Thursday, September 20, 2012

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2004                                                                                                                                                    FOTO  MERLIJN  DOOMERNIK
ten slotte Faas van Dijk 1959-2012
Compromisloos
ontwerptalent


Begin jaren negentig was het Binnenhuis in de Huiden- straat dé toonaangevende interieurzaak in Amsterdam. De door Yvonne Hulst gerunde winkel presenteerde in een minimalisti­sche setting heruitgaven van moder­nistische ontwerpen van grootheden als Eileen Grey, Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe en Mariano Fortuny en introduceerde de net internationaal doorbrekende Philippe Starck in de grachtengordel.
Teneinde haar nouveau riche klant­enkring nog beter te kunnen faciliteren, verhuurde zij de bovenste etages van haar pand aan een jong interieurbureau, Food for Building uit Utrecht. Het werd gerund door auto­didact Servaas van Dijk - Faas voor vrienden en klanten - en zijn partner Alex van Straten. Het werd al snel duidelijk dat hij de provincie was ontgroeid en zich moeiteloos aan­paste aan het hoge verwachtingspa­troon van de verwende Amsterdamse consument.
Nadat Hulst had besloten zich meer te richten op buitenlandse activitei­ten zorgde Van Dijk, inmiddels zonder partner, voor continuïteit. Lange tijd was het Binnenhuis de enige plek in het centrum van Amsterdam waar Italiaanse A-labels als B & B en Minotti verkrijgbaar waren. Steeds vaker werd Van Dijk niet alleen ge­vraagd om de meubels te leveren, mar ook een ruimtelijk concept te bedenken en zorg te dragen voor de verbouwing.
Parallel hieraan begon hij steeds meer eigen ontwerpen te produce­ren. En met succes. Met een bijna maniakale vasthoudendheid in het streven naar perfectie slaagde Van Dijk erin collecties stoelen, fauteuils, tafels, kasten en bedden te produce­ren die in veel opzichten konden concurreren met buitenlandse voor­beelden. Onder de naam Ozenfant, vernoemd naar de Franse kubistische
schilder, ontwikkelde hij steeds ambitieuzere meubels, uitgevoerd in luxueuze materialen. Leunden de eerste collecties nog sterk op grote voorbeelden als de Franse vooroor­logse minimalistische interieurontwerper Jean-Michel Frank of diens succesvolle hedendaagse evenknie Christian Liaigre, naarmate de tijd vorderde, ontstond steeds meer een eigen signatuur. Wat bleef was de mi­nutieuze aandacht voor detail, maar hoe zelfverzekerder hij werd over de kwaliteit van zijn ontwerpen, des te groter werd de experimenteerdrift. Ondanks een gebrek aan formele opleiding was Van Dijk niet alleen veeleisend voor zichzelf, zijn mede­werkers en de producenten van zijn meubels, maar ook voor zijn op­drachtgevers. Het kwam regelmatig voor dat hij projecten teruggaf aan
Zijn creativiteit was omgekeerd evenredig aan zijn zakelijk talent
klanten die alle inspanningen in zijn ogen simpelweg niet waard waren. Ook raakte hij regelmatig gefrus­treerd door de weerbarstigheid van het bouwproces. Zo ging hij eens op een bouwplaats een aannemer met een klauwhamer te lijf. Deze radicale instelling kwam zijn onderneming niet altijd ten goede. Zijn creativiteit was omgekeerd evenredig aan zijn zakelijk talent. In zijn persoonlijke leven nam hij steeds vaker een even compromisloze houding aan als in zijn professionele bestaan, hetgeen wellicht enigszins bijdraagt aan be­grip voor zijn ultieme beslissing. Faas van Dijk laat op 52-jarige leef­tijd een zoon, een geliefde en een he­laas te klein oeuvre achter.
RONALD HOOFT


Bron: Parool Amsterdam, 20 september 2012

Profit per X: Retail economic engines



For a company to go from Good to Great, Jim Collins writes in his http://www.jimcollins.com/tools/diagnostic-tool.pdf use the Hedgehog concept and economic engine:

"Profit per X

We understand what best drives our economic engine. We have identified our one economic denominator - profit per X - that has the most significant impact on our economics."

Normal retail: GP% -> Profit per X = Profit per $ sales

Contribution margin based pricing: -> Profit per X = Profit per SKU

Examples: IKEA, ALDI, Trader Joe's, (Costco?)

"Relative Contribution" -> Profit per X = Profit per m2

Example: GMROS: Gross Margin Return on Space calculations per SKU without GM% target constraints

Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Monday, September 17, 2012

How ALDI has removed the average gross margin % target from retail planning and evaluation.



Dieter Brandes, former ALDI Ceo and author of "Bare Essentials: The ALDI Way to Retail Success" has explained to me that ALDI does not use cost plus pricing and budgetting which involves setting a gross margin percentage target. ALDI uses contribution margin-based pricing within the constraints of pricing below competition.

In a nutshell:

1. Contribution Margin Per Unit = Price - Buying price

2. Product’s Contribution to Profit = Contribution Margin Per Unit x Units Sold

3. Contributions to Profit From All Products – Firm’s Selling,Gen.&Adm. Costs = Total Firm Profit

The important thing is that contribution is measured at item (SKU) level in euros. Brandes said: "It's always about Volume x Margin in euros. At the end we need money, not margin in percentages. Otherwise I would only sell a single item for a margin of 99% - and selling just one unit would be enough.”

When comparing two items in my product mix, only the absolute amount of the Product's Contribution to Profit is relevant, the gross profit margin percentage of a single item (SKU) is totally irrelevant for retail.

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Framework of Documents : removing average gross margin %'s from retail planning

Version 10-7-2009. This month September 2012 I have put the blogposts below on retail planning online again, but the links, etc, don't match up.


-Introduction / shifting paradigms
-My story/view (not written)
-New Planning method for IKEA
-Thought experiments to illustrate limits of the old method/paradigm (not written)
-Anomalies; crisis of the old method/paradigm in actual retail (not written)
-Store Simulation / Game with old method leading to incorrect decisions
-Thesis and method clothing retail in Chapter 5
-Costco model margins below 10%


E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Shifting paradigms or Framing bias & Removing average gross margin %'s from retail planning.



Is a retail store a place where goods are bought then sold, or is it a selling factory or logistics company ?

Trading paradigm/framework question:

Consider a store with two types of pants, 20 of each were put into the store last week, designers jeans with a price of € 100,- and a margin of 20% of which 5 pairs were sold, and polyester pants for € 10,- with a margin of 50% of which 10 pairs were sold.
GMROII (gross margin return on inventroy investment) is much higher for the polyester pants than for the jeans. Store costs last year were 35% at this location and with our present staff levels. I can order another 20 pants, but have to choose either the jeans or the polyester pants, which should I choose to improve my Return On Investment ?

