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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

BS Earnings and Unconscious Reinvestment

I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised that more than a few people were interested in what Permanent Equity does with its money. After all, it’s one thing to brag about bullshit earnings (shoutout Charlie Munger) and another to be able to buy beer. And what people wanted to know most is how much cash our companies actually generate? 

The answer to question one is a moving target because we live and work in the real world where nothing is ever reliably stable let alone up and to the right, but we have aspirations that our portfolio companies generate in cash at least 90% of what they claim to have earned in a given month. Some call this free cash flow conversion, but we refer to it as earnings quality, and if any of our companies come up short of that 90% target in a given month, and we have spreadsheets to measure it, we want to understand why.

That’s because it’s in understanding why a business did or did not have good earnings quality that a lot of aha moments happen, in particular with regards to operating a small business. For example, one idea I’ve come to believe is that reinvestment, which is what is happening if earnings are not showing up on the balance sheet in cash, takes two forms: (1) conscious and (2) unconscious.

Conscious reinvestment is great. It’s the deliberate deciding on and then spending against a strategic priority whose risk/reward profile is both known and attractive. And if we have a business that’s not generating much cash because it’s consciously reinvesting, that’s, again, great. We’re using pretax dollars to drive growth and the cash should show up later.

What’s insidious, however, is unconscious reinvestment. This is what I’ve started calling it when a bunch of invoices get paid early because someone is on vacation next week, we decide to buy instead of lease some new equipment to get a price break, we hired someone a little earlier than plan because it was a serendipitous fit, and the back office got busy and missed a billing cycle or didn’t make any phone calls to inquire about past due receivables.

Because each one of those decisions on their own isn’t the end of the world, but if they all happen in the same month, and they can because different individuals are the decision-makers and they may not be coordinating, poof, our earnings quality may have just got cut in half without anyone realizing it. And God forbid if you fill that gap with a draw on a line of credit without figuring out why the gap exists in the first place. 

That’s why having a goal of banking at least 90% of its earnings is effective. It doesn’t mean it will happen every month, but if it doesn’t, and you’re not consciously reinvesting, at least the shortfall will shine a light on your unconscious reinvestment and therefore on what process improvements need to be implemented in order to nuke it.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Seven Reasons to Sell

Our founder and CEO Brent is getting set to update his 2018 book The Messy Marketplace later this year. Perhaps exciting news on its own, the point here is that in advance of that, we’ve all been re-reading what was said way back when to help figure out what’s changed (e.g., interest rates) and what’s been learned since then (e.g., how might a buyer and seller meet in the middle around a massive business disruption like a pandemic) to make sure any second edition is a step up from the first.

And while there is quite a bit of change and learning that should add some nuance to the book, what’s been most interesting to me in reviewing the project is what hasn’t changed. The reason that’s so is because a lot has changed since 2018, so if something fundamentally hasn’t, it might be the case that that thing is a constant. And since constants are rare in this world, that makes it potentially notable. For example, Brent wrote in 2018 about the seven root motivations for transitioning a company to new ownership. They are:

1.       Personality/skills: We’re growing faster than I know how to handle.
2.       Exhaustion: I’m burnt out and my heart just isn’t in it anymore.
3.       Freedom: I’m ready to wake up in the morning and think about something else.
4.       Health: If my doctor had it her way, I’d already be retired.
5.       Obligations: I promised my wife at age 65 we could start doing all the things we never had time to do before.
6.       Risk: I can’t manage through another major business disruptions and need to take some chips off the table.
7.       Legacy: I want to make sure that the team I’ve built can continue forward with good support.

Money, of course, is not on this list because as Brent pointed out back then, due to taxes and the power of compounding gains, a business owner will “almost always do better financially…by not selling.”

But back to the seven motivations…

I spent considerable time racking my brain to come up with another one and couldn’t. So if you have a business, or really any significant obligation or responsibility, and one of those seven things is true of you, now might be the time to consider how to transition out. It may cost you, but could also well be worth it.

Have a great weekend, and look for the updated Messy Marketplace in the fall.

Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

What’s Enough Waterproofing?

Apparently I’m not the only one in the world struggling with the relationship between inputs and outcomes because there was a lot of reaction to the idea of slack time as presented in “Can Main Street Innovate?” and then the next day to being whole-ass or half- when it comes to effort. 

Andrew, for example, pointed out that you might not know what was a good use of time and effort until well after the fact, and so any work building domain expertise might end up proving to be rewarding. Matt, on the other hand, pointed me to Parkinson’s Law, which is the idea that the scope of a job to be done will expand to fill the time allotted to complete it, but further noted that Toyota demands a 0% defect rate in manufacturing because if its goal was something more realistic (like 0.1%) then the actual result would likely be something unacceptable (like 0.2%). 

This was all rolling around in my head when we met with some folks who do waterproofing for a living. In talking about their business, they noted that they have three types of customers:

  1. Long-term owners who want and will pay up for waterproofing that will last for decades.

  2. Short-term owners who want and will only pay for sufficient waterproofing to pass inspection at sale.

  3. General contractors that only care if the waterproofing will last through warranty period on their work.

And so these three types of customers make very different choices about what designs and materials to employ, some of which will work longer and perform better than others. In other words, when you see an example of work after the fact where someone ostensibly did a “bad job,” it may be the case that it wasn’t a bad job at all, but was exactly the job the customer wanted done given his or her goals with regards to cost, durability, and longevity.

The reason this is relevant here is because a fair question to ask is if customers (2) and (3) are half-assing it. Further, if most of us make choices most of the time that optimize for our desired outcome rather than the objectively best outcome, does this mean that we all spend most of our time doing things that are not our best? And if that’s true, is that depressing?

