“helping someone out when they need it, you get a customer for life after that,” tepperman said.
tepperman’s has taken some of his grandfather’s innovative ideas and added a modern twist to them, he said. andrew found nate tepperman’s notebooks from the 1930s, filled with copies of the ads he ran in the windsor star.
“he kept a tally of the number of products he sold related to that ad, along with notes on things like the weather conditions at the time, right on that ad,” tepperman said. “he was doing early data analysis.”
the exterior of the tepperman’s store in windsor, shown on wednesday, feb. 26, 2025, sports a banner heralding the business’s 100th anniversary.
dan janisse
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windsor star
tepperman added the company’s business philosophy remains rooted in good customer and employee relations and being a supportive community participant.
andrew credits his father bill tepperman, who oversaw the company from 1970 until 2006, for not only expanding the company’s footprint throughout southwestern ontario but also its social conscience. noah tepperman serves as the company’s secretary/treasurer but also oversees the company’s community engagements.
tepperman’s footprint has grown to include windsor, chatham, london, sarnia, kitchener, ancaster and st. catharines, with 550 employees.
“my father’s decision to expand to other cities has made us less vulnerable to the ups and downs of the auto industry,” andrew tepperman said. “we’re in communities with different types of economies now.”