You’re A Crucial Part of This Team

"I can't fire a broad. Looks like you got the short straw, Justin."

“I can’t fire a broad. Looks like you got the short straw, Justin.”

Another Control Your Cash® patented one-sided conservation question, one-sided since we don’t bog our site down by allowing comments. So you’ll have to answer in the comfort of wherever you’re reading this (home, maybe an airport, hopefully the office – the last of which we’ll elaborate on in a second.) The following question is not, repeat, not, rhetorical:

All things being equal, to the extent that they can be, would you be more or less inclined to work for a company whose official policy includes some variation of the following declaration?:

Employees are our most valuable asset(s).

If you answered ‘More’, there’s lots to unlearn.

“Employees are our most valuable assets.” Think about what that means. The company is profiting off them more than it is off the net receivables, or the cash and cash equivalents, or the property, plant and equipment, or any of the other assets that are supposed to stimulate cash flow and enrich the owners. $45,000 in inventories, if sold at a 100% markup, and subtracting a few dollars for warehousing costs, might realize a profit of $40,000. Meanwhile $45,000 paid to you, the deputy assistant regional manager, might realize a profit of $50,000 if you move enough product and work enough uncompensated overtime to impress the assistant regional manager: the guy whose job you claim you want to have one day.

Any company that tells you that you’re among its most valuable assets and expects you to take it seriously is patronizing you. The kind of employees who are dumb enough to swoon from and find validation in a timeworn line specifically written to make them feel that way are, self-fulfillingly, indeed pretty valuable assets. Because if being told you’re important makes a difference to you, you’re probably underpaid. Because you think you can eat non-monetary, psychological rewards such as compliments.

You negotiate in plenty of other aspects of your life, right? If you comparison shop, then you’re negotiating, kind of. You certainly wouldn’t buy something expensive like a car or a house without looking around and trying to get the seller to come down as much as is prudent. Well, what kind of lunatic determines which supermarket sells the cheapest per-unit laundry detergent, and maybe even uses a coupon, but doesn’t care how many tens of thousands of dollars her employer is making off her? (And then try to whittle that number down a little?)

Your value to your company is measurable. Of that value, or of the revenue that derives from having you around, you keep some and the rest goes to your employer. This is so obvious that it’s easy to miss, yet almost everyone does. Employees think that a salary is a product of an initial round of mediation held during an interview. Some think it’s even less complicated than that, and that a salary is simply what the employer deigns to pay you. It isn’t. Once again, it’s the difference between what you bring in and how much of that the employer decides to pocket. Even Karl Marx understood this, and Marx was one of the most overrated thinkers of all time. (Come to think of it, this was about the only thing he understood.)

Finally, as investors we could give a damn about any company that claims that its employees are #1. Your customers should come first. Well, your investors should come first, but that usually implies having customers. Satisfied ones, repeat ones, as many as possible. Brinker International, parent company of Chili’s, generated $2.82 billion in revenue last year. You know what its “most valuable assets” are? Hint: Not the flair-wearing hostesses and servers, thanks.

The beer kegs. Each one contains about 140 pints, which the restaurants can sell for 3 or 4 times what they paid. Few employees offer that kind of return, and if they could, they’d be crazy not to demand far more money. Beer kegs can’t negotiate. Nor can the soda fountains, which offer an even greater profit margin, albeit on smaller volume.

It’s like politicians who say “children are our most valuable resource”, a proverb which was cloying if inaccurate back when people started saying it in the 1970s, and which should only incur scorn today.

From an employee’s perspective, you want the profit margin on you to be as low as possible. Not so low that it costs money to keep you around – in which case the sensible thing to do is fire you – but low enough that you’re earning a lot relative to your value.

Every commodity – beer, soda, cigarettes, labor – has a markup. People think that the last one shouldn’t be on the list for some reason, or that jobs can’t be quantified and subjected to cost-benefit analysis the same way that non-human assets can. But of course they can. No employee has ever been fired because he made too little money. In fact, the opposite is true. Employees who make “too little” (which, obviously, management would never cop to) are instead held up as emblematic of something larger: the “valuable assets” worthy of mention in the company mission statement. Or vision statement, whichever. Meanwhile, every hour of every day some employees somewhere get fired because management can no longer justify their salaries. Short of stealing company secrets or having sex on the photocopier, overpayment is the #1 reason for being let go.

With the possible exception of pack animals, no asset was ever more valuable than a slave. You got your cotton picked, you got musical entertainment, and you didn’t even have to pay a living wage.

The 22nd Through 24th Ways Rich People Think Differently

One downside to being rich is that you don’t get to decorate your cubicle in fun and exciting ways that highlight your personality.

