Humans suck at decision-makingâŠ
Itâs a big problem for people in business and investing. Iâd like to highlight some mistakes Iâve seen people make (ourselves included).
Problem - The Anchoring Trap
This one comes up anytime youâre in a negotiation.
Letâs use an example:
Youâre going to rent an office for your group.
The landlord proposes a lease with 4 key terms.
Here is where you land after a negotiation:
You got some good terms, thatâs pretty good right?
No, wrongâŠ
What happened here?
You fell into the Anchoring Trap. The owners proposed a framework for the negotiation, and you played within their framework limiting your outcome.
A world-class negotiator would come to the table with 15+ asks for the building owner. Some things you missed: set a cap on the annual increases, push for them to happen after year 3, change the terms of the extension, lower the security deposit, give yourself an âoutâ clause on the lease for a variety of reasons, ask for a ROFR option on the neighboring offices (if you plan to grow).
Solution - The Anchoring Problem
This one has a simple solution to try. Before you see the other sideâs offer, sit down with your team and list out all of the things that are interesting, important or could be helpful in order of importance. Try to be as specific as possible Then you wonât be anchored to the proposed structure or price.
Problem - The Narrative Trap
You create a narrative of who you are in your head, and you proceed to work hard to fulfill that image of yourself through all of your actions.
Be careful tying yourself to any particular brand/image:
You are not a visionary entrepreneur.
You are not an activist investor.
You are a business person, working to make the best decisions available to you in your moment in time based on the data you have.
Hereâs a personal example from early in our journey.
We have a strong policy in my company that we donât renegotiate deals. That means if we make a handshake deal with you about a price, we wonât change our mind at the last minute.
Some investors have developed a bad reputation doing that and have hurt business owners in the process. As business owners and entrepreneurs we hate this type of behavior.
When we first started our investment practice we were committed to this but in the wrong way. Even if the deal financials changed, or the business was not as described, we stuck to our original offer.
This of course can become a problem.
Solution - The Narrative Trap
Actively reframe what âgoodâ and âbadâ behavior is in your organization. You need to talk about it openly and define how you behave in deals.
Once we noticed our behavior and the risks involved, we redefined what good and bad behavior was in our organization.
Our new stance became:
We donât retrade unless the business weâre buying changes. Then changing the deal or walking away is OK.
Problem - The Commitment Trap
You make a commitment to a group of people about an outcome. Then you have to pursue that outcome no matter what.
I found this happened to me when I was building products early in my career.
We would pick a product direction, agree to it as a team and pursue it. Sometimes we would totally miss our goals with a new product, but we all felt trapped by our early commitment, so sometimes we would pursue the testing or development of a product far after everyone knew we should âgive upâ. We wasted a lot of time because of the Commitment Trap.
Solution - The Commitment Trap
Present a way out for you and your team early. If youâre adopting a new investment strategy or building a new product, set some early micro-goals and tell your team: âif we miss our goals, we will reassess and try another product directionâ.
That way if you miss your goal, you donât feel overcommitted to keep pressing the product until you hit your goals. Youâve given yourself a door you can walk through if you need to change directions.
False Strength VS True Strength in Leadership
Young leaders will pretend to know more than they do, and struggle to create a safe space for discussion for their executives to voice concerns or feedback.
True leaders know the journey is full of obstacles, and only if each person is empowered to speak up and provide feedback, then the business will succeed.
Your job as a leader is to filter all of the feedback youâre getting and make an educated decision. If youâre not taking a lot of feedback, youâre missing important data in your decision-making.
đBonus - On Costco
A few weeks ago readers voted to learn why I love Costco.
I grew up going to Costco twice a month on a Sunday. It was my father/son bonding activity.
My love for Costco is made up of 3-parts: nostalgia, my love for value, my love for good business.
Letâs talk about the business of Costo.
First letâs ask ourselves, what qualities would create the most valuable company in the world? Answer:
Offering Size - Huge marketplace
Longevity/Moat - High Barriers to entry
Free cash flow - very low levels of capital deployment
Costco is a perfect flywheel business. As it grows, so does its moat. Letâs take a look.
Moat: unbeatable prices. '
Costcoâs volume purchasing allows it to drive down the cost of products. It simply has more negotiation leverage with suppliers. Then they pass through all those savings to you, the customer. They will never mark-up their products above 14%, no matter how good their supplier deal is (Walmart is at ~20%).
So as a consumer you have certainty your prices will always be the best at Costco. The bigger Costco gets, the cheaper your products will be.
Moat: quality of products
Costco (as opposed to Walmart), has made a commitment to providing high quality goods. You can ask any chef, Costco has the best grocery products: meat, vegetablesâŠetc
Hereâs why â Costco limits their number of items in store (SKUs) to 4,000. Compare this to an average competitor store at 20,000-60,000 SKUs.
With limited shelf space, Costco merchandisers are negotiating for the best quality at the lowest price, and passing that on directly to customers (most stores charge ârentâ for shelf space to suppliers, Costco doesnât). Due to their high volume/bulk purchasing they get âfirst dibsâ from suppliers.
Moat: beautiful, membership based, sticky free cash flow
In simple terms, the 14% Costco mark-up on merchandise covers all of their operating costs.
The âmembershipâ fee is where Costco generates its cash flow - and where you can really see itâs value.
Itâs a beautiful recurring revenue business with 116 Million members (with 85% membership renewal).
Iâve been a member for 25 years. Iâll never unsubscribe.
ps: Costco, I love you.
Reply to let me know if you liked the post on Heuristics or Costco more đ
Have a wonderful week,
~ Sieva
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