Sunday, July 24, 2016

Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” (6/12)

July 24, 2016 

“Alibaba might as well be known as “1,001 mistakes.” But there were three main reasons why we survived. We didn’t have any money, we didn’t have any technology, and we didn’t have a plan.”


July 24, 2016 

“Just as Jack had lost control of China Pages to his SOE-linked partner, in Beijing Jasmine Zhang had been forced out of Yinghaiwei by her largest shareholder, rumored to be connected with China’s Ministry of State Security.”


July 24, 2016 

“Other entrepreneurs, especially those who had set up Internet service providers (ISPs) to roll out dial-up services to consumers, found themselves squeezed out by large SOEs like China Telecom. ”


July 24, 2016 

“In China, the Taiwan-born Jerry Yang became a hero. The public was fascinated to learn how an immigrant to the United States had become a billionaire before the age of thirty.”


July 24, 2016 

“Charles Zhang (Zhang Chaoyang), the founder of Sohu, was born in Xi’an. One month younger than Jack, he won entry to Tsinghua University to study physics before heading on to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). After attaining a Ph.D. in physics, Charles stayed on as a postdoc, working to foster U.S.-China relations through MIT’s Industrial Liaison Program. ”


July 24, 2016 

“While Wang Zhidong, Charles, and William were surfing the waves of China’s exciting new dot-com sea, Jack was languishing on the dusty dot-gov shore. ”


July 24, 2016 

“ The new site attracted the praise of government officials, including MOFTEC minister Shi Guangsheng, who called it a “solid step by China to move into the age of e-commerce.”


July 24, 2016 

“The reality, though, was that all the offline bureaucracy involved in registering on the website made it unappealing to businesses, especially because the website could not facilitate any orders or payments.”


July 24, 2016 

“But his government perch ended up giving Jack another lucky break: his first encounter with Jerry Yang, the cofounder of Yahoo. In the coming years, the fates of Jack Ma and Jerry Yang would become ever more closely intertwined.”


July 24, 2016 

“As the general manager of Infoshare, and a fluent English speaker, Jack was asked to receive Jerry Yang and his colleagues, who in late 1997 came to Beijing to look for opportunities for Yahoo in China. ”


July 24, 2016 

“Jack introduced him to his wife, Cathy, and they took Jerry, Jerry’s brother, and Yahoo vice president Heather Killen to visit Beihai Park, opposite the Forbidden City, and the Great Wall. Here they took a photo that would play an important role in helping separate Jack from the pack, illustrating Jack’s early meeting with the global king of the Internet at the time.”


July 24, 2016 

“But Jack was worried about the consequences for him and his planned new venture of walking out of his government job. A friend advised Jack to feign illness, a common ruse in China to escape from such predicaments. Jack did in fact come down with appendicitis a few months later, but by then he was already back in Hangzhou and his new venture was well under way.”


July 24, 2016 

“Jack has been asked many times why he chose an Arabic name for his company rather than something derived from his passion for Chinese martial arts or folklore. Jack was attracted, he said, by the “open sesame” imagery, since he hoped to achieve an opening for the small- and medium-size enterprises he was targeting. He was also looking for a name that traveled well, and Alibaba is a name that is easy to pronounce in many languages. He liked the name since it came at the beginning of the alphabet: “Whatever you talk about, Alibaba is always on top.”


July 24, 2016 

“In contrast to the business-to-business sites in the United States that were focused on large companies, Jack decided to focus on the “shrimp.” He found inspiration from his favorite movie, Forrest Gump, in which Gump makes a fortune from fishing shrimp after a storm: “American B2B [business-to-business] sites are whales. But 85 percent of the fish in the sea are shrimp-sized. I don’t know anyone who makes money from whales, but I’ve seen many making money from shrimp.”


July 24, 2016 

“The government’s policy of “informatization” was making the Internet more affordable. Getting a connection from the local phone company still took months and could cost as much as $600. But in March 1999 the government scrapped the installation fee for second phone lines and made it cheaper to surf8 online, too, cutting the average price from $70 per month in 1997 to only $9 by the end of 1999.”


July 24, 2016 

“Jack likes to put Silicon Valley companies on a pedestal, but he also likes to rally his team by saying Alibaba could knock them off it: “Americans are strong at hardware and systems but in software and information management, Chinese brains are just as good as American. . . . I believe that one of us can be worth ten of them.”


July 24, 2016 

“Although Jack and Cathy together were the lead shareholders, Alibaba was cofounded by a total of eighteen people, six of whom were women. None came from privileged backgrounds, prestigious universities,13 or famous companies. This was a team of “regular people,” bound together by Jack’s energy and his unconventional management methods. ”


July 24, 2016 

“In May 1999, Jack met Joe Tsai,16 a Taiwanese-born investor then living in Hong Kong. Joe would become Jack’s right-hand man, a role he still performs more than seventeen years later. The association between the two would become one of the most profitable and enduring partnerships in Chinese business.”


July 24, 2016 

“At the age of thirteen, speaking hardly any English, Joe was sent off from Taiwan to the Lawrenceville School, an elite18 boarding school in New Jersey. There Joe excelled at his studies as well as at lacrosse, which he credits with helping him assimilate into American culture and learn the importance of working in a team: “The sport taught me life lessons about teamwork and perseverance. While I never got past playing on the third midfield line, being part of the team was the best experience of my life.”


July 24, 2016 

“I asked Joe how he came to connect with Jack: “I wanted to be more intimately involved in technology start-ups. Because I was making investments for Investor, sitting on boards, I always felt a layer of distance between the board and the management. I said to myself, I should be involved in the operation.”


July 24, 2016 

“Joe remembers how Jack outlined his ambitious goal for Alibaba: to help millions of Chinese factories find an outlet overseas for their goods. The factory owners lacked the skills to market their products themselves and, Jack explained, had little choice but to sell their goods through state-owned trading companies. Jack was proposing to cut out the middleman, always a compelling idea.”


July 24, 2016 

“Later on Jack told me that there are three kinds of people he doesn’t trust: Shanghainese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong people.” But somehow Jack and Joe, a Shanghainese-speaking Taiwanese who lived in Hong Kong, hit it off. “It was fate that the two of us ended up working together.”


July 24, 2016 

“Joe too was thinking carefully before taking the plunge. “I went back a second time because I saw something in Jack. Not just the vision, the sparks in his eyes. But a team of people, his loyal followers. They believed in the vision. I said to myself, If I am going to join a group of people, this is the one. There is a clear leader, the glue to the whole thing. I just felt a real affinity to Jack. I mean who wouldn’t?”


July 24, 2016 

“ Looking at how Sina, Sohu, and NetEase had done it, Joe registered an offshore company,23 writing out a personal check for $20,000 to a law firm, Fenwick & West, to ready Alibaba’s corporate structure to receive venture capital investment. All they needed now was to find the investors. He set out with Jack for San Francisco.24”


July 24, 2016 

“Chris explained to me that in his Economist article he had compared Jack to Jeff Bezos because “[b]oth are clever entrepreneurs who have grown rich by being among the first to exploit the Internet’s potential. But there the similarities end.”



Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” iBooks. 

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Notes From: Duncan Clark. Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built (5/12)

July 17, 2016 

“Soon after returning from Seattle to Hangzhou, Jack resigned his position as a teacher at the Hangzhou Institute of Electronic Engineering.”


July 17, 2016 

“In March 1995, Jack convened a gathering of two dozen of his night school students to present his concept and seek their advice, as well as their business. “I asked the most active and capable people from my evening classes to my home. I talked about two hours, they listened to me, obviously confused. . . . Eventually lots of people cast their votes. Twenty-three of them said it would not work out. Only one person—now he is working at Agricultural Bank of China—said to me: If you want to try, then go ahead, but if it doesn’t work out, come back as soon as you can.”