 

Saw this on Yahoo! Finance. It’s a 21-point summary of a book titled How Rich People Think. The consensus seems to be that the book is mediocre, but the summary was solid. Points included stuff like

Average people live beyond their means. Rich people live below theirs.

Average people believe the markets are driven by logic and strategy. Rich people know they’re driven by emotion and greed.

Average people teach their children how to survive. Rich people teach their kids to get rich.

All of which are indubitable, and which inspired us to add to the list.

 

Rich people quantify, average people aren’t “all about numbers”.

You want to take the one most beneficial step towards improving your financial situation, regardless of how good or bad a place you’re in right now?

Figure out your net worth. Add up everything you own, even including your house if it makes you feel better. Don’t use the sale price, use the current value. Go to Zillow if you don’t know where to start. Don’t forget to subtract your mortgage balance. Oh, that makes it negative? Sorry about that.

Add your 401(k) or IRA balance. It’ll take you 10 minutes to figure this out. You should have an account number and a login somewhere. We’d tell you to subtract your credit card balances, but we’re assuming you’re not so dumb that you’re carrying any.

That’s your net worth. A rich person knows his or hers within a few percentage points, instead of dreading the bills that are going to come in tomorrow’s mail. Here’s one of the stupidest lines we’ve ever featured in our weekly Carnival of Wealth, which itself is often a paean to stupidity. This is verbatim from a submitter, plus the ((sic)):

The Debt

Erika Amex: $285.67
Citi Card: $2,128.41
Student Loan #1: $9,101.51
Student Loan #2: $11,432.70
Student Loan #3: $2,050.00

So apparently there is a third student loan (0% interest) that I completely forgot about it (sic) until I was sent a bill in the mail. Great.

Average people get willfully blindsided like this all the time. Rich people don’t “forgot about” $2,050 debts. They know what they owe, and when they’re supposed to pay it by.

Yeah, whatever. Rich people don’t have debts.

Which brings us to another point:

 

Rich people leverage, average people make do with what they’ve got.

Rich people have plenty of debts. To some extent the richer you are, the more you’ll borrow. If this sounds counterintuitive, you might be average.

Rich people borrow money, at known and stated interest rates, with the intention of earning returns that outpace what they’re borrowing said money at. The prospective dry cleaner who borrows $500,000 at 6% is now on the hook for $30,000 a year. But now he can buy machines and a storefront. He can sell his wares – or in this case, his services. He can take money from customers, who will pay that $30,000-a-year loan for him and do it gladly if he returns their clothes sufficiently gleaming. Maybe he’ll even be able to pay the loan back early, allowing himself to borrow even more, at lower rates, which he can then use to finance bigger operations with.

Or he could get a job working for someone else, and save as much of his pitiful salary as possible.

It’s like people who pride themselves on paying cash for a house, but don’t tell you how long it took them or where they were living in the meantime. If you have to save for 30 years to buy a house, 30 years during which you paid rent to some other homeowner, that’s hardly anything to be proud of.

Most rich people are not born that way. Really, they aren’t, despite what the more reactionary folks on the left side of the political spectrum believe. The Cox family heiresses are outnumbered by the successful entrepreneurs who understood this fundamental principle of leverage. Ultimately, that’s far more important than an inheritance.

 

Rich people learn from mistakes, average people dwell on them.  

Everybody fails. You’re probably somewhat familiar with the following story, but it illustrates the point:

Apple. The largest corporation in the world and one of its most respected. 5 short years after it went public, the board of directors tossed out the company’s primary founder and visionary. The board sided with the CEO whom Steve Jobs had hired, over Jobs.

12 years and 3 CEOs later, Jobs came back, and every home run since has been well-documented. Here’s what a rich person would have learned in that interim:

  • I can still create imaginative products, but I need to spend more judiciously.
  • Instead of suing my biggest competitor (Microsoft), maybe we can cooperate and both get even richer. Heck, I’d even be willing to sell them a non-voting chunk of the company.
  • Our designs are a little different than most. Let’s make them vastly different, and brand ourselves in a way that Dell or Hewlett-Packard can’t imagine.
  • We’ve got to stop cannibalizing our own products. In fact, what if we were to make minor changes to them on a regular basis, and sell them to the same people again and again?
  • Being a computer manufacturer is swell, if limiting. Why can’t we be a retail outlet? A phone company? A music store?

Here’s what an average person would have learned in the interim, if you’ll suspend disbelief for a second and assume that an average person could have built Apple in the first place:

  • This sucks. Ungrateful bastards.
  • Who are they to treat me like this?
  • Damn, I never should have created the Lisa. Damn. Damn. Damn.
  • I wonder if Microsoft would hire me. Maybe I could be a department head there. Gates will rub his hands with glee, but I really need a job.

Ways 25 through 27 on Friday.