Do Less

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Thursday, 9.34pm

Sheffield, U.K.

If something is not worth doing at all, it’s not worth doing well. – Charlie Munger

The world is frenetic right now.

We have access to more information than ever, but learn very little.

That’s because we see the same two or three things over and over again on the platforms we use.

And it can seem like there’s nothing else that’s important.

It’s time to try and switch off.

But how do you do that?

I started with https://clew.se. This is a one-person donation supported search engine that indexes “writing by independent creators”.

You can always find something interesting to read there written by a real person.

Another strategy is to delete everything – to do less – as little as possible.

This is quite hard, as most of us take on obligations without really considering the full costs of doing so.

We all have scarce resources and must use them for the most good.

It is really quite important to read the Charlie Munger quote above and take a long hard look at whether something is worth doing at all.

If you’re developing software, are those functions worth doing?

If you run a business, are those jobs worth doing?

There is no point making something work well when it should not be done at all.

My bugbear on this is tidying up.

If you don’t have a thing you don’t need to tidy it away.

Just have less stuff.

And by that, I mean have less physical stuff, less digital stuff, less mental stuff.

Life will be simpler.

Finally, the Munger quote leads back to the 1994 shareholder letter by Warren Buffett.

In that, he has these lines, which are as relevant now as they were 31 years ago.

“We will continue to ignore political and economic forecasts, which are an expensive distraction for many investors and businessmen.”

We have no idea whether AI will change the world, whether there will be political unrest in one corner or the other, or catastrophic climate change this year or in the next decade.

What we can do is manage our business prudently and with an eye to the risks coming our way.

Don’t buy a house or start a business in a flood plain unless you have tiled flooring, for example.

It’s probably more important than ever that we make decisions on sound fundamental principles rather than reacting to short term noise.

In short, keep plodding on.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

Papers And The Future

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Sunday, 7.56pm

Sheffield, U.K.

We have the best government that money can buy. – Mark Twain

A paper popped up on my feed today. Kim et al (2024). Strategies of Political Control and Regime Survival in Autocracies.

How do autocracies stay in power?

They use 6 strategies, two repressive, two co-optative, and two indoctrinal.

They can put you in prison, and take away your right to protest or participate in the political process.

They can give you jobs and incentives that make it harder for you to oppose the status quo.

And they can use the media and education to tell people, especially children, what to think.

A lot of places have had autocracies – 103 countries, and 209 regimes in the research.

It’s tempting to look around the world today and see the spectre of autocracy in the politics of the day.

But is that the case?

What do the papers think?

Let’s take the two most important countries around now. The U.S and China. Where are they headed?

The Economist seems split on two thoughts.

The first is that America is doing well and will do better.

It has resources, technology, money… and innovation.

The other is that this might happen inspite of the new administration’s plans.

Take tariffs, for example. The administration argues that they will bring jobs home but instead what they will do is increase prices for consumers.

Laptop prices, for example, might go up 25%.

Looking at the news, coffee will too.

China seems to be in for a more difficult run, but no one is supposed to mention it.

It grew 5% in 2024 – hitting its target.

Although some people found that hard to believe.

Household borrowing is low, property prices are falling and stock markets are anaemic.

Sometimes, if the numbers aren’t what you want them to be, it just means you haven’t done the analysis right.

The things people vote for, if they have a choice, may not be the things they want.

Higher prices, fewer people to do the dirty jobs, and a widening gulf between the have and have nots won’t be fixed easily.

I find it interesting that the papers have stories about computing and history side by side.

On the one side they talk about AI and its promises, or failures.

On the other side they talk about capital and labour and what has happened in the past.

Here’s what I took away.

A system that does not pay people well is one that prioritises profit over society – and the logical consequence is that business will organise itself so that it makes the most money for the lowest cost.

And that’s why manufacturing takes place in low wage countries.

It’s not going to shift back to high-wage countries unless the tariffs are big enough to force it, but of course that raises the price of goods which makes people unhappy.

Apart from the ones with the higher wages.

What we are watching is the imposition of ideology, a top down attempt to reshape how things work.

Which runs counter to the core of thinking, in the US anyway, which is to get out of the way and let people get on with doing what’s in their best interests.

Perhaps the best way to look at the rest of this decade is to remember the old saying.