July 17, 2016 

“China Pages
The company they registered, Hangzhou Haibo Network Consulting (HHNC), was one of the first in China devoted to the Internet. To fund his start-up Jack borrowed money from his relatives, including his sister, brother-in-law, and parents. Jack’s wife, Cathy, was the first employee.”


July 17, 2016 

“During the day, the two partners went out to find clients, returning in the evening to teach an introductory training course about the “information superhighway.” This class helped generate some of China Pages’ early customers.”


July 17, 2016 

“To win more clients, as with Hope Translation beforehand, Jack called on his former students to spread the word and bring in business. Two of them duly obliged.”


July 17, 2016 

“Even with the help of Jack’s former students, China Pages needed more clients if it was going to survive. But demonstrating what China Pages was all about was not easy, for one very basic reason: In Hangzhou at the time it was impossible to get online.”


July 17, 2016 

“Finally, in the fall of 1995, Zhejiang Telecom started to provide Internet access services in Hangzhou. By the end of the year there were only 204 Internet users in the whole province. But Jack was among them and was finally able to load a website in front of his first client, the Lakeview Hotel, on the 486 computer he’d brought back from Seattle in his suitcase.”


July 17, 2016 

“It took three and a half hours to download the front page. . . . I was so excited.”


July 17, 2016 

“While the Chinese government was thinking about what to do about the Internet—wrestling with issues of ideology, control, and infrastructure—the U.S. government was pondering the wisdom of bringing a communist country online. In the end, it was not politicians but scientists,2 on both sides of the Pacific, who took the lead. After years of efforts, the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in Menlo Park, California, connected3 with the Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP), 5,800 miles away in Beijing.”


July 18, 2016 

“Just as King Henry IV of France cemented his legitimacy by putting a chicken on every dinner table on a Sunday, with xinxihua the Chinese Communist Party began to roll out phone lines, then cell phones, then broadband connections to hundreds of millions of people.
In 1993, Vice Premier Zhu Rongji launched the Golden Bridge Project to create an information and communications network spanning the whole country.”


July 18, 2016 

“In 1995, only 1.5 million personal computers were sold in China, mostly to business or government users. Priced at roughly $1,800, the PCs cost a fortune for average Chinese at the time. The costs of getting a fixed line installed and getting online, combined with a lack of awareness about what the Internet actually was, meant that China Pages was having a hard time finding enough customers.”


July 18, 2016 

“After encountering resistance at the local level, Jack started to spend most of his time in Beijing. There he met up with Jasmine Zhang of Yinghaiwei. The two did not hit it off, Jack later sharing his first impressions: “I though if the Internet’s demise comes one day, hers will be earlier than mine. I was already very idealistic, but here was someone who was even more idealistic than me.”


July 18, 2016 

“The problem for China Pages was that it really was just a directory. The site was pretty rudimentary, merely listings of a company’s products for sale. There was no way for prospective customers to make purchases online, so there was a limit on what China Pages could charge for its services.8”


July 18, 2016 

“China Pages was running out of cash to meet its payroll. Switching sales staff to commission-based pay relieved the pressure for a while, as did a 10,000-yuan contract from a client in the textile industry. But China Pages was in a vulnerable state.”


July 18, 2016 

“Jack had discovered that when working with China Pages on the Zhejiang government website, Dife had registered the domain name www.chinesepages.com, very similar to his own venture’s www.chinapages.com, and a new company called “China Yellow Pages.” Yet because Dife was a subsidiary of a powerful SOE, Jack couldn’t fight back. Gritting his teeth he had to give interviews with local media lauding the new venture: “The establishment of Dife-Haibo will further strengthen China Pages.” He concluded by saying, “We have every reason to believe, with the right policies of the Party and the State, and with the tremendous support from every walk of life in the society, China Pages will surely achieve great success. China’s information high-speed train will be faster and faster!”


July 18, 2016 

“Years later, after Alibaba had become successful, Jack was free to comment on the experience. China Pages was dwarfed by its new partner, and while Jack was the general manager, the position turned out to be of little value. “When the joint venture was formed, disaster followed. They had five votes on the board, and we had two. Whenever there was a board meeting, whatever ideas I put forward, if one of them voted against it, the rest of them followed suit. During five or six board meetings, none of our ideas were passed.”


July 18, 2016 

“Jack had lost control of his pioneering venture: “At that time I called myself a blind man riding on the back of blind tigers. Without knowing anything about technology or computers, I started the first company. And after years of terrible experience, we failed.”


July 18, 2016 

“The China Pages episode provided him with some important lessons, as well as good material for his speeches, such as, “It is difficult for an elephant to trample an ant to death, as long as you can dodge well,” and “With good strategies, you will definitely survive. To this day, I’ve realized one thing: Don’t be nervous if you face huge competition in the future.” He would later draw on his experiences when taking Alibaba into battle against eBay, in the David versus Goliath struggle that would raise his profile on the global stage.”



Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” iBooks. 

Notes From: David McCullough. “The Wright Brothers.” (1/11)

May 18, 2015 

“Wilbur would remark that if he were to give a young man advice on how to get ahead in life, he would say, “Pick out a good father and mother, and begin life in Ohio.”


May 18, 2015 

“It is assumed that young folks know best, and old folks are fogies. It may be so, but old folks may be as right about new fangles as young folks are about fogy ways.
Make business first, pleasure afterward, and that guarded.
All the money anyone needs is just enough to prevent one from being a burden on others.”


May 18, 2015 

“But all such plans ended when, playing hockey on a frozen lake beside the Dayton Soldiers’ Home, Wilbur was smashed in the face with a stick, knocking out most of his upper front teeth.”


May 18, 2015 

“But it is known that he was then working in a drugstore on West Third Street and that the druggist, in an effort to relieve him of the pain of rotting teeth, was providing him with a popular cure of the day, “Cocaine Toothache Drops.” In little time young Haugh became so dependent on drugs and alcohol, his behavior so out of control that he had to be committed for several months to the Dayton Asylum for the Insane”


May 18, 2015 

“ The whole episode seems to have been something the family wished to put behind them and remains a dark corner in Wilbur’s life about which too little is known. But clearly it changed the course of his life.”


May 18, 2015 

“Wilbur remained a recluse, more or less homebound, for fully three years—three years when he began reading as never before.”


May 18, 2015 

“Between formal education at school and informal education at home, it would seem he put more value on the latter. He was never overly concerned about his children’s attendance at school. If one or the other of them chose to miss a day or two for some project or interest he thought worthy, it was all right. And certainly he ranked reading as worthy.”


May 18, 2015 

“Years later, a friend told Orville that he and his brother would always stand as an example of how far Americans with no special advantages could advance in the world. “But it isn’t true,” Orville responded emphatically, “to say we had no special advantages . . . the greatest thing in our favor was growing up in a family where there was always much encouragement to intellectual curiosity.”


May 18, 2015 

Now and then the brothers would include items from other publications that they judged worthy of the readers’ attention, such as one titled “Encourage Your Boy,” reprinted from Architect and Building News.”


May 18, 2015 

“A high school friend of Orville’s, Paul Laurence Dunbar, who had been the class poet and the only black student in the school, became a contributor to the West Side News. Later, when Dunbar proposed doing a weekly paper for the black community, Orville and Wilbur printed it on credit, but it lasted only a short time.”


May 18, 2015 

“Bicycles had become the sensation of the time, a craze everywhere. (These were no longer the “high wheelers” of the 1870s and ’80s, but the so-called “safety bicycles,” with two wheels the same size.) The bicycle was proclaimed a boon to all mankind, a thing of beauty, good for the spirits, good for health and vitality, indeed one’s whole outlook on life.”



Notes From: David McCullough. “The Wright Brothers.” iBooks. 

Monday, July 18, 2016

Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” (4/12)

July 17, 2016 

“The Chinese word for Hope was Haibo, which literally translates as “vast like the sea.” Popular slang for leaving a government job and entering the private sector at the time was to xia hai, or to “jump into the sea.”


