First played by Paul Whiteman and his orchestra. Or maybe that was Flamin' Mamie; hard to tell them apart.originally posted by Eden Mylunsch:
And in his latest SVB report, Rob MacMillen of SVB figured ALL of this out and told it like it is and the news went over like a lead zeppelin with all the boomer+ shot callers, most of whom still think "Stairway to Heaven" is the greatest song of all time and remember hearing Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" when it was first released, back in what, 1947?
originally posted by Eden Mylunsch:
And in his latest SVB report, Rob MacMillen of SVB figured ALL of this out and told it like it is and the news went over like a lead zeppelin with all the boomer+ shot callers, most of whom still think "Stairway to Heaven" is the greatest song of all time and remember hearing Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" when it was first released, back in what, 1947? And after reporting that the Captains of the Wine Industry were effectively deaf to the masses, Rob's bank got run on and shut down. Cause and effect? Maybe so, but probably not, because SVB's main clientele are VCs who voted for Trump and lobbied for laxer rules on regional banks. And they were the people who demanded their cash back as soon as rumors began rumbling as to the soundness of SVP. Touché. Self-induced self-fulfilling prophecy anyone?...
If the wine side of SVB is not resumed by whichever financial entity it becomes, I would expect that some other institution will swoop in and hire Rob and his team and keep the momentum going.
-Eden (getting used to my can getting kicked down both forks of the road)
originally posted by Cole Kendall:
It’s a little embarrassing in hindsight, but I can remember sitting in business school while professors were teaching about management miscues in companies or about products that are no longer with us. The case studies were always presented in such a way as to lead the reader to a textbook conclusion. So I always came away from the case study thinking with youthful hubris, “Those people must be idiots! I could do better than that! The train was on the tracks, the lights were on, the horn was blaring, but the company never evolved or changed!”
...
But there are plenty of examples of companies whose leaders saw the writing but kept doing what they were doing because “that’s what we do, and it’s always worked!”
originally posted by Ken Schramm:
This popped up recently...
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Ken Schramm:
This popped up recently...
Ken, I'm afraid that your link is borked.
Mark Lipton
Yeah, but we’re the nipple ring we’re interested in.originally posted by Eden Mylunsch:
Everything worked out just fine for all concerned (at least for those with a wine business POV). Everybody still has their job and SVP is now being run by people who are in The Banking Business, not in the wannabe VC biz.
The new nabobs at the First International Bank of Behemoth (AKA: First Citizens Bank & Trust) have taken the same approach to SVP's wine practice in relationship to the rest of the bank's activities as say, ad directors used to think about the mole above Cindy Crawford's lip. Sure, it's there, but it can stay in place and we'll work around it. The wine stuff is a sort of a lagniappe for First Citizens (they'll drink much better in the headquarters executive dining room) but its real value is that funding wineries will draw attention to the rest of the bank's moneymaking chunk of business and the wine wing of the building can be easily divested when its plusses as a novelty expire (much like Ms. Crawford divested herself of Richard Gere while keeping the mole, so maybe in a few years First Citizens keeps the wine gang and lays off their division evicting widows and orphans from their houses and they'll put Snidely Whiplash out of work rather than Rob MacMillen.) Besides, the wine division's yearly expenses could probably be charged off to marketing and PR and the IRS wouldn't raise any eyebrows.
-Eden (let's not get too wrapped up in the self-importance of the wine industry in the big game; on our best day, we're the ring in the nose of that statue of the bull on Wall Street, on not-so-good days maybe we're the ring piercing Dionysus' nipple as he attempts to clamber aboard the bull in an attempt to garner attention for his boozy, potentially rumunerative, lifestyle)
Yeah, but we’re the nipple ring we’re interested in.[/quote]originally posted by Florida Jim: