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22-11-2008, 12:54 AM | #61 | ||
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but is that $1.5m debt free and unencumbered though!
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22-11-2008, 01:05 AM | #62 | |||
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It doesn't matter the point is I need a manager !! The Mrs is enough !!!LOL<<<<<
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22-11-2008, 01:34 AM | #63 | ||
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Nicely put Sourbarsted, and if fuel price had`nt gone up x amount over a couple of year`s we probably would`nt be having this thread. i would be much dirtier on oil companies and exec`s for plight the world is now in, world domination and greed = oil companies .
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22-11-2008, 07:31 AM | #64 | |||
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22-11-2008, 07:45 AM | #65 | ||
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One thing I need to get off my back is this,
Australia and America have been hung out to dry by the media for producing gas guzzling, large emissions, vehicles that up until two years ago, WERE AT THE TOP OF THEIR MARKET!!!!! Both countries share the same characteristic of long open highways that these large gas guzzling cars are built for. Now we are accused of letting the world go by because we do not produce small, fuel efficient cars. Herein lies the problem, up until two years ago, Falcon, Commodore, F-Series etc were the sales leaders in their respective markets then all of a sudden, fuel almost doubled and consumer sentiment shifted towards small, green cars. Now even if Ford decided on the day fuel doubled to start making green cars, hybrids etc, It will take at least three years before they have a prototype and almost 5 years before its a mass production reality. Now the Japanese are being lauded for producing small, fuel efficient cars. HELLO, they have been making them for the last thirty plus years. In Japan the average speed traveled is something ridiculous like 20km/h!!!! And they have to stop driving a car once it reaches a certain age. Now what would you rather have to outlay every few years?, 20k for a corolla or 40k for a falcon? So of course they have been making cheap, fuel efficient cars, because that's what their country demands they make. |
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22-11-2008, 09:17 AM | #66 | ||
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If these CEO's go cap in hand to the government asking for taxpayers money to assist their industry, then I think our representatives have the right to ask a few questions even if they are bit provocative. It just looks bad, particularly GM who by all reports are only months from running out of money. If you had been laid off recently by any of these carmakers you would be a little ****ed!
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22-11-2008, 09:28 AM | #67 | |||
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I'm sure after dealing with whatever POS frontwheel drive cr@pbox they are happy to sell to the Average American, they wouldn't bother asking for money from the Govt as they would finally understand that they have lost their way in the automotive wilderness .. |
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22-11-2008, 09:52 AM | #68 | |||
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PS: I can't believe you ate 400 maxibons!! Clinton |
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22-11-2008, 09:58 AM | #69 | |||
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That sir, is one high horse!! |
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22-11-2008, 02:40 PM | #70 | |||||
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22-11-2008, 03:00 PM | #71 | |||
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Small business owners might work long hours, but those who have the necessary skills don't. And that is the crux of the matter, it takes a certain skill set to run a business, delegate, manage, etc and only about 1% of people have that natural ability, the others either have no idea or have tried to learn it via a tertiary course. Those same 1% know when a rival is poorly managed and profit from it. That might grate to hear, but it's the truth. A little about me:- I've been around corporations most of my life. One company I established on behalf of some old money shareholders grew into the dominant player in Australia within two years and is now close to the dominant company in that industry worldwide twenty years on albeit now owned by a German parent.... I got to the office at 8.30am, always had a lunch break and knocked off at 5.30pm. I have never gone into work on a Saturday or Sunday. Last edited by Wally; 22-11-2008 at 03:13 PM. |
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22-11-2008, 03:11 PM | #72 | |||
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22-11-2008, 03:16 PM | #73 | ||
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I don't know what happened there, I was typing away and somehow I was in edit mode..weird.