July 17, 2016 

“Jack wanted to get his feet wet as an entrepreneur, but he wasn’t quite ready to take the plunge and abandon his public sector job as a teacher. Entrepreneurship is such a well-established part of modern Chinese business and culture today that it is easy to forget how much things have changed in the last few decades.”


July 17, 2016 

“ack’s friend Guo Guangchang, a man worth an estimated $7 billion before his unexplained disappearance for several days in December 2015, is the founder of investment firm Fosun. Guo survived the Cultural Revolution only by eating moldy, dried vegetables, later winning entry to Shanghai’s prestigious Fudan University, where he sold bread door-to-door in the dorms to make ends meet. Prior to his surprise absence in 2015, Fosun had been described by the Financial Times as the “Berkshire Hathaway of China.” Guo is an active supporter of Alibaba’s forays into logistics and finance.”


July 17, 2016 

“Wenzhou lies two hundred miles southeast of Hangzhou. Hemmed in by mountains on one side and the East China Sea on the other, Wenzhou had always looked to trade, including tea exports, for its livelihood. But after 1949, its proximity to nationalist Taiwan became a liability. With Shanghai a three-hundred-mile ferry ride away, the city suffered from its isolation.
Wenzhou had little arable land and many unemployed or underemployed agricultural workers. But once Deng Xiaoping launched his economic reforms in 1978, the private sector started to boom. Wenzhou’s entrepreneurs, often working with family members, started out in light manufacturing. ”


July 17, 2016 

“On sale inside are an estimated 1.7 million products, from toys to plastic flowers, jewelry to suitcases, clothing to home appliances, anything and everything that is Made in China. Without knowing it, a huge amount of what we consume in the West has passed through Yiwu. Even Christmas is “Made in Yiwu”: More than 60 percent of the world’s Christmas decorations are ”


July 17, 2016 

“manufactured in the city. Although traders travel there overwhelmingly for its cheap prices, part of Yiwu’s attraction has been its supply of counterfeit products, for example handbags sold under almost-familiar-sounding names such as “Gussi.” The Financial Times journalist James Kynge traveled to the city in 2005 to research the problem of fake goods, only to find out that even hotels there were fake: He passed by not the Hyatt but the “Hiyat.”


July 17, 2016 

“Yiwu attracts traders from all four corners of the world. The town is a favorite of traders from the Middle East, making Yiwu home to the fastest-growing Muslim community in China. With an estimated 35,000 Muslims in the city at any time—Chinese, South Asian, and Arab—Yiwu features dozens of Muslim restaurants and an ornate $4 million mosque featuring marble imported from Iran.”


July 17, 2016 

Going to America

“Upon arriving in Los Angeles, the story goes, Jack met with the unnamed boss of Tonglu’s erstwhile U.S. partner. Jack quickly figured out, as The Economist related, that the “company he was investigating did not exist, that his host was a crook, and that he himself was in serious danger.” Jack has never named the boss, later described in local media only as a “bulky Californian.” But after refusing to take a bribe, Jack recalled he was locked in a beach house in Malibu, where his captor flashed a gun. He was then taken to Las Vegas, where he was kept in a form of house arrest in a hotel room on the top floor of a casino. Jack hasn’t repeated the details of any of this in recent years. His personal assistant, Chen Wei, has written that it is an episode that Jack prefers to forget. ”


July 17, 2016 

“In any event, it was in Seattle that Jack first logged on to the Internet. He had heard about the Internet the previous year from a fellow English teacher in Hangzhou, called Bill Aho. Bill’s son-in-law was working on an Internet-related business, which Bill described. Jack recalled that it was Bill who first told him about the Internet, but that he “couldn’t explain it clearly either, it sounded very strange. . . . I couldn’t really understand it either.”


July 17, 2016 

“Jack recalled his first online session: “My friend Stuart . . . said, ‘Jack, this is Internet. You can find whatever you can find through the Internet.’ I say really? So I searched the word beer. Very simple word. I don’t know why I searched for beer. But I found American beer, Germany [sic] beer and no Chinese beer. . . . I was curious, so I searched ‘China,’ and no ‘China,’ no data.”


July 17, 2016 

“Jack later recalled to the journalist Charlie Rose: “It was so shocking, we launched it nine forty in the morning, twelve thirty I got a phone call from my friend. ‘Jack, you’ve got five emails.’ I said, ‘What is email?’” Three emails came from the United States, one from Japan, and one from Germany.”


July 17, 2016 

“For his client in Tonglu, Jack returned to China empty-handed, with no deal to finance the proposed highway. But inside his suitcase he carried back with him a computer running the Intel 486 processor: “It was the most advanced in China at that time.”
Back in Hangzhou he set about building his concept of an online yellow pages. He named the business China Pages. In this, his second venture, he would dive headfirst into the entrepreneurial sea, leaving his teaching days behind.”



Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” iBooks. 

Sunday, July 17, 2016

Linkfest


Roger Federer: All I need the fire, the excitement, the whole rollercoaster | Sport | The Guardian https://t.co/xpofedXz8m
Mohnish Pabrai Lecture at Univ. of California, Irvine (UCI), May 24, 2016 - YouTube https://t.co/G0RnnaDlvY
Ira Glass on Storytelling https://t.co/09zvwi12xH via @YouTube
What Now? | Online Only | n+1 https://t.co/2SbkW9iuQh
The Invisible Forces Behind All of Our Decision-Making : Longreads Blog https://t.co/cB6MoUrIMl
Paul Krugman with Gillian Tett: The State of the Economy https://t.co/GGBK71wrvV via @YouTube
Filmmaker Steven Spielberg Speech | Harvard Commencement 2016 https://t.co/gv8KJijbbZ via @YouTube
In Conversation with Steve Schwarzman - Public lectures and events https://t.co/zQTpyLEIOM
Shit Elon Says - Transcript - Elon Musk on Tesla in Hong Kong and China https://t.co/gD6r3LnPgH
Seeking Answers, Michael Phelps Finds Himself - The New York Times https://t.co/Kyk5S8NdIL
Michael Bloomberg's 2016 Commencement Speech - University of Michigan https://t.co/UIkfk0jnxT via @YouTube
The life and rise of Sundar Pichai - Business Insider https://t.co/6ePtcUiCOr
Simple Financial Advice for New Grads -- The Motley Fool https://t.co/d2fV2VVVLk
Ev Williams is The Forrest Gump of the Internet - The Atlantic https://t.co/DMCE0Vdak0
Ubers battle for China - Financial Times https://t.co/fVzG5Hj50P
The body as amusement park https://t.co/zA6AFmSRfR via @aeonmag
Warren Buffett on Investing, Regrets and India https://t.co/0OJ0BhHiMh via @YouTube
Invisibilia: Your Personality Isn't As Set In Stone As You Think : Shots - Health News : NPR https://t.co/IWuRDxbgct
Watch "Fluent Innovation: Using Behavioural Science to Make Your Next Big Idea a Success" on @Vimeo https://t.co/NcMBoWf7kT
PowerPoint Makes Us Stupid? | The Smart Set https://t.co/W1dZaoWUFM
Words of Wisdom and Advice for Aspiring Value Investors https://t.co/gYnsiXflXo
Plastics run in my family but their inheritance is in us all | Aeon Essays https://t.co/m2kFalRIZs
Full video: eBay CEO Devin Wenig at Code 2016 - Recode https://t.co/iEYWQ9NX34
Kids Answer "What is the Best Country in the World?" https://t.co/sNZEGUbo5M via @YouTube
The return of the machinery question | The Economist https://t.co/RhDlTRkfyq
Lunch with the FT: Nikesh Arora https://t.co/9wP2fKLyE3 https://t.co/Y6iEQMa4yN
How to build a successful start-up, according to Reid Hoffman | MBA blog https://t.co/WIncSj64TL
Thornton O'Glove: "Quality of Earnings" | Talks at Google https://t.co/DqawswWcCN via @YouTube
Siddhartha Mukherjee https://t.co/qktJQnBcc6 via @charlieroseshow
The American Dream Is Alive in Finland - The Atlantic https://t.co/vsh0UJcQbB
The Unexpected Story of How This Tiny Country Became the Most Tech-Savvy on Earth | Mic https://t.co/G00PH7sEAx
Clean Tech Investing in 2015 - Novel Ways to Fund Your Start-up https://t.co/MNduLt1RsV via @YouTube
Bill Nye: "Undeniable" | Talks at Google https://t.co/QIOriXPD7Q via @YouTube
Bruce Greenwald: The Death of Manufacturing - YouTube https://t.co/fRjCnt3IuS
Filling the Mid-Market Financing Gap https://t.co/u5qEJNvPRd via @YouTube
Notes from The house that built Jack Ma (2/12) ttp://prashantkhorana.blogspot.com/2016/07/notes-from-alibiba-house-that-built.html?spref=tw
Full video: Tinder CEO Sean Rad at Code 2016 - Recode https://t.co/4wSU1yrVZj
1945-2016: Here̢۪s Basically What Happened -- The Motley Fool https://t.co/qGKySOdkT4
Arthur Rubinstein plays Chopin. Polonaise in Ab Major, Op. 53. Heroic https://t.co/jV5s704RJc via @YouTube
Copy of In Tech We Trust A Debate with Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen - YouTube https://t.co/xJKsPSog3c
Alex Tapscott: "Blockchain Revolution" @Google - ValueWalk https://t.co/3lQ5quTtDG

