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Saturday, 15 September 2018

Starting a business or getting an MBA?

Getting involved in small business, you get involved in marketing, you get involved in accounting, you get involved in strategy and you get involved in sales, it goes without saying that you get involved in public relations.


We all know you don't need to have an MBA to start a business, there are no legal requirements and plenty of people are engaged in small business enterprises without university qualifications. So should a person take on the effort and expense of this post-graduate qualification?

Firstly we need to look at age, current earning potential, time lost from work, opportunity cost and tuition fees. Then we need to take a good hard look at the school offering the MBA qualification, its reputation, quality of instruction offered and entrepreneurial programs the institution offers.

The younger you are, the more opportunity you have to earn the costs back but this is counteracted by the less management experience encountered. The reputation of the institution is important insofar as venture capitalists are attracted, industry experts brought in and the mentoring potential in terms of quality of industry experts.

In an entrepreneurial business venture, the development of ideas that are peer reviewed in venture labs by students, industry experts and faculty staff. One imagines a through analysis allows review of the idea will result in reworking the plan to get exciting ideas off the ground.

The Stanford Venture Studio and their Startup Garage, INSEAD's Centre for Entrepreneurship and the IE Business School Area 31 are programs  Stanford's venture lab holds weekly meetings with business founders, venture capitalists, industry experts and faculty staff to develop new ideas.

Business plans are developed from prototypes, value creation is analysed and the idea tested and peer reviewed with input from faculty members and industry experts. The current crop of start-up businesses revolve around e-commerce and developing online platforms.

A number of leading universities are strongly promoting entrepreneurship as coursework opening labs where ideas are floated and refined. If you have a good idea and you peer review the business plan with input from industry experts, you could easily seek a return on the investment far exceeding the opportunity cost of staying employed.

Thursday, 13 September 2018

A 2015 Upper Reach Tempranillo

Staying home on a Saturday night, I decided to crack the top on a 2015 Upper Reach Tempranillo and I was pretty happy I did. These days you can't pop a cork, but you can certainly crack a screw top.


I am a pretty big fan of Upper Reach so I'm pretty confident bringing a bottle home from their Swan Valley winery. Not that it is an issue as cellar door sales includes tasting so you already know what you are getting. Checking the Upper Reach tasting notes, they tell us this has perfumed notes of cherry, berry and a hint of tomato leaf.

To be honest, I have no idea what this means as I can't say I have ever eaten tomato leaf, but what I do know that this turned out to be a reasonable drop. Tempranillo is a Spanish style well suited to Western Australian, namely Swan Valley conditions as a lighter to medium bodied style wine - I like it. 

Tuesday, 11 September 2018

The Longines 2018 HydroConquest

I love following watches and Longines is a favourite mid-range timepiece that has sparked my interest. They are a solid timepiece, reasonably priced, have plenty of history and have plenty of support through a large distribution network.


I was looking to purchase a HydroConquest about two years back, I like the watch but I thought something was lacking, I stayed true to Longines and purchased a Conquest. Similar to the Conquest, the band with triple lock clasp is great. I like the dial more than the Conquest with the nine numeral added. But I knew in a year or two a ceramic bezel model would come on the market and I would be unhappy with the model I had. That time is now and had I purchased a HydroConquest then, I would be unhappy now.

Like the previous model, 41 mm stainless steel case has a screw-down case-back and screw-in crown maintaining the 300 metre water resistance rating. The crown guard is pretty distinctive for me as with most Longines sports watches. Like most high quality sports watches, the scratch resistant sapphire crystal has layers of anti-reflective coatings to reduce glare.

The L888 automatic movement is the ETA 2892-2 powerplant operating at 25,200 vibrations per hour with a respectable 64 power reserve. For me, the most distinctive feature is the new ceramic bezel, whilst a new feature for the HydroConquest range, it is welcomed. The ceramic bezel is highly scratch resistant, doesn't lose its colour and is reasonably hard. Why Longines waited so long? I don't know but I'm glad they have upgraded the HydroConquest and I like it.

Saturday, 8 September 2018

The Earthrise on Christmas eve

The Apollo space program left us with an array of memorable photographs from their lunar missions. The difficulty is how to decide what was the best photograph of the program? Is it astronauts, rockets, the collection of space craft or the lunar surface?


For me, I find it hard to go past the Earthrise taken from Apollo 8 as the command module orbited the moon on Christmas eve of 1968. I wasn't born yet so for me these achievements by NASA amaze me, I wasn't able to follow these space flights during the height of the space race. Amazingly, no country or space agency has the capability to return people to the moon more than fourty years after Apollo 17 in December 1972 - that's insane.

