Take Five: Putting some Popp in banking
- Take Five: Putting some Popp in banking
- Table of Experts: Reading the tea leaves
- Checking in on Wisconsin banks
- Beyond Lip Service In DEI
- Johnson Financial Group to sell its insurance business to Boston firm
- Johnson Financial Group plans new branches, including in West Milwaukee
- New Johnson Financial Group Branch Planned In West Milwaukee and Delafield
- WisBusiness: the Podcast with Brian Andrew, Johnson Financial Group
- Johnson Wealth Fixed Income Tilts at Emerging Markets Debt, Mortgage Backed Securities
- Your Financial Foundation with Al Araque on the Lifeblood Podcast
- Where Some Investors See A Banking Disaster, Others See Opportunities
- Unexpected health insurance surprise possible when pandemic insurance programs expire
- Expert Advice on Finding the Best Car Insurance Company for Your Needs
- Bond Investors: Be a Prudent Pig, not a Yield Hog
- Women Insurance Pros on Balance, Community and the Future
- Financial Planning For Couples Who Totally Disagree
- Chief Investment Officer Brian Andrew Provides 2023 Outlook on the GoGedders Podcast
- How To Help Clients Who Own Businesses in Declining Industries
- Johnson Financial Group presents 'Lightfield' coming to Cathedral Square Park
- Johnson Financial Group Named Top LGBTQ Workplace
- Financial advice is the midlife job that women want – but don’t know exists
- Expert Insight for Beginner Rental Property Investors
- Meet the RIA: Johnson Financial Group
- Meet the RIA: Johnson Financial Group
- Coolest thing made in Wisconsin announced by WMC and Johnson Financial Group
- Corporate Charitable Contributors in Wisconsin
- Still The Fed!? | Economic Outlook
- 'Coolest Thing Made in Wis.' voting begins
- Johnson Financial Group and Habitat for Humanity Kenosha work together to help homeowners
- Inflation 101: How the Market Is Changing Around Us
- We have a responsibility to be solution providers for our customers
- Being a leader is a team sport
- Jason Herried Joins Chuck Jaffe on Money Life
- Have questions about "Gray Divorce"? Attorney Kelly Mould, CRP® can help.
- Jazz in the Park Is Back Thursday Nights Starting July 21
- People in Business - Al Araque
- 2022 Housing Market Overview: Everything You Need to Know
- "Give Back More Than You Take" - Helen Johnson-Leipold
- A Brief History of Economic Crises, Crashes and Recoveries
- Kelly Mould and Kate Trudell Earn State Bar Award for Outstanding Service
- JFG Supports Affordable Housing through FHLBank Chicago
- Helen Johnson-Leipold shares business tips for success at Marquette speaker series
- Notable Commercial Banking Leaders: Thomas Moore
- Notable Commercial Banking Leaders: Viktor Gottlieb
- Johnson Financial Group partners with Racine Habitat for Humanity to service mortgages at no cost
- Upcoming Lineup Of Broadway Shows Announced At Marcus Performing Arts Center
- See the Milwaukee Business Journal's 2022 Real Estate Award winners
- Joe Maier “Employers are going to have to rethink their practices”
- Emotional Investments: Why They Happen and How to Avoid Them
- Investors are a growing force in the residential real estate market, but how should sellers evaluate these offers?
- Inflation advice for younger colleagues
- Amber Krogman: 40 Under 40
- The Last Word: Planning to make a lasting impact
- Rising Stars in Wealth Management: Robert Schneider
- Should You Sell Your House to an Investment Company?
