including an independent brokerage known as Dennis-Hinkle and Wray. In 1941, these two firms consolidated their offices (and their collective 100+ years of history) in a new firm known as Eichlitz-Dennis & Wray specializing in “all lines of insurance” and an ability to “speak the oil man’s language.” In 1993, the firm merged with Westheimer McCallister & Wolf to form Eichlitz Dennis Wray & Westheimer Insurance Agency Inc. Eight years later, this firm joined the Wortham partnership and – in the words of San Antonio director Bob Wray – “elevated the game” in San Antonio by opening new doors to larger clients while providing middle-market clients with strong technical support. “The Wortham business model clearly works,” Wray says. “Everyone is willing to drop what they’re doing to help a client. The sum of the parts is clearly larger.” Next up for San Antonio: continued work with oil and gas clients participating in the Eagle Ford shale boom. “Companies in the energy sector are very pragmatic about their work, and they appreciate someone who knows what they are doing and who shoots straight with them. They know they can depend on Wortham in San Antonio to protect their people and their assets,” Wray says. 15 With more than 120 Managing Directors among its 500+ professionals in five offices, Wortham is fulfilling the vision of its founder Gus Wortham: an independent insurance agency offering clients superior services and industry-leading expertise. Although a number of national and international firms have approached Wortham over the years to investigate possible partnerships or a merger, Wortham has remained steadfast to a commitment to remain independent. The reasoning is simple: clients and prospects alike respect that Wortham has only a single ambition – namely, to serve the interest of the client. Wortham’s business model of independent ownership rewards its professionals primarily through ownership interests and salary – which is distinct from the standard industry practice of rewarding employees with commissions on “sales.” In each of its professional service areas, Wortham is recognized for a depth of expertise that is unrivaled in the insurance industry. The following is a snapshot of Wortham’s core specialities today: Wortham Insurance: Aimed at the Future 16 “Other brokers house their marine specialists in places like New York or Los Angeles. Wortham’s specialists are in a central location here in Houston, and that’s good for us. Casualty Wortham’s Casualty Department is a center of technical excellence. The group includes marketing and claims professionals who work with a majority of Wortham clients on Primary Casualty (Workers Compensation, General Liability, Automobile Liability), Excess Casualty and Umbrella, International Casualty, Aviation, Environmental, and small-to middle-market commercial accounts. Many of the firm’s Casualty professionals previously worked as insurance underwriters, and their technical backgrounds help them negotiate the broadest possible coverages. Specialties within the group include captive insurance programs, portfolio loss transfers, aviation coverage, and workers compensation – an area in which Wortham places more premium than any other broker in Texas. Wortham is widely recognized as a national leader in securing pollution and environmental coverages, with placement features designed specifically for third-party pollution liability, on-site cleanup of pollution conditions, environmental contractual indemnities, disposal sites, and business interruption from a pollution condition. Property & Business Interruption Wortham’s Property Department is responsible for property coverage marketing and servicing, including claim handling. Marketing specialists focus on catastrophic programs that include Tier 1 wind exposure and earthquake exposure for clients along the Gulf Coast, Atlantic Seaboard, and in California and other earthquakeprone areas. These marketing specialists have access to all major property and specialty carriers worldwide. The department provides clients with access to the latest-generation modeling and analytical tools including RMS modeling, Pictometry and MapPoint, and its claims handling experience includes many catastrophic windstorm, earthquake and complex business interruption claims. Employee Benefits Energy & Marine Wortham Benefits delivers the best value in the marketplace for more than 1,000 clients of every size and specialty. The department’s independence allows it to work with a wide range of carriers and vendors to develop superior solutions for health and wellness benefits programs. Wortham Benefits operates a “call center” and was one of the first companies to offer a private health insurance “exchange” to help clients respond to health care reform. The firm also works with a large number of clients to develop and manage their self-insurance programs. The deeply talented team includes an in-house ERISA attorney, medical director, pharmacy advisor, wellness coordinator, communications specialist, implementation manager and reporting analysts. Wortham’s depth and strength in energy and marine date to the earliest years of the industry. Today, these two disciplines account for more than half of the $1.2 billion in premium placed by the firm each year. Energy clients range in size from small exploration and production independents to giant multinationals with operations in every segment of the industry. The majority of Wortham’s energy professionals hold technical backgrounds in insurance underwriting – and their skillsets allow them to obtain the