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Chitchat Trump the CEO President.

kryonlight

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://blog.dilbert.com/post/153905823756/the-new-ceos-first-moves-and-trump

One of the things I will enjoy about the Trump presidency is watching non-business writers try to explain his methods. Case in point, the recent stories about Ford and Carrier keeping some parts of their manufacturing in the United States because Trump negotiated/bullied them into staying. If you tell that story through a political filter – which is all I have seen so far – you focus on the facts. In this case, the political story is that both the Ford and Carrier situations are exaggerated claims of success.

The political filter misses the story completely. As usual.

Here’s the real story. You need a business filter to see it clearly. In my corporate life I watched lots of new leaders replace old leaders. And there is one trick the good leaders do that bad leaders don’t: They make some IMMEDIATE improvement that everyone can see. It has to be visible, relatively simple, and fast.

Why?

Because humans are not rational. Our first impressions rule our emotions forever. Trump has a second chance to make a first impression because his performance as President is fresh ground. Trump is attacking the job like a seasoned CEO, not like a politician. He knows that his entire four-year term will be judged by what happens before it even starts. What he does today will determine how much support and political capital he has for his entire term.

So what does a Master Persuader do when he needs to create a good first impression to last for years? He looks around for any opportunity that is visible, memorable, newsworthy, true to his brand, and easy to change.

Enter Ford.

Enter Carrier.

Trump and Pence recognized these openings and took them. Political writers will interpret this situation as routine credit-grabbing and exaggerated claims. But business writers will recognize Trump’s strategy as what I will call the “new CEO Move.” Smart CEOs try to create visible victories within days of taking the job, to set the tone. It’s all about the psychology.

If you are looking at Trump’s claims of success with Ford and Carrier in terms of technical accuracy and impact on the economy, you will be underwhelmed. But if you view it through a business filter and understand that psychology is the point of the exercise, you’re seeing one of the best new CEO moves you will ever see.

I’ll say this again because it’s important. We’re all watching closely to see if President Elect Trump has the skill to be president. And while you watch, Trump and Pence are pulling off one of the most skillfully executed new CEO plays you will ever see. Remember what I taught you in the past year: Facts don’t matter. What matters is how you feel. And when you watch Trump and Pence fight and scratch to keep jobs in this country, it changes how you will feel about them for their entire term. This is a big win for Trump/Pence disguised as a small win.

The political press will dismiss Ford and Carrier with fact-checking. But the stock market will be smarter. Experienced business people recognize the “new CEO” move and they know how powerful and important it is.

If you are worried about Trump’s talent for leadership, this should help set your mind at ease. He hasn’t even started the job and he’s already performing better than any past president in the same phase.



In related news, my girlfriend Kristina Basham lost her blue verification badge on Instagram yesterday without explanation. She has 2.2 million followers and there are dozens of fake accounts using her name and photos, so she is exactly the type of user who needs the account verification badge. We’re left wondering if this sudden change is related to my writing about Trump.

You should be disturbed that there is no official way for me to know if this happened for technical reasons or because of some internal Instagram policy. This is a frightening lack of transparency for a social media company (Facebook/Instagram) that is so vital to business success that one could argue it should be regulated as a public utility.

The context here is that I’m already shadowbanned on Twitter for writing about Trump, and trolls have one-starred my book on Amazon.com for political reasons. I’ll keep you informed as I learn anything. But I probably won’t.
 

kryonlight

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.businessinsider.sg/trump...eading-2016-11/?r=US&IR=T#DWGvGxYIIoQ8A1zQ.97

There’s a pattern emerging with Trump’s deals to save US manufacturing jobs

Donald Trump said that he would, if elected President, convince air-conditioner manufacturer Carrier from shuttering a plant in Indiana and moving over 2,000 jobs to Mexico.

Trump was elected, and he has evidently made good on that pledge. Or at least some of the pledge.

Carrier will reportedly retain 800 jobs in Indiana, in two locations (besides the Carrier plant, a facility operated by parent United Technologies was also facing cuts), according to Business Insider’s Kate Taylor.