- Evoking change within the Milwaukee community with Johnson Financial Group's Jim Popp
- Brian Andrew Provides 2022 Outlook on TD Ameritrade's Market on Close Show
- A Shift in the Tech Landscape
- Evoking change within the Milwaukee community with Jim Popp, CEO of Johnson Financial Group
- The Rising Trend Of "Gray Divorce" with Kelly Mould of Johnson Financial Group
- How the Fed's Rate Hikes Will Affect Your Finances
- Evoking change within the Milwaukee community with Jim Popp, CEO of Johnson Financial Group
- Johnson Financial Group Recognized on Financial Planning's 2021 RIA Leaders List
- Financial Education For Teens
- Find out why these business leaders are 2021 Milwaukee-area power brokers
- Thoughts for business executives on future-proofing a business
- Jim Popp Joins Fox 6 to Announce the Milwaukee Holiday Light Festival
- Milwaukee’s Holiday Lights Festival Kicks Off This Week!
- 2022 Market Outlook with Brian Andrew of Johnson Financial Group
- Notable Women in Insurance: Joanne Szymaszek
- Brian Andrew Joins Gene Mueller on WTMJ Radio
- #FreeBritney: When Protections Turn Toxic
- WisBusiness: the Podcast with Jim Popp, president and CEO of Johnson Financial Group
- M&A Environment Heating Up, Says Johnson Wealth
- WE Energies Customer Spotlight On Energy Efficiency
- Your home renovation may require an insurance update. Here’s why.
- Johnson Financial Group donates $500,000 to United Way organizations across Wisconsin
- Madison’s Moving Business Forward Podcast
- Thoughts for business executives on return-to-office technology
- First look: Johnson Financial Group's new Downtown offices and branch
- Johnson Financial Group Shows Off High-Rise Office
- Six Tips for Developing a Business Plan for Uncertain Financial Times
- The sky’s the limit for an advisor dedicated to working with airline pilots
- Is Bitcoin Here to Stay? An Assessment of Opportunities and Risk
- You may have a ‘huge edge over high-powered investors,’ says investing risk expert: Here’s why
- Executive Insights with Jim Popp
- CEO Jim Popp Honored as Distinguished Executive
- 2021 Guide to Wealth Management: A War on Wealth?
- Notable Alumni: Scott Cooney
- Jason Herried Joins Chuck Jaffe on Money Life Market Call
- Top Workplaces 2021: Q&A with three CEOs who were recognized for their leadership during a challenging year
- How will Biden's new tax plan affect you?
- American Jobs Plan: Potential Implications for You and Your Business
- Get on the Right Track to Financial Freedom
- Greater Madison area Top Workplaces 2021
- The Crazy Housing Market: Buy, Sell or stay on the sidelines?
- UPAF Ride for the Arts series will take place over three June weekends
- Navigating the Financial Market in 2021 with Brian Andrew of Johnson Financial Group
- Financial services industry helped guide businesses through sharp downturn: Banks hustled to meet massive PPP demand
- Financial services industry helped guide businesses through sharp downturn: Banks hustled to meet massive PPP demand
- Johnson Financial Group matches food donations to help feed Wisconsin families
- Johnson Financial Group: To donate $300,000 to help feed Wisconsin families
- Women in Leadership: Sharing & Celebrating Women's Stories
- 2020 Milwaukee-area power brokers
- Dow Surges to Highest Level Since February on Vaccine Results, Biden Win
- Johnson Financial Group Named One of Wisconsin's Largest Corporate Charitable Contributors
- Brian Andrew joins TD Ameritrade Network's Market on Close Show
- Don't forget about the "I" in D&I
- Johnson Financial Group to move Milwaukee offices to Cathedral Place
- Pandemic Uncertainty Leaves Wisconsin Bankers Ready To Reserve
- What's going on in the financial markets right now with Jim Popp of Johnson Financial Group
- Downside risk is now a pit, not a chasm. Still, underweight stocks & overweight (some) bonds.