The same question posed from a logistics paradigm/framework:

Customers pay me to buy pants and bring them to the store for them to pickup. Last week I brought 20 pairs of 2 types to the store. For designer jeans 5 customers paid me $ 20, per pair for this service, for the same service 10 polyester pants customers paid me $5,- per pair. I can order another 20 pairs but have to choose between the two types of pants, which should I choose to maximize my profit ?

If you see a store as a place where a collection of items that has been bought, is sold, then it seems logical to focus on gross profit margins expressed in percentages. For example, in a clothing store if you have a fixed budget to buy articles for the season, then articles sold at the end of the season with the highest margin % have made the best use of your buying budget.

The same is true of a poor street vendor selling fruit who has a limited amount of money to buy fruit for the next day's sales.

Eddie Lampert is used to trading on Wallstreet. He is now running Kmart and Sears from a buying and selling paradigm. If you buy stocks, bonds etc. then gross margin percentage profit (in a certain time period) is your most important resultant.

Some of the most successful retail formula's are however now managed as selling factories not as street vendors. Below we consider a clothing store, IKEA, Wal-Mart and ALDI.

In the past managers always worked for at least 6 weeks in the store's own clothing manufacturing factories. The stores themselves were managed as selling factories. In the manufacturing factories the focus was on optimizing machine use, in the stores the focus was on meters instead of machines. The profit per sq. meter (aka GMROS) should be as high as possible. The markup was fixed at 25% (considerably lower than competitors) and attention was focussed on managing stock turns (=turnover speed). Stock turns were managed per price point within commodities. For example trousers with an average price of 10,- would have to reach a stock turn target 5 times higher than trousers priced at 50,- to achieve the same profit per sq. meter. Smaller articles that took up less space could have lower stock turn targets than larger items at the same price point to achieve the same profits per sq. meter.

As one entrepreneur said to his son when explaining merchandise planning:"Meters are the Alpha and Omega."

"IKEA is a production-orientated retailing company." It works very closely with the factories trying to lower costs. It also owns it own furniture factories (Swedwood). So when Ingvar Kamprad decided to sell hot dogs at IKEA, he didn't do that based on the percentage profit margin on hot dogs, but by approaching the hot dog selling process much the same way as the manufacturing process: "The target he set was that two people at the counter would be able to sell three hundred hot dogs an hour. A number of trials were carried out, and the best working position as well as the most functional fittings were tested."

Using wages per hour, rents, energy costs they calculated the profit per day on hot dogs. Just as you would in a factory calculate the profits when making an IKEA bookcase.

Ingvar Kamprad also did the same type of calculations for the sale of what is now called the ÄLMHULT mug. They retail for €0,25. Huge amounts of them are sold straight off the pallet. There is little handling involved, and the dollar margin per square meter is above average. In other words Ingvar had "proven" that they were profitable.

But the textbook planning method for retail is based on the old buying and selling paradigm. The mugs have a low percentage gross margin and were at first moved into the furthest corners of the store by managers trying to improve their gross margin percentages.

As Ingvar puts it: "Our pricing policy is fundamental. The stumbling block is when we price ourselves out of the market. Our economists constantly go on that we must keep our “total gross profit margin” to a certain percentage. I say to the economists, “What the hell is ‘percentage’ anyhow?”

Ingvar wrote in 1998 "after having been the subject of endless bickering for over a decade, in this respect we are beginning to wake up with a vengeance.
That pleases me enormously."


When I worked at IKEA from 2001 to 2004, methods had been developed to get department managers focussed on sales instead of gross margin percentages, but the underlying planning system and IKEA's own textbooks had not been changed.

The question is, what will happen after Ingvar leaves the company ?

Wal-Mart according to Peter Drucker has changed the paradigm of retailing from the buying and selling of goods to moving them.

Sam Walton in his autobiography described the paradigm shift as shifting from "variety store thinking" or "concepts" to discounting. "It's amazing that our competitors didn't catch on to us quicker and try harder to stop us. Whenever we put a Wal-Mart store into a town, customers would just flock to us from the variety stores...most of them did eventually convert to discounting. Kuhn's Big K became a discount chain. Sterling launched it's Magic Mart discount chain. And Duckwall went into discounting.
Now most of these guys already had distribution centers and systems in place, while we had to build one from scratch. So on paper we really didn't stand a chance. What happened was that they didn't really commit to discounting. They held on to their variety store concepts too long. They were so accustomed to getting their 45% markup, they never let go. It was hard for them to take a blouse they'd been selling for $ 8,-, and sell it for $ 5,-, and only make 30 percent...we were ending an era in the heartland. We shut the door on variety store thinking."


Wal-Mart over time lowered their average margins further from 30% to around 20% percent, to the companies asking 45% it just didn't make sense. Their reporting systems couldn't show them a profit on individual articles that had a less than average percentage margin.

Walton himself on the other hand, wrote about a Wal-Mart store manager selling 200 lawnmowers for $ 200,- that he had bought for $ 175,- as an example of excellent retailing. They were sold in days from the parking lot without even having been brought into the store. In my opinion the fact that the margin was 12% while the average Wal-Mart markup at the time was 30% didn't deter Walton from mentioning it in his book, because it was obvious to him that this article had increased the store's bottom line profit. The store earned $200-$175 * 200 = $ 5000,- extra margin with minimum extra costs. Competitors who were locked into the variety store way of thinking (paradigm) saw something completely different. They would look at the sale of lawn mowers for a 12% margin, consider the fact that Wal-Mart's store costs were 26% of sales and the obvious conclusion (viewed through the old paradigm) was that Wal-Mart had lost money by selling them.

Calculate the stores results from this real life example without the sale of these lawn mowers (see page 4 of the store simulation document). The average gross margin percentage would have been higher, but the bottom line profit would have been half as much.

ALDI : Dieter Brandes, former CEO of Aldi Nord wrote :"Marktpreise können nun einmal nicht ignoriert werden. Schon manches Unternehmen hat sich mit falschen Kalkulationen und unzweckmässigen Kostenrechnungen aus dem Markt >>herausgerechnet<<." (Konsequent Einfach, p. 156).

In the blog post below is a framework of documents dealing with adjusting retailing accounting to the new paradigm by removing average gross margin % targets from retailing planning and evaluation.

Comments, input, help with writing to better express this concept, etc. are more than welcome.

E-mail me: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Removing average gross margin %'s from retail planning. Thesis based practice and theory.

