Fred Davies

Fred Davies passed away in early August at the age of 84 after a long battle with illness. Fred led Moores for the majority of my time at the company.

I was recruited in 1985 and reported to him for the next 16 years until, in a surprising turn of events, in 2001, he called the directors to the boardroom to advise he was leaving immediately. He said it was always his plan and the two senior Masco staff, who flanked him, nodded sagely. Masco were the American holding company who’d bought Moores in 1996. Up until that point the company had been a 1987 management buy out from George Moore. (George had pocketed about £87m from this disposal.)

Frankly, Fred was as shocked as the rest of us at his departure. Masco had decided to replace him well in advance and his replacement had had time to buy a house in Harrogate and move in. The new man turned up the next day fully briefed and ingratiating himself with the shocked directors. Fred’s brutal axing was not a complete surprise, if you analysed his relationship with Masco. However, it was very much the beginning of the end of the company as an industry leader and benchmark for UK furniture manufacturing and distribution profitability.

The company I joined was formal and a little eccentric to the point of extremes. In internal meetings staff addressed each other as ‘Mr’ so and so. You never addressed directors by their first names and initials became the norm for each of us. Secretaries took minutes of the most senior meetings, there was an exclusive director’s dining room with a Cordon bleu cook and Saturday morning attendance and working was expected by senior employees.  The corridor that accommodated Mr Moore, until he departed, had radios playing at low volume outside each office to prevent any eavesdropping. What you may have learned that needed such secrecy I can’t imagine. Secretaries luxuriated in the status of their director and seemed gatekeepers who maintained the mysticism of their bosses. 

Not all this was Fred’s creation but it persisted for some years and was quite restrictive. Fred himself maintained his distance and authority. In work he was serious and spent no time on social niceties. I know outside of Moores a different personality was evident. One former employee recounted his first encounter as a new recruit in the office of his boss when Fred walked in and declared “I didn’t pick you” and walked out again. I also recollect asking Fred after a few weeks, after my joining, if I was doing alright? I was quite an insecure yet ambitious new manager. Fred put me at ease (not) by reflecting on the question and affirming that my performance was ‘broadly acceptable’!

The background needs to be set but his talent and gift was a sharp commercial mind, a quite indomitable personality, complete authority and a good judge of people if not sensitive to their feelings! His directors were industry leading and happy to be left to get on with the job with minimal coaching or oversight. The structure of the company was also clear sighted: he shut the retail division factory up in Newton Aycliffe not long after it became his responsibility. Its competitors were larger, had more volume and had better customers. Insuperable advantages. There would be no retrieval so he shut the business and we pursued retail from Wetherby. Commercially he made his mark in the company with a clear and unemotional understanding of the customers and market place.

For example, the customer often wasn’t the company who bought the furniture. It was, in the case of Local Authorities, the architect. Moores was a strict adherent to British Standards and our furniture was the best design for any social housing application. However, the order and payment was with a contractor who wanted the product for a low price, delivered on short lead times and discounts for paying promptly. They spent literally £millions with Moores, however, the actual specifier was an architect who simply wanted our product and wouldn’t brook the contractor buying an alternative despite their energetic trying. Hence in many instances the contractor had to accept high prices, fixed delivery timescales and if he wanted a payment settlement discount we’d add 5% to the quotation so he could have it back when he paid his bill! Most of our competition coveted contractors and danced to their tune. To maintain our discipline through a large sales force who interfaced with the contractors required, on occasion, an iron will. Fred was unbending, as were his anointed disciples such as myself.

Over his years as the Managing Director and then Chief Executive Officer the profits and gross margin were exemplary. Of course his team delivered the targets and worked hard but ultimately he oversaw this financial performance. Talking of team the fact that Moores developed so many people who went elsewhere in the industry to attain riches or success was a function of what a good academy Moores was with its structure and professional management. I personally had the ride of my life. In 1987 I became a ‘founder’ as I joined the management buy out team; one of two non-directors.

Philip Turnpenny, Steven Wicks, Tony Ives, Peter Thorndyke, Fred Davies, Geoff Potts, Richard Bown, Derek Frost & Clive Walley – the management buyout team

I then was invited to join the board a couple of years later. I was nicely on the path to a Jaguar XJ6!  All corporations have their stresses and I can think of some politics and inter personal problems that were part of the 16 years where Fred was viewed badly by some of his senior reports. It’s indisputable though that the money they earned was exceptional and ultimately set them up for life after their exit. Which brings us back to Fred’s departure.

Masco bought Moores with the improbable declaration that they’d be hands off. After all why buy an industry leading company to interfere with it? However, we were a wholly owned subsidiary and some senior European Masco management wanted to leverage what they saw as ‘synergies’ across the group or have us inter trade etc. Fred was less than enthusiastic, on occasion, about these supernumeraries to the point of rudeness and certainly didn’t feel he was a subordinate to this band of European Masco employees even if they did. It maybe didn’t help that Fred had many outside interests/projects that considerably reduced his time in the office. We’d grown used to his absences but Masco must have noticed his time away. 

For all this disdain he did ‘dip in’ to other Masco company ideas and the whole move from assembling our private housing cabinets with screws to glue and dowel started life with a visit to a Masco factory in Spain that inspired him. Not only this he was still taking dramatic operational decisions such as changing leadership of the manufacturing function allowing the whole activity of many departments and hundreds of employees to be reorganised and a new culture implemented. The improvement was stunning when it bedded in. However, one day the axe fell and Fred was gone. No doubt they thought a new more open and Masco friendly leader would be the way forward.

