Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2020

Links

‪"Great investing requires both generating returns and controlling risk. And recognizing risk is an absolute prerequisite for controlling it.... Risk means uncertainty about which outcome will occur and about the possibility of loss when the unfavorable ones do." --Howard Marks‬

Haters - by Paul Graham (LINK)

Berkshire Hathaway’s Culture of Trust (LINK)
Related book: Margin of Trust
Jim Grant on the Hidden Forces Podcast (LINK)

Aspen Ideas to Go Podcast: Netflix’s Ted Sarandos on Streaming, Competition, and What’s Next [H/T @JerryCap] (LINK)

A playlist of short videos on mental models [H/T @anshul81] (LINK)

Boeing Employees Mocked F.A.A. and ‘Clowns’ Who Designed 737 Max (LINK)

Meet 2020 AV2, the first asteroid found that stays inside Venus's orbit! (LINK)

Current Kindle book deals worth considering:

High Growth Handbook by Elad Gil ($1.49)

Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman by James Gleick ($1.99)

Also, for audiobook listeners, I noticed that Cable Cowboy as well as Common Stocks and Common Sense are now available on Audible.

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Links

I'm back in Charlotte after a great couple of weeks traveling. As often happens, I brought way more to read with me than I actually had time to read, but I did catch up on some podcasts, started a couple of new things, and was able to get through Bethany McLean's latest book, Saudi America, which I thought was especially good, well-balanced, and timely. It pairs well with Jeremy Grantham's "The Race of Our Lives Revisited," as well as the shale section in the first part of Peter Zeihan's book The Absent Superpower.

One of the Grant's podcasts also mentioned two books on cycles—one by Jim Grant himself, The Trouble With Prosperity, as well as Economics and the Public Welfare by Benjamin Anderson, which Amazon tells me I bought in 2012 and yet wasn't kind enough to also let me know where I seem to have placed it. And those books both reminded me that we are only a couple of weeks away from the book many of us have been eagerly awaiting: Mastering the Market Cycle by Howard Marks.

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"Machines are there to help people, not replace them. Humans should never wait for machines. Machines wait for people. And so in this way, I find myself so far outside of the world of technology. I see so much 'technology over everything' kind of thinking where those people are like, it’s all there....I don’t even think there’s such a thing as, truly, the technology industry, right? It’s a weird construct. It’s like, technology is a...it’s not an industry. It’s not even a strategy. It’s sort of a tactic. It’s like a tool that you use to give people more skills." --Tobi Lütke

Tobi Lütke, founder and CEO of Shopify, talks with Shane Parrish on The Knowledge Project Podcast (LINK) [In addition to the quote above, this conversation also has some great insights on culture and on creating the right environment at a company.]

Predicting the Future with Bayes’s Theorem (LINK)

You Can Time The Market, Just Not All The Time - by Jason Zweig (LINK)
Howard Marks has made a few market calls in his day, but warns that it’s harder than it looks
How Jim Chanos Uses Cynicism, Chutzpah — and a Secret Twitter Account — to Take on Markets (and Elon Musk) (LINK)

Grant’s Interest Rate Observer's piece on municipal bonds, featuring Chris Pavese of Broyhill Asset Management (LINK)

Amazon Data Leaks and Bribes Have Consequences (LINK)

How to keep up progress on global health - by Bill Gates (LINK)

For Real Vision subscribers, Michael Mauboussin had a video released discussing "The Five Behavioral Mistakes Investors Make" (LINK), and the final episode of The Jim Grant Series also aired, which was an interview with Dan Rasmussen (LINK) [If you're not a subscriber and would to join or take a free trial, you can sign up HERE.]

Ben Thompson's article from last week, as well as his latest:

The iPhone Franchise (LINK)

The European Union Versus the Internet (LINK)

And Ed Yong has continued his productive ways, writing about the latest and/or more interesting science stories of the day...