My thesis (here) tried to answer the question:
"How can the sales price of a product be set in such a fashion that it forms a reflection of the actual costs involved in selling that product?"

("Actual costs" as opposed to the standard average gross margin percentage markup goals.)

The question is basically the same as that posed by Ingvar Kamprad of IKEA below:
"Our pricing policy is fundamental.
The stumbling block is when we price ourselves out of the market. Our economists constantly go on that we must keep our “total gross profit margin” to a certain percentage. I say to the
economists, “What the hell is ‘percentage’ anyhow?”
The key to merchandising, which is much simpler than my DPP based thesis, is to ignore SGA costs (rent, staff, administration, etc) completely and focus on Opportunity Costs. In other words: "What could I have sold on the shelf instead of what I a am selling now, how much more could I have earned" instead of "I sold x at margin y and my rent was z , staff costs were..so the article was profitable".

Cost = Shelf used aka "Space"
Time = Money

Opportunity Cost = Space occupied x time that is occupied

Cost = Space x Time, not a % of sales or a DPP calculation.

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

Removing the fixed average margin % goal at IKEA .

A rough outline for a planning system for IKEA.

Removing the average gross margin % (percentage) goal from retail planning, execution and evaluation.

The normal method for store planning is, take the sales and gross margin percentages from last year and set goals for next year.

Past results old method

For example year 1 results: Sales € 100 000 000,- , Markup percentage 40 % , Markdowns 2% -> Average gross margin percentage = 38% . Gross margin in euros is 38% of € 100 000 000 equals € 38 000 000,-
Operating expenses (SGA costs) are € 35 000 000,- = 35%
Planning for future old method

In year 2 the company decides to lower prices to increase market share. Markup percentage is 39% instead of 40% , markdowns remain 2% , average gross margin percentage is projected to be 39% - 2% = 37% , to achieve the same gross margin in euros € 38 000 000,- , sales have to be € 38 000 000,- / 37% = € 102 702 703,- .

Management then estimates whether this is realistic based on previous experience with price elasticity of demand in the market.

Much attention is then spent during the year to make sure the average gross margin percentage doesn't fall below the new target.

Below I describe a new planning method for IKEA without an average gross margin percentage target.

Past results new method

Sales were € 100 000 000,- if articles had sold at original prices then the margin would have been € 40 000 000,- but a total of € 2 000 000,- was marked down. The total gross margin was € 38 000 000,-.

Planning for the future new method

In the new method there is no binding top down percentage target for gross margin.

The goal is to increase the total gross margin amount in euros. A final gross profit percentage can be used as rough indication, but shouldn't be tied to management evaluation or compensation.

The gross margin in euros an article produces is the selling price minus the buying price times the number of units sold. In other words: volume x margin.

IKEA has around 10 000 different articles or SKU's (stock keeping units).
These are spread over 10 business areas. That means 1 000 articles per business area.
The vast majority of gross margin and sales derive from less than 200 articles per business area.

Sales managers need to look at their assortment and plan which prices and sales they expect per article next year and this will result in a forecast of sales, margins in euros and the total number of units to sell.

The total gross margin, the sum of the margins of all 10 000 SKU's for the new year needs to be more then € 38 000 000,- (last year's result).

Country management might set upper or lower limits on the volume of articles to be sold (for example due to capacity restraints in the distribution centers).

To maximize profit, daily sales steering (merchandising) should never be based on gross margin percentages, but on gross margin in euros. Many of the most profitable articles have lower than average gross margin percentages.


Markdowns could be limited to an absolute amount in this case for example € 2 000 000,-

Finally, please note:

If an article marked up at 30% sells much better than planned (even when average costs were planned to be 35% of sales), that only increases bottom line profit.

That works as follows, total sales increase as does gross margin in euros. The gross profit percentage will dip slightly, but so will the operating expenses expressed as a percentage of sales. For example from 37% to 36% and from 35% to 34% respectively.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

I would be interested in any feedback people have about this idea.

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Elevator pitch: Removing average gross margin %'s from retail planning.


Existing retail planning methods using a sales and an average gross margin percentage target constantly lead to suboptimal decision making by buyers and merchandisers.
For example; a company has a gross margin target of 40% and costs are 35% of turnover.
If a certain product sells better than expected and has a margin of 30% this has to be compensated to reach the 40% gross margin target.
The decision might be to raise the price, to promote other products with margins above 40%, or to even stop selling the product.
The underlying assumption when using an average gross margin target is that products sold at a lower margin percentage than the average cost as a percentage of sales are not profitable.
But products with low gross margins can be very profitable if their selling price is higher and/or number of units sold is higher than comparable products. Products with below average gross margin percentages often increase the store's net profit margin.
The costs are mainly the amount of space used and handling time for a certain product, not a fixed percentage of the selling price.
Retail planning should be based on gross margin income in $ (per sq. meter) without an average gross margin % target. This is called contribution margin-based pricing. (Deckungsbeitrag in German).


Es handelt zich niet um Strategie Trading Up oder Down aber die Wahl von "Kosten- und Leistungsrechnung" System. Frueher hat man 
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deckungsbeitrag in Euros pro Teil im Haus (Produktionsfaktor) genutzt fuer Plannung
statt Handlungskostenzuschlag in % http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handlungskosten . 


E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

GMROS & Removing the average gross margin percentage goal from retail .

Management Accounting for Discounting: If GMROS is a better indicator of a part of an assortment's contribution to profit than gross profit percentage by itself, than company wide, store wide, department and SKU targets should be set in GMROS not gross profit percentage.

Note: To calculate how much space is being used, you can use the number of items in stock. See the Bottom Line Contribution below for an example.

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

Sometimes lower margins can lead to higher margins: a thought experiment

Sander Koppelaar recommended that I should read the book "What the CEO wants you to know: How your company really works." by Ram Charan.

It's a great book, I highly recommend it. As does Bob Nardelli former CEO of The Home Depot stores: "Finally, a book that shows how business works."

For me it was interesting to see how he used the word "margin". "Throughout this book, we use the word margin to refer to net profit margin after taxes. That is, the money the company earns after paying all its expenses, interest payments, and taxes." p.39

But in describing a street vendor selling fruit he confuses gross margin with net margin. "Every time he sells a melon, he makes just a little bit of money. His profit, the difference between what he pays for the fruit and what he sells it for, is very low. His profit margin-the cash he gets to keep as a percentage of the total cash he takes in-is around 5%."
The difference between the buying and selling price is a retailer's gross margin. The "profit margin" or "net profit margin" is the gross margin minus the costs of selling the item.

(Even as I am writing this and looking up the definitions on Wikipedia I am getting confused.)

