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The Rewards of Discipline

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

April 2012

Virtually all investment companies define “discipline” as a strength or even a competitive advantage. This issue of Excess Returns considers an important manifestation of discipline — being systematic — as it applies to all aspects of running an investment firm, from portfolio management and client service to sales and marketing.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 2 | Number 4

In This Issue

Tillie

Special-Ops Editing

The Power of Habit

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphainvestmentmarketing.com

Tillie

The story I am about to tell happened a long time ago, but I remember the details vividly. I was in a cab on the FDR Drive in New York City on a brutally hot day when I saw a Doberman/Rottweiler mix sitting by the side of the highway, panting and looking distressed and disoriented. There was nothing in sight but fast-moving traffic, asphalt … and this dog. She was wearing a bright-red harness. I got out and went up to her. She sniffed my hand, then let me lead her by the harness while the two of us hailed another cab. She had no tags and none of the New York shelters I checked had anyone looking for her, so I set about finding her a new home.

As part of my volunteer job a few weeks later, I happened to be confirming information about all of the animal shelters in our area for a flier put out by our local dog owners association (“What to do when you find a stray dog?”). I thought I had called all of the New York City shelters, but in double-checking found there was one I had missed. I was tired at the time and the following craven thought crossed my mind, “Ahh, I don’t really need to double-check everything. The information is probably fine as is.”

But I am a systematic soul by nature and I have long worked in the investment world, where discipline is critical. So I called this shelter and while checking its phone number thought to ask, “Hey, you didn’t have anyone come in looking for a Doberman/Rottweiler mix lost a few weeks ago, did you?” “Oh my God, yes!” said the woman, “Was the dog wearing a red harness?”

How Investment Companies Can Be More Disciplined

Usually the rewards of being disciplined are not as immediate as helping a family find their lost dog. But recalling this experience makes me think of the many ways in which discipline matters in my field:

Investment process description and implementation. Does your firm document the investment process step by step in writing and does the investment team follow the process consistently as documented? Does the team adhere to portfolio diversification guidelines or is a certain fuzziness occasionally allowed? Does expediency sometimes trump discipline? Does the sell discipline provide a true framework for action or is it merely a series of generic reasons for sale, entirely subject to personal interpretation — “we find a better idea,” “valuation is realized” or (my personal favorite) “fundamentals have deteriorated.” Who does what when and are these actions really performed systematically?

Results measurement and analysis. When the investment process does not work, does the investment team know why? Or are they twisting in the wind? I have spent many hours over the years crafting credible answers to questions such as, “Why are you underperforming and what do you plan to do about it?” and “What have you learned from your investment mistakes?” I can usually tell when the answers make sense or when they consist mainly of hope with a dash of spin. Real answers tend to come wrapped in research and analysis — systematically measuring where performance comes from — and the firms that tend to measure results in one area (investing) also tend to measure results in other areas (client service).

Information sharing. A portfolio specialist once told me that salespeople and client relations professionals at his firm did not receive bonuses until they had updated their notes in the company’s database. “Wow,” I thought, “this is treating them like children — as in, ‘You can’t have any ice cream until you do your homework.'” The reality, though, is that many client-facing professionals do not update their company’s database routinely or in depth. Our company frequently asks for database notes about a specific product. Sometimes, the information we receive is stellar — detailed observations, insights and feedback that provide a valuable history of market interactions. Too often, though, what we get is unintelligible and/or completely lacking in information value.

Editorial standards. Does a professional proofreader review every document your firm sends to clients, consultants and prospects? Does your company follow a style sheet to ensure accuracy and consistency? (See Special-Ops Editing for more on the importance of a style sheet.) Are all facts checked in every document? In my experience, rare is the investment company that can answer “yes” decisively to all of these questions. There are many different categories of people who are likely to be annoyed by shoddy and inconsistent editing: (1) people who care about language, (2) people who make their living as teachers (think decision-makers at university endowments and state teacher retirement funds), (3) people who despise verbosity (which usually results from nonexistent or sloppy editing) and (4) people who value quality and consistency and are offended (whether consciously or subliminally) by its absence. Hmmm … that sounds like just about everyone, doesn’t it?