When all is said and done, more is said than done.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

Why We All Need Help Crossing Chasms

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Friday, 8.10pm

Sheffield, U.K.

Pretend that every single person you meet has a sign around his or her neck that says, ‘Make me feel important.’ Not only will you succeed in sales, you will succeed in life. – Mary Kay Ash

I’ve had a few conversations the last few weeks that have got me thinking about sales.

Sales… what does that mean to you?

I wrote a post last year about how we all dance for someone. It might be a boss, a customer – it’s hard to think of someone that isn’t working for someone else.

Those who aren’t fall into one of two camps: they are rich enough not to; or they haven’t learned how to sell.

You sell yourself into a job, you sell your company into a contract, and you sell your partner on committing to you.

Sales matters, it’s what makes it possible to make money and live a life.

When we start a career we don’t know how important sales are – we send out hundreds of CVs, wait to be selected – and perhaps don’t realise that if we get through to an interview you’re really going to a sales pitch.

When you’ve been in a job for a while and then start looking around for a new one it’s easy to forget that you’re starting a sales process again.

If you’ve been selling yourself for a while then maybe you’ve forgotten just how long it took you to learn these skills that you now take for granted.

So, in order to do good work you first need to sell yourself as the person who can do the work.

But, before you can sell you have to get the chance to do so.

How do you get the chance to go in front of someone and pitch what you do?

Cold calling? Marketing? Tendering?

All these methods work for different organisations in different ways. Cold calling is a thankless enterprise but it gets results if you’re willing to play the odds. As does marketing and respond to tenders.

But the single most useful tool for anyone starting a business or looking for a job is a referral.

If someone introduces you to someone that you might be able to help that’s the best way to cross the chasm – to get across the gap between you and a customer.

This isn’t new information – of course – referral based approaches have been around for centuries.

That’s how most religions took off.

More practically, however, if you run a business the best thing you can do if you want to talk to customers is get some help.

You’ve probably got someone in your contact book who is a connector – who knows everyone.

Those connectors have spent time building their connections and their network – and that has value.

Value that’s worth paying for.

If you’re starting a business now, especially one based on knowledge and skills, put an incentive program in place for referrals – pay your introducer well if their introduction leads to a contract.

And if you’re a connector, team up with a business that needs your help.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

Starting A Business Later In Your Career

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Wednesday, 9.40pm

Sheffield, U.K.

The two big startup killers are when there’s just no market for what you are doing, and team problems. – David Cohen

Most ventures fail.

Many people think that successful founders are young – they’re the ones that are smart, know new technology, don’t have commitments, can outwork the competition and can think outside the box.

It turns out, however, that older founders are more likely to be successful. A 50-year old founder is nearly twice as likely to create a higher growth firm than a 30-year old.

This is good news for those of us that are growing irritatingly older.

People often think that what matters in a business is getting to product-market fit.

You have a great idea – perhaps it’s a new app that helps you manage your aquarium.

The next step is to build the app.

Then it’s time to go and find paying users.

This is the way we often do things when we’re young.

I remember building all kinds of tools that I thought would be immensely useful.

But somehow no one else wanted to use them, and they never got the traction I thought they might get.

As you get older you realise that you need to think about the problem in reverse – what you need is market-product fit.

Go and find a need – something people want that they’re not getting now – something they would pay for, preferably a lot.

Then build a product that fits that need.

Now, you might argue that if it were that easy surely everyone would be doing it.

Well, think about this for a minute.

Who is your competition?

On the one hand, you have young founders who don’t know what they are doing yet and are busy building rather than looking at the same market need that you’ve discovered.

On the other hand there are large companies that could meet that need – once they’ve got the budget approval, nod from legal, IT setup – all the things that hobble you in a big, rich enterprise from moving quickly.

You could build your product in the time the large enterprise gets its first white paper in front of a VP.

A low risk strategy for a founder, especially an older one, is perhaps as follows.

  1. Go and talk to the market. Find a need that you can fill.
  2. Build a solution and get early customers.
  3. Iterate and build until you have something that delights your small customer base.
  4. Grow quickly, hire and build a team that can support your service.
  5. Put yourself up for sale – look for a large company that wants what you have and will acquire the lot.