Bacteria in a Dinosaur Bone Reignite a Heated Debate (LINK)

The Genes That Never Go Out of Style (LINK)

The Three Major Cartels Behind the Downfall of Africa’s Elephants (LINK)

Wiping Out the Brain’s Retired Cells Prevents a Hallmark of Alzheimer's (LINK)

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Links

"The notion of 'Keep Showing Up.' I wish I would have got that earlier, because I think it would have been easier to endure through some very difficult periods of time. I wish I would have learned that early in my business career.... I would have liked to have somebody tell me: 'Paul, keep showing up.'" --Paul Black [when asked about what life lesson he wished he'd have learned earlier in life, via the podcast below]

Capital Allocators Podcast: Paul Black - Gratitude, Fun, and Growth Stocks (LINK) [There is a great discussion on assessing company culture starting at the 17:50 mark, as well as a recommendation of the book The Culture Cycle. His example describing Whole Foods' culture as having an 'absence of fear' reminded me of some of Peter Kaufman's comments about the importance of trust—among businesses, relationships, and puppies.]

Mohnish Pabrai, Guy Spier and Raamdeo Agrawal interviewed by ET Now at the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (video) (LINK)

Nobody Planned This, Nobody Expected It - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

“Principles for Success”: an ultra mini-series (about 30 minutes total) overview of Ray Dalio's ideas (LINK)

Tech’s Two Philosophies - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

a16z Podcast: The Case Against Education, From Signaling to Rainbow’s End (LINK)
Related book: The Case against Education
Surgical Checklists Save Lives — but Once in a While, They Don’t. Why? - by Siddhartha Mukherjee (LINK)

Ebola Returns Just as Trump Asks to Rescind Ebola Funds - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Links

"We try to think about things that are both important and knowable. There are important things that are not knowable.... And there are things that are knowable, but not important - and we don't want to clutter up our minds with those. We ask ourselves: 'What's important and knowable?'... There are all kinds of important subjects that Charlie and I don't know anything about. And therefore, we don't think about 'em. Our view about what the world will look like over the next 10 years in business or the state of U.S. competitiveness - we're just no good [at that]." --Warren Buffett (1998 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting, via Outstanding Investor Digest)

"We're not predicting the currents that will come just how some things will swim whatever the currents may be." --Charlie Munger (1998 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting, via Outstanding Investor Digest)

What Does Culture Smell Like? (LINK)

Boyar Value Group's Q1 Letter (LINK) [There are also a bunch of other Q1 Letters HERE.]

Open, Closed, and Privacy - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

MUST SEE VIDEO: Snowstorm on a comet! (LINK)

What's Wrong With Growing Blobs of Brain Tissue? - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Fossilized Human Footprint Found Nestled in a Giant Sloth Footprint - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Links

How Jeffrey Immelt’s ‘Success Theater’ Masked the Rot at GE (LINK) [In response to a question about assessing a company's culture from the outside, a wise and successful business man once told a small group of people that I was a part of that one of the ways to try and do it is to try and figure out if a company and its leaders lie. See if what they say and write is true. The example given (roughly) was a company that writes about how many new products it is developing, but when you go to a trade show, speak with a company employee and mention how you read about all the new products they have coming out soon and in development, and they say something like "Oh no, we haven't developed a new product in a decade." That's a sign the culture could be a rotten one; or at least an undesirable one in which to put your capital to work.]

The Ski Team That Sleeps Together Wins a Lot of Gold Medals Together [H/T Tamas] (LINK) [From a week ago, but a great example of building the right kind of culture.]

A long Twitter thread (100 replies) from someone who has read Nassim Taleb's new book, Skin in the Game (LINK) [The U.S. release date is next week.]