Notes From: Martin Ford. “Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future.” (1/10)

July 5, 2016 

“While industrial robots offer an unrivaled combination of speed, precision, and brute strength, they are, for the most part, blind actors in a tightly choreographed performance. They rely primarily on precise timing and positioning. In the minority of cases where robots have machine vision capability, they can typically see in just two dimensions and only in controlled lighting conditions. They might, for example, be able to select parts from a flat surface, but an inability to perceive depth in their field of view results in a low tolerance for environments that are to any meaningful degree unpredictable. The result is that a number of routine factory jobs have been left for people. Very often these are jobs that involve filling the gaps between the machines, or they are at the end points of the production process.”


July 5, 2016 

“ It might be argued that the robot’s eyes can trace their origin to November 2006, when Nintendo introduced its Wii video game console. Nintendo’s machine included an entirely new type of game controller: a wireless wand that incorporated an inexpensive device called an accelerometer. The accelerometer was able to detect motion in three dimensions and then output a data stream that could be interpreted by the game console. Video games could now be controlled through body movements and gestures. The result was a dramatically different game experience. Nintendo’s innovation smashed the stereotype of the nerdy kid glued to a monitor and a joystick, and opened a new frontier for games as active exercise.”


July 5, 2016 

“The history of computing shows pretty clearly that once a standard operating system, together with inexpensive and easy-to-use programming tools, becomes available, an explosion of application software is likely to follow. This has been the case with personal computer software and, more recently, with iPhone, iPad, and Android apps. Indeed, these platforms are now so saturated with application software that it can be genuinely difficult to conceive of an idea that hasn’t already been implemented.”


July 7, 2016 

“Nonetheless, those 140 factory jobs represent at least a partial reversal of a decades-long decline in manufacturing employment. The US textile industry was decimated in the 1990s as production moved to low-wage countries, especially China, India, and Mexico. About 1.2 million jobs—more than three-quarters of domestic employment in the textile sector—vanished between 1990 and 2012. The last few years, however, have seen a dramatic rebound in production. Between 2009 and 2012, US textile and apparel exports rose by 37 percent to a total of nearly $23 billion.7 The turnaround is being driven by automation technology so efficient that it is competitive with even the lowest-wage offshore workers.”


July 7, 2016 

“US manufacturing more competitive with low-wage countries. Indeed, there is now a significant “reshoring” trend under way, and this is being driven both by the availability of new technology and by rising offshore labor costs, especially in China where typical factory workers saw their pay increase by nearly 20 percent per year between 2005 and 2010. In April 2012, the Boston Consulting Group surveyed American manufacturing executives and found that nearly half of companies with sales exceeding $10 billion were either actively pursuing or considering bringing factories back to the United States.8”


July 7, 2016 

“Increased automation is also likely to be driven by the fact that the interest rates paid by large companies in China are kept artificially low as a result of government policy. Loans are often rolled over continuously, so that the principal is never repaid. ”


July 7, 2016 

“Many analysts believe that this artificially low cost of capital has caused a great deal of mal-investment throughout China, perhaps most famously the construction of “ghost cities” that appear to be largely unoccupied. By the same token, low capital costs may create a powerful incentive for big companies to invest in expensive automation, even in those cases where it does not necessarily make good business sense to do so.”


July 7, 2016 

“In June 2013, athletic-shoe manufacturer Nike announced that rising wages in Indonesia had negatively impacted its quarterly financial numbers. According to the company’s chief financial officer, the long-term solution to that problem is going to be “engineering the labor out of the product.”12 Increased automation is also seen as a way to deflect criticism regarding the sweatshop-like environments that often exist in third-world garment factories.”


July 7, 2016 

“San Francisco start-up company Momentum Machines, Inc., has set out to fully automate the production of gourmet-quality hamburgers. Whereas a fast food worker might toss a frozen patty onto the grill, Momentum Machines’ device shapes burgers from freshly ground meat and then grills them to order—including even the ability to add just the right amount of char while retaining all the juices. The machine, which is capable of producing about 360 hamburgers per hour, also toasts the bun and then slices and adds fresh ingredients like tomatoes, onions, and pickles only after the order is placed. Burgers arrive assembled and ready to serve on a conveyer belt. While most robotics companies take great care to spin a positive tale when it comes to the potential impact on employment, Momentum Machines co-founder Alexandros Vardakostas is very forthright about the company’s objective: “Our device isn’t meant to make employees more efficient,” he said. “It’s meant to completely obviate them.”



Notes From: Martin Ford. “Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future.” iBooks. 

Notes From: Walter Kiechel. “The Lords of Strategy: The Secret Intellectual History of the New Corporate World.”

August 2, 2014 

“Most dangerous of all, the prestrategy worldview lacked a rigorous sense of the dynamics of competition—“If we do this, the other guy is likely to do that.” It was like trying to do large-scale engineering without knowing the laws of physics. As a set of ideas, strategy sought to remedy all these deficiencies.”


August 2, 2014 

“that consultants are at best hangers-on of only occasional, limited usefulness—in the ancient, tired joke, someone who borrows your watch to tell you the time, ”


August 2, 2014 

“which, of course, is not always a bad thing to be reminded of—or at worst, rapacious parasites whose slightest presence in the corporate body indicates gullibility, weakness, and insecurity on the part of its leadership.”


August 2, 2014 

“They all believed that ideas are not “out there” waiting to be discovered, but are tools—like forks, knives, and microchips—that people devise to cope with the world in which they find themselves. They believed that ideas are produced not by individuals, but by groups of individuals—that ideas are social. They believed that ideas do not develop according to some inner logic of their own, but are entirely dependent, like germs, on their human carriers and environment. And they believed that since ideas are provisional responses to particular and unreproducible circumstances, their survival depends not on their immutability but on their adaptability.”


August 2, 2014 

“The tamer, more conventional way of framing this tension is to see the history of strategy as a struggle between two definitions, strategy as positioning and strategy as organizational learning. The positioning school, led by Harvard’s Porter, sees strategy making as the choice of where you want to compete, in what industry and from what spot within that industry, and how—on price, with distinctive products, or by finding a niche.
The organizational-learning school, by contrast, maintains that no company that’s already up and running can choose its strategy as if it had a blank slate. Almost gleeful in its derision of the positionists—at least its leading spokesman, McGill’s Henry Mintzberg is—the learning school also argues that virtually no strategy ever works as originally planned. The point, they say, is for the company to set off in one direction, learn from the response it gets from markets and competitors, and then adjust accordingly.”