This is a 3-5 year plan, and then if you have time, rinse and repeat.

So, if you’re on the wrong side of 40, your best years are still ahead of you.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

Is The News Trying To Copy Social Media?

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It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it. – Upton Sinclair

My news sources for a few years, perhaps even for the last half a decade, have been the BBC and CNN.

And whatever turns up on social media.

I was quite excited, then, to discover that the library made it possible to read newspapers from around the world.

I thought I’d get thoughtful, interesting, and balanced information from experienced journalists.

There is a lot of that.

And then there is stuff that makes you think.

Take the Wall Street Journal. You’d think that it’s going to focus on business, tell you what you need to know.

And it does. I shouldn’t be unfair. There are a number of excellent articles.

And then there are some downright bizarre opinion pieces, the sort of stuff you’d normally see on social media rather than in a reputable paper.

Quite a lot of them are angry about the renewables business – and the shift away from gas.

The argument goes something like this – renewables need lots of minerals, that’s a lot of mining, plus they get subsidies so they are bad and we should keep burning gas.

Which sounds reasonable, except that there’s no balance to the opinion.

Presumably the gas infrastructure was built with lots of subsidies and it still gets them.

Yes mining is bad. So is climate change.

The bad news is that if we really want to do something we need to stop consuming so much and live within planetary resources.

But that’s tricky because the reason we can make such powerful and sophisticated weapons is because the economies with the capability are rich because their consumers make and buy the kind of things that require powerful and sophisticated technology.

An agrarian society that is happy growing rice is going to be good for the environment – but will also struggle to defend itself.

These are complicated areas where it’s hard to figure out what to do and I suppose these baying opinion pieces are shouting about what they think is needed.

The reaction from government is to do what will get people to vote for them, and that acts as something of a check mechanism. Go too far one way and you’ll alienate everyone else.

You can get in power by being extreme. Staying in power, in a democracy anyway, requires compromise.

The extreme nature of social media and political discourse suggests that compromise is never an option.

In public anyway.

Away from scrutiny, the people that matter probably get on with making deals, and those deals rely on hammering out a compromise.

That’s the way the world really works.

And if anything is going to make things better, it’s continuing to work towards finding a compromise between competing priorities.

At least, while I’m reading this news and wondering what I’m getting out of it, I’m also strolling along on a treadmill.

The world might be complicated, but targeting calories needn’t be.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

We Have The Shovels – But Where Is The Gold?

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Monday, 9.44pm

Sheffield, U.K.

Truth, like gold, is to be obtained not by its growth, but by washing away from it all that is not gold. – Leo Tolstoy

I’ve been enjoying reading newspapers again.

If you had told me 20 years ago that I would read a lot, then get to a point where I simply looked at lots of small articles lined up like cards, and rarely read a long-form article I would have thought you were nuts.

But that’s what’s happened. We’ve gone from making time to read to “consuming” content.

It’s time to slow down. Like the slow food movement, perhaps we should get back into slow reading.

And thinking about what we’ve read.

I have spent a lot of time over the last year or so thinking about AI.

It’s professionally important to me. Could AI do what I do? Could it help me do what I do better? It seems like my areas of competence – which centre around decision making and the sustainable transition, with a bit of technology thrown in, are affected by, and are relevant to the development of AI.

For example, I have spent much of the last couple of decades immersed in power markets. Power prices are set by supply and demand in deregulated markets. AI is power hungry and there is an explosion in data centers that will use a lot more power than current ones – which means there is a need for new connections, new contracts, and potentially price spikes in wholesale power prices.

Of course, you can build renewable generation near your data center – and there are strategies to mitigate the risks – but the point I’m making is that power is important.

The growth area in the last year has been in building and kitting out data centres to support the use of these new LLM models. That means lots of chips to run the models and big server farms to handle the global demand. ChatGPT runs very fast – much faster than the local LLM on my computer – because it runs on more computers.

Cooling those computers requires power and water – and we’re back to the resource requirements.

But really, all we have so far, is the equivalent of picks and shovels – where’s the gold?

Well, that’s the next thing to figure out. Which companies are going to make more money – either through increased revenues or decreased costs through the use of AI?

This is actually much harder to do than you think.

I think I’ve written about this before, but the savings from an improved process often go to the supplier, rather than the customer.