The Case Against Google - by Charles Duhigg (LINK)

Sergio Marchionne's final lap (LINK)

Retired sanitation honcho pulls in $285K a year in pension — twice his old salary [H/T @jtepper2] (LINK)

How Australia All But Ended Gun Violence (LINK)

What Muhammad Ali Can Teach Us About Success and an Authentic Life - by Robert Greene (LINK)

The Knowledge Project Podcast -- Survival of the Kindest: Dacher Keltner Reveals the New Rules of Power (LINK)
Related book: The Power Paradox: How We Gain and Lose Influence
Why Is Blue So Rare In Nature? (video) [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Friday, February 16, 2018

Links

I had a great time in L.A. this week, and enjoyed getting to see Charlie Munger in-person holding court at the Daily Journal Annual Meeting. It appears we are still awaiting a video to be released, but there are some notes HERE (and someone recorded an audio of the meeting HERE). And I agree with my friend Phil that one of the more interesting pieces was also Peter Kaufman's brief remarks that Munger asked him to give. As Phil posted on Twitter: 
My favorite part of the $DJCO meeting yesterday was actually from Peter Kaufman. His "Five Aces" of investment management:
1. Total integrity.
2. Actual, deep fluency in the subject.
3. Fee structure w/two-way fairness.
4. Uncrowded investment space.
5. Long runway.
I think he then also added (roughly) that if you find someone who fits that criteria, give them as much as you can afford to give them. 

***

"There are worse things than having people misunderstand your work. A worse danger is that you will yourself misunderstand your work." - Paul Graham, "Hackers and Painters" (Source)

Making Sense vs. Being Right - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

Tony Hsieh of Zappos on Hiring for Culture (LINK)

Wild, But Not Crazy - by Clifford Asness (LINK)

The end of the low-volatility regime (LINK)

Tech Luminary Peter Thiel Parts Ways With Silicon Valley ($) (LINK)

Jim Chanos on the return of choppy markets, Tesla, and the 'rent-seeking behavior' that's hurting our economy (video) [H/T Josh Brown] (LINK)

This Short Seller Pressed ‘Tweet.’ Then the FBI Showed Up (LINK)

Matt Levine chats with Tyler Cowen (audio/podcast) (LINK)

Exponent Podcast: Episode 141 — The Mailbag Episode (LINK)

These Crickets Can’t Sing Anymore—But They’re Still Trying - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Links

"Like other practicing historians, I am often asked what the 'lessons of history' are. I answer that the only lesson I have learnt from studying the past is that there are no permanent winners and losers." —Ramachandra Guha

Howard Buffett to be sworn in Friday as Macon County sheriff [H/T @NicoleFriedman] (LINK)

Ray Dalio talks with Tim Ferriss (podcast) (LINK)
Related book (released next week): Principles: Life and Work
You Need To Do What Others Don’t - by Ian Cassel (LINK)

How Bacteria Could Protect Tumors From Anticancer Drugs - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Gregg Popovich on the Spurs' philosophy and culture (video) [H/T @mlombardiNFL] (LINK)

***

In the video above, Gregg Popovich made this particular comment: 
"We talk a lot about character, and can you really change someone. If someone is selfish, can you change that and make him or her a part of the team? My bottom is, usually, they am what they am."
While it's possible to change cultures and people, and plenty of people have made huge changes in many areas of life, that comment reminded me of some things Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger have said over the years, with the particular quotes below taken from Peter Bevelin's All I Want To Know Is Where I'm Going To Die So I'll Never Go There
Buffett: "Management changes, like marital changes, are painful, time-consuming and chancy.... We don't try to change people. It doesn't work well...We accept people the way they are." 
Munger: "The failure rate at trying to change a culture is likely to be 100%." 
Buffett: "Changing cultures is really tough. I've had a little experience with that. The trick in business is to get in with a culture that's already the right kind."

Monday, January 30, 2017

Links

"A wise man seeks wisdom; a madman thinks that he has found it." 
-Persian proverb (via A Calendar of Wisdom)

The video of Warren Buffett and Bill Gates on Charlie Rose (LINK)

'Becoming Warren Buffett' Goes Beyond a $74 Billion Fortune [H/T Linc] (LINK)

‘Becoming Warren Buffett’ is a timely reassurance that some billionaires have a heart [H/T Linc] (LINK)

The $99 Billion Idea: How Uber and Airbnb Won (LINK)
Related book (released tomorrow): The Upstarts: How Uber, Airbnb, and the Killer Companies of the New Silicon Valley Are Changing the World - by Brad Stone
James Grant on WealthTrack (video) (LINK)

The Hidden Fees Inside Managed-Future Funds - by Jason Zweig (LINK)

