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Return to Virginia Business - July 2004

Cover story

No fancy office for LandAmerica's CEO
Cost-cutting helped company breaking into Fortune 500

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by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
for Virginia Business

July 2004

When Lawyer’s Title Insurance Corp. spun off from Universal Leaf in 1991, things didn’t look good for the company. It had just come through two years of poor results, the victim of a stagnant real estate market plagued by high interest rates. All CEO Charles H. Foster Jr. could see was red ink. “It was like the faucet had turned off,” he says.

The 61-year-old Princeton graduate recalls his early days in the corporate hot seat from a cramped, cluttered office at LandAmerica Financial Group’s Richmond headquarters, the holding company for Lawyer’s Title, and the company Foster now heads. “Our values were low. The surprising thing was that no one came in and bought us.” As it turned out, LandAmerica did well by just hanging on, so well that in March of this year the company placed 483rd on the Fortune 500 list, with record revenues of $3.4 billion for 2003, sparked by record-low interest rates and booming real estate sales.

The relatively rapid ascent was an uphill battle all the way. After Lawyer’s Title spun off, it had to reconfigure. “We needed a board of directors, corporate governances; things we didn’t need before,” notes Foster. One thing was clear: Foster had to find ways to cut costs — across the board. When the company moved its Richmond headquarters from the West End to the city’s Southside, the employee cafeteria was the first casualty. “Then we decided what size offices we needed,” he says. All offices, including Foster’s, were trimmed to a standard size: 10 by 15 feet. “And then we looked at staffing requirements.”

A staffing overhaul shaved jobs and replaced them with a cadre of temporary workers and part-timers. Then came the carrot on the stick: Foster tied employee compensation to the company’s performance. The plan worked. “Before you knew it, we’d gotten our costs in line at a time when the real estate industry was in such a poor situation that banks were writing off loans.”

But the plan wasn’t short-term. It became the blueprint that would put LandAmerica, a holding company whose subsidiaries provide real estate transaction services for residential and commercial customers, not only on the Fortune 500, but also on the magazine’s prestigious list of most admired companies.

Even now, the number of employees is a fluid roster that bloats and shrinks in sync with the real estate industry. “Now we’re much more adept [at] having flexible costs associated with the people side of the business,” says Foster. Last year, for instance, the company staffed up with temporary and part-time workers to push through a tsunami of refinancings. The staff is leaner these days since the furious flurry of refis slowed as rates crept up.

Now, with 800 offices and 10,000 agents in the U S., Mexico, Canada and other overseas markets, keeping full-timers happy throughout frequent change is a challenge. Foster found that employee incentive plans were essential to LandAmerica’s future. And, like its work force, the company’s incentive plans move up and down with business volume. Pressed to sum up the corporate philosophy that earned LandAmerica its place among the country’s leading companies, Foster keeps it simple: “Mind your costs, and be disciplined.”

A decade ago, LandAmerica was product-driven. “We did title insurance,” Foster says. “Customers thought of us in those terms.” But industry changes in recent years have found its customers making new and different demands. “Large lenders who drive a lot of loans want a company to provide a variety of services. Because of that, we clearly have a culture driven by customer service.”

“Bundled services” has become a key term in industries from software to banking. Likewise, LandAmerica has sought to be all things to all people in the business of real estate transactions — lenders, developers, real estate agents, attorneys, and property buyers and sellers —handling everything from title searches to closings.

These days the company’s mantra is growth, says Foster. Last year, it expanded the products and services it offers primarily to the mortgage lending community, and it continues to make acquisitions that will help with this goal. It also added a home inspection division and is poised to move into other related areas, such as homeowner warranties. “With the huge rush in revenues, we popped into the Fortune 500,” says Foster. “We want to grow enough to stay there.” But staying on the list will be incidental to Foster’s mission. He says he won’t turn down the heat until LandAmerica is America’s number one service provider for real estate transactions.

 

Return to Virginia Business - July 2004


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