The dog’s name was Tillie and her owner had been calling her local shelter frantically for several days after Tillie ran away en route to the vet. The owner and her entire family (mother, father, sisters, brothers and even a few cousins) came to bring Tillie home. There was much hugging and weeping and they gave me a sizable contribution for our dog owners association.

If I had not checked that one fact in that one document (while feeling tired and not wanting to be bothered), Tillie most likely would have been placed in another home, never to be united with her family. But as I give myself a pat on the back for this one disciplined action, I also start thinking about all the different ways I can become more disciplined in running my own business and in helping my clients to do the same.

Special-Ops Editing

A friend who always sends me cool Internet links recently provided an excerpt from an email sent by author Robin Sloan about his editors at Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Mr. Sloan describes the use of a style sheet to ensure accuracy. A time line is created. Character descriptions are cross-referenced. Inconsistencies are culled or corrected. Here is how Mr. Sloan describes the rigor and efficiency of his editorial team:

“FSG’s copy-editing team is like a special-ops squad. Clear the area! Check for bombs! Here’s the map! Go go go! I’m the timid informant being shepherded to a safehouse by this super-competent crew, and once I’m inside, safe from harm (and spelling everything consistently) they’ll head right back out into the firefight.”

The intense discipline described here underscores the need for higher editorial standards in the investment world. All investment companies should have an updated style sheet that serves not only as a guide to editorial consistency but also as a guide to consistency of the story. For instance, the special-ops editors at Alpha Partners might discover that the same quantitative investment model is sometimes described as a “relative value model” and other times as an “intrinsic value model.” At best, prospective investors are confused by such inconsistent labeling and at worst they may suspect (probably correctly) that the investment process is not implemented consistently.

The Power of Habit


In The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg describes how changing one habit can create “a chain reaction, starting a process that, over time, transforms everything.”

The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business, by Charles Duhigg, explores the role of habits in creating change. I love this book for several reasons. It shows how researchers reinterpret their findings to shift strategy, turning a product with disappointing sales into one that earns a billion dollars a year. It tells the story of how changing a “keystone habit” revitalizes the culture and earnings of a major corporation. Perhaps best of all, it provides invaluable guidance for individuals seeking to replace bad habits (smoking, drinking, overeating or nail biting) with good ones. My favorite part of the book is the section describing how “small wins fuel transformative changes.” If you are serious about creating change, in yourself or in your organization, you should read this book.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2012 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphainvestmentmarketing.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

April 2025

The Art of Uncertainty

Slashed spending by CEOs. Postponed or canceled construction projects. Jobs being cut and delays in hiring. “The unpredictability of President Trump’s stop-start trade offensive,” The Wall Street Journal noted on April 28, “is paralyzing companies on every front except one―taking an ax to costs.” Where will it all end? No one can know. And that’s why now is a very good time to read a book about the art of uncertainty. Professor David Spiegelhalter helps readers understand how humans have learned to measure, manage and survive the unknown. In addition to key insights about putting uncertainty into numbers, the author provides valuable lessons in successful strategies for communicating uncertainty.

January 2025

The Algebra of Wealth

Income. Compound interest. Investments. Debt. Taxes, Inflation … All play a role in building a profitable life. But so do character traits such as stoicism, focus and making the most of present time. In The Algebra of Wealth, Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at NYU Stern School of Business and a serial entrepreneur, provides expert advice on how to generate income and turn income into wealth. Based on personal experience and behavioral research, Professor Galloway offers vital insights that transcend the typical personal finance book, covering topics such as the futility of worry, treating expense management as a “rational obsession” and finding one’s true identity through hard work as opposed to pursuing a passion.

October 2024

The Money Trap

In this tale of Shakespearean proportions, Alok Sama describes his experiences working for one of the most prolific and audacious venture investment entities, SoftBank’s Vision Fund. Fund investments include ByteDance, Nvidia, Arm and Alibaba―along with legendary failures such as WeWork and Sam Bankman Fried’s FTX. At some point in his time as president and CFO of SoftBank, the author becomes aware of a plot to discredit him and a colleague―a plot involving surveillance of his family, a smear campaign in the press, bogus legal threats and even a honey trap. While hoping to learn who and why, the reader gets a fascinating crash course in early-stage tech investing.

