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High Flying CommutersBy: Editorial StaffWhat a way to live! Some top executives are choosing Southwest Florida as home and jetting off for business. |
After a busy day at work, Jim Malone hops onto a jet and
flies home to Naples.
For three years, this 59-year-old executive has commuted to
cities like New York and Houston and even globally to conduct business while
living in Naples because of the lifestyle it affords. As founding partner and
managing director of Bridge Associates, Malone works with billion-dollar public
and privately owned companies in the aerospace, real estate and manufacturing
industries to aid in turnarounds, restructuring and crisis management.
“There is virtually not a week that goes by that I don’t
travel out of Naples,” Malone says. “That’s part of why I love living here. You
work hard, you’re focused, you’re doing the best job possible for your clients
during the week, and part of the drive is to know that 12 months out of the
year you’re going home to be involved with people that are important to you and
activities you enjoy among the most beautiful surroundings anywhere in the
world.”
Long a playground for the wealthy and retired, Southwest
Florida is attracting a new breed of business elite: hardworking pre-retirement
executives and business owners who want the area’s lifestyle now. Just check
out the activity at Naples Municipal Airport every Sunday evening and Monday
morning, as Gulfstream jets with $50-million price tags, smaller planes like
the Cessna 421 owned by local pest control executive Truly Nolen, and other
privately owned and corporate jets depart for New York, Minneapolis,
Tallahassee and Fort Lauderdale. Business executives are frequent fliers,
whether piloting themselves, chauffeured in the company jet with their company
logo on the tail, chartering or flying commercial.
“A lot of guys come in on Thursday night and leave Sunday or
Monday morning. We have several clients who have offices elsewhere, live here,
and commute back and forth. It’s good for us,” says Scott Phillips, owner and
chief executive officer of Jet1, which is based at Naples Municipal and
provides charter services, jet sales and leasing, hangar space and fuel, and
manages corporations’ planes. The business commuter is becoming less seasonal,
he adds.
At Southwest Florida International Airport, some travelers
admit they often bump into the same people. “My definition of knowing that you
travel too much is when your gate agent says, ‘Heather, you’re not going to
make your connection,’” says attorney Heather Gilchrist, who splits her time
between Naples and Louisville.
An “Opportunity-Driven” Lifestyle
Veteran businessman Nolen is no pest at Naples Municipal
Airport. Nearly every week, he departs on trips to his company’s locations in
Florida, California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas. Although he
occasionally charters a jet for extra-long trips, Nolen pilots his eight-seat
Cessna 421 (the company’s yellow, red and black mouse logo is painted on the
tail) about 90 percent of the time. “It’s got everything as far as the comfort,
but doesn’t have the speed of a jet,” he says.
Relying on assistants—often in two or three cities—Southwest
Florida’s high-flying executives are prepared to get in the air within hours,
if business calls. After years of travel, many have crafted seamless
organizational strategies, aided by technology.
Southwest Florida has become the headquarters for this kind
of lifestyle, says Rick Inatome, who founded two billion-dollar technology
companies, Computer City and Inacomp Computer Centers, and now lives full time
in Naples, where he has started Mentor Capital Partners, a venture capital
fund. “For some of us, fortunately, the work that we do we can do anywhere. If
you’re going to use anywhere as a home base, Naples is probably the most
wonderful place in the world to do it,” he says. “It doesn’t matter what city I
lived in, I’d have to be on a plane three or four days a week.”
Between his venture capital interests, his positions on the
boards of directors for companies such as Motorquest Automotive Group,
automotive consultant R.L. Polk and Co., AAA Michigan and insurance company
AIG, and the car dealerships he owns in Boston and Michigan, Inatome is used to
seeing Naples from the sky. “My primary business is investments. In that
business you’re looking at companies fairly frequently and you don’t have a
schedule or a pattern to it, it’s opportunity-driven,” he says. “It’s a fairly
frequent-changing schedule.”
Most high-fliers seem to enjoy the pace. For eight years,
media executive Brian Cobb has lived permanently in Naples, and for eight
years, he’s traveled at least a day or two every week. His company, Cobb Corp.,
which specializes in mergers and acquisitions of media properties and owns two
TV stations (WTXL in Tallahassee and KADY in Santa Barbara/Los Angeles), is
based in California. Depending on the deal, he could be in any city on any day.