lowest pricing and the broadest coverage and terms regardless of market conditions. Special areas of distinction within the department include control of well and property capabilities, and superior claims management by the professionals who handle marketing responsibilities and negotiate policy wording. Risk & Insurance Magazine regularly includes Wortham professionals among its list of industry-leading “Oil & Gas Power Brokers.” Much of our work involves procurement contracts written by the government – and Wortham’s analysis has repeatedly ‘educated our customer’ on insurance issues to the point that an amendment is released. That’s an outcome that improves the procurement process and protects our company at the same time. Happy birthday, John L!” Joe Vaughan Chief Executive Officer Ocean Shipholdings, Inc. 17 “Five years ago, a fire broke out at our chemical purification, processing and packaging plant in Columbus, Wisconsin, and we lost about 40% of our facility. The Wortham team in Houston was a crucial and supportive part of our disaster recovery plan. They played a key role in assuring that all claims were paid promptly, and they helped us get back to full production in 20 days. We wouldn't be in business today without Wortham – so please mark us down as ‘one happy customer.’ It's easy to see why you're celebrating your 100th anniversary!” Steve Quandt Executive Vice President Columbus Chemical Industries 18 “You can buy insurance from anyone, but Wortham understands this is a relationship business. Professional Indemnity Wortham’s Professional Indemnity Department places annual premium of more than $100 million, easily marking the group as a national leader in securing coverage in five areas: director and officer liability; fiduciary liability; employment practices liability; crime; and cyber liability. As an independent company, Wortham accesses underwriters throughout the world, including major carriers based in the United States, Canada, London and Bermuda. Carrier solvency and quality are critical to these highly sensitive coverage lines, and Wortham’s Security Review Committee carefully monitors and confirms the financial health of our clients’ carriers. Our team includes liability specialists who have helped settle numerous complex claims, including one of the largest fully insured fiduciary settlements ever secured by a Texas-based company. Our executive liability claims services include the initial reporting of claims to the appropriate carriers, coordination of claims reporting and monitoring, and interfacing with attorneys representing both the carrier and the insured. Claims are typically handled by the same Wortham marketing technicians who negotiated the liability coverage – which provides clients with an important advantage in negotiating settlements. Risk Management Wortham works in tandem with clients to minimize their cost of risk, which includes retained losses, insurance premiums, and administrative and risk management expenses. To achieve the lowest cost of risk, this department analyzes retained losses and develops loss forecasts. It also designs strategies that minimize collateral requirements and other ancillary expenses. Wortham's team of experts has extensive experience in reviewing contracts to uncover potentially harmful issues. Since the structure of insurance and indemnity contracts can impact the design and viability of clients' insurance programs, the department conducts an in-depth review of each contract to provide improved protection for our clients. Fire Protection & Life Safety Wortham offers safety and loss control solutions that can lower the long-term cost of risk. Life safety consulting services assist clients in improving workplace and customer safety, mitigating injuries and illnesses, and integrating safety management into their overall business strategy. Wortham’s consultants are experienced in providing a wide range of services, from regulatory review and compliance, training curriculum development, safety prevention strategies and safety program development. The department’s fire protection consultants have extensive experience with a wide range of industries, and they provide critical loss control services and ensure that proper protection designs and programs are in place. The collaborative effort helps reduce customers’ property loss potential, which is a key driver in insurance costs. Environmental Wortham offers deep expertise in environmental insurance, and it uses overall market scale to provide clients with a competitive advantage in placing coverages with more than 300 leading insurance carriers. Specialization is key to serving the complex needs of clients in a wide range of industries, and it allows Wortham to properly respond to coverage challenges that might otherwise be overlooked or underweighted. The same team that markets and negotiates coverages is also heavily involved in the claims process. The end result is an effective and cost-efficient risk management program distinguished by superior service. Surety Bonds, Fiduciary, & Crime Wortham’s surety professionals handle 20,000+ bonded obligations for more than 400 companies. In the oil and gas industry, the team is highly experienced with a complete range of surety bonds: license, permit, complex assurances, financial guarantee, court-condemnation bonds, and private plugging & abandonment bonds. Wortham also handles oil and gas compliance bonds for all state and federal agencies (e.g., TX RXR, BOEM, BLM, BIA and others). Wortham works with every major surety company as well as specialty