Leadership Reflections: Working Alongside Family At Transpak
By Leilani Arendell
When people hear that TransPak is family-run, they often picture something quaint. Maybe a small office, a couple of siblings managing operations, handwritten invoices passed across a kitchen table. But TransPakâa global leader in crating, packaging, logistics & design based in the United Statesâisnât a small business anymore. Not by a long shot.
And yet, at its core, it still feels like one. Thatâs the paradox of family leadership. You grow. You globalize. You digitize. But the rootsâthose personal, sometimes messy, always meaningful connectionsâstay intact.
Iâve had the privilege of watching this dynamic play out up close. And Iâve come to believe that family in leadership doesnât just shape a companyâs story. It shapes its soul.
Generations at the Helm
Bert Inch Sr. started TransPak in 1952 with little more than grit and vision. But what he really left behind wasnât just a business modelâit was a philosophy: solve real problems, treat people right, stay humble.
That philosophy didnât fade when the next generation stepped in. It deepened.
Today, the Inch family still guides TransPak forward. But itâs not a dynasty for the sake of legacy. Itâs continuity with purpose. A recognition that some of the most enduring values in businessâlike trust, accountability, and people-first thinkingâoften begin at home.
Real Conversations in Real Time
I remember a moment during a team offsite. A mid-level manager asked a tough question about resource allocation. The conversation could have easily been deflected or âtaken offline.â Instead, a member of the family leadership team leaned forward and said, âLetâs talk about it now. Everyone deserves clarity.â
There was no fanfare. No hierarchy. Just eye contact, transparency, and a willingness to listen. That moment stuck with me.
Because in many family-led businesses, those kinds of conversations are normal. You donât wait for quarterly reports or formal memos. You talk things through. Right there. Right then.
That approachâhuman, immediate, maybe even a little imperfectâis part of what makes TransPak feel different.
A Culture That Doesnât Feel Manufactured
These days, âcompany cultureâ is a buzzword. But at TransPak, culture isnât something you write in a handbook. Itâs something you witnessâwhen senior leaders remember warehouse birthdays, when project leads step onto the floor to help, when someone stays late because they want to get it right.
Those small gestures add up.
And while this culture didnât start because of family leadership alone, itâs been nurtured by it. Protected, even. Especially during moments when outside pressures might have nudged the company toward colder, more corporate decisions.
The Messy Side (Thatâs Also the Real Side)
Of course, family leadership isnât always smooth. Disagreements happen. Generational perspectives clash. Sometimes youâre navigating business growth and Thanksgiving dinners with the same people.
But those tensions can be productive, too. They bring perspective. History. A kind of emotional accountability thatâs hard to manufacture any other way.
Youâre not just answering to shareholders. Youâre answering to people youâve known since you were 12. People who remember when your first âbusiness pitchâ involved selling lemonade in the driveway.
That kind of accountability keeps you honest.
And NowâA Global Moment
In November 2025, TransPak will be in London as a nominee for the Go Global Awards, hosted by the International Trade Council. Itâs a global gathering of business leaders, innovators, and changemakers from every continent.
For a company like oursârooted in family, grown through grit, expanded with intentionâitâs an opportunity to share not just what we do, but how we do it.
Because the awards arenât just a celebration. Theyâre a crossroads. A chance to connect with peers, forge new collaborations, and imagine whatâs next in a rapidly evolving world.
And Iâd like to think that if Bert Inch Sr. could see it, heâd be proud. Not just of the companyâs growth, but of how itâs stayed grounded in its values.
Final Thoughts
Thereâs a phrase we say around here: âBuild it like itâs your own.â That could apply to crates. Or strategies. Or careers.
But when your company is led by family, that phrase takes on a deeper meaning. Because it is your own. And that spiritâof ownership, responsibility, and quiet prideâflows through every pallet, every shipment, every relationship.
Itâs not flashy. But itâs real. And it lasts.


















