MONDAY FEBRUARY 25
My Mentor: Lending More Than Money

After biding his time as a senior commercial banker for Bank of Boston in such far-flung places as Cameroon and Zimbabwe in the early 1980s, Peter Hermann returned to the U.S. with aspirations of running his own show. But after all his globe-trotting, not just any show would do.

February 2008

A two-year stint spearheading a new lending division with partner Michel Reichert helped prove his mettle and (temporarily) satisfy his ambitions, but now he was ready to explore uncharted territory: launching a private-equity division within the venerable New England bank. All he had to do was persuade his boss, Chad Gifford, Bank of Boston’s vice chairman at the time, to lend his support (and money).

Twenty-two years later, Hermann, 53, credits the 65-year-old Gifford — now the chairman emeritus of Bank of America, thanks to a string of mergers that brought Bank of Boston into the BofA fold — with having had the vision and confidence to help him achieve success in private equity. After departing Bank of Boston with his partners in 1994, Hermann founded Heritage Partners, a Boston-based private-equity firm focused on buying family-owned businesses.

Hermann:Michel and I knew very little about private equity at the time. We were lenders. But we convinced Chad we knew about analyzing businesses. He gave us the bank's full support and encouraged us to try. At the time, KKR and Citibank were about the only leading names within the asset class.

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