markets serving the oil and gas industry, and active involvement with surety organizations allows Wortham to arrange for bond execution on a same-day basis in every major U.S. city. In the event that claims consultation or resolution is required, Wortham relies on the Surepath interactive bond processing service – an online tool that allows clients to obtain summary reports on all account exposures and access a database with copies of all outstanding bonds. Personal Lines & Life Insurance Wortham offers a specialized practice in personal insurance that provides clients with customized, comprehensive packages to meet their unique requirements and goals, including family limited partnerships and trusts. Wortham's team of seasoned experts provides hands-on guidance on personal property and automobile policies, including homeowners, secondary vacation homes, high-rise condos, single or multiple autos and personal aircraft as well as collections of antiques, fine art, jewelry, wine, antique or collector autos, and other vehicles. Wortham professionals also handle coverage for watercraft and yachts, farms and ranches, family offices, workers compensation for household staffs, and executive personal risk management. To provide additional protection, Wortham handles liability policies for personal umbrellas that range from $1 million to over $100 million, and secures group excess policies for clients in designated groups such as physician groups and legal firms. They are highly flexible, and they provide us with the best resources, regardless of where they are based. Like Whole Foods, they are a Texas company – and that carries weight with us, since we are all about local. I could describe Wortham as ‘old school’ or charming – but whatever it is, it works, and I’m very comfortable with it. They get me what I want without beating up the insurance carriers, and those carriers have genuine respect for Wortham. I do, too.” Margot Roth L’Heureux Global Director of Risk Management Whole Foods Markets, Inc. 19 “Wortham’s biggest differentiator comes down to ‘people.’ We place a high value on technical expertise, and our private structure lets us take a long-term perspective in growing our firm around the best people in the industry.” – Rob Bridges What Wortham means to me... 20 “When it comes to knowledge, experience and work ethic, I’ve never worked with a better group of people. My colleagues are like family, and they make the work day enjoyable.” – Marla Daniels “No one ever talks about ‘my client.’ It’s always about ‘our client.’ Since all the owners and future owners are paid off the bottom line in accordance with their ownership of the firm, we all stand ready to help and assist each other.” – Bob Hixon “My career in insurance spans 44 years – and I’ve never seen another company like Wortham. We are populated by bright, competent people, and the firm’s commitment to clients and employees is nothing short of stellar.” – Ralph Hamm “Wortham people look at insurance and client service as an avocation, not a vocation. They let the job define their hours rather than the other way around. I wanted to be a part of this kind of team, and I’m proud that we have made a continuous contribution to the performing and visual arts communities in Houston.” – Jeff Cross “I consider myself blessed to have shared a significant portion of my life with people of integrity who pursue excellence in their work. This is a highly competitive world, but in my 27 years at Wortham, we have operated a prosperous business and slept well at night. No one could ask for more from a chosen career, and I owe sincere thanks to everyone who has forged the heritage of this company.” – Jim McCann “The best things at Wortham are our people. They don’t fit into a box. That’s why we are so successful: everyone has the enthusiasm and the skill to get the deal done. They create – and they make things happen.” – Chad Dodd “I was a Wortham client before I joined the firm – so I have observed our client relationships and service delivery from both sides. As a Wortham ‘insider,’ I can appreciate the true source of our attentive and supportive service: a structure that encourages collaboration rather than competition within the firm. That’s a rare phenomenon in our industry.” – Jim Gleaves “Within hours after Hurricane Ike, we were up and working, unlike lots of other firms, and client CEOs came by to see how we had done it. They saw something beyond our satellite systems and emergency trailer. Watching our people at work, they saw a genuine esprit de corps. I believe that spirit has always defined Wortham.” – Charles Flournoy “It’s a remarkable network of people. The culture in San Antonio is more relaxed. Houston tends to work on big accounts with short fuses and placements that involve London. Here, we are traditional middle-market underwriters. But when we need help with a client, there is nobody who is not willing to drop what they’re doing and help.” – Bob Wray “Telling the history of Wortham involves telling the history of Houston. With clients like the Port of Houston Authority, City of Houston and the Metropolitan Transit Authority, we’ve worked with the groups that built Houston into what it is today. And we’re continuing to work with clients that will represent the future of the city.” – Randy Schuler “When customers have a concern or a question or a serious problem, a Wortham team member will always be there with a quick and appropriate response. And without exception, we always put the customer’s best interest first.” – Bert Guempel “I had several job