The third generation usually destroys a family business, but Jim Perdue ended up growing his century-old poultry company tenfold by focusing on all-natural premium meatsâbeyond chickenâand not following the flock. https://t.co/6Rj2CIPFQH ðž: Aaron Kotowski for Forbes https://t.co/bwyc5Ton0n
@Forbes·2026幎5æ31æ¥Â·2ä»¶ã®ãœãŒã¹
èšäºãèªãé¢é£ãã ãžã§ã¯ã
ãã¹ãŠã®ãœãŒã¹
The third generation usually destroys a family business, but Jim Perdue ended up growing his century-old poultry company tenfold by focusing on all-natural premium meatsâbeyond chickenâand not following the flock. https://t.co/6Rj2CIPFQH ðž: Aaron Kotowski for Forbes https://t.co/bwyc5Ton0n
@Forbes
2026幎5æ31æ¥
Perdue heir Jim Perdue once walked away from the family businessâthen came back and grew it into a multibillion-dollar company. After leaving in his twenties, Perdue returned under an ultimatum from his father and went on to transform Perdue Farms into Americaâs fourth-largest chicken producer. Tod
@Forbes
2026幎5æ31æ¥