I think the answer to that question is yes, but also that it’s not as depressing an answer as it might seem on its face.

See, Brent, Mark, and I then hit on this line of thinking again in a separate conversation about what a common north star for our portfolio companies might be. “What about high-single-digit organic cash flow growth?,” I suggested.

“Maybe,” Brent and Mark responded.

And the reason that’s a maybe is because depending on the circumstances, high-single-digit organic cash flow growth might be a perfect goal for one company but a wholly inappropriate goal for another even if high-single-digit organic cash flow growth might be better than the alternative. Instead, we want to target a goal on a case-by-case basis that puts us at that moment in time on the spot we want to be on the efficient frontier between risk and reward.

So given all of the choices, the question is “What’s enough waterproofing?” And while I want to say, do it right, I think the answer is actually “It depends.” Because doing something the best you can is both time consuming and expensive and therefore might not be right or optimal. But also beware the Toyota problem, which is that if you don’t at least try to do the best, you might end up much worse off. 

Or as the waterproofers pointed out, leaks are inevitable. It’s only a matter of when and how big.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

More is Better than Less

A cynical approach to negotiating is to always ask for more. After all (and this was actually said to me verbatim once), more is better than less and you don’t get 100% of the things you don’t ask for. Further, if you can do this from a position of strength, when it comes to isolated negotiations, you are going to win more than you lose. 

What this strategy ignores, however, is that the more often one employs it, the more likely the world becomes to not want to negotiate with you. And since life is in some sense a never-ending series of negotiations, having the world not want to negotiate with you means cutting off the chance at open-endedness, which is an expensive prospect given that the theoretical value of open-endedness is infinite. In other words, being an aggressive and self-interested negotiator doesn’t mean you will lose negotiations, but rather that over time you will have fewer chances to negotiate.

One thing that I’ve observed to be true is that most of us overvalue near-term certainty and undervalue long-term optionality. Consider, for example, the hypothetical case of a key vendor that leverages its in-stock position on raw materials important to a small business during a supply chain disruption caused by a global pandemic to significantly increase the price of that material to that small business. While the vendor is likely to get what it's asking for, it will come at the cost of the small business reducing its reliance on that vendor and willingness to build capabilities around said partnership. And so we should all do the math in thinking about that trade-off and decide if we as people and organizations want a bigger piece of a smaller pie or its opposite.

None of this is to say that people or partners shouldn’t be compensated fairly, but rather to observe that if you present value any growing stream of cash flows, the majority of the total value is typically concentrated in the terminal value, i.e., the value that is created beyond the forecast period. Think about that for a moment: We have no visibility into how or why most value will be created.

Now, I’ll admit that’s maybe overstating the practical implication of an abstract mathematical formula, but when it comes to thinking about how to approach negotiation, I don’t think it’s too far off. After all, more truly is better than less, and the variable that matters most to generating more is not performance during any single unit of measurement, but the duration of your measurement period. 

Said differently, if your goal is to negotiate for the most, then figure out what will get you more time and opportunity beyond the forecast period. And if you think about it that way, rarely will the answer be more dollars now.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Tell Me I Did a Good Job

Most people know by now that one way I quality control these missives is by sending them out internally at Permanent Equity for feedback before they are even considered for consumption by the outside world. This is why the ones that are “not my best” never see the light of day and so therefore you think (maybe? I hope?) that I am clever more consistently than I really am. 

And I also hope that I do a decent job of communicating to the people at Permanent Equity how much I value their feedback, good, bad, or indifferent. Yet even Brent, after a string of pretty decent ones, replied “I’ll stop replying to all of these with ‘good job’...but…good job.’”

And I said, because it’s true, “Keep replying! It’s nice to start my morning with an affirmation.”

I don’t relay this story to toot my own horn, but rather because I think it’s illustrative of the fact that no one puts something out into the world without wanting a genuine response. Yet for some reason many of us are programmed to think that we might be bothering or burdening someone by responding. 

For example, I sent an email recently to our investors to gauge interest in whether or not they would attend a Partner Summit here in Columbia, Missouri. I got a number of responses and duly noted in a spreadsheet who might and might not attend. A few days into receiving those responses Brent, who was cc’d on some of them, said, “Hey, are you responding to these?”

And I said, “No, I didn’t want to clog up people’s inboxes. I was going to respond to everyone when we had a decision on whether or not to move forward with the Summit.” As soon as I said it, I knew what I had said was stupid. Why wouldn’t I respond and thank them for their response and say we would be excited to see them? Not only is it true, but in all cases I could and can think of, recognition is better than a vacuum.

Another thing this got me thinking about is the relationship in a relationship between duration and contact frequency. My experience is that when someone makes a new friend, there’s a surge of activity that decays over time even though it seems like the opposite should be true. And I’ve experienced that with this daily. Most of the responses I get back (aside from Brent, who writes me back a lot) are from people I’ve never heard from before, but my favorite responses are usually from people who have already written back a few times (note that you have to write once in order to write twice). 

Again, I can’t put my finger on why that is, but if you have insight, I’m all ears. What I do think is true, however, is that nobody doesn’t want to hear from you provided that what you are sending is both genuine and thoughtful (stay away, spammers). At the risk of repeating myself, it turns out we’re social creatures.

Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

What’s Your Secret Formula?

Back when I explained how we set out to brew the world’s best cup of coffee, I shared three paradigms that might help one achieve success at anything:

  1. You’re only as strong as your weakest link, i.e., the best you can do is your worst input.

  2. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts, i.e., your inputs are all better together.