August 2024

The Coming Wave

The Coming Wave describes how new technologies such as AI and synthetic biology are going to change the world. Not this year or next but over multiple decades. As a co-founder of two AI companies and the current head of AI at Microsoft, the author is well positioned to understand and communicate everything that can go right with the coming tsunami of new technologies―and everything that can go wrong. This book makes a compelling, heartfelt case for “claiming the benefits of the wave without being overwhelmed by its harms.”

February 2024

The Devil Never Sleeps

The devil is the potential for pandemics, climate change disasters, terrorist attacks and massive computer hacks. A leader in crisis management and homeland security, Juliette Kayyem documents in depth the perils of underreacting to the inevitable. By dismissing harbingers of doom as mere noise, countries and companies risk turning emergencies into calamities, local diseases into global pandemics and manageable negative events into existential crises. This book provides invaluable lessons on how to prepare for the devil, how to limit harm when the inevitable crises do occur and how to pivot in time for future disasters.

October 2023

Wealth, War & Wisdom

The reality of war never goes away. “Once every couple of generations,” writes Barton Biggs in Wealth, War & Wisdom, “an epic event occurs that destroys accumulated wealth.” The U.S., Australia and Sweden “have been lucky―so far―but in Europe, the apocalypse has happened in one form or another on a regular, generational basis.” In addition to tracking the fascinating history of the markets during WW II, this book explores two primary enemies of wealth during war: complacency (it couldn’t happen here, not to us) and failure to diversify by country and asset class.

August 2023

The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest

Destined to become a classic of economic history, Edward Chancellor’s book provides an intensively researched compendium of all the economic woes that can result from excessively low interest rates. Starting with the ancient origins of interest, the book moves to the unintended consequences of zero-bound (and even negative) interest rates, and concludes with the impact of ultra-low rates on emerging markets.

How Investment Companies Can Be More Disciplined

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

April 2012

Virtually all investment companies define “discipline” as a strength or even a competitive advantage. This issue of Excess Returns considers an important manifestation of discipline — being systematic — as it applies to all aspects of running an investment firm, from portfolio management and client service to sales and marketing.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 2 | Number 4

In This Issue

Tillie

Special-Ops Editing

The Power of Habit

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphapartners.com

Tillie

The story I am about to tell happened a long time ago, but I remember the details vividly. I was in a cab on the FDR Drive in New York City on a brutally hot day when I saw a Doberman/Rottweiler mix sitting by the side of the highway, panting and looking distressed and disoriented. There was nothing in sight but fast-moving traffic, asphalt … and this dog. She was wearing a bright-red harness. I got out and went up to her. She sniffed my hand, then let me lead her by the harness while the two of us hailed another cab. She had no tags and none of the New York shelters I checked had anyone looking for her, so I set about finding her a new home.

As part of my volunteer job a few weeks later, I happened to be confirming information about all of the animal shelters in our area for a flier put out by our local dog owners association (“What to do when you find a stray dog?”). I thought I had called all of the New York City shelters, but in double-checking found there was one I had missed. I was tired at the time and the following craven thought crossed my mind, “Ahh, I don’t really need to double-check everything. The information is probably fine as is.”

But I am a systematic soul by nature and I have long worked in the investment world, where discipline is critical. So I called this shelter and while checking its phone number thought to ask, “Hey, you didn’t have anyone come in looking for a Doberman/Rottweiler mix lost a few weeks ago, did you?” “Oh my God, yes!” said the woman, “Was the dog wearing a red harness?”

How Investment Companies Can Be More Disciplined

Usually the rewards of being disciplined are not as immediate as helping a family find their lost dog. But recalling this experience makes me think of the many ways in which discipline matters in my field:

Investment process description and implementation. Does your firm document the investment process step by step in writing and does the investment team follow the process consistently as documented? Does the team adhere to portfolio diversification guidelines or is a certain fuzziness occasionally allowed? Does expediency sometimes trump discipline? Does the sell discipline provide a true framework for action or is it merely a series of generic reasons for sale, entirely subject to personal interpretation — “we find a better idea,” “valuation is realized” or (my personal favorite) “fundamentals have deteriorated.” Who does what when and are these actions really performed systematically?

Results measurement and analysis. When the investment process does not work, does the investment team know why? Or are they twisting in the wind? I have spent many hours over the years crafting credible answers to questions such as, “Why are you underperforming and what do you plan to do about it?” and “What have you learned from your investment mistakes?” I can usually tell when the answers make sense or when they consist mainly of hope with a dash of spin. Real answers tend to come wrapped in research and analysis — systematically measuring where performance comes from — and the firms that tend to measure results in one area (investing) also tend to measure results in other areas (client service).

Information sharing. A portfolio specialist once told me that salespeople and client relations professionals at his firm did not receive bonuses until they had updated their notes in the company’s database. “Wow,” I thought, “this is treating them like children — as in, ‘You can’t have any ice cream until you do your homework.'” The reality, though, is that many client-facing professionals do not update their company’s database routinely or in depth. Our company frequently asks for database notes about a specific product. Sometimes, the information we receive is stellar — detailed observations, insights and feedback that provide a valuable history of market interactions. Too often, though, what we get is unintelligible and/or completely lacking in information value.

Editorial standards. Does a professional proofreader review every document your firm sends to clients, consultants and prospects? Does your company follow a style sheet to ensure accuracy and consistency? (See Special-Ops Editing for more on the importance of a style sheet.) Are all facts checked in every document? In my experience, rare is the investment company that can answer “yes” decisively to all of these questions. There are many different categories of people who are likely to be annoyed by shoddy and inconsistent editing: (1) people who care about language, (2) people who make their living as teachers (think decision-makers at university endowments and state teacher retirement funds), (3) people who despise verbosity (which usually results from nonexistent or sloppy editing) and (4) people who value quality and consistency and are offended (whether consciously or subliminally) by its absence. Hmmm … that sounds like just about everyone, doesn’t it?

The dog’s name was Tillie and her owner had been calling her local shelter frantically for several days after Tillie ran away en route to the vet. The owner and her entire family (mother, father, sisters, brothers and even a few cousins) came to bring Tillie home. There was much hugging and weeping and they gave me a sizable contribution for our dog owners association.

If I had not checked that one fact in that one document (while feeling tired and not wanting to be bothered), Tillie most likely would have been placed in another home, never to be united with her family. But as I give myself a pat on the back for this one disciplined action, I also start thinking about all the different ways I can become more disciplined in running my own business and in helping my clients to do the same.

Special-Ops Editing

A friend who always sends me cool Internet links recently provided an excerpt from an email sent by author Robin Sloan about his editors at Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Mr. Sloan describes the use of a style sheet to ensure accuracy. A time line is created. Character descriptions are cross-referenced. Inconsistencies are culled or corrected. Here is how Mr. Sloan describes the rigor and efficiency of his editorial team:

“FSG’s copy-editing team is like a special-ops squad. Clear the area! Check for bombs! Here’s the map! Go go go! I’m the timid informant being shepherded to a safehouse by this super-competent crew, and once I’m inside, safe from harm (and spelling everything consistently) they’ll head right back out into the firefight.”

The intense discipline described here underscores the need for higher editorial standards in the investment world. All investment companies should have an updated style sheet that serves not only as a guide to editorial consistency but also as a guide to consistency of the story. For instance, the special-ops editors at Alpha Partners might discover that the same quantitative investment model is sometimes described as a “relative value model” and other times as an “intrinsic value model.” At best, prospective investors are confused by such inconsistent labeling and at worst they may suspect (probably correctly) that the investment process is not implemented consistently.

The Power of Habit


In The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg describes how changing one habit can create “a chain reaction, starting a process that, over time, transforms everything.”

The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business, by Charles Duhigg, explores the role of habits in creating change. I love this book for several reasons. It shows how researchers reinterpret their findings to shift strategy, turning a product with disappointing sales into one that earns a billion dollars a year. It tells the story of how changing a “keystone habit” revitalizes the culture and earnings of a major corporation. Perhaps best of all, it provides invaluable guidance for individuals seeking to replace bad habits (smoking, drinking, overeating or nail biting) with good ones. My favorite part of the book is the section describing how “small wins fuel transformative changes.” If you are serious about creating change, in yourself or in your organization, you should read this book.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2012 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphapartners.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

April 2025

The Art of Uncertainty

Slashed spending by CEOs. Postponed or canceled construction projects. Jobs being cut and delays in hiring. “The unpredictability of President Trump’s stop-start trade offensive,” The Wall Street Journal noted on April 28, “is paralyzing companies on every front except one―taking an ax to costs.” Where will it all end? No one can know. And that’s why now is a very good time to read a book about the art of uncertainty. Professor David Spiegelhalter helps readers understand how humans have learned to measure, manage and survive the unknown. In addition to key insights about putting uncertainty into numbers, the author provides valuable lessons in successful strategies for communicating uncertainty.

