Henderson Agency

"[2][5] The advertising agency, which received New York Times coverage,[6] planned for its founder's retirement with succession planning, i.e. building and extending its bench strength.

[7] The buildup was not all straight line: In 1979, a "five-year veteran" was named agency president,[8] yet someone else who had joined in 1978 displaced him in 1982.

[7] In April 2006, the headline "A South Carolina Agency Closes Its Doors" told the end of what The New York Times called Henderson Advertising.

"[12] A 2017, look-back by a local newspaper wrote that it "grew to become the largest in the Southeast and among the top 1 percent in the nation," adding that they "built a modern headquarters ... (1978), adding a second building in 1984.

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