In 1852 Aristide and Marguerite Boucicaut began to scale the business model of their small shop on the corner of Rue de Sèvres and Rue de Bac. The department store is still known today as Le Bon Marché.[3]
The Boucicaut's treatment of their employees was novel for the time - a paternalistic relationship where the employees were given food, housing, entertainment, and education. In return, loyalty and adherence to a moral code.[2][4]
In 1880, Marguerite changed the company to a société en commandite, or a partnership with her top managers that continued the "family" nature of the Bon Marché even after her death.[4] With no heirs, Marguerite willed her fortune to the employees of the Bon Marche and her social works, including a hospital and a home for unwed mothers.[2]