This Trump deal, which he duly tweeted about, follows a negotiation that he reportedly had with Ford about what the president-elect erroneously thought was a plant relocation to Mexico. But it was really just an altered plan by Ford to keep manufacturing a Lincoln vehicle at a Louisville, KY plant where the automaker wanted to increase production of a similar SUV, badged as a Ford.

Ford wasn’t considering the production move until 2019, when the current United Auto Workers contract is up. And there would have been no job losses as a result of the move, according to Ford.

These are wins of a sort for Trump, but a pattern is emerging.

The art of the deal
Some of the Carrier and UT jobs are being saved. A small amount of Lincoln production — around 2,000 vehicles per month — is staying put in Kentucky.

It should be fairly clear what’s going on here. United Technologies said that it could save $65 million per year by moving, but it has $56 billion in annual revenue, according to the New York Times. Indiana will provide $700,000 in tax incentives, but adding the whole thing up is a rounding error, in terms of UT’s overall business.

Trump wants to make a deal, because that what he does: he’s a deal guy. His running mate is Mike Pence, the governor of Indiana. So UT keeps some workers in Indiana. Everybody gets to look good.

But of course, a whole bunch of jobs are still going to Mexico: 1,300 in total, Fortune reported. The outsourcing trend remains intact.

Ford didn’t even have to worry about juggling jobs. All it had to do was not move production of a vehicle it wasn’t planning to move for three years anyway. The Lincoln production could also be discontinued at the Louisville plant, replaced with production of the vehicle that Ford had wanted to build, the Ford Escape. It’s basically the same car.

There isn’t much that changes in terms of Ford’s long-term thinking about sending unprofitable vehicle production to Mexico. Ford has, after all, been operating plants in Mexico since the 1960s.

We’re talking about only two announcements here, so it may be a stretch to call it a pattern. But if this is the way things are going to go, Trump is going to be spending a decent amount of time and energy negotiating deals that tweet well, but that aren’t really what you’d call needle-moving, in the grand scheme of things.

Maybe as president he’ll up the stakes. Then again, companies that have planned to use NAFTA to their financial advantages will learn what works with Trump — give away something, but keep the master plan intact.
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
Oh so he is a deal guy. No wonder PLP judge want to block the new regulation on paying more workers overtime pay to make deal with him.

"Trump wants to make a deal, because that what he does: he’s a deal guy. His running mate is Mike Pence, the governor of Indiana. So UT keeps some workers in Indiana. Everybody gets to look good. "
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
basically just like Trump university,fluff on the outside,nothing but a dollop of shit on the inside.he sold u a trump university deal,a lump of shit covered with m&m chocolate candy,so u dont realise u are eating shit until its melting inside ur mouth.

fixing america's economy will require intense surgery and economic hard knocks and a bunch of five year plans and Cultural revolution and total reforms,and the only man with the brains to do it is Ross Perot.this Trump thinks a bunch of TV showtime and media presentation is going to fix everything.
 
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tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Angmoh want their chinese tea for free so they plant opium in india to exchange for tea.

Tea need sugar and without sugar drink tea alone won't be nice.

To hv sugar in their tea they need sugar plantations. Angmohs are not willing to toil the land and work hard to plant the sugar becos plant sugar are labor intensive. If must work hard to plant sugar than might as well forget about enjoy tea. Must enjoy tea without the hard work. Fix others to work hard for the sugar are amgmoh marketing which they are good at.

But Angmoh not willing to share their common wealth sugar plantation profits among their white labours. So they fixed it by kidnapping Black colored human from Africa in millions to be slaves for their sugar plantation economy.

This was how America fixed their common wealth shared among the lazy whites and Trump shd repeat the same. Only ways to fix white man share their own common wealth is at expense of other races and nations use slaves from African and opium addicts for Chinese.

Not happy use gunboats to pillage exploitation and looting other nations to create their common wealth to shared among the whites.

Fuck Trump.
 
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bodycells

Alfrescian
Loyal
Angmoh want their chinese tea for free so they plant opium in india to exchange for tea.

