David Senra Profile picture
Dec 13, 2023 1 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger said Les Schwab was one of the best founders they studied.

"A true fanatic."

16 ideas from his autobiography:

1. Intensity is the price of excellence —Warren Buffett

"I am 68 years old now.

And I've run it in overdrive my whole life.

I've always wanted to be the best tire dealer, not necessarily the largest tire dealer."

2. The people serving your customers are the most important people in your company:

"We have had some people in the office that sometimes think they are more important than the stores.

The office serves only one purpose, and that is to serve the stores.

Some of our office people sometimes wonder about this.

But I’ve warned them, don’t BITCH to me because that is the way I want it.

If you want to go out and start at the bottom changing tires and work into a manager job, then hop right to it.

If it weren’t for those men in the stores working their butts off in all kinds of weather, missing meals, God awful hours, etc. you wouldn’t even have a job."

3. If you’re not serving the customer, or supporting the folks who do, we don’t need you. —Sam Walton

"Let the people at the store level know you are behind them.

They are the ones who make you successful, not the person in a nice office who has nothing to do today but to send out another DAMN directive.

If it doesn't help the store, tear it up and tell the office to go to hell."

4. There are no shortcuts around quality and quality starts with people. —Steve Jobs

"People are the success of our company.

Most anyone can sell tires.

The only difference between a Les Schwab Tire Centre and most any tire dealership is the people working there."

5. Be unselfish for good reasons.

"We share 50% of our profits with all the employees in the store.

My thinking has always been if I give away half the profits I still have half.

If I share $10 million with people I still have $10 million left over. I don’t understand why businessmen can’t do this.

It is being unselfish for good reasons.

It helps a lot of people."

6. Helping people succeed in life provides deep satisfaction:

"Success in life is being a good husband, a good father and you end up being a second father to hundreds of other men and women.

Last night I attended a wedding of a young man from our office.

This young man told me that two men had influenced his life, his father and me.

That’s worth more than money."

7. Promote from within —There’s no problem you can’t solve if you know your business from A to Z.

"In our 34 years of business, we have never hired a manager from the outside, nor have we ever hired an assistant manager directly to that job.

Every single one of our more than 250 managers and assistant managers started at the bottom changing tires.

They have all earned their management jobs by working up."

8. Most businesses are poorly run. If you're on the ball you can beat them.

"We are different from most American corporations.

We think the most important people in the company are the people on the firing line; the ones who sell, do the service work and take care of the customer.

Most American corporations have the fat salaries for the top people and treat the people at the end of the line as peons.

I guess that is why, if you are on the ball, you can beat them on any type of fair competitive basis."

9. Decision making should always be made at the lowest possible level:

"A company starts, it grows, and as it grows, more and more of the decision making moves to the main office.

And this is one hell of a big mistake.

The decision making should always be made at the lowest possible level.

Give your manager the authority to make his own daily decisions, under certain guidelines of course, but let him run his show."

10. You can innovate by doing the exact opposite of your competitors

"Most tire businesses had a small showroom and all the tires were hidden in the warehouse.

My thinking was to reverse —to make the showroom the warehouse."

(All of his competitors quickly copied his idea)

11. Never, ever, think about something else when you should be thinking about the power of incentives.—Charlie Munger. Sharing profits with employees =less theft from within:

"Now that we share with all people, if any one employee sees another employee steal they are a weak kitten if they don’t report it.

Why?

Because this man is stealing from them, from his children.

If he won’t fight for his children, he can’t be very much.

For a company as large as ours we have very little dishonesty."

12. Pay the highest wages possible

"Their company paid low wages and had a lower overhead.

The flaw was they didn’t get —with the low pay— near the quality of employees we had."

(This competitor went bankrupt)

13. Get out of your office

"If the store manager runs his store right, he doesn't have to spend hours and hours looking at the office reports; if he's doing okay the records will show it.

In fact if he spends too much time in his office it is a sure thing his store will suffer.

Sell tires, give service, keep expenses low, keep good communications with employees, be careful with credit, watch for leaks —do these things and you'll come out all right."

14. *Stay* out of your office

"Stay out of a store for 30 days and you've forgotten 50 percent of what you know."