January 2025

The Algebra of Wealth

Income. Compound interest. Investments. Debt. Taxes, Inflation … All play a role in building a profitable life. But so do character traits such as stoicism, focus and making the most of present time. In The Algebra of Wealth, Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at NYU Stern School of Business and a serial entrepreneur, provides expert advice on how to generate income and turn income into wealth. Based on personal experience and behavioral research, Professor Galloway offers vital insights that transcend the typical personal finance book, covering topics such as the futility of worry, treating expense management as a “rational obsession” and finding one’s true identity through hard work as opposed to pursuing a passion.

October 2024

The Money Trap

In this tale of Shakespearean proportions, Alok Sama describes his experiences working for one of the most prolific and audacious venture investment entities, SoftBank’s Vision Fund. Fund investments include ByteDance, Nvidia, Arm and Alibaba―along with legendary failures such as WeWork and Sam Bankman Fried’s FTX. At some point in his time as president and CFO of SoftBank, the author becomes aware of a plot to discredit him and a colleague―a plot involving surveillance of his family, a smear campaign in the press, bogus legal threats and even a honey trap. While hoping to learn who and why, the reader gets a fascinating crash course in early-stage tech investing.

August 2024

The Coming Wave

The Coming Wave describes how new technologies such as AI and synthetic biology are going to change the world. Not this year or next but over multiple decades. As a co-founder of two AI companies and the current head of AI at Microsoft, the author is well positioned to understand and communicate everything that can go right with the coming tsunami of new technologies―and everything that can go wrong. This book makes a compelling, heartfelt case for “claiming the benefits of the wave without being overwhelmed by its harms.”

February 2024

The Devil Never Sleeps

The devil is the potential for pandemics, climate change disasters, terrorist attacks and massive computer hacks. A leader in crisis management and homeland security, Juliette Kayyem documents in depth the perils of underreacting to the inevitable. By dismissing harbingers of doom as mere noise, countries and companies risk turning emergencies into calamities, local diseases into global pandemics and manageable negative events into existential crises. This book provides invaluable lessons on how to prepare for the devil, how to limit harm when the inevitable crises do occur and how to pivot in time for future disasters.

October 2023

Wealth, War & Wisdom

The reality of war never goes away. “Once every couple of generations,” writes Barton Biggs in Wealth, War & Wisdom, “an epic event occurs that destroys accumulated wealth.” The U.S., Australia and Sweden “have been lucky―so far―but in Europe, the apocalypse has happened in one form or another on a regular, generational basis.” In addition to tracking the fascinating history of the markets during WW II, this book explores two primary enemies of wealth during war: complacency (it couldn’t happen here, not to us) and failure to diversify by country and asset class.

August 2023

The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest

Destined to become a classic of economic history, Edward Chancellor’s book provides an intensively researched compendium of all the economic woes that can result from excessively low interest rates. Starting with the ancient origins of interest, the book moves to the unintended consequences of zero-bound (and even negative) interest rates, and concludes with the impact of ultra-low rates on emerging markets.

Investment Marketing Lessons through Horse Trading

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

December 2011

Marketing and sales professionals, even veterans with decades of experience, can still learn vital lessons about their own discipline through everyday life. Communicating with the checkout person at the supermarket, visiting your doctor or hiring a contractor — all such interactions, small and large, yield a wealth of insights about do’s and don’ts. Last year, a major purchase taught me a few new lessons and reaffirmed some old truths regarding how human beings make big decisions.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 1 | Number 12

In This Issue

Investment Marketing Lessons through Horse Trading

Presenting First or Last?