Apollo 8 was the second manned space flight of the program with Commander Frank Borman, Command Module Pilot James Lovell and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders as the first manned spacecraft to leave low Earth orbit travelling into the gravity field of another celestial body. The command/service module made 10 orbits of the moon and was only the second Apollo mission to carry crew into space after the Apollo 7 mission just 2 months earlier.

These manned missions were to build to the lunar landing of Apollo 11 in July 1969 with Apollo 9 launched in March of 1969 and only a couple of months later Apollo 10 in May of the same year. What I find amazing is the rate that NASA was launching Apollo missions, I can only imagine the frantic activity at Cape Canaveral during this period. The space race was flat out, that's for sure.

Thursday, 6 September 2018

Overtaking on a crosswalk

I viewed this unusual situation, I was waiting at a crosswalk and there was a number of people using a crosswalk. A woman was waiting in her car letting people cross when the guy behind her became aggressive driving around her stopped vehicle crossing onto the wrong side of the road to get through.


People had to get out of the way, he was accelerating through the crossing whilst people were still in the middle of the road. Had he have struck a pedestrian, he would be automatically guilty of a traffic violation. I would have hated to see a pedestrian in such circumstances, this was really a reckless act that had the potential to seriously injure a person. Naturally I'm glad this didn't happen, people really need to think about the consequences of their actions.

Tuesday, 4 September 2018

Transitioning to retirement - well maybe

The question of retirement in Australia has been made all the more difficult by the poor policy decisions of the Turnbull government to change superannuation strategy for the purpose of budget repair.


Let's not forget that the idiotic policies of the Rudd and Gillard governments led us down this route of fiscal instability where budget repair is now required to return the budget to surplus and start paying back the mountain of debt now accumulated. In 11 years when I turn 60, will I be able to transition to retirement?

These idiots running currently running the country seeking both personal and political power over the best interests of the inhabitants had better start working together to ensure the working class are looked after - in other words, the taxpayer.

Whilst we haven't had a technical recession in 26 years, we have had a number of economic slowdowns resulting in plenty of personal economic difficulties. While this hasn't destroyed the personal wealth of working class families wholesale, plenty of individuals are feeling economic stress and any chance of retiring early have been smashed. Will my personal transition to retirement run smoothly when I turn 60?

I am unsure and whilst my personal finances are currently reasonably robust, these constant changes in government policy to not lead to stability allowing individuals to plan for retirement and remove the burden from the publicly funded pension system. Naturally the political class have no such concerns, their generous taxpayer funded retirement packages are off limits.

Saturday, 1 September 2018

The 2018 Omega Diver 300

The Baselworld Watch and Jewellery Show is the premium watch exhibition held in Basel Switzerland where the latest horological designs and upgrades to existing designs are on display. The new Omega Diver 300 will be available in boutiques in August 2018 - so I guess I won't be seeing one in the flesh for a while.


For the 25th anniversary of the Seamaster Diver 300, Omega has updated their entry-level diver model, this is also the 70th anniversary of the Seamaster range so an upgrade was always on the cards. Sized slightly larger than previous Diver 300s with the 41 mm case, a larger 42 mm case houses a the METAS certified master chronometer co-axial Calibre 8800 automatic movement updating the 2500D movement.

The standard blue three hand timepiece reference 212.30.41.20.03.001 or black reference 212.30.41.20.01.003 has been expanded with a grey dial added but I can't say I like the look of the grey dial.

What I loved about the previous model is the dark blue lacquered dial on the 212.30.41.20.03.001 reference or jet black 212.30.41.20.01.003 reference, my choice is the blue. I don't like the new laser etched wave dial, but that's just me, I never liked the wave dial on earlier models either although they were pretty popular among watch enthusiasts.

I will admit I do like the laser etched wave dial on the black version, that is good. The Omega logo on the previous model really pops as it a separate piece, the new version appears to be painted on the dial and lacks the depth of older models.

The Calibre 8800 is a great improvement, many argue the METAS certification is really an Omega internal certification and they have just renamed a series of tests but that's not entirely true. The METAS labs are open to any manufacturer wishing to gain extra certification.

One expects the brands within the Swatch Group to be the main certification volume, I can't really see competitors increasing costs by undertaking extra tests unless a solid marketing gain might be gained.

Plenty of people like the new model, I am certainly impressed by the mechanical specifications but can't get into the wave dial or the clunky helium escape valve. Despite my initial apprehension, I think the 2018 model will be popular with Omega customers.