August 2, 2014 

“ Somewhat incongruously for such a distinctively American character, Bruce Henderson was also an elitist. He provoked outrage among students at the Harvard Business School when he placed an ad in the student newspaper saying that BCG was looking to hire not just the run-of-that-mill but, instead, scholars—Rhodes Scholars, Marshall Scholars, Baker Scholars (the top 5 percent of the class). He wanted the smartest of the smart, and to attract them he was prepared to overlook what might have seemed obvious liabilities. Of the first seven professionals at BCG, only one besides Henderson had any consulting experience.
This kind of elitism infused the strategy revolution and helped foment a stratification within companies and society—we are not all in this together; some pigs are smarter than other pigs and deserve more money—that contributed to the fiercer feel of today’s capitalism.”


August 2, 2014 

“But take the trouble to look for it through unsentimental eyes, and you can find evidence everywhere over the past five decades that increasing numbers of people have come to understand business not just by doing it—as it was done in the past, as company lore said it was to be done—but rather as framed and mediated by ideas. ”


September 2, 2014 

“n working for a client thinking of buying a small oil company, the consultants concluded that the target’s “past and present reported profits were meaningless” to their calculations. The only measure to take seriously was how much cash the company’s operations would throw off in the future. Henderson would build on this thinking and tie it in with the experience curve in a 1972 Perspectives piece, “Cash Traps.” ”


September 2, 2014 

“The philosophical underpinning of his recommendation “was balancing operating risk and financial risk.” If you had a low level of operating risk, as timber companies did, “beef up the financial risk by the use of debt, to get to the appropriate level of debt for the business.” Soon thereafter, Weyerhaeuser embarked on a program of acquiring more woodlands.”


September 2, 2014 

“Tight logical relationships between the cells are what give a matrix its power. As HBS professor Clayton Christensen has observed, a four-box matrix is simply another way of conveying the relationship captured in a quadratic equation.”


September 2, 2014 

“The matrix mostly addressed dilemmas around cash—which businesses in the portfolio threw it off, which ones consumed it. This offered valuable insights to clients struggling with diversification; consultants from that era still shake their heads over how many companies had bought growth businesses without realizing that these used up cash in their early days and would have to be funded from somewhere else.”


September 2, 2014 

“When a client’s actual business units were plotted on the matrix (see figure 4–5) the result was often what certain consultants—most of them at Bain & Company—later came to call “the million-dollar slide”: a single image that captured and conveyed so much information about a company’s strategic situation that by itself, it was worth a million dollars in consulting fees. BCG finally had its first bona fide “product.”




September 2, 2014 

“Looking back, the BCG pioneers of the matrix are prepared to admit they got the dog part slightly wrong, and not just in the nomenclature. “Being inexperienced businesspeople, we didn’t walk in there and tell [them] how to run their businesses,” says Zakon, without irony. “It didn’t dawn on us that the way to manage a dog was not to starve it, but to LBO it,” that is, sell it ”


September 2, 2014 

“In the 1980s, as we will see, the complaint went up that while consultants like BCG might be good at helping you devise a strategy, they were largely useless in helping you put it to work—at “implementation” or “execution.” BCG in particular would come to realize that the charge had a lot of merit.”


September 2, 2014 

“In 1976, Bruce Henderson would write and publish a Perspectives essay titled “The Rule of Three and Four.” In it, he argued, “A stable competitive market never has more than three significant competitors,”


September 2, 2014 

“Bain took to the job readily—he became Vanderbilt’s director of development at age twenty-six—and from it extracted two lasting lessons. First, he found that he enjoyed and was good at working with senior corporate executives. His fund-raising territory included New York, and he ended up spending considerable time with the heads of Kodak, J.P. Morgan, Chemical Bank, ”


September 2, 2014 

“and the Bank of New York. “I was fascinated by how they got there, what they did, how they thought about their jobs,” Bain recalls. He discovered that he shared many interests with them: “sports, women, business, competition, goals,” as he lists them. “I liked every single one of those guys a lot, and they liked me. I felt very comfortable with them.”


September 2, 2014 

“Henderson said to him, “I need someone very smart, who understands and can work with and motivate senior executives and be respected by them. And I need someone who understands business. Normally I start with very smart people who know about business, not that they really know anything about how business works but they know about business because they’ve been to business school. You have the other two things but don’t have that. But there’s no reason why you should be behind anybody from Harvard Business School, because while they’re learning how to play nice with others, and how not to be scared to death of chief executives, you can learn some of the rudiments of a business education.” He invited Bain up to Boston to meet and be interviewed by others at the firm.”


September 2, 2014 

“The proposed compensation was $14,000 a year, the average offer the firm made to graduating Harvard MBAs. The trouble was, Bain had been making $18,000 at Vanderbilt—“I was well paid.” The two men negotiated, Henderson upped his offer to $17,000, and Bain agreed to join the firm. “I tell my kids that every job change I ever made, I took a pay cut,” Bain volunteers.”


September 2, 2014 

“He told friends at the time, “I feel like I’m a consultant on a desert island, writing a report, putting it in bottle, throwing it in the water, then going on to the next one.” Today, he recalls his mounting frustration: “I wouldn’t know, perhaps ever, how well I did on that study.” Which led to his ultimate question: “Do our clients make any more money because of us?”


September 2, 2014 

“[I told them,] “If you’re going to play a game, for your life, with a guy who has an IQ of one hundred and ten, do you want to play tic-tac-toe, or checkers, or chess? It’s going to be chess. Now, I’m going to tell you the guy has the same IQ you do, and again, you’re playing for your life. How many chess books are you going to look at, how many old master games? Either you’re a lot smarter, or you’re a lot better prepared and you think a lot more strategically.”
And then, zeroing in,
“Because this is so complex, and because to my knowledge you’re ”


September 2, 2014 

“ Implicit in BCG’s retail marketing of ideas was the notion that these ideas were available to all. Bill Bain, by contrast, wanted his consulting work to result in strategies that were distinctive, proprietary, even secret. One might say that in contrast to most of his colleagues, Bain took the power of strategy and competitive advantage really, really seriously.”


September 2, 2014 

“The study had continued for two or three months when Bain found himself in a BCG officers meeting. His colleagues began asking him questions, slightly critical in tone, about what they regarded as “the problems associated with a client that lasted indefinitely.” These allegedly included tying up consultants whose consequent availability for other work would be unknown. Other colleagues worried that the open-ended arrangement was disrupting the schedule of the editing department, which had to book well in advance to prepare final reports. Even Henderson himself, the original disruptive force, seemed ambivalent.”


September 2, 2014 

“By virtue of its be-there-with-you-all-the-way approach, Bain & Company stole a march on its competitors in tackling implementation. Effectively, Bain was taking the concepts from the early stages of the strategy revolution and figuring out how to turn them into behavior, in ways that BCG, already moving on to look for the next killer construct, was not.”


September 2, 2014 

“This approach entailed delivering on the promise of the experience curve. “We recognized that your costs don’t automatically decline with the experience curve,” says Schaubert. “You have to manage them down.” The firm may not have blazoned forth what it was doing, but if you want to see how Greater Taylorism was first done best, you need look no further than Bain’s work with its clients.”


September 2, 2014 

“The product of Bain’s efforts was to be not a report or a study—the firm’s consultants still drip with disdain at the mention of such things—but rather a strategy and, even more important, results—results that you could see first on the bottom line, then in the stock price. Fairly quickly, this value proposition was boiled down to a snappy formulation: “We don’t sell advice by the hour; we sell profits at a discount.” In practice, this usually meant relentless attention to the three Cs—costs, customers, and competitors—a distillation of the essential elements of strategy that Bainies still ritually invoke. Particularly costs.”


September 2, 2014 

“Bain got steadily better at exploiting the Freedom of Information Act to gather intelligence on competitors from their filings with the government, as well as at reverse-engineering techniques like those it used for Bausch & Lomb. The search evolved into one for best competitive practices.”