opportunities when I first moved to Houston – and Wortham stood out as the best insurance firm in town. Ambitious professionals who have an entrepreneurial spirit and a ‘will to succeed’ gain an opportunity to pursue ownership and share in the long term growth of the firm.” – Russell Thomas “I joined the Navy to serve a larger cause. When I left the service, I didn’t want to lose that feeling of being part of something meaningful. Wortham fits that bill. I’m proud that I’m part of a company that has helped make Houston what it is today, and continues to serve the needs of an ever-changing city.” – Gavin Hurd Gus Wortham’s vision for Houston included “something unique which will attract international attention.” Wortham’s founder led an effort to secure funds for what became the Astrodome, the first domed stadium that was called “the Eighth Wonder of the World.” In addition to providing bonding for the construction of the facility, Wortham provided insurance for the first tenants: the Houston Oilers of the Luv Ya Blue era. “When we learned that one of our clubs was pulling back on brownwater insurance in the United States, we worried about what that would mean for our coverages. Within a matter of days, Charles Flournoy at Wortham helped us identify a new club and arrange a seamless transition to a new underwriter. In our business, we steer our customers in the right direction. Wortham does exactly the same thing for us.” Stephen Huffman President G&H Towing 21 The Wortham Insurance Visitor Center at Buffalo Bayou Park Leaders Edge magazine has noted how the Wortham name runs deep in Texas civic life because of the work of the Wortham Foundation, created by Gus Wortham and his wife Lyndall, a longtime volunteer and community activist in Houston. Since its incorporation, the foundation has helped fortify Houston as a leading U.S. center for the arts, medical research and education initiatives. Well-known recipients of significant contributions from the Wortham Foundation have included the Wortham Theater Center (opened in 1987 as the home of the Houston Ballet and Houston Grand Opera), the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, the Houston Symphony Orchestra, the Wortham Theatre on the University of Houston campus, and the Wortham IMAX Theater at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. Today, Wortham handles the insurance needs of many of the region’s leading arts and non-profit groups – including the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. Gus Wortham was an early and ardent supporter of the rodeo, which has provided more than $350 million to support scholarships and educational programs for Texas youth since its inception. Scores of Wortham’s managing directors and employees have served the non-profit organization in volunteer and committee leadership positions over the years, and Wortham Managing Director Jack A. Lyons will serve as chairman of the board of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo in 2015. To mark its centennial in 2015, Wortham joined with leading underwriters and continued its heritage of community philanthropy with the largest gift in the company’s history to underwrite the primary gateway to Buffalo Bayou Park, a $45 million public amenity taking shape along Allen Parkway fronting the north side of Wortham’s Houston headquarters. When the Wortham Insurance Visitor Center opens in 2015, it will become part of a ribbon of greenbelts and outdoor facilities to Former Wortham Chairman be enjoyed by Houston residents and visitors for generations to come. Allen H. “Buddy” Carruth Wortham offices in Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth and San Antonio are served as the president of the also supporting their communities to mark the centennial year in a Houston Livestock Show and meaningful and enduring way. Rodeo during the 1970s. Wortham: Paying it Forward When it opens in late 2015, the Wortham Insurance Visitor Center (center of rendering on next page) will serve as the gateway to Buffalo Bayou Park – and commemorate Wortham’s centennial for generations to come. Leading underwriters joined Wortham in making the substantial gift to the Buffalo Bayou Partnership. Thank you for joining Wortham in celebrating the 100-year history of our company – and for being part of our future as we continue building 22 on our heritage of commitment and superior service to our clients. 23 Seasoned Experts. Comprehensive Solutions. That’s Wortham. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Houston HOUSTON Wortham Tower 2727 Allen Parkway Houston, TX 77019 713/526-3366 Austin AUSTIN 221 West Sixth Street Suite 1400 Austin, TX 78701 512/453-0031 Dallas DALLAS 5950 Sherry Lane Suite 500 Dallas, TX 75225 214/740-6000 Fort Worth FORT WORTH 1600 West Seventh Street Fort Worth, TX 76102 817/336-3030 San Antonio SAN ANTONIO 131 Interpark Boulevard San Antonio, TX 78216 210/223-9171 Richard Blades Chairman Bob Hixon Chairman Emeritus Charles Flournoy Vice Chairman – Technical Randy Schuler Vice Chairman – Development Peter Pincoffs Vice Chairman – Texas Network Leo Taylor Vice Chairman – Fort Worth-Employee Benefits Robert Wray Managing Director – San Antonio Phil Bair Managing Director – Manager, Professional Insurance Brian Welch Managing Director – Manager, Casualty & Small Commercial Chad Dodd Managing Director – Sales & Promotion Michael Ruehman Managing Director – Manager, Marine & Energy Jim McCann, J.D. Managing Director – Manager, Commercial Accounts www.worthaminsurance.com Wortham, L.L.C., General Partner John L. Wortham & Son, L.P. 24 25