Why is it important to distinguish between the two ? The reason is, that in retail gross margin by itself tells you nothing about profitability. This is because the costs of actually selling the product aren't included the calculation of gross margin. In manufacturing the gross margin is more closing related to net profit margin because the costs of manufacturing are included in the manufacturer's gross margin.

Let's look at a simple thought experiment with the street vendor and see how changing your product mix and lowering your margins can increase your margins.

Say the street vendor only sell 1 article per day and he pays $5,- per day to rent his fruit stand.

Day 1:

$ 10,- received for selling 1 apple (= sales, revenue)
-$ 4,- buying price of the apple (= cost of goods sold)

The gross margin is sales minus cost of goods sold.

$ 6,- gross margin = 60% profit margin ($6/$ 10,-)

-$ 5,- renting fruit stand (= cost of selling or SGA costs)

Net profit margin is gross margin minus cost of selling (=Sales-COGS-SGA)

$ 1,- profit (=$10-$4-$5) is a net profit margin of 10% ($1,- / $10,-)

-------------------------------------------------
Now what happens when you lower profit margin ("the cash he gets to keep as a percentage of the total cash he takes in."

Day 2 Sell 1 orange for $20,- with a gross margin of 40% (the apple on day 1 had a gross margin of 60%)

$ 20,- received for selling 1 orange (= sales, revenue)
$ 12,- buying price of the orange (= cost of goods sold)

The gross margin is sales minus cost of goods sold.

$ 8,- gross margin = 40% of sales ($8/$ 20,-)

-$ 5,- renting fruit stand (=selling costs or SGA)

Net profit margin is gross margin minus cost of selling

$ 3,- profit over $20,- sales is net profit margin of 15%

By choosing the right product your net margin has gone up by half (from 10% to 15% even though your gross margin has decreased by a third (from 60% to 40%).

Day 3 Sell 2 kiwis for $10,- each with a gross margin of 40% (the apple on day 1 had a gross margin of 60%)

$ 10,- received for selling 1 kiwi (= sales, revenue)
-$ 6,- buying price of the kiwi (= cost of goods sold)

The gross margin is sales minus cost of goods sold.

$ 4,- gross margin for 1 kiwi = 40% of sales ($ 10,-)

-$ 2,50 renting fruit stand ($5,- / 2 kiwis)(=cost of sales)

Net profit margin is gross margin minus cost of selling

$ 1,5 profit over $10,- sales is net profit margin of 15%

Total profit is profit per kiwi x 2 = $ 1,5 x 2 = $ 3,- is 3x original profit.


E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

Buying for Margin (%) Rather than Assortment $ : Sears Kmart Lampert


"“notions” and curtain hook hangers were the highest margin items in the store"

Sears Holding (which includes Kmart) just posted a loss and another decline in same store sales. While Kmart thinks it makes the most profit on "notions" (zippers, buttons, buckles, snaps, charms and beads) because they have the highest gross profit percentage. Wal-Mart focuses on selling articles with higher values at higher turnover speeds.

I don't agree with the article below.

From Retail Systems Research: "Retailers are also using technology to focus on gross profit rather than just sales. Hence we see continued interest in price optimization and management software along with that which supports inventory localization and tools to measure what have become irregular patterns of behavior.
Retailers are also working with the most responsive merchandise vendors they can, which often translates into those vendors with the best infrastructure and optimal distribution network.
Once you’ve decreased all your spending, you find yourself into a very different philosophy. You stop trying to fill up the stores with merchandise and instead, you let unprofitable space stay empty. This brings us to Edward Lampert, an early adopter of this philosophy when he took over K-Mart. His philosophy was to stop growing the chain, and start growing margin. Early on, Wall Street rewarded him for this. We are fully aware that Mr. Lampert is not the most beloved CEO in retail, but in these times, his philosophy is not wholly without merit.
Mr. Hastings tells of taking a store tour in Kmart in 2003. Senior executives were talking about margin and expenses. It turns out that “notions” and curtain hook hangers were the highest margin items in the store. They made a huge contribution to pre-tax profit. Mr. Lampert’s philosophy was to maximize the inventory value of those peg hooks.

He believes “buying for gross margin” is here to stay.
A philosophy that was lurking on the periphery has been put into the center of the game for most retailers. It is worthy to note he believes Walmart is not adopting that philosophy. It doesn’t have to. While many retailers may believe it’s better to be out of stock than to take excess liquidation markdowns, Walmart can push much of that risk back on its vendors. Being big has its privileges. "


E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer@gmail.com

How Marks & Spencer can compete with the £28,- ALDI men's business suit

"Suits your wallet, Sir:" Aldi credit-crunch outfit for £28 from News of the World


The numbers: ALDI suit £ 28,- , margin estimate 15%. Marks&Spencer lowest price suit £ 49,50, margin estimate 45% (based on average gross profit of 41%) .

Margin per suit in pounds: Aldi £28 x 0,15 = £ 4,20, Marks & Spencer £49,50 x 0,45 = £ 22,28

The Contribution per suit is the margin in pounds x TOS. If Marks & Spencer goes toe to toe with ALDI, finds a supplier with a similar offer ands sells it to customers at the same price, than it will be making money if the suits sell 6 times faster than their present lowest offer. This can be calculated by dividing the absolute margin of the present Marks & Spencer suit by the margin of the ALDI suit: £ 22,28 / £ 4,20 = 5,3

If the suit sold 6 times faster the result would be a lower gross profit %, but much higher sales and thus lower costs expressed as a percentage of sales and a higher bottom line profit.

As always comments and criticism are welcome.

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

Dieter Brandes on pricing & planning at ALDI


Dieter Brandes was, over many years, a top manager at Aldi, Germany´s biggest and most successful supermarket retailer. He has written several bestselling books on leadership and management at Aldi, "consistently simple management" and better ways of controlling a business. Mr. Brandes is now a freelance consultant. Aldi, the company Mr. Brandes derives most of his advice from, has never used a budget and can be considered one of the most successful retail companies in the world. The company´s results have been outstanding, over decades.

Here's a discussion I had with him over E-mail , the document went back and for so it might be a bit difficult to read. Questions are welcome.

Dear Mr. Brandes,
Thank your for your time just now on the telephone.

A few years ago I contacted you via E-mail and asked you how ALDI calculates it’s selling prices.

Brandes „ Selling prices at ALDI are never based on a calculation.

Your answer was roughly: „ALDI has a 2 step method: First determine the lowest possible selling price. Then step two, see if you can lower the price even more.“

Brandes: „A third or actual first step is beating the direct competition’s price, because it looks good, to go as deep as possible compared to them, preferably 50% lower or even more.