  3. Go big or go home, i.e., your best input is your biggest driver.

Soon after, I heard back from Paul who said, “That’s great and all, but how do you know what your best and worst inputs are? There are only so many in your coffee example, but in a business there could be tens or hundreds.” And while it’s true that revealing how to brew the world’s best cup of coffee was a deliberately simple example, that doesn’t mean that more complicated use cases are lost causes.

Way back when, I shared Permanent Equity’s secret formula, a legitimate mathematical equation that makes clear the relationship between the variables that contribute to our success as a private equity investment firm:

Clearly, if Permanent Equity is succeeding, it’s because we have capital and deal flow, have done a good job analyzing businesses and negotiating terms, and have added value post-close. And if we want to do even better, we can look at this equation and decide where we want to double down.  

If, on the other hand, there comes a time when Permanent Equity is not performing well, it will likely be because we’ve fallen down in one or more of these areas. As for which it might be, if we’re tracking what we should, that should be pretty clear in the numbers. And once we know that, we can decide if we want to try to fix what’s not working, double down on what is, or rejigger the equation. For example, if we’re not adding value post-close, well, that problem not only won’t get solved by having more deal flow, but probably gets made worse. Raising more capital, however, might solve deal flow challenges because when people know you have access to capital, they tend to bring you opportunities to invest it.

So what I said to Paul was if you’re trying to achieve something and you’re not sure why it is or isn’t being achieved as you would like, write it down as a secret formula and then analyze each contributing variable independently. As you do so, you may find that each can be further broken down into sub-variables – keep doing that until what you are trying to achieve has been set equal to a finite number of controllable inputs.

Because when that’s done, you should be able to see what matters, identify what is and isn’t performing as expected, and then start the hard work of deciding what to do about it.


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

If You Get the Chance to Ask…

One thing I’ve learned is that when you meet someone new, particularly if it’s a business introduction, it may end up being the only time you ever talk to that person, so if there is something interesting about them, you should ask about it, because you may never get another chance. And this is how I ended up derailing a conversation between Emily and I and an investment banker when, in the course of telling us about his background, he said that he had worked in the accounting department at Enron from 1996 to 2001. 

You know, 2001? When that entire company collapsed amid a massive accounting scandal.

“You worked at Enron from 1996 to 2001?” I asked.

“Yes,” he confirmed.

“What was that like?” I got out before Emily kicked me under the table.

“Uh, stressful,” he replied. 

“Could you tell? Did you know?”

He said, “No, not really, I wasn’t in the top levels, but I did start to think something was odd when I saw what the company was valuing its Venezuelan investments at. I mean, Chavez had just taken power and it didn’t seem like they could be worth much. But that’s why I got subpoenaed by the Department of Justice?

“You got subpoenaed by the Department of Justice!?” I spit out. 

At this point, Emily was not amused. Breakfast was close to over and we knew nothing more about the deal he was there to tell us about. But this was too good. 

“So what was that like?” I continued before she could redirect.

“Uh, stressful,” he repeated. “I went in there without a lawyer thinking it would be a pretty straightforward conversation since I didn’t know very much.”

“Was it?”

“No.”

“Hmm. What’d you learn?”

“Well,” he thought it over, clearly reliving the experience in his mind. “I learned to never again respond to a Department of Justice subpoena without a lawyer.”

And that, I thought, was a pretty good learning to get and well worth the time spent getting it. That said, we also didn’t get the deal. 

Have a great weekend.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Transparency? Yes!

At the risk of oversimplifying, owners of small businesses don’t often share financial results with their employees because they don’t want them to either (1) know how good it is or (2) know how bad it is. And that makes sense. It sucks to be resented because you’re rich just as much as being pitied because you’re poor.

But I will advocate for transparency with this story about our COO Mark…

Back in a previous life Mark took over a struggling business unit at a big company. This was a business line that should have had 40%+ net margins, but was instead trying to avoid tripping a bank covenant. Fast-forward a few years and the team had 10x’d the bottom line. Was it rocket science? Not as he tells it. Rather, the things he focused on were surprisingly straightforward:

1) Transparency: We started openly sharing our numbers and our challenges with the entire company.

2) Accountability: We made sure each key part of the business had a capable leader and they knew what their goals were.

3) Unity: That leadership team met regularly to talk about their challenges and solve them together.

In other words, he changed very little about the business other than how honest and open it was between and among the people working in it. But why did that work?

One explanation could be dumb luck. Maybe the industry took a turn for the better and whatever Mark and his team did would have been successful no matter what. But I think that underestimates what people can accomplish when they are armed with information. 

Because even the rocket scientists among us can’t solve problems or optimize opportunities if they don’t know that those problems and opportunities exist. 


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Time to Lawyer Up

I’m always on the lookout for things that are uncorrelated and countercyclical, so you might not be surprised to learn that with the economy potentially slowing I told our chief legal officer (and resident coffee aficionado) Taylor that it’s time to start suing people. I’m kidding, of course (we only sue on the merits), but what is true is that it is a strategy for others. Simply put, when the economy goes down, litigation goes up.

This makes sense. Economic downturns can cause companies to terminate employees and break contracts, which are events that leave counterparties aggrieved, but they also tend to make people poorer and crankier, which are anecdotally the catalysts behind most lawsuits. In fact, we were talking to a structural engineer the other day who had built a commercial construction consulting business with remarkably smooth revenue growth that didn’t seem to ebb and flow with the commercial construction industry. The secret, he revealed, is that in addition to advising contractors on how to build things, he had gotten certified to serve as an expert witness in court to testify at cases of construction projects gone wrong. “When there is money to be made,” he said, “everybody works hard to make it. But when the money dries up, everyone thinks they should have made more.”

What’s interesting about all of these cases, however, is that very few of them (1% to 5%, depending on your source) ever go to trial. That’s because, to quote the aforementioned pithy structural engineer, “everyone knows the last place you’ll find justice is in court.”

