Jump to content

gjm

Members
  • Content Count

    5618
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    116

Everything posted by gjm

  1. gjm

    Import tax

    A lot of people don't realise that you don't have to be self-employed to offset income-related expense against your due tax. And whatever you do - do not pay to have a potential tax refund evaluated and paid to you. That's a rip-off.
  2. gjm

    Import tax

    A friend of a friend was ranting about how the rich in NZ pay loads of tax to support those too idle to work. Curiously she had no answer to a suggestion that the very rich typically pay an equivalent of a much lower rate of tax (at least) than an average working person, because the very rich employ people to help them not pay tax. It's sad, but there are very blinkered people on both sides of the major political divide, those that genuinely believe 'their' party can do no wrong. It's a great shame that those people can only end up disappointed and disillusioned.
  3. gjm

    Import tax

    Sadly, that was after all the infrastructure to support the changes to fuel taxation had been implemented. So... Scrap the changes and be criticised for wasting money on implementing the infrastructure, or continue, and be criticised for the changes. Damned if you do; damned if you don't.
  4. gjm

    Import tax

    It'd be easy to say "but National would have..." But Labour did say no new taxes. Sadly, I suspect that reality really hit home once they were the main party in power and had a better grip on the country's finances. And the reality is that more money is needed for the country. Overseas investment has tended to be of the one-off buy land variety, which is unpopular. Overseas income from dairy sales has fallen as world dairy market prices have dropped, and (like it or not) a situation has been manufactured in NZ where we have become dependent on that income. So the 'normal' streams aren't there to support the infrastructure changes the country needs. New streams can be created, but that takes time, and Labour don't have time. They have to be seen to act now. So we get to suffer.
  5. Some of you will know, others may suspect. But for some this will be news. Pelican Parts and Turner Motorsport are now both a part of the ECS empire. Actually, they are an asset of Bertram Capital Investments, as is ECS: Turner and Pelican are regarded as an 'add-on investment'. ECS Tuning, Ziza, Alzor, Bremmen, and Schwaben are all wholly-owned brands of ECS. Many will say "OK - so what?" And if your dealings with ECS have been good, then that is an entirely justified question, and perhaps you don't want (or need?) to read further. Daniel Curtis joined Turner Motorsport in 2007, working with Will Turner, and helped build TMS into a company that people wanted to deal with. He's posted on Facebook about his experiences of the buyout of TMS (most comments of which are reportedly entirely representative of the Pelican takeover), but for those who don't 'do' Facebook (I don't blame you!) the following is a copy'n'paste from the Grassroots Motorsports forum: "This may already be old news, but a recent FB post by Daniel Curtis, a long time TMS guy, caught my attention. If it's all true (which I don't know, but ), it's a sad state of affairs for the automotive aftermarket industry.....not that this kind of thing doesn't happen in all industries (the independent ski shop i work at was bought a few years ago by a larger corporate entity and I saw some of the same issues). Anyhow, thought I'd repost here in case anyone is interested. I've bought many things from Pelican (and some from Turner) in the recent and distant past so I thought it was interesting, and wonder how it will affect the future of other similar companies (FCP Euro, etc). 3 years ago today, July 1, 2015, ECS "acquired" Turner Motorsport incorporated, the company I had toiled to help Will Turner build up for 8.5 years. They promised the former owner, a guy I shared a small office with for over 5 years, all sorts of amazing synergies and upsides. We'd share the best of both companies to form a super-knowledgeable, cutting edge source of auto parts with unmatched experience and customer service. Those were all lies. When I arrived at Turner in 2007, they were a small niche / boutique operation that sold a couple million in parts per year, fueled by a handful of true enthusiasts. I had left a solid job at another respected BMW parts outfit for the chance to work for an exciting up-and-coming BMW Tuner that already had a reputation for racing and no-BS parts. When the ECS management team landed at Turner for the first time after the buyout, I was of course guarded. My optimism quickly turned to disgust. My impression of them was smarmy. Ruthless. Greedy. And in some cases, completely inept. Most notably the the two former owners, who's opinion I held as low as one could imagine. They had sold controlling rights to their company only a year before, and were now "Co-CEOs" of the private equity owned entity, an asset of Betram Capital Investments. Many of our numbers were better than theirs. Our customer satisfaction higher, returns lower, vendor relationships deeper, and our employee retention and advancement out of this world. We managed a better profit margin, taboot. (Who knew: When you have happy customers and employees, you can run a good business!) Seeing behind the scenes of Turner Motorsport and ECS Tuning, it was clear -- One was a company that earned its reputation, the other a Wild-West movie scene, pretending to know what they were doing, luring customers in with prices slightly lower than their peers, and growth that stemmed from mostly dumb luck, and past smart employees who had quit along the years. They had no clear vision besides growth-at-any-cost, to inflate their private equity owned LLC so they could dump it to another larger company in a few years and (hopefully) some key players would walk