'Can you sum up in words...' I just heard an interviewer ask an interviewee in the BBC 24 hour news program.
How else might he have summed up ? telepathically ? by farting in Morse Code ?
Friday, 24 February 2012
Thursday, 23 February 2012
A Freudian Slip ?
I've been reading Freud's Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis and finding it very tedious. I suspended reading of it for a few days while I finished another book, and when I decided to return to Freud I couldn't find the book anywhere.
There are several places where I'm likely to put down partly read books, but it wasn't in any of them !
Freud would have found that most significant.
There are several places where I'm likely to put down partly read books, but it wasn't in any of them !
Freud would have found that most significant.
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Valentines Day
I've never felt any interest in Valentine's day, I've never been inclined to send a Valentine's card, and have never received one.
I understand that the custom is for cards to be anonymous. As one of the obstacles to romance is a shyness that prevents people declaring love, anonymity seems absurd.
I understand that the custom is for cards to be anonymous. As one of the obstacles to romance is a shyness that prevents people declaring love, anonymity seems absurd.
Thursday, 9 February 2012
False Economy
In Sainsbury's today I noticed a 'special offer' of two packets of cherries for £3-00. Each packet contained 200 grams, so that was 400 g for £3-00.
In the market similar cherries were being sold for £1-00 per pound, that is £1-00 for 454g, instead of £3-00 for 400g.
Sainsbury's profit margin must be huge!!
In the market similar cherries were being sold for £1-00 per pound, that is £1-00 for 454g, instead of £3-00 for 400g.
Sainsbury's profit margin must be huge!!
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Rare Talent and Huge Salaries
In an earlier blog I doubted whether the ability to run a large business is rare enough to necessitate the vast salaries many directorships attract, and suggested that people were often mistaking good luck for business acumen.
I’m now having second thoughts.
Even if running a business does not require any single very rare skill, it might still still require a rare combination of common skills.
I’d expect the successful captain of industry to be well above average in each of the following.
Intelligence (1/10)
Power of concentration (1/5)
Stamina and perseverance (1/5)
Co-ordination - ability to avoid muddle and confusion (1/2)
Memory (½)
Ability to assess people (½)
Ability to manage people, to delegate, supervise adequately without overdoing it, to judge when to listen, and when not. (1/3)
After each I’ve put an estimate of the proportion of the population who meet the standard.
Assuming independence, the probability of someone qualifying in all respects would be the product of all those probabilities, namely:
(1/10)*(1/5)*(1/5)*(½)3*(1/3) = 1/(6000)
Senior posts are usually taken by people in the age range 40 to 60, who I guess amount to less than a third of the population, so the proportion of the population qualified by both age and ability is at most 1/18000.
The population of Great Britain is around 60 million, so the number of people is between 3000 and 4000. That number must be further reduced to remove people of the requisite abilities who have not chosen business careers - some will have chosen instead to be doctors, lawyers, academics, journalists, computer programmers, soldiers or civil servants.
How many people are needed to run our large companies? I’m not sure how many companies are involved. 1300 companies are quoted on the main market of the London Stock Exchange, though not all those a British. All companies in the FTSE 350 index have their primary listing in Britain, so I guess that at least 350 companies need directors of high ability and each company will need several. With fewer than people 4000 available, leadership talent may be rare after all.
I’m now having second thoughts.
Even if running a business does not require any single very rare skill, it might still still require a rare combination of common skills.
I’d expect the successful captain of industry to be well above average in each of the following.
Intelligence (1/10)
Power of concentration (1/5)
Stamina and perseverance (1/5)
Co-ordination - ability to avoid muddle and confusion (1/2)
Memory (½)
Ability to assess people (½)
Ability to manage people, to delegate, supervise adequately without overdoing it, to judge when to listen, and when not. (1/3)
After each I’ve put an estimate of the proportion of the population who meet the standard.
Assuming independence, the probability of someone qualifying in all respects would be the product of all those probabilities, namely:
(1/10)*(1/5)*(1/5)*(½)3*(1/3) = 1/(6000)
Senior posts are usually taken by people in the age range 40 to 60, who I guess amount to less than a third of the population, so the proportion of the population qualified by both age and ability is at most 1/18000.
The population of Great Britain is around 60 million, so the number of people is between 3000 and 4000. That number must be further reduced to remove people of the requisite abilities who have not chosen business careers - some will have chosen instead to be doctors, lawyers, academics, journalists, computer programmers, soldiers or civil servants.
How many people are needed to run our large companies? I’m not sure how many companies are involved. 1300 companies are quoted on the main market of the London Stock Exchange, though not all those a British. All companies in the FTSE 350 index have their primary listing in Britain, so I guess that at least 350 companies need directors of high ability and each company will need several. With fewer than people 4000 available, leadership talent may be rare after all.
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