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Name: John Lesser
Degree and Year: BJ '50 (Advertising)
Company: John Lesser and Associates
Title: Owner
City and State: Kings Point, N.Y.
John Lesser, BJ '50
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John Lesser, BJ '50, has spent 57 successful years in the advertising and promotions field, serving major corporate clients such as Sharp, Toshiba, Panasonic and Olympus Optical, just to name a few. Now focused on just one client with the consultative agency he founded in 1971, John Lesser and Associates, Lesser took time to reflect on his career and the role the School played in his life. The following is his account of a true Missouri Journalism success story.
Learning Lessons in the Military
After graduation, I returned to New York City and joined an Italian sewing machine company, Necchi, as ad manager. It was a hot product in the 1950s with print advertising in major women's magazines and network TV. The advertising agency was Doyle, Dane, Bernbach -- a hot agency of that era.
The Korean War intervened. My ROTC commission in the Air Force was activated, and I became the public information officer at Laughlin Air Force Base on the Mexican border in Texas. At the beginning of my stay, it was a jet fighter training base for both American and foreign pilots. Then, it became the training base for pilots of U-2 spy planes.
During my stay at Laughlin, I noticed that an editor of the weekly Army-Air Force Times was an MU graduate. The base was located in the heart of West Texas cowboy country, and my base commander had trained as a cavalry officer while at West Point. I arranged for the base commander to be the marshal for an important local charity parade, and subsequently, I used my MU connection to get a large photo of him (waving to the crowds while leading a charity parade) on the front page of Army-Air Force Times. He received congratulatory messages from his West Point classmates and comrades-in-arms throughout the world. Loved it! Lt. Lesser was forever a hero!
Building a Successful Career
Upon return from the service, I had a few successively more important corporate jobs in New York City, including assistant sales promotion manager of United States Plywood and sales promotion manager of the B.F. Goodrich Company (a fantastic plum which I left because the company relocated its headquarters from New York City to Akron, Ohio). Then, I joined SCM Corporation, the manufacturer of Smith-Corona Typewriters, Marchant Calculators, coated paper copiers and a primitive punch card data processor/computer. With a series of promotions, I became the advertising and sales promotion manager worldwide.
In 1971 (about 20 years after graduation), I had a major change in my life. I was invited by SCM Corporation to organize a house advertising and sales promotion agency which would be located in not-too-shabby company offices (on the 39th floor of a skyscraper on New York's Park Avenue.) It came with a multi-year contract.
John Lesser and Associates was underway.
We added a second client, Sharp Electronics, through a recommendation by the president of Smith-Corona to the president of Sharp USA. The work for Sharp lasted more than 15 years and was of a promotional nature: literature, sales contests, sales meetings for personnel and customers. That relationship with Sharp led to referrals to a number of Japanese companies for which we handled sales promotion at first, followed by print advertising and trade-related product publicity and, finally, sales and marketing consultative advice.
The Japanese companies with which we enjoyed long relationships included (in addition to Sharp): Toshiba, Panasonic, Olympus Optical and Brother Typewriters. We worked with each of these companies for more than a dozen years, all very good relationships. We also had a large American company client, American Brands (formerly American Tobacco).
Our offices were in the Graybar Building, the mid-town New York City home for Coca-Cola, J. Walter Thompson Advertising (my company's first landlord) and numerous foreign nations' delegation offices (the United Nations was two blocks away).
Changing the Business
After about 25-30 years, the business began to retract. The needs of the clients changed and required different skills (largely more electronics oriented). I no longer had the hunger and need to solicit new clients. The downsized business moved from mid-town Manhattan to suburban offices on Long Island near my home in Kings Point, N.Y.
Now, there is one client left, a client with which we have worked for 34 years. It is Nishiyama Corporation, a group of mid-sized, mid-level technology industrial Japanese companies. For Nishiyama, the work is of a purely consultant nature, involving sales and marketing, personnel management, rental of office space, and contacts with attorneys and accountants. Nishiyama serves its own product interests as well as a trading company for other Japanese companies and government departments.
It has been a career rewarded in many ways, among which are satisfaction from client respect for jobs well done; close and permanent relationships with employees, clients, and vendors; and a decent income.
Realizing the School's Impact
About ten years or so ago, I found myself with time on my hands after a conference in Kansas City, Mo. I used the time to rent a car and return to Columbia for nostalgia sake. Besides visiting the sites of former residences in my college days, I stood between Jay Neff and Walter Williams Halls. I was gripped with emotion and stood there crying -- with remembrances of joy. I was surrounded by students with offers to supply any needed help. I explained my emotional feelings.
I had the same feelings about the importance of the J-School in my life when I returned for the 1950 class reunion in 2000. I may have it again when I return in September for the School's centennial celebration.
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