That’s well put, but not a very clear guideline. Exactly how do you calculate what „as deep as possible „ is ? It has to add up. As you wrote "Marketprices just can’t be ignored. There are many retailers who in the past have used incorrect methods, calculations and ineffective cost allocations which have led them to price themselves out of the market and as a consequence out of business.“ (Dieter Brandes, Konsequent Einfach: Die ALDI Erfolgsstory, p. 156).

The normal non-food planning and evaluation method, which is based on the company achieving a gross margin % target, is in my opion, an example of an incorrect method and cost allocation. The founder of IKEA, Ingvar Kamprad, also described the limitations of the usual retail planning method: "Our pricing policy is fundamental. The stumbling block is when we price ourselves out of the market. Our economists constantly go on that we must keep our “total gross profit margin” to a certain percentage. I say to the economists, “What the hell is ‘percentage’ anyhow? ...after having been the subject of endless bickering for over a decade, in this respect we are beginning to wake up with a vengeance. That pleases me enormously."

Brandes: “Aldi has something like that - a rough guideline that results in a total gross profit margin, today roughly 15%, but this has absolutely nothing to do with the margin percentage of individual items. Sugar and milk are always very low.

But isn’t the “total gross margin” the average of the individual article. Isn’t that a link ?

Brandes: “ That’s correct. The total is that of the whole company and can be found in the “income statement”. Simply remember the following ( here in abbreviated form): You operate a particular business with a specific business model. In retail the major determining factor is your range. If that is clear, then you buy the right items that fit your business model as cheaply as possible and sell them at a price that matches your business model. This all happens on an existing space, which you cannot change. So what is the problem with margins, etc? I do not understand it. And that goes for food and textiles as well as for a car salesman.

Let me try to explain the problem of using a gross margin % target.

Existing retail planning methods using a sales and an average gross margin percentage target constantly lead to suboptimal decision making by buyers and merchandisers.

Brandes: “I recommend the following: do not see this margin percentage as a target, but as the actual current margin percentage of the last month or last year. At that margin we have made a good profit. If we could maintain this margin at the current level that would be good. We have the current buying prices and selling prices and a carefully chosen product mix with resulting sales. In practice, this is a relatively stable situation and changes are small. Perhaps there are more changes in the fashion sector, where the latest rage, seasons and buying in lots may play a role.

For example; a company has a gross margin target of 40% and costs are 35% of turnover.

Brandes: “In my opinion, this 35% is only the sum of costs on my income statement. It has (in principle) no other meaning or use in planning for individual items. When I would be generating 40% gross profit, I’d end up with a profit of 5%. That would be very good for a supermarket.

If a certain product sells better than expected and has a margin of 30% this has to be compensated to reach the 40% gross margin target.

Brandes: “NO. If this product sells very well - or sales are achieved in addition to ordinary sales, then the total sales revenue increases as well as the absolute margin in dollars. The gross margin percentage will dip slightly, and most probably the selling (SGA) costs as a percentage of sales will decline. So maybe 39% gross margin and 34% costs.

The decision might be to raise the price, to promote other products with margins above 40%, or to even stop selling the product.

Brandes: "Stop selling 'because the product makes a good turnover??? Increase the price only to meet a "target margin percentage" of 40%? That just can not be serious, can it ?”

The underlying assumption when using an average gross margin target is that products sold at a lower margin percentage than the average cost as a percentage of sales are not profitable.

But products with low gross margins can be very profitable if their selling price is higher and/or number of units sold is higher than comparable products.

Brandes: “All this has nothing to do with "comparable products" to make or with the level of "selling prices".
Products with below average gross margin percentages often increase the store's net profit margin (ie. Bottom line profit).

Brandes:” This can be true.
The costs are mainly the amount of space used and handling time for a certain product, not a fixed percentage of the selling price.

Brandes: “This is correct in principle. But in practice one can forget the costs of space and handling. It makes no sense to calculate and allocate these costs for all 10,000 products. If someone really wants to do some sums, then I suggest marginal costing and revenue.

Retail planning should be based on gross margin income in $ (per sq. meter) without an average gross margin % target.

Brandes: “Completely agree, especially if you’d please also omit the sq. meters.

Below I give a simple example of two identical stores that both sell 1 type of coat.
Joseph’s store sell’s coats with a low gross margin percentage and makes a profit. Voss’s store sells expensive coats with a gross margin percentage and is losing money. If you were to put the income statements of the stores together, than you would conclude (using the standard gross margin % paradigm) that Voss’s coats were somehow profitable.
Brandes: „We shall soon see, whether that is true.

This is followed by a simple method which will measure the coats actual contribution to bottom line profit.
Brandes: „Never contribution to profit, but only the contribution to the total margin in euros.

My question is, how would an ALDI buyer / merchandiser view this ? Which calculation would he or she make to QUANTIFY which coat contributes to the bottom line profit and which might be adjusted in price. How would you yourself decide which articles with a low gross margin percentage are profitable and which articles with a high gross margin % are loss makers?

Brandes: ”Such considerations are never employed. Also, it does not matter what an article contributes. The only question is: what must be in the range and what price should I set, so that it is highly interesting for the customers.”

See the following article

An unconventional idea and the unconventional management accounting behind it.

From the book Vier Generaties Snekerkring : "The year 1906...every clothing store in Amsterdam, including C&A, was targeting just 4% of the population. The remaining 96 per cent could not afford to buy from them. If you could include those 96% in your target group, you could cut your profit mark-up dramatically.

Even with a much lower margin, the far greater volume of sales would still boost the
bottom-line profit!

So it happened that C&A started offering coats of reasonable quality for no more than six guilders. ... It was a knock-out success. From day one the coats flew out the window.

Joseph was making a lot of money in his store. He even drove his nextdoor neighbour Voss out of business. The two stores, that were equally big, merged. When the profit and loss
statements were consolidated it suddenly seemed like the coats sold by Voss were more
profitable and the coats sold by Joseph were making a loss !

Brandes: ”That is wrong. Because it's always about Volume x Margin in euros. At the end we do need money, not margin in percentages. Otherwise I would only sell a single item for a margin of 99% - and selling just one unit would be enough.

I agree with you. Other retailers make the mistake of focussing on high margin %’s and GMROII. “Mr. Hastings tells of taking a store tour in Kmart in 2003. Senior executives were talking about margin and expenses. It turns out that “notions”(zippers, buttons, sewing materials) and curtain hook hangers were the highest margin items in the store… Mr. Lampert’s philosophy was to maximize the inventory value of those peg hooks.) ” and while working at C&A as a shoebuyer, I was given a list of the “most profitable” articles in my assortiment, it was just sorted by gross margin percentage starting with the highest, they were €5,- flipflops with a 90% margin, while we had sold just as many shoes at € 120,- with a margin of 45% in less time. Even at IKEA many managers made the same mistake of assuming that a high gross margin percentage always means that it is the most profitable product.