If you’re like me (i.e., competitive and never wrong), that’s really frustrating because it means that people who are in the wrong are winning paydays or not being held accountable for their wrongful actions. In fact, I’m pretty sure that the most common attorney/client conversation goes something like this:

Client: What do you think I should do?

Attorney: Settle.

Client: ARGH!

As for why this is (leaving aside the simplest explanation that attorneys lack follow through), I asked Taylor and he attributed it to certainty and agency. 

On the certainty side, since you never know what a judge or jury might do, your range of outcomes is unknown and unknowable, whereas one can negotiate a settlement agreement down to the last letter. While this guarantees every lawsuit against you will cost you something (certainty is expensive!), it means that you can at least make sure you get something for your money.

As for agency, a reality is that many civil lawsuits get passed off to insurance companies who (1) aren’t personally competitive; (2) are regulated and have no appetite for open-ended liabilities; and (3) can spread incurred settlement costs across their entire base of customers in the form of higher premiums. The tragedy of the commons strikes again.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Crazy and/or Well-Moisturized

Like most Americans, our office spent an inordinate amount of time after the Super Bowl talking about the ads (and also relishing in our local area sports team’s third championship in five years, but I don’t want to rub that in because we have prospective deals in both Baltimore and the Bay Area). And while we enjoyed The DunKings ad a lot, the consensus favorite was Michael Cera revealing that human skin is his passion. And it was in the course of reaching that conclusion via the Socratic method that Brent noticed a small white tub on Holly’s (shoutout Gen Z and thanks for your help writing this one) desk and said, “Wait, is that CeraVe?”

And as soon as he said it we could all see Holly winding up and then maybe Brent regretting that he asked. 

“Yes!” she said. “I carry a travel-sized CeraVe Daily Moisturizing Lotion with me everywhere I go. I keep a 12 oz. tub of CeraVe Moisturizing Cream at my desk, a 16 oz. pump top tub of CeraVe Moisturizing Cream on my nightstand, and a 19 oz. tub of CeraVe Moisturizing Cream in the waiting just in case I run out. Some might call this crazy; I call it being well-moisturized. But you know what the problem is, Brent?”

Brent looked at me for support, but there was no way I was intervening.

“The problem, Brent, is that a few years ago I splurged and purchased the 16 oz. pump top CeraVe Moisturizing Cream. Each time the tub ran out of cream, I just purchased a non-pump top replacement tub, and changed out the lids. Until December 8, 2023, when I didn’t want to brave the holiday rush at Target and opted to order the 19 oz. tub from Amazon for $16.02. While I thought I was getting more bang for my buck, the 16 oz. pump top lid doesn’t fit the 19 oz. container. Can you believe that, Brent?”

Brent again looked at me, but I averted my gaze. 

“So now there I am, Brent, physically scooping the cream out of the 19 oz. tub and into the 16 oz. container like I’m Pooh Bear with a honey pot just so I can use my pump top. Does that seem right, Brent?” 

“How much more is the 19 oz. container with a pump top?” Brent asked.

Double the price,” responded Holly.

“In dollars?” Brent inquired.

“16!” said an outraged Holly.

“Can I give you $16?” asked Brent, hoping beyond hope that Holly would say yes.

“It’s not the money, it’s the principle, Brent. Both you and Michael Cera should understand that. The tub lids should all be the same diameter so I can continue using my years old pump top on new tubs of this fabulous moisturizing cream.”

And it ended there because fortunately Jenny had catered in barbecue for the office that day so we all had a pulled pork lunch to get to, but it just goes to show that even innocent questions can prompt unlikely diatribes. 

As for why I am telling this story here, I (1) needed to acknowledge that the Chiefs won the Super Bowl (again, sorry Baltimore and the Bay Area); (2) thought it was funny; and (3) wanted to revisit the risk/reward calculus of businesses making life harder on their customers in pursuit of near-term profits. This is also Amazon continuing to degrade the value proposition of Prime and food companies that shrink portions to surreptitiously maintain margins amid rising costs. 

Businesses, of course, are frequently run by the numbers, but it’s one thing for them to be an objective and another to be a byproduct. As for whether or not juicing profits by charging more for no-longer-interchangeable pump tops is what’s behind CeraVe’s packaging geometry, I have no idea. But I do think Holly, whether crazy and/or well-moisturized, has a point.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Have Hard Conversations

One of the things that’s true about our line of work is that we have a lot of stakeholders. As a result, we have a lot of hard conversations. That’s because stakeholders are people and people, as Brent likes to say (and we’ve all adopted the saying), are messy. 

It’s for that reason that the piece of content on our website that I refer back to the most is our Tactical Guide to Tough Conversations. And I refer back to it before each time I think I am going to have a hard conversation (there is, by the way, no difference between a tough or hard conversation, but the person who titled that piece liked alliteration and went against my recommendation to call it The Hitchhiker's Guide to Hard Conversations) because hard conversations are by definition hard and you’re probably only going to get one shot at having one and having it go right, so you need to make sure you’ve thought it all the way through and are prepared for whatever direction it might go. In other words, read The Guide.

Further, another thing that’s true about hard conversations is that if you’re the one initiating one, the person you’re having it with may not have known ahead of time that a hard conversation was on the horizon and therefore may not be at all prepared for it. This is important to recognize because if it’s true, that person is likely to react emotionally, which puts the onus doubly back on you as the initiator to make sure that the conversation is trafficking in facts in pursuit of an achievable and desirable outcome. 

How can you do that? Here’s what our Guide says:

  1. Know why you’re having the conversation and what the achievable and desired outcome is.

  2. Recognize going in that one conversation won’t solve everything, so appreciate that this conversation is likely the beginning (and not the end) of a larger conversation.

  3. Prepare and practice for the conversation out loud. 

  4. Be specific and direct with examples.

  5. If the conversation is escalating or getting emotional, bring it back to its purpose and achievable and desired outcome. 

The reason these principles work is that they solve for the developments that tend to make hard conversations go off the rails. Namely:

  1. Asking for something that’s not achievable.

  2. Expecting resolution and becoming frustrated when it can’t be reached.

  3. Saying something off the cuff that’s stupid.

  4. Not being able to support a point of view with evidence.

  5. Open-endedness; when one thing becomes about everything.

The other key to a hard conversation is ending it, and the best way to do that is by identifying an agreed upon next step. After all, the only way forward is progress, so be satisfied if, after what’s probably been an emotionally draining experience for both parties, you’re able to agree that you’ve made it.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

How to Build a Portfolio

Our CEO Brent and I were talking the other day, as we regularly do, about investing. And more specifically about portfolio construction as in “what type of opportunity might we want to invest in next.” Because in a world like ours, where there aren’t thousands of opportunities listed and traded daily on efficient public markets, it helps to have an idea of what you’re looking for so you don’t miss it when you see it. That’s the importance of preparation when your chances to act are finite and intermittent.

As we talked that through, though, it also dawned on us that neither of us are classically trained in investing. And so while we now are well aware of things like the Kelly criterion and correlation coefficients for sizing and measuring bets, we had practical experience of the implications of those things before we had the specific technical knowledge. 

An implication of that is that there is healthy tension between the qualitative and the quantitative in the way we think about building a portfolio of investments, which you could probably guess just by eyeballing, without knowing the position sizes, valuation multiples, or financial condition of any of them, Permanent Equity’s portfolio

So what’s the method to the madness?

In thinking through how we have built our portfolio, five tenets emerged, learned over time, that I thought might be helpful to others who are trying to build a portfolio of anything, with portfolio here being defined as individual things that need to cohere in order to do one thing successfully.

  1. Know what you’re trying to accomplish.

  2. Don’t risk more than you can afford to lose.

  3. Diversify, but not too much.

  4. Only take risks you’re compensated for taking.

  5. Everything is more correlated than you think.

The plan is to explain each of these in significantly greater depth (do I hear “white paper”?) at some point in the future, but for now, have a great weekend.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

This is Urgent

Responding to the idea that the point is constraints, Stephen wrote back, “It brings up an interesting question. How can we create that sense of urgency…when it’s not naturally there?”

To which I replied, “Great question. I don’t think we spend much time thinking about how to make life harder for people, but maybe we should?”

And as owners and operators of businesses, I think that’s mostly true. In my career, I’ve been fortunate to work for organizations that treated people well with much of what I’ve heard from managers being something along the lines of “What do you need?” or “How can I help?” This is also a tactic I’ve tried to employ as I’ve been entrusted to lead teams. 

Yet as I reflected on that, it also became apparent to me that while at those organizations that treated people well, some of the best work the people in those places did was done when deteriorating exogenous economic conditions forced them to really dial-in. So an open question is: Would an organization achieve better performance if everything were more difficult and stressful more often if not all the time?

As I thought about that, I realized there are times when we do make things deliberately harder on others. One obvious example is sports practices. During soccer scrimmages, we often limit the girls to one or two touches. When I played baseball in high school, practice at-bats would start with two strikes. And in basketball the coach might give you only five seconds to shoot out of an inbounds play. The goal of these scenarios is to force a practitioner to operate under pressure so that person not only learns to deal with that pressure, but also so that the game would feel easier when those deliberately applied hardships were removed.

A key difference between sports and business, however, is that sports have clearly delineated times to focus on process (practices and training sessions) versus outcomes (competitive matches and games), whereas in business the line is much more blurred. Sure, most businesses offer some form of “training,” but it’s typically done on the job. Further, while athletes spend significantly more time practicing than playing, employees in the U.S. are lucky to get one hour per week of “practice.” 

But what would practice at work look like anyway? There isn’t enough time in the day and business, unlike sports, has no clear rules of engagement. A worker might practice a process to perfection only to have it be deemed irrelevant the next day.

Another risk of amping up the pressure on employees is burnout. In other words, how much sub-optimal performance is tolerable in order to keep turnover low? Because a lot of turnover is likely to lead to significantly lower performance than what you’d get from a good, long-tenured personal who’s dialed-in, but just not really dialed-in. Further, it may be the case that the ability to really dial-in when necessary is enabled by not having to be really dialed-in all the time.

And maybe that’s the answer. That value creation is not linear and therefore most of our time should be spent creating conditions that enable high performance so we can achieve it in the moments it’s most necessary.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Work Changes You

Permanent Equity was fortunate to have Steve Cockram zoom into one of our recent Lunch ‘n Learns to talk about his 5 Voices framework and new book The Communication Code.  As an aside, and lest you think we are inhospitable, he was supposed to be here in-person, but the Lunch ‘n Learn ended up being planned for one of those weeks in winter when Columbia, Missouri, briefly turned into the East Antarctic Plateau (variance!). I digress…

I wrote about Steve previously in this space in the context of using words wisely, but Steve’s expertise goes so much deeper than that. So read the books. Both the Voices and the Codes will help you become a better communicator in both your professional and personal lives. 

This, though, is about something slightly different. See, Steve and I have gotten to know each other a little bit and during the course of his talk, I asked a question. In the course of his answer, because he knew me a little bit, he referred to me as a Pioneer/Creative, which was interesting to me because I had recently taken the 5 Voices assessment and measured out as a Guardian. So as a follow-up question, and because all Lunch ‘n Learns should be about me, I asked how he had pegged me as a Pioneer/Creative and if I was that, why would I have tested as a Guardian?

