Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

Leadership Insights

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

From the first issue of Leadership Insights, a new e-newsletter from The Poling Group:

I am pleased to introduce Leadership Insights, our complimentary e-newsletter designed to offer you a variety of articles and commentaries on the latest thinking, discoveries and practices in the fields of leadership and business. Leadership Insights will be published by THE POLING GROUP For Integral Leadership on a quarterly basis.

This premier edition includes suggestions on developing one’s leadership, maintaining one’s integrity, and avoiding the perils of micro-managment.

Because we want to offer you practical “learnings and choices that matter”, we would welcome your feedback and suggestions.

In This Issue

Have You Ever Thought About …

Playing the Integrity Card

Ways to Improve Your Leadership

Danger of Micromanagment

A Way I See It …

Emerging economic structures

Saturday, July 14th, 2007

In the Mackey thread I asked if capitalism, as an emergent socio-economic structure, could embody the values that Mackey represents, which seem to arise at a higher level of development. I used the analogy of trying to fit a more developed value peg into a less developed structural hole. If capitalism is the wrong hole for the job, then what is?

Michel Bauwens has been exploring the very real socio-econmic developments in peer-to-peer (P2P). This form of exchange has been happening for some time and Michel has attempted to theorize it in his popular essay “P2P and Human Evolution.” Below are some excerpts of summary points from Michel’s 7/13/07 blog entry “What P2P means for the world of tomorrow“:

Our current world system is marked by a profoundly counterproductive logic of social organization: it is based on a false concept of abundance in the limited material world; it has created a system based on infinite growth, within the confines of finite resources

…we need to base our physical economy on a recognition of the finitude of natural resources, and achieve a sustainable steady-state economy

Markets, as means to to manage scarce physical resources, are but one of the means to achieve such allocation, and need to be divorced from the idea of capitalism, which is a system of infinite growth.

Peer to peer as the relational dynamic of free agents in distributed networks will likely become the dominant mode for the production of immaterial value; however, in the realm of scarcity, the peer to peer logic will tend to reinforce peer-informed market modes, such as fair trade; and in the realm of the scarcity based politics of group negotiation, will lead to reinforce the peer-informed state forms such as multistakeholdership forms of governance.

The world of physical production needs to be characterized by:
a) sustainable forms of peer-informed market exchange (fair trade, etc..);
b) reinvigorated forms of reciprocity and the gift economy;
c) a world based on social innovation and open designs, available for physical production anywhere in the world.

The best guarantor of the spread of the peer to peer logic to the world of physical production, is the distribution of everything, i.e. of the means of production in the hands of individuals and communities, so that they can engage in social cooperation. While the immaterial world will be characterized by a peer to peer logic on non-reciprocal generalized exchange, the peer informed world of material exchange will be characterized by evolving forms of reciprocity and neutral exchange.

We need to move from empty and ineffective anti-capitalist rhetoric, to constructive post-capitalist construction. Peer to peer theory, as the attempt to create a theory to understand peer production, governance and property, and the attendant paradigms and value systems of the open/free, participatory, and commons oriented social movements, is in a unique position to marry the priority values of the right, individual freedom, and the priority values of the left, equality. In the peer to peer logic, one is the condition of the other, and cooperative individualism marries equipotentiality and freedom in a context of non-coercion.

This is the truth of the peer to peer logical of social relationships: 1) together we have everything; 2) together we know everything. Therefore, the conditions for dignified material and spiritual living are in our hands, bound with our capacity to relate and form community. The emancipatory peer to peer theory does not offer new solutions for global problems, but most of all new means to tackle them, by relying on the collective intelligence of humankind. We are witnessing the rapid emergence of peer to peer toolboxes for the virtual world, and facilitation techniques of the physical world of face to face encounters, both are needed to assist in the necessary change of consciousness that needs to be midwifed. It is up to us to use them.

Integral business practices?

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

Ken Mackey has been an inspiration to me since hearing of him in Ken’s IN interview. He’s the CEO of Whole Foods and is implementing many of Ken’s ideas into his business. However the below has given me pause to ponder.

I want to make it clear that I am not claiming that Mackey intentionally tried to manipulate stock prices but that the article seems to suggest as much. The quoted blogger after the article seems to have received the same impression by his choice of words. But if Mackey did indeed do so that would certainly be a greivous breach of law and ethics. Even if he did not it certainly calls into question the ethics of such behaviour, given his privileged position in this particular context.

Here’s a Wall Street Journal article on Mackey’s participation in a Yahoo stocks message board. Could these tactics be justified as “integral?”

Note: the embedded links in the article did not trasfer upon copying. You can find them in the original article linked above.