Brandes: “You are absolutely right. Nevertheless, I don’t care about the margins!! I have decided that flipflops are part of my range just as different shoes in different price ranges and qualities. After that I purchase the assortment and set the right price - and the margins like 90% and 45% are the result.(see above).

With the ALDI calculation, Volume x Margin in euros, you find that pairs of designers jeans with a price of € 100,- and a margin of € 20,- with 5 pairs sold, contribute more to the total margin than polyester pants for € 10,- with a margin of €5,- of which 10 pairs are sold.

Brandes:. "Right. But both are in my inventory. One cannot say that we won’t sell polyester pants, because the absolute margin is low (but 50%). Or, we don’t sell designer jeans, because the gross margin percentage is only 20%. Playing around with these numbers is not worthwhile."

A retailer might say: ”It costs us 35% to sell an item in our store at this location and with our present staff levels, the designer jeans aren’t making us money, the polyester pants with their higher margins are profitable.”

Brandes:”Such a retailer cannot survive in the market. They couldn’t run any kind of business, because they do not understand even the basic 1 x 1 of business administration - or to put in another way, no reasonable ordinary person or businessman would think such nonsense, except probably for someone who didn’t pay attention at Harvard and was subsequently deformed by McKinsey.

Back to the story of Joseph and Voss’s coats:

When considered by conventional retail accounting where the profit mark-up percentage has to be higher than the percentage of costs, new management might have made the wrong decisions for the future.

Let's look at Joseph's numbers:

C&A store selling Josef's black coats
$6,- selling price per coat
-$4,-buying price per coat
--------------------------
$2,- margin or $2/$6 = 33,3% profit margin
50 000 coats sold in one year
$100 000,- gross profit ($2, x 50 000)
-$50 000,- store rent
-$25 000,- labor and staff costs
---------------
$25 000,- bottom line profit

Voss was making a loss with his more expensive coats with a higher profit markup. Let's consider his profit & loss statement.

Voss's store selling expensive coats
$12,- selling price per coat
-$6,- buying price
-------------------
$6,- margin or $6/$12= 50% profit margin
10 000 coats sold in one year
$60 000,- gross profit ($6, x 10 000)
-$50 000,- store rent
-$20 000,- labor and staff costs
---------------
-$10 000,- bottom line LOSS

Consolidated store profit & loss

$ 420 000,- Total sales
-$260 000,- Buying price
-------------------------
$160 000,- Margin, 38% gross profit ($160 000/$420 000,-)
-$100 000,- Rent
-$ 45 000,- Labor and staff costs, 35% selling costs ($ 145 000/$ 420 000,-
--------------------------
$ 15 000,- Bottom line profit

Stores plan their average gross margin % based on their past performance, goals and
expectations for the period ahead.
If a store in a certain year had a gross margin percentage of 38% of sales and the selling costs of running the store were 35% of sales, the net margin would be 3,5%.

For most companies this would be unacceptable, a consultant might be called in and a decision might be made to increase the gross margin percentage from 38% to 40% of sales.

The product mix contains 2 products:
Joseph's coats with a profit mark-up of 33,3% and Voss's coats with a profit mark-up of 50%.

Which coat is contributing more to the store's profits ?

Brandes: “This is my answer. Cost allocations are "inadmissible". How do you actually want to do this with 10,000 articles?
You wrote:“It’s always about Volume x Margin in euros.” that’s easy to calculate for 10.000 articles, not the cost allocation but the contribution to the total profit margin.

Brandes: „Yes, the profit contribution can be measured, if you would really find that necessary. Why? Because it's fun? Therefore, my recommendation: do not employ people in staff positions and close down the controlling department.


With a simple addition you can calculate the following for 10 000 or 200 000 articles (SKU’s) in a store.

(Units sold x Margin in euros) / Stock = Income per unit in stock

Or expressed in another formula
$Margin x TOS = Income per unit in stock
$Margin=selling price - buying price
TOS = Turn Over Speed = units sold per year / average stock

Brandes: “I can understand the formulas. But I do not see why I need the TOS. I have a separate goal for my buyers, they must reach the lowest possible inventory while satisfying demand. Low storage costs will be a result. This has little to do with sales and margins.

But if you have 1 000 units of one article in stock and 15 000 of another article, you should be selling selling more of the second article.
Brandes: “Yes, but only if everything must be sold (sellout). On the other hand, if there is a constant resupply of a certain kind of sock it isn’t relevant. You should only be interested in whether the stocks have been well planned.

ALDI's method of comparing articles: contribution margin based calculation
Brandes: Below it is quite clear that Joseph contributes 62.50% to earnings and Voss only 37,50%. At this point, you should stop calculating. This is the final result, the only one we need. The key remains your choice of store concept: low-cost or luxury provider, or both.


Item_________Margin as % of total sales_______Contribution to margin

Joseph's coats____23,81%_______________________62,50%

Voss's coats______14,29%_______________________37,50%

Total_____________38,10%_______________________100,00%


That’s clear, but it only works because both coats are using the same amount of space (ie. have the same number of units in stock).
Brandes: „It’s always right , depending on the store concept.. And furthermore, are both companies one trick ponies , only selling one style of coat ?

Remember Joseph's coats are marked up at 33,3% and the store's costs are 35% of sales, while Voss's coats are marked up at 50%. It looks like Joseph's coats are loss leaders, because the margin is lower than the cost of selling. If you were part of the buying merchandising team how could you help increase the gross margin percentage ? What would happen if a buyer suggested replacing Voss's coats by more even more expensive coats with a profit mark-up of 25%?

Joseph realized there was no link between an article's gross profit markup percentage and it's bottom line contribution (boost).

He calculated how you can cut your profit mark-up dramatically and even with a much lower margin, still boost the bottom-line profit !

His management accounting system (similar to GMROS) was based on allocating costs not as a percentage of sales but by coats in stock.

Brandes: “This is where the calculation should be stopped, because it is illogical. You should think of using contribution margin-based pricing, but go no further. What is the contribution of each article (units sold x margin in euros) to the general expenses (rent, etc.). I haven’t even looked at your method described below, I won’t take it into consideration. Buyers must also forget the costs of the store. They don’t have anything to do with the contribution of a coat.

In the calculation below, I have at your request gotten rid of the cost allocation, it doesn’t change the conclusions.