Everyone Poops and has Customer Churn (and a Dozen Notes) - by Tren Griffin (LINK)

Billionaire Steve Wynn: Building Las Vegas (2014 video) [H/T @iancassel] (LINK) ["We never risked the firm. Never risked the firm. My responsibility to my employees, my stockholders and such; that I can't promise to be right all the time. No one can. You make calls. Sometimes they're right, sometimes they're wrong. But capital structure allows you to survive the inevitable cycles of business, which go up and down as surely as sunrise and sunset, except we don't know the timing. They allow you to survive your own miscalculations. Capital structure, I learned at a young age, thanks to Mike Milken who taught me this story; capital structure is everything. And I've always had a capital structure that was bulletproof."] [Wynn's answer about building a good company culture from the 33:50-40:58 mark is also worth a close listen.]

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: On Governance (LINK)
Those who aspire to “right speech” often measure their words with four questions: Is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary? Is it the right time? Right speech should not escalate conflict, but it doesn’t retreat from necessary truth, and criticisms don’t always seem kind. The question of right speech is the question of how one might best serve others. Criticism with the intent to offend is not constructive, but silence is equally detrimental when it quietly endorses a pattern of offense, or encourages the silence of others. 
Those of you who have followed my work over the decades know that I look at the world holistically in terms of the interconnection and responsibility we have toward others, and I’ve never been much for separating “business” from those larger values. After all, most of my income regularly goes to charity, and nearly everything that remains follows our own investment discipline. Whether my comments on matters like peace, civility, economic policy or governance are well-received or not (and I'm grateful that they have been over the years), there are moments when one has the responsibility to speak if one has a voice.
How Mark Sisson grew a loyal tribe before launching a niche health food line (podcast) (LINK)
Related book: The New Primal Blueprint
Amor Fati: The Immense Power of Learning To Love Your Fate (LINK)
Related previous post: Friedrich Nietzsche quotes on amor fati ("love of fate")
Book of the day (mentioned by Warren Buffett at Columbia): Essays In Persuasion – by John Maynard Keynes

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Links

The Carroll Culture: "He Focuses On Your Purpose Beyond The Game" (LINK) [If anyone knows of other articles describing great cultures like this, please feel free to pass along. Thanks. And while I've only read one of them so far, I've seen recommended that three of the best books on examples of great cultures are the three listed at the top of the list HERE.]
Of all the things that help shape Carroll’s philosophy on coaching—on life really—one of the most important is an idea that sounds simple, but is actually rather complex in its application: helping people be the best they can be. And an important distinction to make here is that the focus isn’t on helping an athlete be the best football player he can be, but on helping that individual be the best person he can be. Take care of that first, and the football part will follow
Nassim Taleb's Foreword to Ed Thorp’s Memoirs, A Man for All Markets (LINK)
Ed was initially an academic, but he favored learning by doing, with his skin in the game. When you reincarnate as practitioner, you want the mountain to give birth to the simplest possible strategy, and one that has the smallest amount of side effects, the minimum possible hidden complications. The genius of Ed is demonstrated in the way he came up with very simple rules in Black Jack. Instead of engaging in complicated combinatorics and memory–challenging card counting (something that requires one to be a savant), he crystallizes all his sophisticated research into simple rules. Go to a Black Jack table. Keep a tally. Start with zero. Add one for some strong cards, minus ones for weak ones, and nothing for others. It is easy to just increment up and down mentally, bet larger when the number is high, smaller when it is low, and such a strategy is immediately applicable by anyone with the ability to tie his shoes or find a casino on a map. Even while using wearable computers at the roulette table, the detection of edge was simple, so simple that one can get it while standing on a balance ball in the gym; the fanciness resides in the implementation and the wiring.
Google and the Limits of Strategy - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

Amazon rolls out Prime Reading, giving Prime members free access to more than 1,000 books and magazines (LINK)

Weird orange crocodiles found gorging on bats in Gabon’s caves (LINK)

Cod may have regional accents, scientists say (LINK)

