To: The Board of Directors, Our RFP Response (Markets), Part X
In this our second post regarding markets we are not pursuing the resolution of any issues such as we discussed in the Resource Marketplace module of our prior post. An issue that needs to be addressed and resolved in order to attain a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry. The Financial and Petroleum Lease Marketplace will also implement the market's organizational structures into the Preliminary Specification and provide the organized interface necessary to access and interact within these markets of the oil and gas industry as they exist and evolve. Modules in which the full transactional power of the Preliminary Specifications ERP system supports the activities within these markets. We’ll also briefly discuss the Marketplace Interface that we’re building as I believe the virus provides the opportunity to adjust one's opinion to the use of this feature. I have suffered the slings and arrows, the ridicule for it in the past and there is not much that can stand in disagreement to what I haven’t already heard. In my opinion it is revolutionary and needs to be seen in the context of the changes that occurred in 2020.
The Petroleum Lease Marketplace module is as one could imagine. An opportunity to post, bid, purchase, sell mineral rights and producing properties in the marketplace that exists and is replicated virtually within the Petroleum Lease Marketplace module. Everything from the opportunity to participate in a joint venture to establishing the surface rights payments is fully supported by the ERP system of the Preliminary Specification. Our product sits on top of Oracle ERP Cloud which includes their tier 1, Oracle Fusion Applications that Gartner rates as the highest quality offering. These oil and gas markets include the data of the Federal, State, Provincial, Freehold and Offshore leases. An opportunity for industry to consolidate on a dynamic platform which uses proven tier 1 technologies with the constant support of the service providers maintaining transaction administration and accounting in a standard and objective manner. (Note: People, Ideas & Objects have maintained the policy, and it is written into the user community and service provider licenses. That we will maintain arm’s length distance from all royalty administrations. We are operating in the best interests of the oil and gas industry. To ensure that they are provided with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. There will be no compromise on this anywhere within this sub-industry.) This will be enhanced with the constant iterative design and development being undertaken by People, Ideas & Objects user community and developers on a permanent basis. Whereas if a jurisdiction reviewed and changed their royalty rates at some point, in terms of either the rate or method calculated, producers would not need to concern themselves with the administrative or accounting aspects of those changes. The user community, developers and service providers would have them covered and implement the necessary changes in the software and services in a timely and accurate manner. Producers would only need to deal with the issues regarding the revised costs of the royalty.
Administration and accounting are not competitive advantages of the producer firms. Thankfully that is one of the statements that we’ve received no pushback on. That doesn’t mean that these areas have to be a hodge podge, slapped together system that only makes do. There’s no reason why the industry shouldn’t have achieved state of the art ERP systems within their firms. That producers haven’t had state of the art ERP systems has led to many questioning not only the integrity of the accounting but also the systems that are being used by industry. Why? And why is it that the issue of overproduction, or as we define it as unprofitable production, can be documented to have existed in the North American marketplace back as far as July 26, 1986? The solution we propose to the overproduction issue, in addition to aligning all of these organizational constructs, but not the bureaucracy, has been available since December 2013. We documented the directors and officers liability throughout 2020 and these still stand today. Investors today are unhappy and becoming litigious. There is significant personal risk involved to the officers and directors, and People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service providers are offering a value proposition that makes the Preliminary Specification the best investment a producer can make. In terms of markets, it is alleged that there is double the amount of oil needed up until 2050. This capacity overhang forces the North American high cost producer to assume the swing producer role. To produce only profitable production. Saudi Arabia has production costs of $3 and probably $0.00 capital costs therefore can produce profitably at literally any price. They could use the money and the markets in 2050 are too far away and unpredictable for them to sit back and wait for. Let's call that the reality of the situation.
In terms of marketplace modules, there is the Financial Marketplace module. As with the Resource Marketplace module we see many changes in this oil and gas marketplace. Which I would think producers would welcome at this point as financing is next to impossible. Moving to the Joint Operating Committee as the key Organizational construct of the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable producer is achieved in the Preliminary Specification. You’ll recall in Part VII of this series we noted that the movement of the knowledge to where the decision rights were held, which is the Joint Operating Committee, enhances accountability. It's here that the Financial Marketplace enhances that accountability with the board of directors' interaction with their current and prospective shareholders and bankers. A review of the Financial Marketplace modules specification would be the best source of information to capture an overall understanding of the module. If we also recall the discussion we had in Part VIII of this series regarding the standard and objective nature of the accounting that is conducted throughout the Preliminary Specification and the service providers. Consider if that would satisfy some of the issues that investors and bankers have raised regarding their investments and loans in the industry? Where everything being produced is profitable and the producers are seeking to maximize their profits by shutting in unprofitable production. Would People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and service providers be helping producers satisfy their shareholders and bankers to the point where they’d begin investing in the industry again? We hope that this enhanced accountability is not one of the reasons that the Preliminary Specification was not accepted in the industry? Sanctimonious questions I know, but that is what this environment and the relationship between People, Ideas & Objects and the bureaucrats has become.
Hokey graphics aside, the demos for the Marketplace Interface were prepared by the underlying technologies that are available to us. These were also prepared almost a decade ago. Much has developed in the technological environment since. There are many points that I would argue that are different today than were at the beginning of 2020. They include.
- The work from anywhere and its enhanced productivity of employees.
- The co-mingling of professional and personal lives, the deduction of redundant travel times and archaic rituals has had a marked increase in the performance of white collar workers engaged over a 12 to 14 hour day.
- Zoom induced hell. (The demand to always be on camera.)
- Turning cameras off for peace of mind is now a necessity to this ball and chain. All to satisfy one’s immediate supervisor's demand for command and control through continuous mandatory attendance.
- The lack of ERP tool support availability.
- Search, contracting, buying, selling, financing, billing, paying, marketing etc. What is currently being done in the ERP area of oil and gas vs what could be done could not be more stark. Oil and gas is in the dark ages.
- Proliferation of bots.
- Both good and bad. Note, Oracle’s Cloud ERP now has “good” bots that fight the “bad” bots that may be attempting to get in.
- Always there capability.
- The establishment of permanent, virtual real estate for your bots and organization.
Looking at the establishment of IT in other industries where technology has been embraced we can ask some interesting questions. Why is there such volume on the stock exchanges today? What are all those algorithms doing? It’s been more than two decades that they’ve existed. How is it that NASA, Ford and GM can all be collectively outperformed by Elon Musk? And how is it that oil and gas is generally, and rightly regarded as having many of the best science and engineering Information Technology available to it. Yet its business is about to be thrown on the trash heap of history?
The only solution as it stands today, from a creative destruction and disintermediation point of view, is People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service provider organizations implementation of the Preliminary Specification. The natural forces of disintermediation and creative destruction are being obstructed through the diversion of industry revenues away from the development of initiatives such as the Preliminary Specification. And therefore are unnecessarily directly supporting the status quo behaviors that have been proven to be disastrous.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations, everywhere and always. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. We’ve joined GETTR and can be reached there. Anyone can contact me at 713-965-6720 in Houston or 587-735-2302 in Calgary, or email me here.