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To: rbg81
Re: short term choices.

Part of the problem are are all the unethical Masters of Business Administration being promoted into high positions in business and government.

MBAs are ignorantly educated to look only toward short term gains with the idea that short term gains will trickle up to long term gains. Often that is simply not true. Short term gain myopia always fails because of a failure to plan for Capital investment for future growth; if focuses on the quarterly and yearly bottom lines, but not the five and ten year goals, much less fifty year growth. Research and Development of future products are de-emphasized in preference to marketing current products and services being sold and/or ideas that can quickly be brought to the market, especially those that will redound to the credit of the MBA’s tenure, not to some future management team. One of the secrets to Apple’s repeated successes is their corporate policy of planning for at least five to ten years in the future. That keeps their profits at the highest in the industry.

MBAs are always looking for promotion or teleportation advancement to another position in another management position. To an MBA, management experience, knowledge, and especially loyalty is “fungible,” in their view, and is always transferable; it is not owed to the company they are currently working for. Choices are made always to gild the short term health of their current company because that benefits their CV, not build for the future of that company because they won’t be there. If it harms the employees, so what, the MBA’s résumé is that much better for his next step up the corporate ladder of his/her career building. Ethics does not enter the equation.

45 posted on 01/12/2020 11:18:31 AM PST by Swordmaker (My pistol self-identifies as an iPad, so you must accept it in gun-free zones, you hoplophobe bigot!)
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To: Swordmaker

Short term gain myopia always fails because of a failure to plan for Capital investment for future growth; if focuses on the quarterly and yearly bottom lines, but not the five and ten year goals, much less fifty year growth. Research and Development of future products are de-emphasized in preference to marketing current products and services being sold and/or ideas that can quickly be brought to the market, especially those that will redound to the credit of the MBA’s tenure, not to some future management team. One of the secrets to Apple’s repeated successes is their corporate policy of planning for at least five to ten years in the future. That keeps their profits at the highest in the industry.


I agree with you to a point. Even in relatively stable times, its very hard to be a good fortune teller. One of the things that complicates planning for the future is the fast pace of technological change. It’s a little foolhardy to bet big on technologies and products beyond the 10 year horizon for that reason. Also, companies cannot tune out the short term in favor of the long term. To do so consistently would be to invite disaster. It has to be a balance.

As for Apple, it seems to me they are still living off the imagination of Steve Jobs. Time will tell.


57 posted on 01/12/2020 2:43:37 PM PST by rbg81 (Truth is stranger than fiction)
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