Monday, July 18, 2016

The Seven Deadly Sins of Banking

From Capital Returns (the excerpt below was from a Marathon letter written in November 2009):
One large European financial institution, however, which didn’t blow up during the Global Financial Crisis is Svenska Handelsbanken, Sweden’s largest bank and a long-term Marathon holding. Over the years we have gotten to know the bank quite well. Our meetings with management have often provided timely insights into the folly of their European banking competitors. A recently published book about the bank, entitled A Blueprint for Better Banking, by Niels Kroner, describes the history and culture of the bank and, as the title suggests, argues that many of the recent problems of the financial system could have been avoided if other banks were run in the “Handelsbanken way.” 
Handelsbanken is a very conservatively run, branch-based retail bank which was the only major Swedish bank not to break in the Nordic banking crisis of the early 1990s. This time around, Handelsbanken has pulled through yet again, avoiding the need to raise fresh capital or receive government support. That puts it on a short list of only three major European banks. Handelsbanken’s decentralised business model encourages branch managers to make loans based on local, face-to-face knowledge of customers rather than relying on centralised credit scoring techniques, as their competitors do. The bank consistently has the best customer service ratings in the industry and the lowest costs (as demonstrated by a low cost to income ratio compared with other banks). A few years ago, we asked management why (as we had been told) there were holes in the carpets at many of its branches. “Carpets don’t make money,” was the reply. 
Having avoided the disasters of its peers, since the beginning of 2007 Handelsbanken shares have outperformed those of all other major European banks. According to Niels Kroner, Handelsbanken has succeeded by not committing what he calls the Seven Deadly Sins of Banking. These are as follows: 
First deadly sin: Imprudent asset-liability mismatches on the balance sheet 
Obviously there are many cases around the world of how borrowing short and lending long can go wrong for banks. Recent examples in Europe include Northern Rock in the UK and the Irish banks. During the boom years, the Irish banks financed household mortgages that had a contractual maturity of two decades or more, with commercial paper of less than one year’s duration. Handelsbanken is acutely conscious of the risks posed by asset-liability mismatches. The bank uses a central treasury function to match and price deposits and loans according to their respective maturities. In this way, branches cannot report a profit by simply engaging in maturity transformation. 
Second deadly sin: Supporting asset-liability mismatches by clients 
The classic example here is foreign currency lending to households in Central European countries. Not long ago, European banks were providing low interest euro and Swiss franc mortgages to Hungarian and Latvian consumers. It was unlikely these customers understood the foreign exchange risk they were running. Handelsbanken does not engage in such lending, mainly because the primary incentive of the branch managers is to eliminate default risk. The worst thing a branch manager can do is to run up bad loans. Internally, branches are ranked on this measure to shame the underperformers. 
Third deadly sin: Lending to “Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay” types 
Here one immediately thinks of banks lending to subprime borrowers and private equity firms. Handelsbanken’s approach is rather to “lend to people with money.” Theirs is a niche lending approach rather than a mass market one. In company research meetings over the years, Handelsbanken told us that the banking industry had become obsessed with earning a few extra basis points of spread each quarter, while losing sight of credit risk, namely the chance that borrowers might never be in a position to repay the principal. 
Fourth deadly sin: Reaching for growth in unfamiliar areas 
A number of European banks have lost billions investing in US subprime CDOs (UBS has blown some $40bn in this manner), having foolishly relied on “experts” who told them that these were riskless AAA rated credits, i.e., they outsourced the underwriting decision. In Scandinavia, many banks pursued growth in the Baltic states and have suffered as GDP in the region has contracted by 15–20 per cent this year (house prices in Latvia are now down 70 per cent from the peak). Handelsbanken’s approach to foreign expansion, by contrast, has always been one of cautious “organic incrementalism,” as they describe it. The bank largely eschewed the Baltic states as too risky. Instead, Handelsbanken expanded its branch network in a number of mature Western European markets – including UK, Germany, and Norway – where it has been easy to recruit good branch managers among those who have grown disillusioned with the centralising tendencies at their old banks. In the UK, Handelsbanken hired local branch managers who brought with them their best clients and most highly regarded colleagues. 
Fifth deadly sin: Engaging in off-balance sheet lending 
Recent examples of the cardinal banking sin of off-balance sheet lending include the use of conduits and SIVs by European banks. By contrast, Handelsbanken’s approach is to accept only risks which it is prepared to hold on its balance sheet until maturity and not to lend money to those that are in the business of lending money themselves. Incidentally this principle also restrained the bank from engaging in pass-the-parcel securitization schemes which have had such a damaging effect on underwriting standards across the European banking system. 
Sixth deadly sin: Getting sucked into virtuous/vicious cycle dynamics 
The sixth deadly sin is to be seduced by what might be termed Ponzi economics. Lending by Scandinavian banks in the Baltic states seemed like a good idea for a long time partly because GDP was growing rapidly. The strong economic growth, however, was a function of rapidly growing credit supplied by the banks themselves. The fact that every bank was lending in the same market made it feel safe, and for a while the virtuous cycle continued. Real estate markets around the world were similarly characterised by the notion that asset quality was independent of credit conditions. Handelsbanken prides itself on its contrarian streak. It is less prone to high level “strategic” moves (which normally entail engaging in happy groupthink) because of its reliance on the branch network. The branches have a fairly consistent risk appetite through the cycle and so tend to lose market share in frothy times (e.g., during the 2006–08 period) and gain share when others are unwilling or unable to lend. 
Seventh deadly sin: Relying on the rearview mirror 
A recent expression of this common financial vice includes the widespread use of value-at-risk models. Such models tend to be based on a limited amount of historic data, which in the years before the crisis were relatively benign. True risk was understated. In its 2007 annual report, Merrill Lynch reported a total risk exposure – based on “a 95 per cent confidence interval and a one day holding period” – of $157m. A year later, the Thundering Herd stumbled into a $30bn loss! After house prices have risen by 85 per cent in ten years, as they had in the United States, was it realistic to expect a maximum decline of 13.4 per cent (Freddie Mac’s worst case scenario)? Handelsbanken determined its capital requirements based on more pessimistic crisis scenarios, such as a repeat of the Swedish banking crisis. 
There are many other ways in which Handelsbanken is different from its peers. In its dialogue with investors, bank representatives refuse to engage in the game of trying to estimate this year’s profit number. They have no other choice, since divisional budgets were abolished in 1972. If managers have budget targets, so the thinking goes, it becomes more difficult to stay out of the market when pricing is unfavourable. 
Management incentives are also unusual. The bank funds an employee profit-sharing scheme called the Oktogonen Foundation, which receives allocations when the group’s return on equity exceeds the weighted average of a group of other Nordic and British banks. If this criterion is satisfied, and it usually is, except at the peak of the cycle, one-third of the extra profits can be allocated to Oktogonen subject to a limit of 15 per cent of the dividend to shareholders. If the Handelsbanken lowers the dividend paid out to its shareholders, no allocation is made to the profit-sharing foundation. 
The foundation channels a large part of its resources into Handelsbanken stock and currently holds 11 per cent of the bank’s equity. All employees receive an equal part of the allocated amount (without the traditional skew towards the upper echelons), and the scheme includes all staff in the Nordic countries and, since 2004, in Great Britain. Disbursements are only made once a member of staff has reached the age of 60. Employees who have been working for Handelsbanken since 1973 have around $600,000 – which turns out to be roughly half the value of a Nobel prize – due to them at retirement, regardless of whether they have worked as the CEO or as a security guard. The system undoubtedly contributes to the bank’s tribal culture and aligns employee interests with shareholders.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Links