September 3, 2014 

“The one element of continuity through all this, dating back to James O. McKinsey, was an instrument called the general management survey. The preferred diagnostic of many early consulting firms, it represented a sort of standardized audit of a company’s organization, procedures, records and budgets, all supposedly aimed at gauging the effectiveness of the client’s management.”


September 3, 2014 

“Lightning flashed through my mind,” says Gluck. “What do I say to this guy? Do I tell him the truth? But I grew up in a tough neighborhood in Brooklyn, so I said to him, ‘I don’t think we know what we’re doing.’” “What?” Patton replied. Gluck elaborated: “We go up there to the client, and we show them a chart that says this is the kind of revenues you need, what we call a strategic gap analysis; here’s what your projects are going to be, there’s a big gap in here. The Corning guy would say back to us, ‘Don’t worry, we’ll fill it with stuff out of our laboratories.’ Which means nothing happens.” Dismayed, Patton said, “We’ll see about this.”


September 3, 2014 

“ We took a hard look at our processes for selecting and evaluating consultants and at the quality of our knowledge.” This is McKinsey-speak for the realization that it had expanded too quickly and promoted people who weren’t as sharp as they should be, particularly in the face of mounting worldwide economic troubles and increasing competition from the upstarts at BCG and Bain. ”


September 3, 2014 

“ The head of the technology practice asked Gluck to make a presentation on the electronics industry for one such occasion. Gluck initially refused, finally acceding to the request only on the condition that the consultants interested in attending be flown to Bermuda to conduct their deliberations. Today, he argues that it was the first of what was to become a grand—in many ways—McKinsey tradition: the off-site retreat to create new knowledge.”




September 3, 2014 

“ The first, primitive phase consisted of mere financial planning. Here planning was “viewed as a financial problem” and consisted of little more than the annual budgeting exercise. Rather to their astonishment, the consultants found that “in well over half of the business enterprises surveyed (including a number of highly successful companies), formal planning has never evolved beyond annual budgeting.”


September 3, 2014 

“ The clouds part, and the planners “suddenly realize that their responsibility is not so much to chart the future,” which is tough to do, “as it is to lay out for management decision the key issues that face the company.” Lyrically, the McKinsey paper labels this spark “issue orientation.”


September 3, 2014 

“Whereas McKinsey had emphasized “the situational nature of strategy development”—as in, “It all depends”—its competitors had developed a systematic approach to the subject and had even gone beyond this to actually demonstrate “a capability to execute it.” To Gluck, the buffs were conversant with the state of the art, always debating its fine points, particularly implementation, “supported by standard analytical approaches” and better at empiricism than the Firm”


September 3, 2014 

“By the early 1980s, Gluck argues, McKinsey was on its way to becoming a firm of strategy buffs. To be sure, there were still pockets of resistance, or uninterest, mostly growing out of the perceptions of many at the Firm—perceptions that endure to this day—that its greatest asset isn’t its ideas, or even its people, but rather its dazzling array of clients and the continuing strength of its relationships with those clients.”


September 3, 2014 

“Up through the 1970s, the closest approximation HBS had to a course on strategy was a two-semester offering named Business Policy. Required of all students in the second, final year of the MBA program, it was supposed to serve as the capstone of their education, showing them how to integrate the different disciplines they had studied—finance, marketing, accounting—as would the “general manager” of a business, the person with profit-and-loss responsibility for its operations overall.”


September 3, 2014 

“Writing cases that were to be cornerstones for his Business Policy course, Andrews found that contrary to what contemporary economists would have predicted, different companies in that industry actually had different cost structures and different levels of profitability, mostly because competitors pursued different product and sales strategies.”


September 3, 2014 

“Economists have been harassing my idea of the concept of competitive strategy ever since,” Andrews told me, “in the sense that the human, and the moral, and the ethical dimensions are largely ignored. Michael Porter and that group are working within the concept, but have departed from it—the ethical and moral elements”


September 3, 2014 

“The real reason I got interested in strategy was Roland Christensen,” says Porter, using his teacher’s given name, as few others do. “I found this guy and this subject so compelling; it just ignited a tremendous passion for this holistic, integrated, how-to-get-all-these-pieces-to-come-together” approach. Porter ties the theme in with what became his life’s work: “What ”


September 3, 2014 

“I’ve come to see as probably my greatest gift is the ability to take an extraordinary complex, integrated, multidimensional problem and get arms around it conceptually in a way that helps, that informs and empowers practitioners to actually do things.”


September 3, 2014 

“At that stage in IO’s history, he says, the view of industry structure was “overwhelmingly dominated by just two factors: seller concentration [what percentage of the market did the top four or top eight command] and barriers to entry,” of which three or four types were posited, such as scale. “When I put that next to the industry studies I had looked at in the business school, I said, ‘No. Fails. Not enough. Too stylized.’ ” He became an even more avid student of business school case studies of individual industries and companies, as well as articles from magazines such as Fortune and Forbes. “I just read and read and read and read.”


September 3, 2014 

“The standard criticism of the five-forces framework, particularly from consultants, is that it’s static, that unlike the experience curve, say, it doesn’t help predict how the competitive situation in an industry will evolve or how the positions of the different players shape up or shake out. Porter doesn’t buy that. ”


September 3, 2014 

“urs of preparation his mentor put in before each class discussion, observed the sessions, and frequently hashed over with the master afterward the how-to of the Socratic magic he’d witnessed. The pupil would go on to eventually put on wildly popular courses himself—and routinely command fees in the high five figures for speeches to business audiences—but he still doesn’t rank his teaching abilities as high as he rates Chris”


September 3, 2014 

“The bigger oddity about Competitive Strategy for our history is that most of it, fifteen out of its sixteen chapters, isn’t actually about strategy. Rather, it’s about industries and how to analyze their structure, as Porter readily admits: “The Competitive Strategy book is basically a book about industries, because that’s what I’d worked with.”


September 3, 2014 

“ There were essentially three strategies a company could choose, he posited: low-cost leadership (beloved of fans of the experience curve), product differentiation (making your offering so distinctive that you could charge more for it), or market specialization (pick a niche and dominate it).”


September 3, 2014 

“As head of Business Policy I, Porter began introducing his frameworks and takeaways into the curriculum that all MBA students were required to take. Partly in recognition of this, in 1986, the course’s name was changed to Competition and Strategy. As course head, too, Porter could spearhead the other critical sally in his “pedagogical battle,” importing PhDs as faculty members at the expense of DBAs trained up in the school’s own doctoral program.”


September 4, 2014 

“You need to understand the [underlying] economic logic so you don’t have to reinvent the wheel every time. And that’s my job, my business. There’s all this stuff about how do you create an organization that can both understand and go through the process of doing this, and implement it well, and commit to it, and all that is really, really important stuff. But that’s complimentary” to his own efforts.
Within a year or two of Porter’s initial triumph, it was to become startlingly apparent just how really, really important—and popular—the human stuff actually was.”


December 18, 2014 

“What is the best way to define the consciousness of a company? To capture it as a purposeful entity? Corporations aren’t conscious beings, of course, but are legal constructs that are also agglomerations of individuals, each with his or her own mind, bound together by agreement, law, and custom. But if it were in your interest, perhaps because you were running one, to get your mind around the company as something akin to a person, self-aware, with aspirations and fears, capable of conceiving action and taking it, what would be the most useful framework, model, or construct to adopt?”


December 18, 2014 

“Herbert Simon, a polymath—cognitive psychology, computer science, public administration, sociology—and professor who in 1978 won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics for his work on, as the citation read, “decision making within economic organizations.” Probably his most memorable finding was that those organizations didn’t abide by theories of rational decision making. Instead of choosing the path that economists would say leads to the best possible result, they will often pick an option that keeps contending internal factions at peace”


September 4, 2014 

“To page through Peters’s 1971 copy of March and Simon’s book Organizations is to follow the smoke trail of a mind on fire: underlining everywhere, marginal notes, words circled, arrows linking one passage with another.”