For every coat in stock you could calculate the BOTTOM LINE CONTRIBUTION. Income.

Income per coat = $Margin x TOS
$Margin=selling price - buying price
TOS = Turn Over Speed = units sold per year / average stock

Both stores were the same size and could present 1 000 coats on the shopfloor.

The consolidated store thus presented 2 000 coats, 1 000 of Joseph's and 1 000 of Voss's.

Income per coat = $margin x TOS
Joseph's coats = ($6-$4) x 50 000/1 000 = $2 x 50 = $ 100,- /coat/year

Voss's coats = $12-$6 x 10 000/1 000 = $6 x 10 = $ 60,- / coat/year

Total bottom line contribution = SUM of CONTRIBUTIONS ($ 100 x 1 000 coats) + ( $60 x 1 000) = $ 160 000,-

When Joseph (and later generations of Brenninkmeijers) used Income BOTTOM LINE CONTRIBUTION calculations, they could make the right decisions and leave the competition who listened to consultants in the dust.

Consider for example the buyer who suggested stocking expensive coats at a 25% profit
markup, eventhough last years costs were 35% of sales.

The buyer suggested selling coats for $ 24,- which had been bought for $ 18,-. (The competition sold similar coats at a 50% profit markup for $ 36,-).

What would happen if they replaced Voss's coats with these more expensive but lower margin "Keurklas" coats.

Income per coat = $margin x TOS = ($margin x Units sold) / Stock

How fast do I have to sell the "Keurklas" coats to beat the Voss coat's contribution?
TOS = Income per coat / $margin

The $margin is $24-$18=$6
TOS (Turn Over Speed) = $ 60 (Voss) / $ 6,- = 10 turns per year needed to add more contribution than Voss's coats.

Joseph decides to order a few of the coats and sell them as a test. They sell at a TOS of 15.

Contribution Income = $margin x TOS = ($6 x 15) = $90,- euros per coat per year

He replaces the 1000 Voss coats in stock (50% profit markup) with 1000 Keurklas coats (25% profit markup).

Bottom line profit = SUM of BOTTOM LINE CONTRIBUTIONS ($ 100 x 1 000 coats) + (+$90 x 1000) = $ 190 000,-

--------------------------------
Profit and loss statement Joseph + Keurklas coats

$ 660 000,- Total sales
-$470 000,- Buying price
-------------------------
$ 190 000,- Margin, 29% gross profit ($190 000/660 000)
-$100 000,- Rent
-$ 45 000,- Labor and staff costs, 22% selling costs ($ 145 000/$ 660 000,-)
--------------------------
$ 45 000,- Bottom line profit, 7% margin ! ($45 000,-/$660 000,-)


E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

It's not whether you have a high or low margin, it's the rules you use to play the game.



ALDI plays by different rules than most retailers, instead of using a cost plus planning system with an average gross margin percentage goal, they use contribution margin-based pricing.

Trader Joe's which seems to be a totally different company probably uses the same system when making assortiment decisions.

LIDL: I don't have a clue.

Primark: I don't know.

HEMA uses cost plus pricing with a gross margin % target, I used to work there in 2000 and they are still using SAP Retail Solution, which is based on the Retail Inventory Method.

Sears, K-Mart use cost plus pricing with a gross margin % target substantially higher than Wal-Mart's and in practice focus on high GM% and GMROII.

Wal-Mart uses cost plus pricing within the constraint of having lower prices than competitors. They have lowered average gross margin targets from 30% to 22% and have no plans to increase them. It is probably just a coincidence that Wal-Mart went bust in Germany where ALDI is strong and that ALDI is growing in the US, but it might have to do with the difference in their ability to "see" the bottom line contribution that a single SKU delivers.

COSTCO has lower prices than Wal-Mart and uses cost plus pricing (10% margin) with extra income derived from membership fees.

Megacorp and Good Old Company both used contribution models, then in the fifties switched to the Retail Inventory Method and used a mix, at the end of the nineties they were a pure play cost plus operation and now use a bit of both.

IKEA ignores the cost plus, gross margin target rules to a great extent. In practice when merchandising, setting prices and deciding on assortment cuts and additions they use contribution margin based systems. But the textbooks and manuals they have lying around are still based on cost plus pricing and a precise company wide gross margin target is still set.

Ahold and most other supermarket chains use a mix of systems known as Category Management.

Comments, criticism and especially additions to this list are more than welcome !

E-mail: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) cs.com

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Jarno Smeets : Dreamer or marketeer?

Google translate version of Humo article by Belgian journalist who spoke with "Jarno Smeets" a few weeks ago.

It was a nice story: a young Dutchman wanted with homemade wings into the air. I found the video at the website of Wired: A young man with a big kite sail on the back, half a second in the sky.



At the very end I plug my headphones in and, surprise: guy who speaks Dutch. Interesting.
The plan of Jarno Smeets is with homemade wings into the air. His wings are of kite sail. The frame of its wings is made of carbon. Two electric motors provide the necessary strength to lift off to get. His LinkedIn profile: graduated from the University of Coventry as a mechanical engineer, previous job at an engineering company in Coventry, now working for Philips in Eindhoven as a technical engineer.

Dreamers are fun. Dreamers with a game plan and the technical know how to carry it out are even more fun. So I contact Jarno Smeets. His website is already a year or so. On his Twitter feed, he equally long contact with do-it-yourselfers and technology journalists from around the world. The technology he describes in a video diary looks implausible. On his website is an interview of himself with Bert Otten, a Dutch professor at the University of Groningen. Who says what you're trying is difficult but technically feasible. The Wired mathematician who finds release in the problem: theoretically feasible with modern technology.

So I drive on a bitter cold morning to The Hague. There, in a warehouse in the port of Den Haag, I see the kite sail hanging on the carbon framework. It sketches hang on the wall, and a picture of Jarno's grandfather, the inventor who already wanted in air with a home-built helicopter - albeit one that works on pedal power.

(Picture we took for the HUMO article)

We briefly talk about the non-believers on the Internet, who think that the movie was created with CGI, computer generated imagery. I find it quite plausible themselves look - all in all he is only fifty centimeters into the air. Jarno laughs off the allegations. Nonsense.

It will take hard work to really to get airborne, from Jarno explains in the interview. His canvas is a bit broken. And his six-month sabbatical will end soon: it's back to Philips.
The piece appears in HUMO a week or two later, which we leave in the middle or Jarno ever really will fly or not. Another month later I get the morning Email. "I did it", it says. "I have flown." I see the movie: it shows how Jarno takes a long lead and suddenly comes off the ground.

The news travels fast around: Wired, Business Insider, express.be bring the news that Smeets is the world's first man who has successfully flown as a bird. Jarno I would call for a reaction, but I can not catch him. It gnaws me: last time for someone who has emphasized how much work it would be to really get to airborne, it flies remarkably smoothly. And high and far. His landing is perfect - there Tom Waes can still eat your heart out. Weird. Still stranger: YouTube does the title of this movie "part 14 or 14" (watch that video below). The previous movie "part 13 or 14 '. How could he know that last time the next movie would be his last?




Some specialists in CGI (computer generated imagery) view the movie with the successful flight. They see no trace of CGI, as many kritikasters on the Internet claim. But that does not say anything, they say it could also be that Jarno is hung from a crane, and that the wire rope of the crane is then erased in post production. The quality of the movie is bad anyway.

I call Philips and Pailton engineering, according to two companies where he has worked his LinkedIn profile. "Mr. Smeets works here as far as we can not figure out," is at Philips. At Pailton they are somewhat harder: "I ​​can confirm Jarno Smeets That has never worked for Pailton either in England or in Germany. The MD has been here for 15 years and does not know him and the technical director for just longer and does not know him. Also He has never worked for us under any contract or sub contract role. If he claims to have Worked here he needs to show some evidence Such As a pay slip, or a contract or letter as from us. "

We try Jarno Smeets several days to reach for a reaction, but in vain. Even the repeated attempts to contact the Dutch professional failed. Jarno's flight was a publicity stunt? Wii, or Red Bull or the maker of kite sailing? Or is it a hoax of a young man with a lot of time? No idea. There is even a minimal risk that the film is real. The website "tested.com" allows an expert to the word that says the flight of Jarno about him quite possible. But for now seems to be the final score: non-believers 1, dreamers 0.

End.

(April 1st in Holland is written 1/4 not 4/1 like in the US)


Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Tweets written by Roald Dahl in Danny the Champion of the World

Excerpt from Danny The Champion of the World, page 105.

"Ours was just a small village school, a squat ugly red-brick building with no upstairs rooms at all. Above the front door was a big grey block of stone cemented into the brickwork, and on the stone it said, THIS SCHOOL WAS ERECTED IN 1902 TO COMMEMORATE THE CORONATION OF HISROYAL HIGHNESS KING EDWARD VII. I must have read that thing a thousand times. Every time I went in the door it hit me in the eye. I suppose that’s what it was there for. But it’s pretty boring to read the same old words over and over again, and

I often thought how nice it would be if they put something different up there every day, something really interesting.

My father would have done it for them beautifully. He could have written it with a bit of chalk on the smooth grey stone and each morning itwould have been something new. He would have said things like,

DID YOU KNOW THAT THE LITTLE YELLOW CLOVER BUTTERFLY OFTEN CARRIES HIS WIFE AROUND ON HIS BACK?

Another time he might have said,

THE GUPPY HAS FUNNY HABITS. WHEN HE FALLS IN LOVE WITH ANOTHER GUPPY, HE BITES HER ON THE BOTTOM.

And another time,

DID YOU KNOW THAT THE DEATH’S-HEAD MOTH CAN SQUEAK?

And then again,

BIRDS HAVE ALMOST NOSENSE OF SMELL. BUT THEY HAVE GOOD EYESIGHT AND THEY LOVE RED COLOURS.THE FLOWERS THEY LIKE ARE RED AND YELLOW, BUT NEVER BLUE.

And perhaps another time he would get out his chalk and write,

SOME BEES HAVE TONGUES WHICH THEY CAN UNROLL UNTIL THEY ARE NEARLY TWICE AS LONG AS THE BEE ITSELF. THIS IS TO ALLOW THEM TO GATHER NECTAR FROM FLOWERS THAT HAVE VERY LONG NARROW OPENINGS.

Or he might have written,

I’LL BET YOU DIDN’T KNOW THAT IN SOME BIG ENGLISH COUNTRY HOUSES, THE BUTLER STILL HAS TO IRON THE MORNING NEWSPAPER BEFORE PUTTING IT ON HIS MASTER’S BREAKFAST-TABLE "


Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Fotos van Barbel 1973-2011







Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Sunday, May 08, 2011

Gaggle app for paragliding , cool for Layar Augmented Reality?


I was in Andelsbuch last week flying with Joost Krantz and Maurik Paragliding.


Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

A year after hearing about the Technological Singularity

A year ago I heard Ray Kurzweil on a BBC radio interview. I wrote down some thoughts at the time.

A year later it seems, that the concept is getting a bit more mainstream. (Of course a BBC interview is already mainstream). In 2010 and in 2011 this year, the Singularity has been discussed many times in the New York Times, Time magazine had a cover article , etc.
Forbes has a blog "Robot Overlords" devoted to the subject. But few people (in Amsterdam) have heard of the concept.

What I didn't expect was an astounding AI demonstration like IBM Watson...



Another important development are the Microsoft Kinect Hacks (for robots) : See this parody Kinect Self-Awareness Hack

It is interesting to note that people do think in a linear fashion and can't get to grips with exponential progress. An example is Paul Allen who in his 2011 autobiography Idea Man wrote:
"Though I won't say that a singularity is impossible, I believe that it is centuries away at best...It took forty years to develop a computer chess program that could consistently beat the best human players,"

That shows me that he is thinking in roughly equal steps: 40 years to do this, 40 years to do that, 40 years for the next thing after that, etc = centuries. In exponential thinking if each step takes 1/2 the time of the previous step, you a get totally different scenerio. That is acceleration. Things should only get really interesting around 2025, when computers are more than 10 000 times faster than IBM Watson today.









Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

The world's most expensive exercise machines. The 0 minute a day workout.

In February I test drove Paul van der Meer's pimped TWIKE in Amsterdam. Basically the TWIKE (TWin bIKE) is a car with 2 hometrainers built-in.

Now while writing a blog on it and looking for "human electric hybrid" on Google, I've come across the Human Car. A car for four oarsmen !


Both machines are in my perception competitors to the ROM exercise machine. You use the TWIKE and Human Car in time you would otherwise be commuting anyway. That makes them, the 0 minute exercise machines.


and they are the opposite of the Fatmobiles: The motorized wheelchair shopping carts that gigantically fat people use at the grocery store because they are too fat and lazy to walk.


Many people are suffering from Diseases of Affluence and Wikipedia lists "Less strenuous physical exercise, often through increased use of a car." as the first cause.

So remember www.facebook.com/pages/Youre-fat-not-disabled-Get-off-the-motorized-shopping-carts and take a Twike or Human Car for a drive instead!

Watch this POV video of the TWIKE on the open road.


Comments, questions or E-mails welcome: ajbrenninkmeijer (a) gmail.com