Jamie Dimon on the Recode Decode podcast (LINK)

How Warren Buffett’s Son Would Feed the World (LINK)

The Ideal Investment: Companies That Don’t Invest [H/T @jasonzweigwsj] (LINK)
Related book: Capital Returns
Hedge-Fund Star Kyle Bass Slips on Oil [H/T Will] (LINK)

Jim Grant: No rate hike this year (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

a16z Podcast: Automation, Jobs, & the Future of Work (and Income) (LINK)

The Curse of Culture - by Ben Thompson (LINK)
The implications of this definition are profound: culture is not something that begets success, rather, it is a product of it. All companies start with the espoused beliefs and values of their founder(s), but until those beliefs and values are proven correct and successful they are open to debate and change. If, though, they lead to real sustained success, then those values and beliefs slip from the conscious to the unconscious, and it is this transformation that allows companies to maintain the “secret sauce” that drove their initial success even as they scale. The founder no longer needs to espouse his or her beliefs and values to the 10,000th employee; every single person already in the company will do just that, in every decision they make big or small. 
As with most such things, culture is one of a company’s most powerful assets right until it isn’t: the same underlying assumptions that permit an organization to scale massively constrain the ability of that same organization to change direction. More distressingly, culture prevents organizations from even knowing they need to do so. 
..... 
Related book: Organizational Culture and Leadership
Malcolm Gladwell at TIBCO NOW 2014: The Right Attitude (video) [H/T David] (LINK) -- [I don't think I'd seen this before. As usual, Gladwell tells his story featuring a real person, in this case Malcolm McLean. To hear more about McLean from someone who knew him, see the 4th question in the video Five Good Questions for Gene Hoots.]

The Deliberate Creative (LINK)

Monkeys can run up vertical cliffs on just their hind legs (video) (LINK)

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Warren Buffett on culture

Via Peter Bevelin's All I Want To Know Is Where I'm Going To Die So I'll Never Go There:
Culture, more than rule books, determines how an organization behaves. 
I think we have a very good culture virtually everyplace in Berkshire. I hope it’s everyplace. This is what we are looking for, and it’s more a question of culture than controls. If you have a good culture, I think you can make the rules pretty simple.

Monday, August 24, 2015

Charlie Munger on practice evolution

From Whitney Tilson's 2000 Wesco Annual Meeting Notes:
Practice Evolution 
"This is really important. For example, Hertz and Enterprise Rent-a-Car through practice evolution have developed personnel systems, etc. that work for them. They are like different species in similar ecological niches. 
"Common stock investors can make money by predicting the outcomes of practice evolution. You can't derive this by fundamental analysis -- you must think biologically. 
"Another example is Tupperware, which developed what I believe to be a corrupt system of psychological manipulation. But the practice evolution worked and had legs. Tupperware parties sold billions of dollars of merchandise for decades. 
"We wouldn't have bought CORT if we didn't like the culture, which resulted from long practice evolution." 

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

The importance of culture

From DREAM BIG: How the Brazilian Trio behind 3G Capital - Jorge Paulo Lemann, Marcel Telles and Beto Sicupira - acquired Anheuser-Busch, Burger King and Heinz:
YOU CAN EXPORT A GREAT CULTURE ACROSS WIDELY DIVERGENT INDUSTRIES AND GEOGRAPHIES. The truly remarkable thing is how the Dream-People-Culture model carried from investment banking and finance into beer, from Brazil to all of Latin America, then to Europe and the United States, and now expanding all over the world. For Lemann, Telles and Sicupira, culture is not in support of strategy; culture is strategy. The three partners have always held to their core values and distinctive culture, while continually growing into new industries, expanding across geographies, and pointing towards ever bigger goals – a beautiful example of the underlying dynamic, “Preserve the Core and Stimulate Progress” exemplified by any enduring great company. There is a corollary to this lesson: you can “predict the future by geography.” In the early days of the company, the three founders looked from Brazil to the United States, saw what was already working; then, instead of simply waiting for that to happen in Brazil, they would act aggressively to import the best United States practices, and do so early.
The excerpt above also reminded me of what Christopher Begg wrote in his Q3 letter:
"The only moat that is not fleeting, and conversely the only moat that is truly enduring, is culture."
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Related previous post: “Dream, People, Culture”: Carlos Brito, CEO of Anheuser-Busch InBev

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Leading@Google: Tony Hsieh (July 2010)

Tony Hsieh visits Google in Mountain View to talk about his new book - Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose. 

The visionary CEO of Zappos explains how an emphasis on corporate culture can lead to unprecedented success.


Link

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Related book: Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose