How Will People, Ideas & Objects Achieve Success, Part I
A quick comment before we begin our post today. We see in the increasing commodity prices of this past week the commensurate increase in the value of producers shares. This is also the bureaucrats “muddle through” strategies' big payoff. Actually their only payoff. Their dividend is the reduction in any pressure to act to fix the underlying overproduction or other difficulties that should be addressed in the business. The only concern at this point, as far as the bureaucrats are concerned, is how to reclaim some of the lost executive compensation of this past decade. The traditional response has also been to chase more production by drilling as many new wells as they could. That may not be the case this time. The service industry has been degraded significantly in terms of its capacity and producers, based on their fourth quarter 2020 reports, have diminishing cash and much greater demands for that cash if and when it does show up. This boom / bust cycle has been playing out consistently over the past four decades which the bureaucrats have been able to generate their great personal compensation from. For most everyone else it became boring in the early 1990s. Therefore, strike up the band, it's time for the bureaucrats to chase that cash one more time, at least for the rest of this month.
Alternatively how everyone can achieve success throughout the industry should be the number one question going through people’s minds as they contemplate the difficulties in oil and gas today, and the contrast People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service providers present with the Preliminary Specification. What we’re undertaking in the development of this industry wide ERP software as we’ve defined it to date. With the establishment of the user community and their service provider organizations is unique and hasn’t been done in any other industry anywhere before. Building a permanent ERP focused software development and user community based capability and capacity. My assessment of the Information Technologies we’ll be using is that their level of maturation is more than adequate to meet the demands of our architecture and the difficulties and complexities we’re throwing at it. Our impediment to this point has been bureaucratic resistance to change. Disintermediating oil and gas in the same style that’s been experienced in many other industries over the past few decades and what will be occurring eventually to all industries. Bureaucrats have effectively resisted the inevitable elimination of these new forms of organization. To the point where today they’ve fundamentally destroyed the industry in the process of defending their turf.
A couple of catch phrases in there, added to the mystique and magic of IT, wrapped in an air of certainty and filled with the hope that only vaporware provides. This should stand as testament to the efforts of oil and gas bureaucrats in denying any challenge to their methods of operation. You only get what you pay for and they never supported what the industry needed, it conflicted with their personal compensation. If they looked critically in the mirror the only reasonable question they could ask themselves would be “how is it that we’re still alive.” I can honestly say that People, Ideas & Objects are ascendant to contrast their steep downward trajectory. In terms of options and opportunities to deal with their future, I am biased, and unaware of anything outside of our vaporware. That is I know that our vaporware is the only vaporware that exists. My persistence over these past thirty years is due to what has taken these issues to finally manifest themselves into the wholesale melting down of all aspects of the oil and gas industry. Specious accounting has hidden the real damage for many decades which can only raise serious questions as to the quality of that accounting. Where were the audit firms? Now that these issues are here bureaucrats have three options. Two of them are incapable of solving the issue. Those being bankruptcy and the self declared movement towards clean energy. The third is they take the responsible choice of funding the Preliminary Specification in order to mitigate their responsibility in the destruction of the industry, and provide the solution to ensure that they can claim “issue mitigated, nothing litigated.” It’s the easy way out and by far the most effective way to deal with their problems. When I say their problems I mean their personal issues that are now center stage in terms of what concerns them.
Let’s explore that third alternative for the bureaucrats. Although they may blame the most viable scapegoat that comes to mind that morning. The reason for the difficulties that oil and gas producers and the industry face today is due to the C suite and board of directors primarily focusing on innovative and creative solutions of how to enhance their personal executive compensation. As far as they were concerned that is what they were there for. Nonetheless their personal fortunes now stand in contrast to the value remaining in the industry and its inability to generate any value without direct outside investment from investors or bankers. Money only ever went in as they say and never came out. Or as the bureaucrats would say “you have to put cash in the ground!” The issue’s cause is a result of a lack of production discipline and chronic overproduction. We can trace the origins of this issue back to at least July 1986 and it has been ever present in oil since that time, and in natural gas since late 2009. Shale makes overproduction a permanent and tragic consequence of the bureaucrats “muddle along” strategy and business model. This is the point in which the directors and officers should have begun seeking a solution to the overproduction issue, in late 1986. In December 2013 publication of the Preliminary Specification occured. Our product deals specifically with the overproduction issue by applying common business principles. It was at this point that the producer bureaucrats redoubled our beatings and increased their overall efforts to silence us. We therefore have the established historical points where the issue is well defined, and the only viable solution that exists for the overproduction issue has been available. Yet nothing was done by said bureaucrats but to raise superfluous claims, outright lies, blaming of others and viable scapegoats. They were too busy “putting cash in the ground” and “building balance sheets” to concern themselves with the business of the business. Besides investors and bankers were buying the producers specious financial statements the producers were issuing. “See the accounting firm signed it too,” the bureaucrat states.
