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Deep MBA Thoughts
Commencement Address for MBA Students
University of Georgia
May 11, 2001
Congratulations to all you "masters" of
business—and thanks to your parents and other supporters
here, who helped you reach this important milestone.
Also, congratulations for making the
wise decision to attend graduation ceremonies. If you don't
already know it, you'll soon learn how important rituals
are to a successful career. And on a personal level, you
need to create good memories. Later on, you will be your
memories. And that's all you will be.
I'm glad to be back home for many reasons.
For one thing, I got to eat a Varsity chili dog. It brought
back old memories, but it's not the same as when the Varsity
was just across the street from the arch.
Another reason I'm glad to be back
is that it gives me a chance to commune with one of my musesthe
late, great Georgia Bulldog Lewis Grizzard. I was reminded
of Lewis because of his line "Chili dogs always bark at night." If
you hear barking, that's what it is.
I was last here in April 2000, to honor
one of my economics professors of the 1960s, David McCord
Wright. I used one of his favorite sayings as the title of
my remarks: "Growth Comes through Change and Causes Change." Professor
Wright was right. Growth does cause change. I appreciate
that more than ever after this past year.
In the first half of last year, economic
growth exceeded a 5 percent annual rate. In the second half,
it fell to 1.6 percent. The early estimate was 2 percent
in the first quarter of this year. As Cole just indicated,
you're finishing your MBA program in a very different economic
environment than when you began it. Not only did your present
change during that time, so did your future.
But I don't know whether your change
of future was for better or for worse. And you don't either.
We never know for sure what is good news and what is bad
news. Waylon Jennings thought it was bad news when he gave
up his seat on Buddy Holly's plane to the Big Bopper. I'm
sure it seems bad to you now that you are graduating into
an economy with the blues, but it could have been worse.
You could have graduated last year and hooked up with a dot-com
just when it was fixin' to crash and burn. Fixin' is
a good word in both Georgia and Texas.
I'm optimistic for the long run. I'm
still a new-paradigm, New Economy optimist. The new and improved,
high-productivity, high-growth economy of the late '90s will
be back. We are in an information economy, and no information
has been lost. None of the new silicon recipes have been
lost. Moore's law has not been repealed. The Human Genome
Project has given us the recipe for humans, which will spawn
miracles for the rest of our livesand beyond. But while
the recipe books have survived, they may be used by different
cooks. Destruction, after all, is part of creative destruction.
We may be in transition from "The early bird gets the worm" in
the New Economy to "The second mouse gets the cheese." Maybe
somebody moved your cheese while you were here. If so, you'll
find more. If you haven't already, read Who Moved My
Cheese?
The blues take many forms. When your
milk cow runs off, you get the milk cow blues. When your
girl or your guy runs off, you get the "Lovesick Blues," à la
Hank Williams. What we've got now is the low-down, high-tech,
fast-burn, my-venture-capitalist-doesn't-appreciate-my-business-plan-anymore
Wile E. Coyote blues.
Wile E. Coyotefor those too young
to rememberis the cartoon character who would chase
the Road Runner to the edge of the cliff. The Road Runner
always managed to stop, as Wile E. Coyote overran the cliff.
But Wile never felluntil he looked down.
The tech bubble probably burst when
someone looked down and sawas we say in Texasall
foam and no beer. Actually, that's not correct. There was
plenty of beer, but it did have too big a head on it. The
beer at Allen's on Prince Avenue in the 1960s never had much
headI'm toldbut you can't say that about the keg
beer at the fraternity partiesespecially late at night
when irrational exuberance took over.
Hangovers are a predictable result
of irrational exuberance, but they need not be fatal. The
hair of the dog often helps and is certainly better than
a mood swing to irrational pessimism.
I'm no management expert, but I gave
a speech on the subject once, which I titled "Switches and
Dials." You can find it on my web site. I'm a dial person
myself. A switch is either on or off. It's all or nothing.
Right or wrong. Black or white. Management issues never seem
that clear-cut to me. I prefer to turn the dial and make
decisions at the margin. A little less of this for a little
more of that. Trade-offs, but not all-or-nothing trade-offs.
A little bit country, a little bit rock 'n' roll.
I think my switches-and-dials analogy
might also be useful in thinking about our economy, the stock
market and perhaps even your careers. During the height of
the hypeespecially during 1999the old rules and
the old rules of thumb were thrown out the window. We went
from "Profits are everything" to "Profits don't matter." Someone
decided that volume mattered more, and stock prices responded
accordingly.
When someoneprobably someone like
Warren Buffettfinally looked down and decided the king
had no clothes on, he flipped a switch and back we wentdetermined
to go all the way back, apparently.
If you haven't already, you should
read The New New Thing, by Michael Lewis. It's about
the culture of Silicon Valley. He also wrote Liar's Poker in
the 1980s. In The New New Thing, Lewis tells how
the center of the universe shifted from Wall Street in the
'80s to Silicon Valley in the '90s. I appeared on a program
with him last year, which for him was part of his book tour.
He said a book tour is a lot like politics, but without the
sex.
Anyway, Lewis dates the shift in the
center of the universe to the creation of Netscape, which
gave us a browser to surf the web. That was the technology
part, in 1994. The financial shift came when Netscape went
public in 1995, only 18 months after its creation and long
before it made a dime. On the first trading day, the price
of Netscape shares went from $12 to $48. Three months later
it was $140. Quoting from The New New Thing:
In the frenzy that followed, a
lot of the old rules of capitalism were suspended . .