15. Once you get on the ball, *stay* on the ball. As Sam Walton said: We just got after it and *stayed* after it.

"If we think there is a free lunch, if we rely on last year's results, then this company will turn the corner, too, and then we too will start down the hill.

And once you start down, it is mighty hard to turn around.

If we become complacent, BROTHER, it's all over with."

16. There’s a rule they don’t teach you at Harvard Business School. It is: If anything is worth doing, it’s worth doing to excess. —Edwin Land

"Whatever you do, you must do it with gusto, you must do it in volume.

It is a case of repeat, repeat, repeat."

--
The sign of a true fanatic. Didn't even have time to cut his hair. Too busy selling tires....Image

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More from @FoundersPodcast

Dec 16, 2024
New podcast with my friend @ChrisWillx on 15 recurring traits of history’s greatest founders:

1. Excellence is the capacity to take pain.

2. Problems are just opportunities in work clothes.

3. There are ideas worth billions in a $30 history book.

4. Relationships run the world.

5. You can always understand the son by the story of his father. The story of the father is embedded in the son.

6. Actions express priority.

7. Bad boys move in silence.

8. Belief comes before ability.

9. By endurance we conquer.

10. If you know your business from A to Z there is no problem you can’t solve.

11. The public praises people for what they practice in private.

12. Self pity has no utility.

13. The good ones know more.

14. Money comes naturally as a result of service.

15. If you love what you do the only exit strategy is death.

The episode contains stories and examples from each one.

Chris is one of the hardest working podcasters I know and one of my favorite people.

Our stories are remarkably similar, grinding away on a podcast for years with little to show for it, refusing to give up, and finally breaking through a half decade later.

Hope you listen to the episode!Image
We are going to run this back every year with more maxims and stories for each one.

I’ve collected almost 100. You can find more in the replies here:
Read 4 tweets
Jan 18, 2022
Ed Thorp's life story is remarkable

He founded the first quantitative hedge fund, made the first wearable computer with Claude Shannon, met a 38 year old Warren Buffett, had great relationships with his family, and took care of his health

12 ideas from his autobiography:
1. Only play games where you have an edge:
2. Learn to teach yourself so you can think differently
Read 16 tweets
Jan 17, 2022
I read 66 biographies last year

Here are 10 you should read!
1/

Larry went from dropout to the richest person in Utah, sacrificing his health and family relationships along the way

He wrote this autobiography as he was dying —he wanted to warn future entrepreneurs

He said his story is a "cautionary tale"

amazon.com/Driven-Autobio…
2/

Chuck Feeney made $8 billion and gave it all away while he was still alive

A gifted entrepreneur who secretly created a cash flow machine and insisted on living life on his terms

amazon.com/Billionaire-Wh…
Read 13 tweets
Jan 12, 2022
22 pieces of advice for entrepreneurs from Steve Jobs:
1. Recruiting is your most important job.

2. Figure out who the really smart people are and hang around them.

3. You must find extraordinary people.

4. A small team of A players will run circles around large teams of B and C players.
5. Build an environment where talented people feel they are surrounded by equally talented people.

6. Your employees must feel that their work will have tremendous influence. You do that by having a strong, clear vision.
Read 11 tweets
Jan 11, 2022
Book thread

5 key lessons from Churchill by Paul Johnson:
1. Build your own personal curriculum

Churchill did not do well in school

His father called him an academic failure

But Churchill loved language — he read everything he could get his hands on

He worked hard at being a great writer
No one in history worked harder at being a great public speaker

He made over $50 million from writing books and his speeches are still quoted half a century later

His father did not live long enough to see how wrong he was
Read 9 tweets
Dec 30, 2021
Siggi Wilzig survived Auschwitz, arrived in America with $200, and died 50 years later worth hundreds of millions

A thread on what I learned from reading Unstoppable: Siggi Wilzig’s Astonishing Journey from Auschwitz Survivor and Penniless Immigrant to Wall Street Legend:
When Siggi was 14 he was forced by Nazis to work in a factory 12 hours a day, 7 days a week

Two years later they tell him to go home and pack a bag

He goes home

Every Jewish person in his neighborhood is pulled out onto the street
His entire family is forced from their home and told to get on a train

There is a little girl in a green coat who was separated from her family

Siggi takes her by the hand and stays with her during the trip

They arrive at Auschwitz

Guards separate everyone into two lines
Read 17 tweets

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