Tea need sugar and without sugar drink tea alone won't be nice.

To hv sugar in their tea they need sugar plantations. Angmohs are not willing to toil the land and work hard to plant the sugar becos plant sugar are labor intensive. If must work hard to plant sugar than might as well forget about enjoy tea. Must enjoy tea without the hard work. Fix others to work hard for the sugar are amgmoh marketing which they are good at.

But Angmoh not willing to share their common wealth sugar plantation profits among their white labours. So they fixed it by kidnapping Black colored human from Africa in millions to be slaves for their sugar plantation economy.

This was how America fixed their common wealth shared among the lazy whites and Trump shd repeat the same. Only ways to fix white man share their own common wealth is at expense of other races and nations use slaves from African and opium addicts for Chinese.

Not happy use gunboats to pillage exploitation and looting other nations to create their common wealth to shared among the whites.

Fuck Trump.

Sugar is toxic. Tea without sugar is nice.
 

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://www.businessinsider.sg/trump...eading-2016-11/?r=US&IR=T#DWGvGxYIIoQ8A1zQ.97

There’s a pattern emerging with Trump’s deals to save US manufacturing jobs

Donald Trump said that he would, if elected President, convince air-conditioner manufacturer Carrier from shuttering a plant in Indiana and moving over 2,000 jobs to Mexico.

Trump was elected, and he has evidently made good on that pledge. Or at least some of the pledge.

Carrier will reportedly retain 800 jobs in Indiana, in two locations (besides the Carrier plant, a facility operated by parent United Technologies was also facing cuts), according to Business Insider’s Kate Taylor.

This Trump deal, which he duly tweeted about, follows a negotiation that he reportedly had with Ford about what the president-elect erroneously thought was a plant relocation to Mexico. But it was really just an altered plan by Ford to keep manufacturing a Lincoln vehicle at a Louisville, KY plant where the automaker wanted to increase production of a similar SUV, badged as a Ford.

Ford wasn’t considering the production move until 2019, when the current United Auto Workers contract is up. And there would have been no job losses as a result of the move, according to Ford.

These are wins of a sort for Trump, but a pattern is emerging.

The art of the deal
Some of the Carrier and UT jobs are being saved. A small amount of Lincoln production — around 2,000 vehicles per month — is staying put in Kentucky.

It should be fairly clear what’s going on here. United Technologies said that it could save $65 million per year by moving, but it has $56 billion in annual revenue, according to the New York Times. Indiana will provide $700,000 in tax incentives, but adding the whole thing up is a rounding error, in terms of UT’s overall business.

Trump wants to make a deal, because that what he does: he’s a deal guy. His running mate is Mike Pence, the governor of Indiana. So UT keeps some workers in Indiana. Everybody gets to look good.

But of course, a whole bunch of jobs are still going to Mexico: 1,300 in total, Fortune reported. The outsourcing trend remains intact.

Ford didn’t even have to worry about juggling jobs. All it had to do was not move production of a vehicle it wasn’t planning to move for three years anyway. The Lincoln production could also be discontinued at the Louisville plant, replaced with production of the vehicle that Ford had wanted to build, the Ford Escape. It’s basically the same car.

There isn’t much that changes in terms of Ford’s long-term thinking about sending unprofitable vehicle production to Mexico. Ford has, after all, been operating plants in Mexico since the 1960s.

We’re talking about only two announcements here, so it may be a stretch to call it a pattern. But if this is the way things are going to go, Trump is going to be spending a decent amount of time and energy negotiating deals that tweet well, but that aren’t really what you’d call needle-moving, in the grand scheme of things.

Maybe as president he’ll up the stakes. Then again, companies that have planned to use NAFTA to their financial advantages will learn what works with Trump — give away something, but keep the master plan intact.

Trump wins on optics ...though Indiana taxpayers got screwed.

Carrier deal in a nutshell
- Jobs saved from going to Mexico - 800;
- Jobs still going to Mexico - 1,300
- Cost to Indiana taxpayers - $7 million

$8,750 per job ...good business sense? Why not, since it doesn't cost Trump a dime.
 
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