"Mike Rapoport" wrote in message
. net...
"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...
"Mike Rapoport" wrote in message
. net...
"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...
"Matt Barrow" wrote in message
...
Walmart has never signed a single $4B deal AFAIK.
The two I mentioned. Wal-Mart was perhaps the first compnay to do
long
term
deals with their vendors, which is why they were able to get
fabulous
deals.
Period. Furthermore I
doubt that *any* supplier has ever lost Walmart as a customer
because
they
could not arrive somewhere at a particular time.
I also forgot to mention all the corporate buyouts that run well over
$4
billion.
Do you think that any of these buyouts or any other $4 transaction
hinged
on
having a corporate jet?
Certainly. Have you ever participated in one? They don't do it my phone
calls and email.
Yes I have and over the phone is how most of it is done.
That's right! We spend days and weeks on the phone before going out and
talking face to face about land, zoning, land use ordnances, contractorsm
sub-contractors...
We do tons of email and fax and FedEx packages seting things up.
Then, we hop in the plane and meet all the parties involved.
Once there is a
conceptual deal, THEN you have the finance people, product people ect
start
getting together. Having people flying around to meet in person usually
is
discovered and the word gets out. Then the stocks go up and the deal
can't
be done. There was a large oil company aquisition that cost over $300MM
more because someone thought it would be secret and clever to hold talks
on
their jets while they were parked next to each other. It didn't take a
genius to figure what was going on
It didn't take a genius to figure out what was going on BEFORE the started
parking jets next to each other (this thing sounds like some goofy
Hollyweird script).
Funny, isn't it, that a few years ago video conferencing and high spped
communications was thought to be the end of flying around and conducting
meetings? Weren't we supposed to telecommute instead of having office space?
Don't even get me started on the "paperless office".
The point isn't (or shouldn't be) that being a bit late is solved by a
business jet. In that you're correct. OTOH, it's not merely a notion that
flying a team out to negotitate and conclude deals face-to-face, with the
"highly compensated employees and executives" is HIGHLY beneficial AFTER a
lot of leg work is completed.
Matt
---------------------
Matthew W. Barrow
Site-Fill Homes, LLC.
Montrose, CO
MOF, John Deakin tells the story of one in his article after making the
transition to the G-IV, and how the business crew prepped for their
meeting
during the flight. http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/185048-1.html
(about
2/3rds down). I rather expect this is the rule more than the exception.
This past week we began our "season" by doing a land buy and then
negotiations with sub-contractors near San Antonio. The entire flight
the
contractor foremen were working up scenarios. We did the whole thing in
one
day and closed a $1.8M deal on two fronts. This is, of course, chicken
feed
compared to the Fortune 50 world.
The fact remains that big deals are not lost due to the lack of a coporate
jet to get people somewhere a few hours earlier..
Which wasn't the point (timing, though that is certainly a MINOR factor).