away millionaires. It was official: Will Turner sold his company to the devil. A soulless machine that didn't care about the car community or its employees. It cared about one thing only: Profit. They were insufferable, right out of the gate. I played along for a few months, as they made one foolish or unimaginable decision after another. As the Director of Operations, I had a bird's eye view of the deconstruction and dismemberment of a once great company. I made several trips to ECS headquarters in Wadsworth, OH. What I saw was what I would describe as borderline inhumane treatment of employees. Unnecessary control tactics to ensure NO ONE at ECS had any "tribal knowledge" of their business. Because of this their employees had a demeanor like abused animals. Cameras over every desk. Unbelievably low pay. Tiny tiny cubicles. Unnecessary dress code from the 1940's. Isolated and key-code locked rooms for every department. I was one .of a select few who could freely walk through all of the departments, and see the inner workings of ECS and the people that worked hard behind locked doors. And I really felt bad for them. I felt almost as bad for their customers. Their warehouse was a disorganized hive of slave-like labor, governed by fear and intimidation. Their shipments were POORLY packaged, their process riddled with opportunities for mistakes and human error, and the morale of their employees those the lowest I've ever seen. As an IT and Ecommerce Manager, their system was one of the most poorly cobbled together hackjobs I'd ever seen as well. Their security and disaster recover was a joke. it's no wonder they had troubles with data breaches and massive credit card data hacking. (Google it!) This was 100% the worst working environment I'd ever seen. Run by delusional and inept management who truly believed they'd built the perfect machine. And now fueled by outside PE money and reckless abandon. The Turner buy-out happened in July, and in December of 2015 they unveiled their new "plan" in a small conference room of ECS. It was the former owner, Mr. Turner, myself, the two "co-CEOs", and 3 or 4 members of senior management. I sat in the board room and watched Will Turner's jaw drop as they explained their master plan -- to consolidate the 50 employee Massachusetts based Turner Motorsport with Ohio. Their reasoning after months of research: "It would save $11k in shipping expense and 0.2 days of package transit time. "That's it???" I asked. At the time, Turner Motorsport alone (not including ECS) was spending some $30k a week in shipping. No one researched the advantages of combining the capabilities of both companies. I argued they needed to re-run their numbers for contrast before impulsively vaporizing Turner Motorsport. They had made up their mind and that was that. So on December 15, I became aware that ECS wanted me to lay off the majority of my workforce. The best of the best, in a hot bed of Boston-area talent were about to be out a job around Christmas. A good portion of whom I had hired and trained, and all of which I worked along-side for years. Several employees pre-dated my years of service, including a few with 18-20 years of experience each. No offers of relocation. No concern or compassion. All business. Just to save a few bucks, and (as time would tell) to the chagrin of its customers. The would also dissolve the in-house R&D and production, boasting their plans to send manufacturing to the same Chinese and Mexican companies ECS was already outsourcing to. They'd keep the domain name and 800 number, and 4 sales reps to continue the perception that Turner Motorsport was an independent parts house. They also kept two customer service reps to handle all the shipping errors, damaged parts, wrong parts, and nightmare orders ECS had become so good at creating. They quietly dumpstered thousands of parts and sent millions of dollars worth of inventory (much of which they had no way of selling) to their Ohio warehouse. A once-great all-BMW parts house went from 50 employees to 6, remains to this very today. Strangely they didn't want me to go, though. They wanted my experience (Ecommerce, IT, SEO, Management, etc) however they could keep me. They tried cutting me in on their private equity parachute "pie in the sky" incentive plan that other ECS managers were on. I turned it down. The incentive plan's legal paperwork was a joke. A labyrinth with only 1 outcome that might pay out a modest bonus, mired with a hundred of ways ECS could cut me out and $0 at their discretion. Pass. Instead I made sure the laid off Turner employees got the best severances and treatment I could, and informed WIll Turner his ride with me as his right hand man was over. I quit on the 9th anniversary of my hire date, which was also the 5th year anniversary of launching a revamped Ecommerce platform that increased sales +40% overnight. I still look back on that as an amazing job, with the most amazing people on the planet, that all came to a screeching halt because someone couldn't turn down a 7 figure payout (yes, 7 figure and decidedly not 8.) I often think how different my life and so many others would be had ECS not picked Turner as the first target of acquisition. But they aren't done! ECS very quietly purchased Pelican Parts last fall. Good luck finding any press and PE newswire hoopla, like the Turner acquisition. They have kept this buy-out VERY quiet [it's not even mentioned on Bertram's webpage where they detail the TMS investment - gjm] , as Bertram knows how bad ECS did with Turner "transition." Who will ECS buy next? Do yourself a favor and get VERY picky about where you buy your German/Euro car parts. Starting asking: "Are you owned by ECS Tuning or Bertram Capital Investments?" Read the ECS Glass Door, and know all the bad reports are 100% truth, while the glowing reviews are almost certainly planted by management to combat a dumpster fire that is their HR department."
  6. gjm