September 4, 2014 

“In Search of Excellence was finally published in October 1982, to modest expectations on the part of the McKinsey firm. Partners were told it was so unlikely that the book would sell that they should use copies primarily as Christmas gifts to clients.”


February 25, 2015 

“Peters and Waterman continually pointed up where the typical, not-so-excellent company fell sho”


September 4, 2014 

“The fundamental contribution of BCG is not the experience curve per se, but the ever-present assumption that differences in cost (or efficiency) are the fundamental components of strate”



Notes From: Walter Kiechel. “The Lords of Strategy: The Secret Intellectual History of the New Corporate World.” iBooks. 

Saturday, July 16, 2016

Notes From: Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built (3/12)

July 16, 2016 

“A future icon of Chinese entrepreneurship, Jack came into the world at a time when private enterprise had almost been completely extinguished. Ninety percent of industrial production had been taken into the hands of the state.”


July 16, 2016 

“As a boy, Jack fell in love with the English language and literature, particularly readings of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom Sawyer that he listened to on a shortwave radio. Later it was the arrival of foreign tourists in China that provided Jack with his opening to the outside world. In late 1978, when Jack was fourteen, China launched the new “open door” policy, initiated by Deng Xiaoping, in pursuit of foreign trade and investment. After a decade of turmoil the country was on the verge of bankruptcy, and desperately needed hard currency.”


July 16, 2016 

“Jack relished any opportunity to practice his English. He started waking up before dawn and riding his bicycle for forty minutes to the Hangzhou Hotel to greet foreign tourists. As he recalled, “Every morning from five o’clock I would read English in front of the hotel. A lot of foreign visitors came from the USA, from Europe. I’d give them a free tour of West Lake, and they taught me English. For nine years! And I practiced my English every morning, no matter if it snowed or rained.”


July 16, 2016 

“An American tourist whose father and husband were named Jack suggested the name and Ma Yun became known in English henceforth as Jack. He is dismissive of the quality of his English: “I just make myself understood. The grammar is terrible.” But Jack never dismisses how much learning the language has helped him in life: “English helps me a lot. It makes me understand the world better, helps me to meet the best CEOs and leaders in the world, and makes me understand the distance between China and the world.”


July 16, 2016 

“David’s father, Ken Morley, once described his first impressions of Jack as a “barrow boy,” or a street hawker. “He really wanted to practice his English, and he was very friendly. Our kids were very impressed.”
David described how the family stayed in touch: “What followed that meeting was a pen pal relationship that I kept up for a few years until my father started to take an interest in helping this young man.” Jack would correspond regularly with Ken, referring to him as “Dad,” who asked him to “double space his letters so that any corrections could be sent back in the spaces.” David explained, “The original with corrections was returned for learning purposes with the reply letter. I believe this greatly helped and encouraged Jack to continue with his English studies.”


July 16, 2016 

“Armed with his improving English, rich knowledge of the history of the area, and a knack for storytelling, Jack embraced the opportunity to show more foreign tourists around the sights of West Lake. He relished visiting Hangzhou’s teahouses, where locals would play Chinese chess and cards and recount “tall tales.”


July 16, 2016 

“But these skills were of little use against one of Jack’s earliest foes: math. In China, all high school students hoping to go on to higher education have to pass a merit-based national higher education entrance exam, commonly known as the gaokao, literally the “high test.” The gaokao takes place over two or three days. Math, along with Chinese and a foreign language, is mandatory.
The gaokao is widely seen as one of the most challenging in the world, requiring a huge amount of preparation and memorization. Today there is growing criticism of the exam’s negative social consequences, including depression and suicide.”


July 16, 2016 

“ Jack resolved to have a different fate, and took the gaokao again. This time his math score improved slightly, to 19/120, but his overall score dropped considerably.
Jack once again set about applying for jobs to make ends meet. He sent out eleven job applications but all met with rejection. Jack likes to tell the story of how even KFC turned him away”


July 16, 2016 

“Undeterred, Jack became a regular every Sunday at the library of Zhejiang University, where he committed to memory the formulas and equations he would have to master to pass the test.
Jack never gained admission to a prestigious university in Beijing or Shanghai. But in 1984, when he was nineteen, he raised his math score sufficiently to win acceptance to a local university, the Hangzhou Teachers College.”


July 16, 2016 

“In the years before he died, he would witness some of Jack’s early success, expressing his embarrassment at the money and gifts Jack and Cathy liked to shower on him. Instead he treasured most, he said, the honor that Jack and Cathy bestowed on him by naming their eldest child after him (calling him “Kun,” an approximation of Ken). China impacted the Morleys, too: Susan Morley went on to study Chinese in Sydney for several years. The Ma and Morley families remain close friends to this day and continue to vacation together.”


July 16, 2016 

“fter his day job at the institute, he started teaching English classes at the Hangzhou YMCA. According to Chen Wei, who first attended a class in 1992, Jack’s English classes were popular because he spent little time teaching grammar, vocabulary, or reading out texts. Instead Jack preferred to pick a topic and engage in conversation”



Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” iBooks. 

Thursday, July 14, 2016

Notes from Alibiba: The house that built Jack MA (2/12)

July 7, 2016 

“Most companies bear the imprint of their founders, but few more than Alibaba. Jack Ma’s outsize influence stems from his passion for teaching. Although he left the profession two decades ago, Jack has never really stopped being an educator. He used to joke that in his case CEO stood for “Chief Education Officer.” Fourteen years after founding the company Jack relinquished the title to become chairman. But the switch served only to heighten his authority. His chosen successor as CEO lasted barely two years in the job.”


July 7, 2016 

“So, Jack doesn’t look the part of a corporate chieftain. He possesses all the trappings, including luxury homes around the world and a Gulfstream jet, but otherwise Jack doesn’t really act the part, either. ”


July 7, 2016 

“Where other business moguls like to talk up their connections or academic credentials, Jack enjoys talking down his own: “I don’t have a rich or powerful father, not even a powerful uncle.” Having never studied abroad, he likes to describe himself as “one hundred percent Made in China.” He stands out as a tech company founder with no background in technology. At Stanford University in 2013 he confessed, “Even today, I still don’t understand what coding is all about, I still don’t understand the technology behind the Internet.”
Jack has made a career out of being underestimated: “I am a very simple guy, I am not smart. Everyone thinks that Jack Ma is a very smart guy. I might have a smart face but I’ve got very stupid brains.”


July 7, 2016 

“On the first day of trading of Alibaba’s shares, Jack was interviewed by CNBC live on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. When he was asked which person had most inspired him, Jack replied without hesitation, “Forrest Gump.” His interviewer paused, then said, “You know he’s a fictional character?”


July 7, 2016 

“Jack’s ability to charm and cajole has played an important role in attracting talent and capital to the company, as well as building his own fame. Jack has a unique Chinese combination of blarney and chutzpah. One of his earliest foreign employees3 summed up for me his qualities in two words: “Jack Magic.”


July 7, 2016 

“Central to Jack’s own distortion field are his skills as a communicator. Jack’s speaking style is so effective because his message is so easy to agree with, remember, and digest. ”


July 7, 2016 

“Jack always speaks without notes. His oratorical skills are so effective because his repertoire is so narrow. Jack can dispense with notes because he already knows much of his material: a well-honed stable of stock stories”


July 7, 2016 

“ I have turned around to look at the faces of the audience, trying to understand what explains his enduring appeal.”


July 7, 2016 

“Humor is a big part of it. As a quick look at any of the hundreds of videos available on YouTube of his most popular speeches will reveal, Jack is very funny.”


July 14, 2016 

“After giving a talk to a group of students in South Korea, Jack himself appeared to be consumed by emotion when asked about his biggest regrets in life, replying that he regretted not spending more time with his family. After composing himself, he added, “Normally I make other people cry.”