- Brian Andrew joins TD Ameritrade Network's Market on Close Show
- Why You Want To Keep Your Politics Separate From Your Investing
- Johnson Financial Group growing, still hiring on its 50th anniversary year
- The COVID Calculation
- Pleasant Prairie company gets boost from Paycheck Protection Program
- Banks locally, statewide step up to help businesses obtain $8.3 billion in PPP
- Johnson Financial Group donates $200K to support United Way, other nonprofits during COVID-19 pandemic
- Second round of PPP starts slowly as Milwaukee-area businesses still await loans
- Brian Andrew joins Chuck Jaffe on Money Life
- Wisconsin lenders ready to shell out hundreds of millions in Paycheck Protection Program loans
- Brian Andrew joins TD Ameritrade Network's Market on Close Show
- Planning opportunities under the CARES Act
- Brian Andrew joins WTMJ to discuss coronavirus and its impact on the economy
- Brian Andrew Joins Gene Mueller on WTMJ Radio
- BizTimes Media Announces Milwaukee’s Notable Women in Commercial Banking
- Johnson Financial Group adviser honored
- Tech-driven R&D goes beyond the budget. Some Milwaukee execs speak up
- What would cause markets to react after Fed meeting
- Banking official remains confident in local economy's growth
- Brian Andrew joins Chuck Jaffe on Money Life
- Rock County home prices continue to climb
- The coolest thing made in Wisconsin
- Dan Defnet named president of Johnson Bank
- Future Returns: Ignore Politics When Investing
- Local banker to get Forward Janesville's Lifetime Achievement Award
- Wisconsin Could See Economic Slowdown This Year, Not Recession
- When Corporate Bonds Are a Risky Investment
- Johnson Financial Group becomes Broadway at the Marcus Center title sponsor
- Getting Ready to Exit: What Baby Boomers know and should know about getting their business ready for sale
- Jim Popp in the News
- Jason Herried's Take on the 'Booms and Busts' of the Economy
- Johnson Insurance creates new 'workplace of choice'
- Paul Ryan lauds Harvard award-winner Helen Johnson-Leipold
- Business Leader of the Year Helen Johnson-Leipold leads big parts of the Johnson family business
- Johnson Financial Investment Expert: More growth, low inflation ahead
- Foxconn's Balance Sheet Tipped in Mt. Pleasant's Favor
- JFG honored by Department of Defense
- The Open Road comes to the Milwaukee Art Museum
- 3 business lessons from the new Johnson Financial Group CEO
- Executive Q&A: Jim Popp takes the helm at Johnson Financial Group
- Banking exec Jim Popp named president of Johnson Bank
- Banker: Focus on millennials, not president
- American Birkebeiner Legacy Lives on with Support from Johnson Bank and Johnson Family Foundation
- Johnson Financial's CIO always focused on learning: Brian Andrew
- TEMPO MILWAUKEE 2020
James Popp, CEO of Johnson Financial Group in Racine, likes to recount how he got into banking after being “fired” by the San Francisco 49ers, the Chicago Bears, and the Houston Oilers [now the Tennessee Titans]. Once football was done, the native of Libertyville, Illinois parlayed an economics major and a business minor into an MBA in finance from Vanderbilt University. Popp, 54, saw very different leadership styles from Bill Walsh and Mike Ditka, but our Take Five conversation focused more on the appetite for risk of today's business leaders.
IB: Based on what you've seen with recent business lending, how would you assess the appetite for risk in the Wisconsin business community?
Popp: The economy is doing very well right now. We're kind of long into the [business] cycle and generally in the banking business, when we get long into the cycle, more folks are willing to lend and it's a very active market right now. We're seeing a pretty competitive market, and the appetite for risk is going up a little bit.
IB: Does that include an increased interest in a metric that had been lagging—capital spending on business equipment by companies?
Popp: We started out in this recovery several years ago with what people were calling a jobless recovery, and then there was a little bit of trepidation about investing because people weren't sure what would happen from a regulatory standpoint. In the past several years, there has been a little bit more optimism and so we're seeing more capital spending. Our customers are building buildings, buying equipment, investing in their plants and equipment, and growing their businesses.
IB: How much did the tax reform law have to do with that? When you cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent, and many pass-through businesses will also benefit from this law, they figure to have more wherewithal to be more confident.