His answer was that he thought I had told him previously that I was a Myers Briggs INTJ, which would correlate with being a Pioneer/Creative. When I clarified I was an ENTJ, he said that that would mostly make me a Pioneer/Guardian. But as for why I was testing as a Guardian, well, that was a different story.

The reason that might be, Steve said, is because in my previous role as CFO and now as CIO, I had a lot of responsibility for making data-driven decisions, watching the numbers, and doing due diligence. As a result, I likely changed as a person because of my onus of work. 

That blew my mind. It sounded ridiculous, but was also probably true. 

The reason this is so is because it’s not just nature that determines who we are and become, but also nurture, i.e., how we modulate ourselves based on our experiences and choice, i.e., what we choose to emphasize based on feedback we receive and perceive. In other words, I may have changed my persona based on what was expected of me, what voids I felt I needed to fill, and what I thought might earn me praise or blame.

As I wrestled with that, I realized that if what someone does for work changes him or her as a person, then it’s critical that ultimately what that someone does makes him or her (1) happy and (2) a better person.

Of course, it’s not realistic to think that can be the case all of the time. But if you find yourself in a situation where it isn’t, you might spend time thinking and talking with others about what you can do and what it might look like to work towards a situation where it is.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Eminem was a No-Brainer

At the risk of dating myself and also revealing how out of touch I am, I didn’t realize that (1) Eminem was eligible for the Rock n’ Roll Hall of Fame and/or that (2) he was inducted a long time ago. Congratulations! Also, I’m old. Anyway, his performance at said induction is worth watching. Where am I going with this? 

You can probably guess by now based on my missives about Joey Ramone and Joe Strummer that I have a soft spot for punk rock. That’s true, and so back when I was in high school I was a regular attendee at the now defunct Vans (since acquired by VF Corp.) Warped Tour. In the 1999 edition of the now defunct Vans (since acquired by VF Corp.) Warped Tour, Eminem was a performer. He had just released “My Name is,” but wasn’t yet a big name and certainly wasn’t yet a big name among folks who listened to punk rock over hip hop. 

Who knows why he was there?

Anyhow, we had a friend named Rita who was hip to both hip hop and punk rock and who also was older and so therefore had a driver’s license in New York and could take us to the now defunct Vans (since acquired by VF Corp.) Warped Tour on Randall’s Island. She did so in her Honda and on the way said, “Hey, there’s this rapper Eminem we should go watch. He’s really good.”

We had no idea who Eminem was, but since we were there because of Rita and since Eminem’s set was in the middle of the day and since there really wasn’t any other band we wanted to watch during that time slot, we figured we’d indulge her and so got to the stage early obtaining front row spots since there was literally no one else there to watch Eminem. Eminem. It’s incredible in hindsight. 

Anyhow, Eminem came on stage, launched into “My Name is,” and inflated a giant mummy with a syringe sticking out of it.  I/we/everyone was/were/was blown away and within minutes, due to the energy and quality of the performance, every person at the now defunct Vans (since acquired by VF Corp.) Warped Tour on Randall’s Island that day was at that stage. Literally, it was a mob scene. And this, hands down, because of the unexpectedness and serendipity of it, was and is my favorite concert ever attended. The guy won thousands of people over on the merits.

This doesn’t happen every day! And it doesn’t happen for two reasons. First, most of us aren’t open to new and unexpected experiences. Second, most new and unexpected experiences don’t win on the merits. But the opportunity to stand front row at a Hall of Fame performance is not one that comes around often. So be open to new experiences and trust snap judgments. No-brainers are no-brainers for a reason…and we all (the world?) should traffic in more of them.

 
 

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

We Risked Our Lives to Get Back to the Office

When COVID-19 shut down the world in March 2020, it brought with it a sea change in how the world thinks about work. Everything that could possibly be done remotely shifted that way abruptly. People who used to spend 40+ hours a week together no longer saw each other in person at all. And some still haven’t.

At Permanent Equity, we were back in the office together within 6 weeks. People thought we were crazy. With so many unknowns about the pandemic, why on earth would we take such a risk?

Of course, it should go without saying that coming back was optional and anyone who had concerns could work from wherever they wanted to. Heck, I came back to the office, but paranoid as I was spent months working out of the studio nee garage with the overhead door wide open to make sure there was lots of fresh air (fortunately we had a stretch of nice weather). 

But the important point is that people came back because they chose to, and I think the reason for that (after some very awkward Zoom happy hours) is that we collectively came to believe that the world was undervaluing trust capital. 

Trust capital is the currency of relationships. You earn it through positive experiences with others. At work, in small amounts, this takes the form of showing up on time, working hard, and doing what you said you were going to do. Larger paydays look like sharing the blame (or acclaim) for something you might have credibly blamed on (or not attributed to) a teammate.

But you can also spend trust capital, which is what you’re doing when someone thinks you are doing the wrong thing but you ask them to trust you and so they let you do it.

Another thing that’s true about trust capital is that different jobs require different amounts of it. On one end, for example, is software development. Because code is objectively transparent, if someone says she wrote good code, you can trust but verify. In other words, if you’re in charge of a software engineer, you don’t need to trust that she’s putting in the work because you’ll be able to tell if she is or isn’t by her output. Business development, though, is different. It can take years in that world for leads to become prospects and then customers, so a lot of trust is needed.

But the most important thing to recognize about trust capital is that it’s impossible to move fast without it. Because without trust, you need contracts. And contracts need lawyers. And lawyers are slow precisely because they exist to not trust one another. 

