In 1991, 47-year-old Linda Reimer
walked into one of the country’s largest home plan design
companies, Design Basics, Inc., looking for a low-stress,
part-time summer job. She was offered a position photocopying
blueprints. Today, she runs the Omaha-based company, which
generates $5 - $7 million in annual sales and employs 50
people.
Reimer had spent the two-and-a-half
decades before 1991 raising children and directing a preschool.
She
Linda Reimer,
President, Design Basics, Inc.
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loved teaching young children and
the preschool she had built was very popular. With her own children
getting older, however, she was looking for something to fill
up some time during the school’s summer break.
The type of person who throws herself into whatever she does, Reimer was
hooked by the end of the summer and continued working at the home plan design
company part-time throughout the school year.
Reimer has always had a natural love for home building. Her father built
homes for 35 years; her mother drew many of his designs. Reimer also has
a never-ending drive to learn and grow – something Design Basics’ owner Dennis
Brozak noticed early on. She often made suggestions of ways things could
be done better, and it wasn’t long before she volunteered to provide mini
seminars on leadership, finance and business marketing for the company’s
employees.
In 1994 Brozak asked Reimer to accept a full-time position as Director of
Human Resources. Not wanting to leave her beloved preschool or its families
in the lurch, she gave a year’s notice and worked both jobs during that time.
After she moved the department’s focus from advocating employee rights to
developing their personal growth, Brozak offered another challenge – heading
up a catalog. When the catalog’s home designs sold well, he decided to test
her financial judgment by making her Operations Director. Soon Reimer was
put in control of all the company’s publishing and named Vice President for
New Product Development.
By 1996, after 13 years at the helm of his company, Brozak began handing
day-to-day operations over to Reimer. In 1997 she was officially named President
of the company.
Despite her rapid advancement, it wasn’t all smooth sailing along the way.
Because the majority of the firm’s customers were builders, she had to prove
herself in a male-dominated field. Reimer visited builders across the country,
asking for their input and learning about their challenges. Today, she is
a popular speaker at national builder conventions with a keen insight into
market trends.
Maintaining Design Basics’ momentum was a daunting challenge. During the
early 1990’s, it had experienced tremendous growth – with sales increasing
700%. The company was named to INC Magazine’s top 500 list as one of America’s
fastest growing companies two consecutive years. Its designs won prestigious
national awards.
By 1997 when Linda took the reigns of the company, the housing industry was
no longer booming and the home design market had become saturated and highly
competitive. “We needed better cost controls. I had to make many difficult
budgeting decisions and place restrictions on spending,” Reimer recalls.
“It was a time of strategic planning and refocusing,” Reimer continues. “We had
to figure out how to get our plans everywhere – to build a huge, broad customer
base, not only builders.”
Despite a fluctuating economy, the company is still growing at a steady rate,
according to Reimer. “Today, many of our clients are consumers. Design Basics’ plans
are marketed in 98% of the national home publications and in lumber yards
and are featured in newspapers across the country every week. Our own publications
are sold at Barnes and Noble and Borders. Maximizing opportunities on the
Internet has allowed us to sell our plans throughout the world.”
Onlookers say Reimer’s management style is one of the keys to her success.
She often creates positions based on individuals’ strengths and interests,
rather than asking an employee to fit into a position. She encourages personal
growth and responsibility; many departments within the firm are self-directed.
Employees are encouraged to contribute ideas which may not be related to
their own departments. A recent employee contest focusing on new marketing
ideas resulted in a web store that markets regional artwork.
One employee comments, “Linda leads with her head and her heart. She has
created a positive environment where people enjoy coming to work and a close-knit
staff that celebrates one another’s birthdays, gathers for potlucks and gets
together for a Thanksgiving smorgasbord.”
Looking back, Reimer is pleased with the turn her life has taken. “I thought
nothing could beat raising children and being a teacher, knowing I was making
a difference in children’s lives. Today, I’m still trying to make a difference
for my employees, our builders and thousands of home buyers. So, in the second
half of my life…I’m having the greatest time.”
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