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Buying the Business, Rebuilding the Culture: Chad Bauer on Transforming a Legacy Agency
Published 3 days, 6 hours ago
Description
Buying an established business sounds like a shortcut. The customers are already there. The name is already known. The history is already written.
But that may be exactly the problem.
Because when Chad Bauer took over SR&B Advertising, he was not starting with a blank page. He was stepping into decades of habits, expectations, relationships, and assumptions. His challenge was not simply to keep the business alive. It was to decide what deserved to be preserved, what needed to be rebuilt, and whether he had the courage to change a company that already had a past.
My guest today, Chad Bauer, is President and Owner of SR&B Advertising, a Baltimore-area advertising agency with more than 60 years of history.
Chad’s story is not the typical founder story of launching something from nothing.
His journey involved stepping into an established business, buying it, and then facing the much harder question: how do you honor what came before while building what comes next?
Chad grew up around the advertising business, learning from his father inside one of Baltimore’s long-standing firms. But taking over a legacy company is not the same as inheriting a finished playbook.
It meant challenging old assumptions, rebuilding culture, creating systems, and moving the agency from tradition into a more nimble, growth-focused future.
What makes Chad’s story especially interesting is that SR&B has grown through referrals, not a traditional outside sales team.
That suggests something deeper than marketing tactics. It suggests trust, relationships, delivery, and a company culture strong enough to make clients want to tell others.
Today, we’ll talk about what it really takes to buy and transform a legacy business, the mistakes founders make when they confuse tradition with strategy, and why an honest story may be more powerful than a polished success case.
SR&B Advertising
https://www.srbadv.com
But that may be exactly the problem.
Because when Chad Bauer took over SR&B Advertising, he was not starting with a blank page. He was stepping into decades of habits, expectations, relationships, and assumptions. His challenge was not simply to keep the business alive. It was to decide what deserved to be preserved, what needed to be rebuilt, and whether he had the courage to change a company that already had a past.
My guest today, Chad Bauer, is President and Owner of SR&B Advertising, a Baltimore-area advertising agency with more than 60 years of history.
Chad’s story is not the typical founder story of launching something from nothing.
His journey involved stepping into an established business, buying it, and then facing the much harder question: how do you honor what came before while building what comes next?
Chad grew up around the advertising business, learning from his father inside one of Baltimore’s long-standing firms. But taking over a legacy company is not the same as inheriting a finished playbook.
It meant challenging old assumptions, rebuilding culture, creating systems, and moving the agency from tradition into a more nimble, growth-focused future.
What makes Chad’s story especially interesting is that SR&B has grown through referrals, not a traditional outside sales team.
That suggests something deeper than marketing tactics. It suggests trust, relationships, delivery, and a company culture strong enough to make clients want to tell others.
Today, we’ll talk about what it really takes to buy and transform a legacy business, the mistakes founders make when they confuse tradition with strategy, and why an honest story may be more powerful than a polished success case.
SR&B Advertising
https://www.srbadv.com