. it had long been a rule of thumb with the Silicon Valley
venture capitalists that they didn't peddle a new technology
company to the investing public until it had had at least
four consecutive profitable quarters. Netscape had nothing
to show investors but massive losses. But its fabulous
stock market success created a precedent. No longer did
you need to show profits; you needed to show rapid growth.
The restas they sayis history.
The stock market was off to the races, especially high-tech
stocks.
The following year, in 1996, Chairman
Greenspan asked his famous rhetorical question about the
possibility of irrational exuberance. A debate ensued about
whether the exuberance was irrational or rational. Whichever
it was, it continued. The Nasdaq gained 86 percent in 1999
alone, before peaking in March 2000 at over 5000. One of
the old rulesapparently abandonedwas the one that
said if something sounds too good to be true, it probably
is.
But thinking in terms of dials rather
than switches, does the discrediting of infinite price–earnings
ratios because of zero earnings have to mean that they can't
be any higher in the New Economy than in the Old
Economy? There werein my opiniongrains of truth
in some of the rationales for higher valuations.
In many of the new technologies, up-front
fixed costs are very high but marginal costs are very low,
making volume your friend. In the New Economy, the first
copy of the new thing is often very expensive to design and
develop. But after that, all other copiesreproductionsare
very cheap. Things like new software, movies, medicines or
medical procedures. Rapid volume growth will move you down
the long-run average cost curve so that with a head start,
no one can catch you and compete on price.
That surely is worth something, albeit
obviously not as much as the market thought. Surely a dial
would be pointing somewhere between where we were in 1999
and 2000 and where we are now. We don't have to use a switch.

I've used up almost 15 minutes of my
allotted hour, and I haven't given you any advice yet. Old
guys like me are always full of advice because our own kids
never took any of it, so we have plenty left over. You'll
find during your business life that advice is plentiful,
but not cheap. And usually the more expensive it is, the
more useless it is.
The singer Kenny Rogers got that kind
of advice in his song "The Gambler": "You've got to know
when to hold 'em, and know when to fold 'em." Yeah, but when
do you hold 'em? And when do you fold 'em? See what I mean?
That's the kind of advice you'll soon be buying from a consulting
firm, for big bucks. Or maybe you'll be selling it.
I'll give you some usable advice: First,
read skinny books. I know you'll keep reading fat books.
Good, but let me urge you to read skinny books as well. By
skinny books, I mean those that give you nuggets of wisdomthings
you will know to be true as soon as you hear them the first
time. For example, from Texas:
- Don't squat with your spurs on. (Actually, a book title
as well as good advice.)
- Timing has a lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance.
- Always drink upstream from the herd.
Lewis Grizzard gave good advice when
he cautioned us about eating barbecue in restaurants that
also sell quiche. And try not to go camping with a guy who
drinks whiskey sours.
Some more:
- Never confuse a memo with reality (a book title and good
advice).
- Don't learn the tricks of the trade; learn the trade.
- Don't dress up as the chairman of the board on Halloween.
- Don't take the Wall Street Journal to the bathroom.
(This one's from me. It's bad for your health.)
- Avoid being assigned more than a year to the human resources
department.
- Never ask a barber if you need a haircut.
More seriously:
- Don't expect others to listen to your advice and ignore
your example. (You have to walk your talk.)
- Praise in public; criticize in private.
- Criticize the action, not the person.
(See what I mean about knowing it is
true as soon as you hear it?)
Now, some more of my own:
- Keep a journal. Write in it often. Just don't put anything
incriminating in it.
- Write out your goals and your New Year's resolutions.
- List your strengths and weaknesses, and work on them.
- And very important, get out your calendar and write your
goals on your calendar as activities. Goals are too ambiguous
standing alone. Translate them into something you can schedule
on your calendar.
You're probably tired of management
advice from classes, but I can't resist just one piece of
advice on becoming a good manager, from Casey Stengel: Separate
the guys who hate your guts from those who are still undecided.
In learning to lead, follow the advice of the Texas cowpoke
and turn around every now and then to see if the herd is
still back there. You can't be a leader without followers.
Like the cowpoke, you may have to lead from the rear.
Don't swing for the fences. Go for
singles and doubles and the home runs will take care of themselves.
Going for the fences all the time leads to strikeouts. But
by the same token, don't be too cautious. Don't play it too
safe. A friend of mine has a radio show for small businesses.
At the end of each show, he reminds his listeners that ships
are safe in harbor, but that's not what ships are for.
Since many of you will end up working
in Atlanta, I'll give you Ted Turner's recipe for business
success: Early to bed. Early to rise. Work like hell and
advertise. To that, my wife, Suzanne, would addespecially
for you womenmoisturize.
But remember that work and career and
success aren't everything! As the late, great songwriter
Roger Miller, put it, you can't roller skate in a buffalo
herd, and you can't take a shower in a parakeet's cage. But
you can be happy if you've a mind to. Have a mind to be happy!
Let me close with a serious thought:
As a fellow Georgia Bulldog, I have a stake in your success,
just as you have a stake in mine. So I really do wish you
well. I hope I haven't done or won't do anything to hurt
the prestige of your degree. I fully expect you to enhance
the value of mine.
Remember, sincerity is the key. If
we can fake that, we'll have it made.
Again, congratulations. Go Bulldogs!
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About the Author
McTeer is president and
CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
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