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22-11-2008, 04:07 PM | #74 | ||
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Having a face to face sit down when asking for large sums of cash is the probably the best approach, considering the scale of the potential crisis looming. For the jet setters to do nothing would be grossly negligent, and lets face it, on their salaries they probably have enough money saved to walk away and say 'bugger you Jack i'm alright', and let the companies fall. The jet has already been purchased so why not use it. To leave it on the tarmac would be even more of a waste. Having said that, some CEO's salaries are obscene. As one forum member drew the analogy of Generals and soldiers on the battlefield, it's the soldiers who have to do the dying.
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22-11-2008, 07:09 PM | #75 | ||
Peter Car
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Media beat up. GM supposedly only lease the jets, they don't own them, and they have recently cut the number from 5 to 3.
As for exec salaries, Ford wanted the best in Mullaly to help get them out of trouble, to get the best you need to pay the best, and he's done a great job so far. Before the economic crises he had steered the company back into the black for a quarter before everything hit the fan, but he prepared for it by selling off assets a while ago for these situations. He spent money on product development to increase sales, invested in making small cars in the US in previously truck and SUV plants (Fiesta goes on sale in the US soon). He's made some smart moves. 2nd in charge Bill Ford, from what I can remember doesn't even get paid money, he just takes stock, probably not a smart move now cause its worth bugger all but he doesn't need the money cause his family owns a controlling interest in the company, he's already loaded. He does this out of obligation to his families company. I don't agree with executive bonuses for CEO's of companies who are going down the toilet, they should only recieve bonuses as a reward for making them successful. Banking and finance CEO's who paid themselves bonuses out of the US governments bailout money should have all their money stipped from them and used to cover their companies losses. Executive bonuses haven't been paid by Ford for a few years now, all the execs agreed to it to help them out. So its not like Ford aren't trying to save money where they can. |
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22-11-2008, 08:05 PM | #76 | ||
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I think we're all forgetting one simple point. All CEO's in every public company are hired by a board of directors. If their CEO isn't preforming it's their responsbility to remove them. However if the company goes backwards for a few years and the CEO is still there then it's the boards fault just as much. The CEO is publically humiliated when they resign or are sacked, often with huge payouts negotiated before they even joined the company. How many boards are similarly "removed" because the damage certainly happened under their stewardship. The board usually approves a CEO's plans so ultimately they are responsible, yet how come they are not being held accountable in this particular situation?
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22-11-2008, 08:23 PM | #77 | |||
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These are the type of comments that I would expect from someone who had NO EXPOSURE to the corporate world Or maybe from someone who has read the "Seven Minute Manager" and got a little carried away Hello I am CEO of GM - I will only work 40 hr weeks...... : |
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24-11-2008, 09:17 AM | #78 | ||
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Long post. Much has been said over the weekend
Wally: Then the CEO's of today shouldn't be getting the bonus' of yesterday's CEOs, they are being paid in advance for forecasted earnings years from now? If the corporation is so inflexible why the reward? Why hasn't management made the corporation dynamic to adjust direction rapidly to a rapidly changing world? The Jap car makers seem to cope pretty well with change. The truth is that these three companies were on the slippery slope many years ago and just blustered their way ahead producing vehicles the public were fed up with. They thought they could tell the consumer what they wanted and the gamble didn't pay off. Me: Quite right. Toyota and VW are as big as any of these yet they have had the right products together with the right marketing. Consider the prius. It in no way enviromentally sound but they have convinced people to pay throough the nose for it just as effectively as GM et al have conviced people NOT to buy their product. Ozmale42: Yes, CEO's do get generous financial rewards, no doubt about that, but at huge personal cost. While most of us pack up at 5 and go home and forget work totally and be with our families the typical CEO's day has only really just begun....in the office till 8pm..then a dinner with a client or a supplier...corporate events, media interviews, home at midnight when kids are in bed....up at 4.30am to do it all over again.....Weekends are either spent in the office or they've brought a pile of work home. When they aren't working they're thinking about working. While on holiday most have to be contactible with Blackberry