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![]() "jps" wrote in message ... "Jim -" wrote in message news:9Z3bb.533979$uu5.89222@sccrnsc04... Why does an average quality family car like a Chevy Impala cost close to $20k today? Why would the same car assembled from parts cost $100K today? Same answer: Greed Well, not exactly. I ran a company into the ground thinking like that. A part assembled into that car might end up costing about twice what the manufacturer pays for it. Even that is a fairly tight margin if you are selling through distribution. If you pay someone to store it for a few years, pay inventory taxes just for owing it, pay the overhead of counting it yearly and the overhead of selling each part one at a time instead of in a single batch, it ends up pricing at about four times the cost to buy it. Harsh, but true. They really do a ****-poor job of teaching this stuff during a engineering degree program. It is astounding the lessons you learn when you run your own business. (into the round) Since then, as I have worked for others, I have paid very close attention in the ins and outs of business finance. I have asked lots of questions and paid closes attention to financial details. If I were to run another company these sort of things would be handled a whole lot better. I have also spent a certain amount of time with the CEOs of several of the companies I have worked for. One of the question I have asked each of them is "why do you do it - you could make more money putting your investment in high yield investments?" Each and every one has answered in about the same way - control. If you work for someone else you might think that a particular product is going to hit it big next year. You may or may not be able to convince someone in management that this is going to be the Next Big Thing. More than likely not. If you are driving the train - you get to decide which track you take, and how much you will coal you will pour to the flames. A worker is essentially working with a fixed income. Within fairly narrow limits, you will make the same no matter what you do. A company CEO that uses money wisely can capitalize as needed to follow a plan. If he thinks that something is going to be the Next Big Thing, he can borrow the bucks, hire the people, and build away. Control of your (and others) destiny. They don't do a very good job of teaching this either. Mark Browne |
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