“Most people that do what I do—which is travel a lot—do it by choice,” he says.
“A big group of my friends in Naples do the same thing I do.”
Getting around would be easier if he lived in a larger city,
Cobb admits. He owns part of a jet through one of the many popular fractional
jet ownership programs and uses that plane about 70 percent of the time.
Otherwise, he flies commercial airlines out of Southwest Florida International,
or heads over to Miami for a better selection of nonstop flights. Cobb, 57,
believes the payoff is worth it. “It’s an unbelievable feeling to fly in to
Naples at the end of the day when the sun’s about to come down,” he says. “It’s
a different feeling than people get flying into Pittsburgh.”
Following the Work
Airborne professionals must head out of town because there’s
not enough business for them here. Pest control executive Nolen, for example,
has a friend in the coal-mining business who lives in Naples but is in the same
position.
Mark Youngquist would rather work in Southwest Florida all
the time. But the demand for his expertise—film production—is not that great
here, so Youngquist, 52, ends up frequently flying to Minneapolis for business.
“It hasn’t gotten to be too much of a drag yet. It’s a way
of life. There’s the necessity of maintaining a business in Minneapolis and
trying to build a new company in this area. Hopefully I’ll someday be dependent
enough on business in this area,” says Youngquist, who has produced local
events like the Golden Apple awards (for teachers) for television.
Once a month, accessories buyer Linda Kutzler flies into New
York City for a week of client meetings. The rest of her travel is typically
international, as she heads to Europe, South America and Asia to spot new
trends for her client, a large United States retailer whose name she won’t
disclose. She usually knows two weeks in advance when she’s wanted in New York, but she’s always
prepared to go anywhere. “At the drop of the hat, I may need to fly to Italy
and meet [my clients] in a week,” she says.
When Dan Bevarly and his wife decided to raise their two
young daughters in Naples, he planned to uproot his public relations and
marketing firm from Louisville. But when he and his family moved here late last
year, he realized that while he was trying to build a client base in Southwest
Florida, he couldn’t say no to business in Kentucky. He decided to split his
time between the cities until he generated clients here, or found a full-time
marketing job. With e-mail and two cell phones, one with a Louisville number
and another with a Naples number, he runs his business from both locations. He
flies out of Southwest Florida International, and sometimes drives up to Tampa,
depending on who has the cheapest fare. “There have been some times on the
flight coming back when I’ve said, ‘I hate this,’” he admits. Then he adds:
“The nice thing about it is that you do have time to get your thoughts
together. It hasn’t been as taxing on me as I thought it might be.”
Attorney Gilchrist, who also commutes between Naples and
Louisville, lives in Louisville, where her husband works and her two children
are in school, but conducts her business in Naples, where she has another home
and an office. Gilchrist, who flies out of Southwest Florida International but
wishes she could afford charter services because of long waits to clear airport
security, chose Naples after her parents moved here and she began to meet
people who needed her to do estate work. Most of her clients live here part
time, too. “I get a lot of business from people that are transient as well,”
she says.
Choosing Southwest Florida
Although the lifestyle can be hectic, many executives plant
roots in the community through charitable giving, religious commitments and
involvement in their children’s schools.
That’s the case with Paul Bush, chairman and chief executive
officer of Jamestown, N.Y.-based Bush Industries, one of the country’s largest
furniture companies. Although Bush has a home in Jamestown, he spends most of
the year in Southwest Florida. Since he moved to Fort Myers 15 years ago, Bush
has donated time and financial resources to the YMCA of Lee County (a branch in
Fort Myers bears his name), the Children’s Hospital of Southwest Florida and
other local organizations. He travels every six weeks to New York to meet with
presidents of Bush Furniture, Bush Business Furniture, Bush Furniture Europe
and Bush Technologies divisions, which brought in sales of more than $346
million in 2001. Trade shows, meetings with clients and retailers, and industry
events also take him away from the area. He keeps organized with two
assistants—one in Fort Myers, where Bush Entertainment, a film and television
production company, is based, and another at the New York headquarters.
Armed with a cell phone, fax, e-mail and overnight