How We Decide

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphainvestmentmarketing.com

Investment Marketing Lessons through Horse Trading

The time is late July 2010 and I am standing in the center of a riding arena in Virginia, watching as three horses are being ridden around and around again. In a moment, it will be my turn to try each of these horses. I am on a mission to buy a new horse as a partner for my sport, three day eventing. During the course of this same week, I will try 18 horses and take careful notes about each one. It occurs to me that this process is rather like a finals competition for institutional asset managers. All of the competitors are well trained and offer a strong track record. I have studied the performance statistics for each horse, and I am confident that virtually any one of them would be an excellent partner. So which one will I choose and why? My ultimate decision, like the decision to hire an investment firm, will depend in some measure on rational thought but also in large part on emotion, sales skill and purely situational factors.

Helping Buyers Decide in Your Favor

My experience buying a horse underlines several key decision factors in any sales process: seller responsiveness, skill in managing the relationship, the enthusiasm of the seller for the product, the importance of diverse sales media and good old-fashioned timing.

1.

The Seller’s Responsiveness. A few sellers did not return my initial call for several days and, when they did so, managed to sound bored and indifferent. In his investment marketing classic, Marketing Institutional Money Management Services, author Philip Halpern defines responsiveness as the "promptness, courtesy and extensiveness with which money managers fulfill requests." The lack of responsiveness, writes Halpern, is "perhaps the most important hurdle that gets money managers into trouble" and, paradoxically, the only hurdle that is "completely and always under the control of the money manager."

2.

The Seller’s Skill in Managing the Relationship. Just as in the investment world, several of the more responsive horse professionals also had a well-defined process for getting to know me and what I wanted to accomplish. These sellers moved to the top of my list as I began to see them not merely as sellers of a product but as a resource. One trainer suggested that I sit down and create a list of what I was looking for in a partnership with a horse; she then discussed my list with me in a thoughtful, caring manner. I did not buy a horse from this trainer, but I almost did and I will recommend her enthusiastically to others in the future.

3.

Enthusiasm for the Product. Another trainer was so enthusiastic that I found myself thinking, "Gee, she really loves this horse. Maybe she should buy him herself." As it happens, I bought her horse, in part because of this woman’s infectious enthusiasm. I tried another horse who, on paper, was equivalent in experience and price. But in this case, by contrast, the seller seemed more interested in negotiating the sales price than she was in the horse.

4.

Diverse Sales Media. The strongest candidates were advertised actively via every conceivable channel: the Internet, the classifieds and word of mouth. But one trainer told me that she did not believe in creating sales videos for horses, as the videos could be taken out of context. "Wow," I thought, "that’s like a hedge fund with one of those super-secretive websites that seems to say, ‘We’re too cool to be bothered with marketing.’" (Do these still exist, I wonder, given the current premium placed on transparency?) Anyway, as you will see in a moment, a sales video ultimately proved decisive in my own final purchase decision.

5.

Good Old-Fashioned Timing. Our clients often ask me whether it’s best to present first or last in a finals. I used to say, "If you give a great presentation, it doesn’t really matter." And there can be advantages to going first. Based on my experience buying a horse, I now say "If you are given a choice, choose to present last." I tried 18 fantastic horses in one week and I bought the last two that I tried on the last day of my search.

Yes, that’s right, I bought two horses. In investment industry parlance, I "split the mandate." My first choice, based on his sweet personality and the quality of our test ride together, was Vintage Trial (aka "Little Vinnie"), described in the May 2011 issue of Excess Returns. But I could not get my second choice, Larkrullah (aka "Big Luke"), out of my head. During my test ride on Luke, when I put him into a gallop and then asked him to slow down again, he seemed simply not to notice my request. Based on this first ride, the risk (being unable to stop him) clearly outweighed the reward (his fantastic athleticism). If I had based my decision purely on this ride, I never would have seen Luke again. But I kept thinking about Luke’s sales video, which showed a keen, powerful horse in good control.

I am taking a calculated risk here, I thought, but if I can learn to ride him like that, then I will have something exceptional … So I bought both Luke and Vinnie, and the only thing I now have trouble deciding on any given day is whether to ride them both or just give them a big hug.

Presenting First or Last?

Going last in a finals competition is by no means always the best option. In his popular blog, marketing expert Seth Godin notes that showing up first can be an advantage — if you believe that you are in a position to set the bar higher than your competitors. In situations where the competition is tight, however, last may well translate into the most positive lasting impression.

