Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Movember

mo-of-honour
Well into the third week it is now increasingly apparent just how many men have taken part in this year’s Movember campaign. I’m sure it’s the same in many places but right now the Gold Coast has more moustaches than a Greek hens’ night.
For anyone wanting to know more or looking to donate or sponsor someone here’s the link to the official website www.movember.com (opens new window so you can look around here some more). Once on their site, select the participating country to browse or search for momen. I guess the non-participating countries work to a different calendar.
I will say that if my friend who did grow a mo says “I’ve come to clean the pool” one more time that unfortunate growth on his lip may come off short of December 1.
All for a good cause.
-Greg
Greed vs Charity, and having to say “No”
Global Financial Crisis. Say it quickly enough and it sounds like something that simply happened. We were all merrily going about our lives, making money and minding our own businesses, when all of a sudden: GFC. Just like everything else that isn’t our fault (war, poverty and a decaying planet) we vocally protested and quickly pointed out just who was to blame. Now, as the dust settles and the Freddies and Fannies of this world have become household names around the globe, I quietly raise my hand and say “I had something to do with that”.
As one of hundreds of thousands of small business owners in Australia, I always pushed the envelope during the good times. Operating a contract for a national parcel freight carrier, my focus has always been on charging as much as the market (or in this case my one customer) would bear and expending as little as possible getting the job done in the process. That’s business. In fact, it’s my obligation as a company director under the Corporations Act. The money charged for freight movements is one way or another reflected in the consumer goods landed price, so as long as the carrier can charge their customers enough everybody’s happy. Greed.
That, of course, was until the public started to worry about their jobs and their ability to fund excessive consumerism. They stopped buying stuff and it no longer needed delivery. So the world’s highest-paid bean counters running the world’s largest parcel freight company inserted their Staedtler HB pencils into the electric sharpeners on their desks and took to the T-ledger with gusto. To save the contractors? No. To save the company? Possibly. To save their jobs? Now we might be close to the truth. As we’ve seen already, although executive salaries are on the bottom of the list of places expenditure can be cut, nobody is immune to the GFC.
Now as I begin to miss operating that courier contract (they converted it to a company-operated run, poaching my only member of staff to do the job) and the considerable cashflow it generated, I turn my focus to capitalising on the next phase of our economic cycle. The power company get paid late for the first time in years and some of the local restaurants miss a patron or two, but only momentarily. I have greed on my side.
Charity, and having to say “No”? That’s the next post.
-Greg
