Well its 2:15 a.m.; our 10 month old daughter is just starting to sleep thru the night and what do we do? Go out today and buy a 9 week old dog... DUH!
RE the all or nothing approach. IF after all these years the rapport and support is not there from your loyal customers, that you couldnt not maintain them in a dual market environment, is not saying much for the goodwill established over the years.
Re timing: I think the CWB will get the same amount of time that farmers had to adapt to the WGTA going down the tubes - 8 months from the announcement to the reality.
IF the family farm had to adapt that quickly, i see no reason that the CWB, with all the years of goodwill built up, the best sales team, the best BOD, the best wheat, the best grading system, the best protein and the best record of defending the family farm, be possibly scared of going head-to-head with a grain company.
Or is it maybe that those same companies now complete 85% of the sales and the sales are actually THEIR customers and the goodwill is owned by the same companies not the CWB.
Its been 10 years since I've seen company sales stats- and alot can change in 10 years.
IN 5 years, i have a wife, two kids and a frikkin dog...
I don't buy into the "all or nothing" theory. As I've said previous, if the barley experiment would have been allowed to pass, you wouldnt be in this mess today. And where are the people who enacted that strategy today?
not in this business...
think about that this Sabbath!
RE the all or nothing approach. IF after all these years the rapport and support is not there from your loyal customers, that you couldnt not maintain them in a dual market environment, is not saying much for the goodwill established over the years.
Re timing: I think the CWB will get the same amount of time that farmers had to adapt to the WGTA going down the tubes - 8 months from the announcement to the reality.
IF the family farm had to adapt that quickly, i see no reason that the CWB, with all the years of goodwill built up, the best sales team, the best BOD, the best wheat, the best grading system, the best protein and the best record of defending the family farm, be possibly scared of going head-to-head with a grain company.
Or is it maybe that those same companies now complete 85% of the sales and the sales are actually THEIR customers and the goodwill is owned by the same companies not the CWB.
Its been 10 years since I've seen company sales stats- and alot can change in 10 years.
IN 5 years, i have a wife, two kids and a frikkin dog...
I don't buy into the "all or nothing" theory. As I've said previous, if the barley experiment would have been allowed to pass, you wouldnt be in this mess today. And where are the people who enacted that strategy today?
not in this business...
think about that this Sabbath!
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