Whole Foods CEO Mackey Posted Comments on Stock Message Board By DAVID KESMODEL and JOHN R. WILKE

July 11, 2007 6:03 p.m.

In January 2005, someone using the name “Rahodeb” went online to a Yahoo stock-market forum and posted this opinion: No company would want to buy Wild Oats Markets Inc., a natural-foods grocer, at its price then of about $8 a share.

“Would Whole Foods buy OATS?” Rahodeb asked, using Wild Oats’ stock symbol. “Almost surely not at current prices. What would they gain? OATS locations are too small.” Rahodeb speculated that Wild Oats eventually would be sold after sliding into bankruptcy or when its stock price dipped below $5. A month later, Rahodeb wrote that Wild Oats’ management “clearly doesn’t know what it is doing… OATS has no value and no future.”

The comments were typical of the banter on Internet message boards for stocks – but the identity of the writer was anything but. Rahodeb was the online pseudonym for John Mackey, co-founder and chief executive of Whole Foods Market Inc. Earlier this year, his company agreed to buy Wild Oats for $565 million.

For about eight years until last August, Mr. Mackey posted voluminous messages on Yahoo’s stock forums as Rahodeb, the company confirms. The moniker is an anagram for Deborah, which happens to be the name of Mr. Mackey’s wife. Rahodeb routinely cheered Whole Foods’ financial results, trumpeted his personal gains on the stock, and bashed Wild Oats.

Rahodeb even defended Mr. Mackey’s haircut when another user poked fun at a photograph in Whole Foods’ annual report. “I like Mackey’s haircut,” Rahodeb said. “I think he looks cute!”

Mr. Mackey’s online alter ego came to light in a document made public late Tuesday by the Federal Trade Commission in its lawsuit seeking to block the Whole Foods-Wild Oats deal. The 45-page filing, submitted under seal when the lawsuit was filed in June, includes a quote from the Yahoo site in which Mr. Mackey said “the writing is on the wall” for Wild Oats. An FTC footnote said, “As here, Mr. Mackey often posted to Internet sites pseudonymously, often using the name Rahodeb.”

Whole Foods didn’t authenticate each and every one of Rahodeb’s postings as being from Mr. Mackey, who declined to be interviewed. However, the company said in a statement that among millions of documents the company gave the FTC were postings Mr. Mackey made from 1999 to 2006 “under an alias to avoid having his comments associated with the Company and to avoid others placing too much emphasis on his remarks.” The statement said, “Many of the opinions expressed in these postings now have far less relevance than when they were written.” A spokeswoman for Wild Oats declined to comment.

Mr. Mackey, a 53-year-old vegan, co-founded Whole Foods in 1980. He built the Austin, Texas, company into the world’s largest organic and natural-foods grocer, in part by acquiring many smaller chains. Like Whole Foods itself, Mr. Mackey is unconventional. He slashed his annual salary to $1 starting last January, explaining later that “this is what my heart is telling me is the appropriate thing to do right now.” Outspoken and opinionated, he writes his own blog on the company’s Web site. (Read the blog.)

READ RAHODEB’S COMMENTS

Rahodeb’s farewell comment to the Yahoo message board for Whole Foods stock in August 2006:

http://tinyurl.com/24vtow

In the following entry, Rahodeb says the fundamentals of Wild Oats shares haven’t improved and that its stock price had risen merely because of speculation of a buyout:

http://tinyurl.com/267oc7

In the following dispatch, Rahodeb lambastes a Yahoo user who claimed Wild Oats had been a takeover target at $14 to $16 a share:

http://tinyurl.com/23el99

In this entry, Rahodeb predicts that Whole Foods shares will one day trade at more than $800:

http://tinyurl.com/2bz3ow

In the following, Rahodeb claims Whole Foods shares are undervalued and Wild Oats is overvalued:

http://tinyurl.com/2hrrkt

Note: Whole Foods didn’t authenticate each and every one of Rahodeb’s postings as being from Mr. Mackey. But the company and Mr. Mackey confirmed that he made numerous postings under the name Rahodeb from 1999 to 2006.

MORE

Whole Foods confirms that John Mackey used an alias in making comments about the company’s stock on Yahoo’s Web site:

http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/ftchearingupdates/faq.html

A link to John Mackey’s blog:

http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/blogs/jm/

Read the full text of the FTC complaint and the FTC document released July 10.

Whole Foods CEO Has Heated Words for FTC
06/27/2007

CEO’s Words May Cook Whole Foods
06/20/2007

Whole Foods agreed in February to acquire Wild Oats, of Boulder, Colo., for $18.50 a share. The FTC sued to block the deal on antitrust grounds in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., saying the combination would reduce competition and raise prices for consumers.