For example, will you really save money using ChatGPT?

OpenAI has already talked about how it wants to take a share of the savings made by firms using its technology.

A few months ago, I could use the tool and get a useful answer. I could show people how useful it was.

In my most recent tests, it’s searched the web and given me less useful information – almost like it’s teasing me and saying I do know something but you’re going to have to pay more to find out.

That creates friction – and increases costs.

This next stage is the really hard bit and I don’t think many companies are going to get this right.

On the one hand, you have a flaky technology – with its makers trying to figure out how to make money from it.

It’s like having a shovel that randomly turns into ice cream while you’re trying to use it.

On the other hand, you have to figure out what the value proposition really is – all too often we don’t care about what we get. AI writing, for example, isn’t the kind of stuff you’re dying to read. Instead it’s the stuff you submit for a term paper because you can’t be bothered to do the reading.

Are you really going to pay for that sort of output?

Have you seen anything produced by AI that you would pay a premium for?

I don’t know how things are going to turn out, but that’s what makes things interesting.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

What’s The Most Important Part Of An Information Business?

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Sunday, 6.42pm

Sheffield, U.K.

When a truth is necessary, the reason for it can be found by analysis, that is, by resolving it into simpler ideas and truths until the primary ones are reached. – Gottfried Leibniz

In a post a couple of days back I asked how we would go about starting to analyse situations.

That got me doing a little reading.

In a paper, which is now 15 years sold, Libertatore and Luo (2010) discuss the implications of the Analytics movement for Operational Research.

Analytics, at the time, was a new term doing the rounds.

I remember being introduced to tools such as PowerBi around 2012 with the advent of cloud computing and software as a service (SAAS) applications.

I didn’t like the idea – but I could see how it would sell.

The paper argues that four big driving forces led to the analytics movement.

I’ve adapted their picture above, as I think the order I experienced is slightly different, so I’m going to discuss it from that perspective.

The first change is that of a process orientation. Things happen. Then other things happen. And these happenings over time result in value for customers.

Managing many operations these days, especially those in information businesses, are about managing processes.

This is different from innovation and research and new ideas.

For example, quantum computing is a hot topic right now. In the West it’s driven by a combination of private investment, university research and the ever-present military interest.

In the East, it’s driven by state investment.

Once you have something promising emerging from research, making it happen in practice is a process problem.

And I’m interested in those practical businesses in this post.

The changing view from stand alone products to processes has a natural fit with the changing ecosystem of data.

We might have once thought of data as a silo, a set of complete information.

Now, we know that we have data sets that keep growing, databases of daily stock prices, weather changes, flooding events, e-commerce purchases – the river of data is constantly flowing and replenished.

But to really use data in a process view what you need is software – and we are awash in software now.

When it comes to open source and free software there is a huge amount of choice – starting with r and python packages that can pretty much do anything you want.

And we now also have people in organisations who understand these things, that have grown up with these tools.

More importantly, those people are in charge – in management roles and in a position to understand how to use these tools in practice.

Knowing how to do analysis is increasingly important for organisations – and they will probably start hiring more and more analysts – people that have the skills needed to work with computers and data.

But, the most important thing they will be doing is applying those capabilities to build better and cheaper processes.

There is a saying in product firms that companies don’t compete, supply chains do.

In information businesses, we could change that to it’s not smart people in consultancies that are competing, it’s the processes they’ve implemented.

The better your process, those likely you are to win.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

References

Liberatore, M.J., Luo, W., 2010. The Analytics Movement: Implications for Operations Research. Interfaces 40, 313–324. https://doi.org/10.1287/inte.1100.0502

Why Would You Want To Buy Greenland?

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Saturday, 9.46pm

Sheffield, U.K.

I’m actually writing history. It isn’t what you’d call big history. I don’t write about presidents and generals… I write about the man who was ranching, the man who was mining, the man who was opening up the country. – Louis L’Amour

Did you hear Trump talk about buying Greenland from Denmark and merging with Canada and wonder what was going on?

I spent some time today away from social media.

A few months back I think I wrote about how I thought social media was a useful source of insight – how people looked for interesting things and shared them with you and the result was like having a team of researchers making sure you knew what was going on.

I’m less sure of that now.