and Laptop on hand. You can be out the door quick smart too in an instant the minute you take your eye off the ball and make a poor decision....Having to cop the demands of shareholders, banks, consumers and the Board and maintain a balance as best you can between all stakeholders in the organisation is a huge responsibility....not to mention the detrimental impact on health. Me: Do you really believe there are no competant people who would do that for a fraction of the CEO's salaries ? But more to the point what do they actually achieve ? Their salaries should be a reflection of the value they add to the organisation not the hours they put in. That's why I get paid more per hour than a labourer, because the work I do adds more value than a labourers does. And returning to my earlier argument, I put it to you that 3 engineers in GM add more to the companies value than Wagoner does. Not any 3 engineers but I believe I could find 3, in fact rather more than 3, and that assumes he's doing 180 hours useful work a week (most engineers work about 60 hr/wk). More broadly, there is a corruption across our whole society between renumeration and worth. The reality in a capitalist system is you take what you can get. You can not convince me that 40 hours driving a truck in a mine is worth more to society than 40 hours nursing the sick and elderly, but show me a nurse that makes $120k+. Sourbastard: I dont really care what the execs get paid. The oversight for this is the shareholders meetings, and I'm not one of those. Me: Absolutely, until they go cap in hand to the government asking for money. The they become accountable to the electorate. Gobes32: Australia and America have been hung out to dry by the media for producing gas guzzling, large emissions, vehicles that up until two years ago, WERE AT THE TOP OF THEIR MARKET!!!!! Both countries share the same characteristic of long open highways that these large gas guzzling cars are built for. Now we are accused of letting the world go by because we do not produce small, fuel efficient cars. Herein lies the problem, up until two years ago, Falcon, Commodore, F-Series etc were the sales leaders in their respective markets then all of a sudden, fuel almost doubled and consumer sentiment shifted towards small, green cars. Now even if Ford decided on the day fuel doubled to start making green cars, hybrids etc, It will take at least three years before they have a prototype and almost 5 years before its a mass production reality. Me: That's an oversimplification. In the US it's been really patchy. Yes SUV's and pickups have held up well but many other cars they have been making have been basket cases. If you do a detailed analysis of the market the big sedans (non specialised like sports/muscle cars and limos) have been in decline. The normal station wagon has been dying in Aus since the EA/VN came out. Conversely the 4b and ut's have been in ascendance. Whereas once everyone was happy to have the big family car now people want cars that do more, either sports cars/GT's, would be recreational velicles, or work trucks. People who buy "normal" cars have been choosing more and more the little cars. The reason the big 3 failed is they refused to believe this trend would continue, they kept building the generic big car in a multitude of styles and badges, they failed over and over to move of showrooms so they just kept selling them at a loss and makeing more of the same. You have to remember that in the US they don't just have a falcon and a commodore. Each of GM and Ford have a dozen badges and many of the cars aren't just optioned up rebadeged variants but actually very different cars. Even Crysler have several badges they sell through. So they have blown over and over development and tooling costs to build many many cars over the last 15 years that no one wanted. That is what has broken them. Dr Smith: I think we're all forgetting one simple point. All CEO's in every public company are hired by a board of directors. If their CEO isn't preforming it's their responsbility to remove them. However if the company goes backwards for a few years and the CEO is still there then it's the boards fault just as much. The CEO is publically humiliated when they resign or are sacked, often with huge payouts negotiated before they even joined the company. How many boards are similarly "removed" because the damage certainly happened under their stewardship. The board usually approves a CEO's plans so ultimately they are responsible, yet how come they are not being held accountable in this particular situation? Me: That happens. I happen to have shares in a company that fired it's board, oh, about 3 years back. The current lot are getting some pretty clear signals from the owners aswell. The problem is the public company system is a dodge. It's virtually impossible for a consortium of shareholders to even get a nominee onto the list to be voted on at an AGM. It's a boys club. Unless you own a LOT of shares you really have little say. |
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24-11-2008, 10:41 AM | #79 | ||
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One thing we also have to take into account in the US is the big three get stuffed over by the union's. The non-american car makers there dont have this problem, unfortunatly it's bad management in the past that is making them pay for it now.
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