So should you make an effort to get your time changed to last, as some marketers recommend? I say no. Show up when you are scheduled to show up and give a standout presentation. If you appear to be changing the time to harness some small situational advantage (and, trust me, the key decision-makers in your audience will be onto this), then you run the risk of simultaneously (1) annoying people and (2) conveying that you lack confidence in what really matters: your firm’s ability to generate consistent long-term investment returns.

How We Decide

Just in case you still believe that human beings make their best decisions based mainly on rational thought, you need to read How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer. The book documents research on the role of emotions and reason in decision-making. Mr. Lehrer explores how we decide in fields as diverse as investing, football and piloting a plane.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2011 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphainvestmentmarketing.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

April 2025

The Art of Uncertainty

Slashed spending by CEOs. Postponed or canceled construction projects. Jobs being cut and delays in hiring. “The unpredictability of President Trump’s stop-start trade offensive,” The Wall Street Journal noted on April 28, “is paralyzing companies on every front except one―taking an ax to costs.” Where will it all end? No one can know. And that’s why now is a very good time to read a book about the art of uncertainty. Professor David Spiegelhalter helps readers understand how humans have learned to measure, manage and survive the unknown. In addition to key insights about putting uncertainty into numbers, the author provides valuable lessons in successful strategies for communicating uncertainty.

January 2025

The Algebra of Wealth

Income. Compound interest. Investments. Debt. Taxes, Inflation … All play a role in building a profitable life. But so do character traits such as stoicism, focus and making the most of present time. In The Algebra of Wealth, Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at NYU Stern School of Business and a serial entrepreneur, provides expert advice on how to generate income and turn income into wealth. Based on personal experience and behavioral research, Professor Galloway offers vital insights that transcend the typical personal finance book, covering topics such as the futility of worry, treating expense management as a “rational obsession” and finding one’s true identity through hard work as opposed to pursuing a passion.

October 2024

The Money Trap

In this tale of Shakespearean proportions, Alok Sama describes his experiences working for one of the most prolific and audacious venture investment entities, SoftBank’s Vision Fund. Fund investments include ByteDance, Nvidia, Arm and Alibaba―along with legendary failures such as WeWork and Sam Bankman Fried’s FTX. At some point in his time as president and CFO of SoftBank, the author becomes aware of a plot to discredit him and a colleague―a plot involving surveillance of his family, a smear campaign in the press, bogus legal threats and even a honey trap. While hoping to learn who and why, the reader gets a fascinating crash course in early-stage tech investing.

August 2024

The Coming Wave

The Coming Wave describes how new technologies such as AI and synthetic biology are going to change the world. Not this year or next but over multiple decades. As a co-founder of two AI companies and the current head of AI at Microsoft, the author is well positioned to understand and communicate everything that can go right with the coming tsunami of new technologies―and everything that can go wrong. This book makes a compelling, heartfelt case for “claiming the benefits of the wave without being overwhelmed by its harms.”

February 2024

The Devil Never Sleeps

The devil is the potential for pandemics, climate change disasters, terrorist attacks and massive computer hacks. A leader in crisis management and homeland security, Juliette Kayyem documents in depth the perils of underreacting to the inevitable. By dismissing harbingers of doom as mere noise, countries and companies risk turning emergencies into calamities, local diseases into global pandemics and manageable negative events into existential crises. This book provides invaluable lessons on how to prepare for the devil, how to limit harm when the inevitable crises do occur and how to pivot in time for future disasters.

October 2023

Wealth, War & Wisdom

The reality of war never goes away. “Once every couple of generations,” writes Barton Biggs in Wealth, War & Wisdom, “an epic event occurs that destroys accumulated wealth.” The U.S., Australia and Sweden “have been lucky―so far―but in Europe, the apocalypse has happened in one form or another on a regular, generational basis.” In addition to tracking the fascinating history of the markets during WW II, this book explores two primary enemies of wealth during war: complacency (it couldn’t happen here, not to us) and failure to diversify by country and asset class.

August 2023

The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest

Destined to become a classic of economic history, Edward Chancellor’s book provides an intensively researched compendium of all the economic woes that can result from excessively low interest rates. Starting with the ancient origins of interest, the book moves to the unintended consequences of zero-bound (and even negative) interest rates, and concludes with the impact of ultra-low rates on emerging markets.

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