    Import tax

    And National 'ran out of time to present it to the people before the election'. They really are as bad as each other. Little by way of redeeming features.
  7. gjm

    Import tax

    Sounds more than a little conspiracy theory to me!
  8. gjm

    Import tax

    I think there is a very real chance that is what will happen. NZ could find itself off the edge of the world as far as small business international trade is concerned. Which will leave the door open to the bigger companies to bring in container loads of items, and charge a fortune for them.
  9. gjm

    Import tax

    I still don't understand how lil ol' NZ expects to have *every* vendor outside of NZ, selling to a Kiwi-based person or company, collect tax for NZ!
  10. I think this one is actually a Photoshop exercise - it's a UK number plate, but B12ALP was never issued.
  11. I only got through the first few pics on my phone - probably shouldn't have said anything!
  12. Not seen an interior that nice for a long time. Looks very tidy. Perhaps even that unicorn - a finished project?
  13. gjm

    e30 Automatic Coupe

    Nice to find someone who isn't looking for a cheap, perfect car! 4-cylinder or 6-pot preferred? 2 or 4 door? I appreciate you may have little preference, but let's see if we can find you the 'right' car instead of one which is merely 'very good'.
  14. gjm

    Quick rant thread.

    Dairy is could be a sustainable product if appropriately managed, but over the last decade or more so many farmers have moved to dairy production that NZ now lacks for the production of other crops. And when dairy prices worldwide drop (as they have), or we have a disease outbreaks (such as mycoplasma bovis), or there's a drought, farmers then hold out their hands for subsidies (joining those receiving subsidies anyway). In the meantime, prices for other agricultural produce increases as availability decreases - the export market has a part to play in the availability, too. As for Labour borrowing... I thought they paid down the national debt, only to have National skyrocket it beyond belief? National claimed it was a lower national debt to GDP ratio, which is true, until the GDP drops because of export or production issues, but the numbers are pretty terrifying. Dairy itself isn't being attacked by Labour and the Greens - it is the irresponsibility of intensive dairy farming and the terrible impact that is having on the environment which they are calling to be addressed. The lack of relevant regulation over agricultural waste dumping into waterways meant farmers took the easy solution, and now they're complaining about being called out on it. National addressed this by altering the 'clean water' assessments (safe to wade but not to swim), but made little inroad into the root cause. As for tax - Labour have broken their 'no new taxes' promise, but haven't done much National hadn't (net) planned to do. And I'm seeing Labour pushing money towards teachers and healthcare professionals, areas which seemingly haven't been adequately addressed for a long time. I feel NZ needs diversity and less reliance on imported product. That seems contrary to the National stance. I don't know what Labour plan to do in that area. What diversity could usefully be encouraged, which won't impact the Godzone image tourism has worked so hard to promote?
  15. gjm

    Quick rant thread.

    Tax is much higher there, but they get a lot more for their money, too. It's almost an acceptance of a (benevolent?) government state - many countries don't like that idea, and want to have their freedom, pay less tax, and... Oh. And have all the benefits as well. NZ is a small country, with infrastructure requirements matching many much larger countries. By infrastructure I mean roads and transport, education, health, and all the things that we are able to take for granted. That has to be paid for somehow, and lower population means it's a higher per capita cost than might be the case in other countries. It's disappointing, at best. But perhaps one of the reasons there is a larger number of self-employed people in NZ than might be expected? That self-reliance can mean greater autonomy for the individual. NZ needs either a renewable product the rest of the world wants (and it's more-or-less proven that dairy cannot be that product, long term) or NZ needs to become more independent in supplying itself. The UK has fairly categorically failed in this, becoming over the last 60 years consumer state - I think NZ is in danger of doing the same.
  16. gjm

    Quick rant thread.

    I keep coming back to comparisons with Norway. Larger land area, similar distribution and variable weather issues, comparable population. Fuel there is (equivalent) $3.50 a litre. However, as a general rule, they are a better run, better financed country. Better social structure, less crime, etc...
  17. gjm

    Gissa job!

    Same here. I've been looking at what help might be available, including this: Grants and help for your new business.
  18. gjm

    Gissa job!

    That is what I'm trying to avoid. Unfortunately the current job market appears geared to replacement and not enhancement. Just don't take anything that means a step back - moving forward again may be impossible!
×
×
  • Create New...