There is probably some useful stuff but because the algorithm shows you what you’re interested in that means after a while you’re not seeing anything new.

That happened very quickly. It took around two months of writing and engaging before it was clear I was in an echo chamber.

So I stopped.

The problem is that once you cut off the information hosepipe you’ve been drinking from, how do you know what’s going on?

It’s a complicated world out there so how do you make informed decisions for yourself and your business?

I started by going back to the library.

UK cities have good library facilities for citizens and one of the benefits of paying a council tax is access to a good e-library which lets you borrow newspapers.

Like the Economist. I used to read the Economist every day. I had a subscription for a while. But then, as free sources of news came along, those habits slipped away.

But 2025 promises to be a year where shutting your eyes is not a good idea.

I borrowed a few papers and started reading. And, for the first time in a decade, started clipping articles out of the paper.

Well, using a snipping tool on the computer and saving them, that is.

It feels like an old fashioned thing to do – to clip an article.

I have a book in my library about the Mitrokhin Archives – about secret KGB operations between the 1930s and 1980s.

I picked it up in a second hand book store, mainly because within the pages the former owner had clipped and stored news stories about spies.

I clipped a story from the Economist about the economics of the Arctic, and learned that Greenland has the biggest deposits of rare earths, nickel and cobalt in the West.

Canada is also home to huge reserves of iron ore, has the largest coastline around, with access to the seas around the Arctic.

These materials are important to the West because the biggest reserves of minerals essential for batteries are in China.

And you know there are some tensions going on there.

Modern armies need technology, that technology needs these minerals.

As an aside, we also need them for green energy technologies.

So, wanting to control the places where these are found starts to make sense.

I think my resolution now, for 2025, is a simple one.

Try and be better informed.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh

Do We Really Want To Live In Interesting Times?

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Friday, 8.42pm

Sheffield, U.K.

We live in the mind, in ideas, in fragments. We no longer drink in the wild outer music of the streets – we remember only. – Henry Miller

Sometimes, technology doesn’t make things better.

The Jevons paradox is an example. Take a resource, coal for example. We develop technologies that use the resource more efficiently and, in doing so, reduce the cost of using that resource. The lower cost increases demand so that we end up using more overall. So, better technology leads to greater energy use.

Not using technology isn’t the answer either. We don’t really want stone tools or bullock carts.

When it comes to getting the balance right, between supply and demand, the market system seems to work pretty well.

When the market works.

But markets are influenced by policy makers who, in many countries, want to try and control how wealth is created rather than letting the market get on with the job.

And that creates a large set of risk factors.

For example, when I was younger, I read that there were only two reasons to buy property.

One, because it was cheaper to buy than rent, or two, because you really really wanted that house.

A home was a place to live, not an investment.

At some point, property has become an investment. It’s supported by the idea that they don’t make land any more, and people will always need a place to live.

And that’s been true for a while. Property prices have surged and many people have a lot of equity tied up in their homes.

But not because of supply and demand.

The increases since 2008 have been driven by very low interest rates. Interest rates that were put in place to avoid a market meltdown.

Being able to borrow more money more cheaply led to an increase in prices, as that extra money people could borrow went towards bigger bids on houses.

And now we have a ticking sound as those cheap mortgages expire and some people find that a repayment at 1% is very different from one at 6%.

China, in particular, acts as a uncertainty generator.

For the last 70 or so years the Chinese system has funneled money into industry after industry, creating capacity and driving down global prices.

That has been a good thing, as part of globalisation, but it’s also led to the shutdown of manufacturing in many countries.

In the last decade or so that’s lead to dissillusionment with globalisation and a retreat, more protectionism and more nationalist leaders on the world stage.

You can see this in the news now, as America responds to an increasingly powerful China, and both countries consider trade barriers, limiting access to technology and the materials that are needed for technology.

The result of all this is what the Economist terms “radical uncertainty”.

Or what the Chinese might refer to as “interesting times”.

I doubt many of us know what to think or what to do in these situations.

How would we even start analysing what’s going on?

I think we might need to go back to the history books, to see what happens when things get complicated.

But we also need ways to get a sense of what’s going on and make decisions in these complex and uncertain times.

That’s one place to focus on in 2025.

Cheers,

Karthik Suresh