Moores from here continued to grow and for a few years made good profits and there remained talent in the top team with new members. However, an overly complicated business that grew too fast, completely out of control in certain areas, led to operational crises. Better leadership at Wetherby or from Masco USA and Europe wouldn’t have led us into this chaos. The upshot ultimately, not too many years down the line, was a halved turnover, halved workforce, growing year on year losses, customers enthusiastically shed(!) and, predictably at Moores’ expense, flourishing competitors. Today the company seems ‘right sized’ and has a plan but it comes from a difficult place to make the progress we all desire.

Moores today is under different ownership. Masco disposed of Moores elegantly and generously as they completely withdrew from the cabinet business in Europe and the USA. Their stewardship at Moores was ultimately unsuccessful bordering on disastrous and fearfully expensive as they had to latterly continually pump £millions into an unprofitable business. For what it’s worth many of the directors, who didn’t voluntarily leave, perished through their iterations and strategies.

Fred grew a great business. I think his departure, which would have happened sooner rather than later as he approached retirement in 2001, would have been less damaging to the business had he not left overnight and enabled Masco to accelerate their interference and mismanagement. I also think we also would have been more cautious about the growth that eventually undid the company.

Fred, after leaving, hosted a dinner for his directors but then had no contact with the organisation or colleagues. I only know one former director he occasionally met or corresponded with. He spent his time between Yorkshire and South Africa and no doubt improved his golf handicap before ill health struck. 

He will remain one of the most influential people in my life.

10 thoughts on “Fred Davies

  1. Very interesting Tony, now I know a lot more about your career as a working man!  I am sorry for the lost of Fred but I am sure your will keep his memory alive as you continue to live the lessons your learned from him.  We leave tomorrow, flying  to Anchorage to start a week’s long cruise through the inside passage down to Vancouver, Canada.  We have been to Alaska several times but this trip will provide us a different prospective from the seaward side.  Expect some photos along the way! Please give your bride hug from me, and give Sam a pat as well! Bob 

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    1. Bob, thank you as always for reading this blog. I have a page that covers my old employer and I’m fortunate to have some followers that this would mean quite a lot to. Anna wants to cruise up that way. Alaska appeals, Vancouver is a beautiful city as is the western coast of Canada. I shall pass on that hug and look forward to the photos. Tony

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  2. What an excellent piece. I remember first meeting him as a young management trainee, and the awe I had for him. He indeed led a remarkable company at the time, and your assessment of the masco debacle and their treatment of an unloved subsidiary like it was a throw away toy for over promoted corporate executives to play with is spot on.

    I was fortunate to have been able to spend time with proper leaders at Moores, with yourself a prime example, who equipped me with skills and practices (and priceless phrases!) that I still use today.

    Happy memories tinged with an element of sadness about where it all ended up.

    But a great write you’ve done, with your gratitude and pride jumping off the page.

    A

    Andy Radcliffe
    ​Group Chief Executive Officer
    ​Esh Group
    ​​​​
    Email: andy.radcliffe@esh.uk.comandy.radcliffe@esh.uk.com
    [cid:ignored-in-diff-B23C9393-7167-466A-A312-0E6B4DA71995]https://www.eshgroup.co.uk/news-social/esh-group-recognised-as-one-of-the-uks-best-managed-private-companies/

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    1. Andy, thank you, not least for reading this stuff. As I commented to PET I wondered how this would read for other directors, your affirmation of my take on Masco is pleasing. Your assessment of my talent is something I wish I could pretend to be worth but very kind of you though. Fortunately you didn’t wither in that environment but gathered up the ‘lessons’ and moved on to greater things. However, we both probably know it’s my collection of phrases that has been the secret of your success…

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  3. Hi Tony,
    An excellent review of Fred and his contribution to Moores. I had some major disagreements with him, especially at the time of the original buyout, but he was the reason behind the growth of the company and its profitability. Unfortunately he could not cope with the input of corporate characters such as Roland Grassberger (I never did understand his role) and had a difficult relationship with all of them, which ultimately led to his abrupt dismissal.
    You end by saying that he remains one of the most influential people in your life. I believe that is true of all the directors and senior management that he worked with during his tenure. Certainly true in my case.
    Peter Thorndyke.

    Sent from my iPad

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    1. Peter, I wondered how my assessment of his career would read to those who were there before me, with me and had major disagreements. Thank you for your comments I really appreciate your confirmation of my interpretation of events. It shows the fragility of businesses and the danger of owners who really never had any particular understanding of their acquisitions, which extended to their appointed leaders. I hope you’re well. I popped in and saw RGB recently and he’s well and as usual DHC is indomitable.

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    1. John, thank you. When the problems hit Moores with the Financial Crisis of 2008/9 I was made redundant and, frankly, I never got back to a fulfilling job. As you’ll have read on these pages I haven’t stood still and have had a brilliant time since but you can feel my regret at the demise of a once terrific business.

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  4. What a lovely tribute to a leader clearly highly influential to your career and that of many others. You blend the man and his times very well with your description of his individual management style and how the company operated more generally. That is a very fine photo too.

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