Popp: Like I said earlier, certainly the absolute value of that from a tax standpoint is great for businesses and it spurs some activity. The other thing that really spurred activity was just taking away the uncertainty. There was some uncertainty about whether anything was going to happen or not happen, and when that started to abate a little bit, it freed people up to make investments that had been on the shelf for a little while.
IB: What does the Foxconn development mean for southeastern Wisconsin and the state in general, particularly the financial services sector?
Popp: Foxconn is an incredibly complex set of circumstances, projects, and other things. If it comes to fruition as we hope it's going to, you can't argue with bringing that kind of economic activity and jobs and business activity to the region. We'll all be very pleased if it happens that way. From a banking and financial services standpoint, it means more consumers, it means more consumer lending, it means housing, it means building buildings, and it means attracting companies even outside of Foxconn to a region that has the capacity to lend to them and create great business opportunities. That high tide, if it all works well, will lift all the boats. There will be plenty for all of us to do.
IB: Given the interest, especially with younger consumers, in banking via smartphone apps, what's your take on the long-term viability of bank branches? In a decade, will the bank branch be a fondly remembered relic?
Popp: That's funny question and it's a great question because I've been in this business for 30 years plus, and 30 years ago we were talking about the demise of bricks and mortar. I don't know the exact numbers, but I suspect that the picture across the country is the growth in branches is in the single digit percentages, 3 percent maybe. Meanwhile, the size of the branches has gone down by 30 or 40 percent. So I don't think branches are going away, but branches are becoming smarter, they are becoming smaller, they are more focused on what our customers and consumers value, and they are becoming more technologically capable. Our customers continue to come into the branch and use their technology, or our technology, to do business, but they also still want some personal face-to-face and connection. So it's going to be a little bit of both, but bank braches will definitely be smaller and more focused on some of those things. The demographic is changing.
IB: You played tight end at Vanderbilt University and had stints with three NFL teams. From your experience in athletics, does playing sports build character or reveal it?
Popp: Both. That's a great way to phrase the question. It absolutely allows you to build character and reveal character. What I love about people who have played sports—and not even just sports because I don't care if you're in a play, in the band, or in sports—anything that involves a team allows you to learn how to do your job and be part of a team, and do what you can do for the greater good of the organization as a team. The flip side—revealing character—is it reveals those who can step up when things get really tough and those who don't or won't. So I think sports are a great avenue to build character and reveal character.
IB: When were you first eligible for the NFL draft?
Popp: I was drafted in 1986 [in the eighth round] by the San Francisco 49ers.
IB: That was a tough team to make back then.
Popp: I had a great opportunity. They were going to keep three tight ends, and I was the No. 3 tight end, and honestly I got hurt. I got a little dinged up, and I had never been hurt before. The reality is that in that business, if you get hurt, miss time, and can't play, it's next man up. The next guy came in and two weeks later I was done. I was out.
IB: So in training camp for a while, you were catching balls from Joe Montana?
Popp: I was catching balls from Montana, and what I wound up with in my short stint in the NFL were a lot of really funny stories but not a lot of money. But think about it. Think about spending a summer with Joe Montana and Dwight Clark and Jerry Rice and all these guys you spend a lot of time with, and then the next year it's Walter Payton and Matt Suhey and Jim McMahon and Dan Hampton and Mike Singletary in Chicago. Those teams had two very different coaches, Bill Walsh in San Francisco and Mike Ditka in Chicago. With Bill, it was ’Come out in shorts and helmets because I know that you know how to play,‘ whereas Mike Ditka was, ‘We're strapping it on every day because whoever is still standing at the end is going to play.’ They were very different coaches.
IB: I hope [49ers Hall of Fame safety] Ronnie Lott never belted you while going over the middle. Popp: Actually, I would say the hardest I was ever hit was buy a guy named Todd Bell, who played for the Bears. In practice, he knocked me out one time. He just lit me up. That was a welcome‐to‐the‐NFL moment.