To buttress its case, the FTC is trying to use Mr. Mackey’s words against him. In its lawsuit, it quoted Mr. Mackey informing other Whole Foods board members that buying Wild Oats would enable the company to “avoid nasty price wars” in several markets and reduce the chance that a big conventional grocer like Kroger Co. would create a competing national natural-foods retailer.

When that part of the FTC’s suit became public, Mr. Mackey fired back at the agency with a 14,000-word treatise on his blog. He accused the government of “bullying tactics,” failing to do its homework, and taking out of context “macho posturing” by executives that is common to competitive organizations.

Rahodeb began posting messages about Whole Foods shares on Yahoo.com in the late 1990s. He quickly gained a reputation as being one of the stock’s biggest cheerleaders, and gamely defended himself when other posters chastised him for being too rosy. “I’ve never pretended to be anything but enthusiastic about WFMI,” he wrote in 2000, using Whole Foods’ stock symbol. “I admit to my bias – I love the company and I’m in for the long haul. I shop at Whole Foods. I own a great deal of its stock. I’m aligned with the mission and values of the company… Is there something wrong with this?”

Rahodeb often expressed pride in the work of Mr. Mackey. “While I’m not a ‘Mackey groupie,’ ” he wrote in 2000, “I do admire what the man has accomplished – building a $1.6 billion business from scratch is quite an achievement.” He then asked another user, “whtmewrry 99,” what he or she had accomplished by comparison. (The poster doesn’t appear to have replied.)

By 2005, Whole Foods had grown to more than 160 stores and its annual sales were $4 billion, making it the leading player in the natural and organic foods sector. In a message in January of that year, Rahodeb predicted great things for Whole Foods’ stock. “13 years from now Whole Foods will be a $800+ stock before splits,” he wrote. “Whole Foods is a tremendous growth stock.” At the time, the shares traded at about $94. Whole Foods’ shares closed yesterday at $39.50, up $1.03, or 2.68%.

Rahodeb often sparred with other users, deploying a rigorous analysis of financial statements. “Your quarterly cash flow variance isn’t statistically meaningful because the time period is too short,” he complained to another user who had criticized Whole Foods in March 2006. He then pasted a summary of the previous six years of Whole Foods’ operating cash flow. “Over the past 5 years operating cash flow has increased 330%,” Rahodeb noted.

When it came to Wild Oats, Whole Foods’ main rival, Rahodeb didn’t pull punches. He often criticized Perry Odak, Wild Oats’ former CEO, who resigned last year. “While Odak was trying to figure out the business and conducting expensive ‘research studies,’ to help him figure things out, Whole Foods was signing and opening large stores in OATS territories,” Rahodeb wrote in 2005. “Odak drove off most of the long-term OATS natural foods managers” and brought in executives who “didn’t know too much about the natural/organics industry or their customers.”

Mr. Odak, in a telephone interview, said he was aware of critical postings, but had no idea Mr. Mackey might have been behind them. “It doesn’t surprise me,” he added.

When on occasion Rahodeb went without posting for several weeks, some users expressed concern about his whereabouts. On at least one occasion, he reassured them that he’d been away but was keeping abreast of the chat.

Last August, Rahodeb filed his last dispatch on the Whole Foods message board. He said he’d lost a bet with “hubris12000” about Whole Foods’ stock performance; the terms of the bet required that he stop posting. He blamed the whims of the stock market for a 40% decline in the company’s shares.

“Whole Foods itself has a very bright future, and I will continue to hold my stock for a very long time,” he wrote. “I’ve enjoyed my 8 years on this Board, but all things must come to an end. I wish everyone the very best. Hog152-keep the faith. Liberfar-good luck with your market-timing game. Hubris12000-take your profits while you can.”

Write to David Kesmodel at david.kesmodel@wsj.com and John R. Wilke at john.wilke@wsj.com

Here’s part of another blogger’s opinion at http://www.informationarbitrage.com:

“Did it ever occur to him that maybe, just maybe, his postings using a pseudonym were in violation of a pretty important securities law? Did anyone in the company know about this like, say, company counsel? I don’t even know where to begin as it relates to governance best-practices. This is such a horrible example of corporate stewardship that it is truly mind-boggling. Through his actions, which I will assume for the moment were fueled by ego and not the conscious desire to manipulate stock prices, he has jeopardized the very brand and franchise he and thousands of employees have worked so hard to build over almost 30 years. Did this ever occur to him as he was posting as Rahodeb that he could be placing his company, his employees and his stockholders at risk? I’d assume not. But isn’t this part and parcel of being the CEO of a public company? I’d say so.”