A reality of what we do is that we often need to move fast without easily observable outputs, which means our job requires high trust. That’s true in and among the Permanent Equity team and also with our portfolio companies. Yet a funny thing about trust capital is that while it is depleted at roughly the same rate regardless of the medium (if you spend it on the phone, over email, or in person it has roughly the same value), it is earned at a significantly higher rate in person than anywhere else. 

This is why we felt it so critical to us back in 2020 to get back to the office. We recognized that, in a remote setting, in jobs that require a great deal of trust and whose work product was not immediately verifiable, we were spending trust capital at a far greater rate than we were earning it back and feared what might happen when we tipped into a deficit. This isn’t to say that we made light of health risks or didn’t take precautions, but rather that the risk of losing trust was similarly real and significant.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Three Things About Bad Presidents

Since it was President’s Day this week I figured I might point out that based on recent polling, it seems likely that no matter what happens in the upcoming presidential election, most Americans will be unhappy with the result. I will say three things about that…

One: My former direct report Morgan Housel says that the most controversial piece he ever wrote based on reader feedback was this one. Called “The Best Presidents for the Economy,” it presented historical data about how “the stock market, corporate profits, GDP, and inflation have done under every president since Teddy Roosevelt.” While those tables have disappeared from that article, here’s the updated data on real GDP growth:

 
 

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis via Morgan Housel; *Partial term

Like Morgan did, I will simply leave that there and let you “create a story around it as you wish.”

Two: Political uncertainty in the US is being cited as a significant risk factor in 2024. Here, for example, is Time calling it the number one global risk. And here are US CEOs telling KPMG that political uncertainty is the top risk to growth. In other words, it’s safe to say that people are worried about the upcoming election and positioning accordingly. 

Three: When it comes to politics, “epistemic spillovers” are a thing. What this means is that if you agree with some politically, you are more likely to take their guidance and advice on other matters even if that person has no relevant knowledge in that domain. This leads to “suboptimal information-seeking decisions and errors in judgment.” Keep that in mind and try to remain objective about non-political decisions amid heightened political rhetoric.

And those are the three things I’ll say about that. Have a great weekend.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Don’t Fix Obvious Problems

One idea that resonated more than I expected was FOMOBOMO. Mark, not that Mark, for example, emailed me back to say that thanks to FOMOBOMO, he finally could explain why he was paying down his mortgage despite having a great interest rate.

The reason that’s so is because all of us do things that don’t objectively make sense, but that make sense to us, and also that there are times when it may be optimal to do something that is clearly not optimal. This, I think, is not exactly FOMOBOMO but a corollary to it, which is the thoughtful and deliberate making of obvious mistakes (TADMOOM?).

The reason Mark paying off his mortgage is a mistake is because he’s paying 3% or so to carry it, but could earn more than 4% today on a 20-year treasury. In other words, there’s an obvious and accessible risk-free opportunity that would generate a better return. 

Except!

Mark perceives non-economic benefits of being debt free, and who is anyone to tell Mark about the relative value of the perceived benefits of his household balance sheet?

You could argue, of course, that Mark is not making a mistake in this example because he believes he is deriving value in excess of cost and that’s how one makes a market anyway. But I think it’s clear here that there is no world where Mark ends up objectively better off by doing this. He just thoughtfully and deliberately wants to do it.

Somewhat related, Jason, who runs our airplane parts paperwork business out in California and has a substack where he records his own thoughts on business and operations, wrote recently about the immense relief of not fixing obvious problems

While that sounds like gross mismanagement (we’re watching you, Jason), what it’s in recognition of is that time is finite, perfect is often the enemy of good enough, and if you’re always trying to optimize everything, you might not get around to optimizing what matters most. There is, however, a fine line here. If we’re not aiming for perfection, what are we doing? And how much imperfection can an endeavor tolerate?

Unfortunately, there’s no clear, right answer. The best you can do is hire good people and trust their judgment, but also always be positioned to be able to tolerate – deliberate or otherwise – inevitable obvious mistakes.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Great Ideas Like Great Songs

It can be entertaining when you have an old soul like Taylor (shoutout compliance!) and a gen Z soul like Holly (shoutout Vanderpump Rules!) in the same office together because you end up having some very interesting intergenerational conversations. So it went after the recent Grammys with Holly extolling the virtues of the winners while Taylor couldn’t stop harping on how music used to be so much better (though both agreed that Tracy Chapman’s performance of “Fast Car” with Luke Combs was fantastic).

To make his point, Taylor asked how many of the 2024 Record of the Year nominees besides Taylor Swift (Miley Cyrus, SZA, boygenius, Victoria Monet, Olivia Rodrigo, Billie Eilish, and Jon Batiste) would still be household names in 30 years? Whereas if you went 30 years back and looked at the same list (Whitney Houston, Neil Young, Sting, Billy Joel, and Peabo Bryson & Regina Belle) it was a veritable who’s who of staying power (though it might be stretching it to say that about that last pair).

And it does seem to be the case that the farther back you go, the more established ROTY nominees seem to be at the time they received their nomination. But is this evidence that music is getting worse?

I think the answer to that is no because the historical performance of an artist is not a reliable proxy for quality of new material (even The Beatles had “Revolution 9”). Further, it’s undoubtedly the case that digital distribution and social media together have made it exponentially easier and cheaper for unestablished artists to go direct-to-consumers and create hits solely on the merits.

Indeed, this breakdown in control of what music gets produced and distributed is likely a bigger factor in the proliferation of “unqualified” ROTY nominees than relative degradation in quality of product. (Also, Occam’s razor, Taylor might just be grumpy.) 