July 14, 2016 

“ An American colleague once asked Jack about his references to Mao in his speeches in China. Jack explained, “For me to motivate you I would talk about George Washington and the cherry tree.”


July 14, 2016 

“Perhaps the most famous lesson of Jack the teacher is known by heart by every Alibaba employee: “Customers first, employees second, and shareholders third.” Jack describes this as Alibaba’s philosophy.”


July 14, 2016 

“Jack doesn’t sugar coat the challenges to his employees. One of his favorite messages to them, and a “bit” in his comedy routine, is “Today is brutal, tomorrow is more brutal, but the day after tomorrow is beautiful.”


July 14, 2016 

“The goal for Alibaba to survive for 102 years might seem weird to outsiders but not to his employees, especially the Aliren (the “Ali People”)—those with more than three years of service—for whom it is an accepted part of the Alibaba culture.”


July 14, 2016 

“ In public, Jack likes to make fun of his shareholders and investors, a means to burnish his credentials as a maverick with his employees and the general public. When the share price of Alibaba’s first business, alibaba.com, languished on the stock market in 2009, Jack cried out at the rock concert–style gathering for the company’s employees, “Let the Wall Street investors curse us if they wish!” Not exactly standard behavior for the senior executive of a publicly listed company.”


July 14, 2016 

“When asked by President Obama in Manila what spurred his interest in the environment, Jack told the story of a lake in which he had last swam when he was twelve years old. “I went to swim in a lake and almost died in the lake because the water was so deep, much deeper than I thought. Five years ago I went to the lake, the total lake was dry.”


July 14, 2016 

“The bicycles at Alibaba are orange and include tandems: the two seats illustrating the company’s emphasis on teamwork above individual achievement.”


July 14, 2016 

“A more tangible benefit for the couples and other Alibaba employees is the interest-free loan of up to $50,000 offered to finance the down payment on a new apartment, an increasingly valued perk for staff members working in high-cost cities like Hangzhou and Beijing. Thousands of employees have taken advantage of the loans, amounting to several hundred millions dollars today.”


July 14, 2016 

“Employees are discouraged from ever complaining—a pet peeve of Jack’s—and encouraged instead to shoulder personal responsibility, carrying out or delegating tasks rather than waiting for orders from on high”


July 14, 2016 

“Customer first” is reflected in the power given to Taobao’s xiaoer referees and in the composition of Alibaba’s workforce. Most of Alibaba employees work in sales, a much higher proportion than the more technical bent of competitors like Tencent and Baidu. Face-to-face visits are a key part of Alibaba’s sales methods.”


July 14, 2016 

“The call to “embrace change” is reflected in Alibaba’s frequent rotation of its employees, switching them regularly between various new products or between regions of the country, regardless of performance.”


July 14, 2016 

“Whatever the inspiration for regular rotation, Alibaba devolves a lot of autonomy to its business units, an effort to maintain a relatively flat management hierarchy and minimize the temptation to shame and blame.”


July 14, 2016 

“Jack doled out much more equity, and at an earlier stage, than many of his Internet founder peers. But he has kept a firm control on the company through his gift for communicating and his lofty ambitions. A modern-day Don Quixote, Jack relishes tilting at windmills, from retail to finance, to entertainment, health care, and beyond.”



Notes From: Duncan Clark. “Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.” iBooks. 

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Notes From: Mary Pilon. “The Monopolists.” (2/15)

January 17, 2016 

“Through secret agreements and shell companies that appeared independent but were in fact operated by Standard Oil, the trust had wiped out its competition and by the late 1800s, the company controlled nearly 90 percent of America’s refined oil flows. Critics such as George noted that capitalism was good at creating wealth, but it could be lousy at distributing it.”


January 17, 2016 

“Lizzie had to leave school to help support her family, a fact that she lamented long into her adulthood.
She attended a convention of stenographers with her father and soon found work in that field. At the time, stenography was a growing profession, one that had opened up to women as the Civil War removed many men from the workforce. The typewriter was gaining commercial popularity, leaving many to ponder a strange new world, one in which typists sat at desks, hands fixed to keys, memorizing seemingly illogical arrangements of letters on the new QWERTY keyboards.
Lizzie’s father also shared with his daughter a copy of Henry George’s bestselling 1879 tome, Progress and Poverty. The early seeds of what would later evolve into one of the most popular modern board games of all time had been planted.”


January 17, 2016 

“The Dead Letter Office had begun hiring women in the 1860s during the Civil War. And after the war, the office continued to employ women, believing them to be more honest and “faithful in the performance of their duties than the men.” Most women who worked there were intentionally tucked away—obscure secret keepers amid the nation’s growing flow of correspondence.”


January 17, 2016 

“An 1869 article in the New York Times argued that women should not make “the mistake of demanding equal payment with men” because “so long as their labor is cheaper than that of men, there will be a powerful reason for employing it.”


January 17, 2016 

“Unusual for a nineteenth-century woman, Lizzie also dabbled in engineering. She invented a gadget that allowed paper to pass through typewriter rollers with more ease. The invention also allowed typewriter users to place more type on a given page and made it possible for documents of different sizes to be placed into the machine.”


January 17, 2016 

“On January 3, 1893, Lizzie went to the U.S. Patent Office to lay legal claim to her invention. As a woman, she would have been a standout in that office at any age, but at twenty-six, she was a phenomenon. Beside her and there to serve as her witness was her father, himself no stranger to the patent process, having applied for and won a few through the years (including one for a permutation, or combination, lock)”


January 17, 2016 

“Though the popularity of Henry George’s theories was ebbing with attendance at meetings and lectures dwindling and Georgist political goals stalling in statehouses and at the polls, Lizzie Magie still believed in them and taught classes about the single tax theory in the evenings after work. But she wasn’t reaching enough people. She needed a new medium—something more interactive and creative.”


January 17, 2016 

“At the turn of the twentieth century, board games were becoming increasingly commonplace in middle-class homes. In addition, more and more inventors were discovering that the games were not just a pastime but also a means of communication. Lizzie took out her pen and paper.”


January 17, 2016 

“Lizzie even created rules for when there weren’t any rules: “Should any emergency arise which is not covered by the rules of the game,” she wrote, “the players must settle the matter between themselves; but if any player absolutely refuses to obey the rules as above set forth he must go to jail.”


January 17, 2016 

“Lizzie created two sets of rules: an anti-monopolist set in which all were rewarded when wealth was created, and a monopolist set in which the goal was to create monopolies and crush opponents. Her vision was an embrace of dualism and contained a contradiction within itself, a tension trying to be resolved between opposing philosophies. However, and of course unbeknownst to Lizzie at the time, it was monopolist rules that would later capture the public’s imagination.”


January 17, 2016 

“The Landlord’s Game was a sophisticated way to get players interested in the single tax theory. The goal was to obtain as much land and wealth as possible, but the means of attaining them were Georgist—even when playing by the monopolist set of rules. When players landed on an “absolute necessity” space, such as bread, coal, or shelter, the player had to pay five dollars into the Public Treasury. “This represents indirect taxation,” Lizzie said. Each time a player went around the board, noted by the “Mother Earth” space, the player received one hundred dollars for having “performed so much labor upon mother earth,” ”


January 17, 2016 

“After years of tinkering, writing, and pondering her new creation, Lizzie entered the U.S. Patent Office for the second time on March 23, 1903, to secure her legal claim to the Landlord’s Game. She quit her one-hundred-dollars-a-month job at the Dead Letter Office and went to work at a private firm. Soon thereafter, she opened an office of her own.”


January 17, 2016 

“In one of history’s coincidences, Lizzie filed her claim on the same day that Orville and Wilbur Wright filed theirs for their “flying machine.” Lizzie’s application made its way through the agency’s paperwork web more quickly than the Wrights’, and on January 5, 1904, her patent was approved. At the time, less than one percent of all patents issued in the United States went to women.”



Notes From: Mary Pilon. “The Monopolists.” iBooks.