To wit, rewind 30 years and it wasn’t like Grammys were being awarded on the merits anyway. Here, for example, were the nominees for ROTY in 1993: “Tears in Heaven” by Eric Clapton, “Achy Breaky Heart” by Billy Ray Cyrus, “Beauty and the Beast” by Celine Dion and Peabo Bryson (heckuva run for Peabo in the 1990s), “Constant Craving”  by k.d. lang, and “Save the Best for Last” by Vanessa Williams. Sure, Eric Clapton and Celine Dion are juggernauts and those are good songs, but not even nominated was “Smells Like Teen Spirit” by Nirvana, arguably the best and most influential record of the past 50 years.

Yes, at the time “Achy Breaky Heart” was recognized as a superior record to “Smells Like Teen Spirit” (which won not a single Grammy in any category). We can agree that’s a miss.

The point is that great songs, like great ideas, can come from anyone anywhere at any time, and just because someone had one before doesn’t mean they will necessarily have one again. Therefore, systems should be set up to recognize and capture greatness no matter its origin. Thanks to technological advances, I think that’s what we’re increasingly seeing in the music industry and if that means more artists that haven’t had or don’t go on to have decades-long careers are being nominated for awards, that’s a feature not a bug.

It’s the same in business, with breakthroughs as likely to come from the shop floor as the C-suite. So if you own or operate one, a good question to ask is are you regularly capturing and evaluating ideas from across the entire organization?

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos gives the advice that the most senior person in a meeting should always speak last and in his recent interview with Lex Fridman advised that meetings go around in order of seniority. While I appreciate the intent of that approach (if one exec doesn’t assert undue early influence, there is more likely to be a debate on the merits), it (1) seems inefficient and procedural (shouldn’t the insight most likely to advance the conversation the farthest go first?); and (2) doesn’t solve for the fact that in a small room a group might coalesce around an idea based on who presented it regardless of when it was presented anyway.

Yet I also can’t top it because alternatives such as anonymous idea generation or trying everything and seeing what sticks come with similar problems.

One thing I will recommend, however, which I don’t think many organizations do, is an idea audit. This is the process of looking back at what you did over the past year, particularly with regards to new initiatives, and identifying who or where the idea for doing that came from. Once you have attribution, you can see whose ideas your organization is most frequently implementing.

My hypothesis when you do this is that the majority of ideas will come from a minority of origins. Then a question to ask is do one or a small number of people have a monopoly on good ideas at my organization or does my organization not have a good system in place for collecting and evaluating ideas from everywhere?

While it’s comforting to assume that the former is the case, if you agree that great ideas, like great songs, can come from anyone anywhere at any time, then what you’re seeing in that idea audit data is actually a reflection of the latter.

-Tim


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Tim Hanson Tim Hanson

Why So Much Cash?

One question we get quite a bit from investors when they see our track record for making cash distributions from our funds is why do you and your companies throw off so much cash? Because with the S&P 500 yielding less than 2% and many public companies paying no dividends at all, ours look high by comparison. There are a few reasons.

First, our businesses are typically structured as pass-through entities. What this means is that they don’t pay corporate income taxes, but rather “pass-through” both tax liability and the cash to pay that tax liability to their owners. In other words, the dividends paid by our companies and funds, unlike the dividends paid by C corps, are issued on a pre-tax basis, which will make them definitionally higher. 

Second, when it comes to capital allocation, there are really three things a business can do with its money:

  1. Pay dividends.

  2. Buy back stock.

  3. Reinvest in the business.

For C corps, they not only pay dividends after paying income taxes, but individuals receiving them then have to pay another 15% to 20% in dividend tax. Leaving aside the issue of whether this double-taxation is fair or not, what it means for C corps is that they get more bang for their buck on behalf of their owners by either buying back stock or reinvesting (because those activities are not taxed twice and reinvestment can be tax-advantaged through policies like accelerated depreciation), so if they are being rational about value creation they will do more of that and less paying of dividends. 

Third, incentives. Because we like dividends (more on that below), the people who run our businesses are typically bonused based on the amount of cash they distribute out of the business. This stands in contrast to the compensation plans of many CEOs of public companies who are rewarded based on stock price appreciation. The thing about dividends is that when they are paid out, cash (a balance sheet asset) leaves the company, so the stock price goes down (not good if your bonus depends on the stock going up). Buying back stock and reinvesting, on the other hand, are both things that give a stock price a better than 0% chance to go up. “Show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome” indeed, as Charlie Munger used to say.

Fourth, there’s a relationship between the size of a business and its ability to tolerate reinvestment and growth, and our experience has been that the more aggressively one tries to reinvest in and grow a small business, the more risk one introduces into its operations. Because remember that anytime you create the opportunity to make gains, you are simultaneously creating the opportunity to take losses. So while our operating team works with our companies to maintain ranked lists of reinvestment opportunities, they are typically never executing on more than one or two of them at once. That’s in order to stay focused on making the reinvestment we’re making successful, but also so that, if it isn’t, we haven’t bet the company. 

Fifth, cost of capital matters. When it comes to reinvestment, our businesses are typically reinvesting in scaling assets such as vehicles, machinery, or facility expansions. Because these assets are tangible and easy for a lender with a lower cost of capital such as a bank to underwrite, it’s typically cheaper to finance them that way than with retained earnings. And so we do. 

Finally, the golden rule applies. As investors, since we are the ones who have to face the consequences of any losses incurred by our investment decisions, we think we should also be the ones who get to decide what to do next with any gains – and we think our investors deserve the same courtesy. This is why distributions paid by our companies to our funds are almost entirely paid forward to the fund investors as beer money rather than recycled by us into something else. We feel that if, after receiving their cash, our investors want to give them back to us to reinvest, they can do so by committing to a future fund, but that that should be their, and not our, decision.

-Tim


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