Therefore the scene was set for today’s decline in the North American oil and gas industry. The personal fortunes of the officers and directors were untouched as they knew not to eat where they were working. I pointed out to them last summer that their officers and directors liability insurance was an issue at which point they promptly increased their coverage at that time by 75%. How much has their coverage gone up since then? And who says these people can’t act quickly? When I pointed out their liability and obligations the first thing they did was increase their coverage. Which I thought was an innovative idea. I then asked if I moved everything I owned into my house and set it on fire, would it provide me with a liquidity that I could appreciate? I still haven’t received an answer from them on that last question. We have however received a number of fourth quarter 2020 reports and they certainly support that cash continues to be put in the ground, and be firmly in place there. The SEC has allegedly launched an investigation into Exxon for the valuation of their assets in property, plant and equipment. This investigation may also extend to shale producers in general. An issue that we feel is directly attributable to the overproduction issue. When you overreport your assets, as a consequence you overreport your profits, which causes investors to pile in to chase the high profits which causes overinvestment leading to what has turned out to be chronic overproduction in North American oil and gas. What we should have all now learned from that is the middle man, our very good friends the bureaucrats, were personally benefiting financially throughout each one of those stages of creating the overproduction. Therefore why would they recognize the issue in 1986 or the solution in 2013?
Bureaucrats are supposed to be the responsible ones, they are also the culprits, they were the ones that were authorized to ensure these types of things didn’t happen, and if they did correct them. And most importantly of all, they have signed their John Hancock in order to commit themselves as personally responsible if anything should go wrong during their watch. In the process they have subjected their personal fortunes as a remedy to resolve any losses for those that they’ve betrayed by any of these (in)actions that caused damages to their stakeholders. Therefore let's discuss the third option that they have outside of bankruptcy and bailing on oil and gas for clean energy.
In order to prove they undertook their fiduciary duties towards their stakeholders. Officers and directors will need to show what it is and how it is they sought to deal with the decline in their organization. I challenge anyone to think of any activity that has been taken by any of these producers bureaucrats? We began a decade ago with the remedial action in the natural gas side of the business by “praying for a cold winter,” stating “we’re profitable,” and suggesting mythical theories of “market rebalancing,” how their accounting was irrelevant “now all of these losses are just accounting! And it deals with the sunk costs of the past!,” and a recent favorite “we can’t shut in production.” These top a very long list of excuses that were used to provide time in which bureaucrats didn’t have to do anything. Blaming everyone from OPEC+, to their own employees, the “service industry is lazy and greedy,” to the most recent, virus induced, “the government has to save us with direct support or tariffs'' or… That is their pathetic and culpable record of their fiduciary duty these past four decades. And now in order to avoid losing their personal fortunes in the process of chronic personal litigation from the producers stakeholders. Stakeholders that have claims that survive the bankruptcy process. The bankruptcy process that may deem the officers redundant just as the directors are on the street immediately upon the declaration of bankruptcy. Where they may have to fight stakeholders with their own resources if… The bankruptcy judge deems the officers and directors liability insurance coverage to be an asset of the corporation and therefore seize it. Where the officers and directors will be on the outside looking in with nothing but their personal asset exposure to protect them. Avoidance of risk should maybe be seen as the first rule to its exposure.
I thought this was about funding People, Ideas & Objects budget, and more importantly how we’re all going to achieve success as a result of the implementation of the Preliminary Specification? And you’d be correct which is why this has turned into a comprehensive series. The budget is the first aspect of our success. As ridiculous as our task is, the cost is among the most significant ERP implementations ever undertaken. Our costs stand at $3.7 billion U.S. dollars. People, Ideas & Objects are a business and businesses are profitable. We are in the Intellectual Property, research and user community business as our key competitive advantages and therefore these have costs that are associated with these attributes. As a result our entire budget comes in for the North American based oil and gas industry at $12 billion U.S. dollars. This is assessed on the basis of North American production per barrel of oil equivalent for the year 2019. This assessment stands at the one time cost of $315 / barrel. Which the bureaucrats might see as the deal of the century due to the fact that they’ve destroyed trillions of dollars in the process of raiding the industry. Personal guilt can be a great motivator. People, Ideas & Objects and I myself justify this budget on the basis of our value proposition that we present to the industry. It is determined to be $25.7 to $45.7 trillion dollars over the next 25 years as a result of making the North American sector profitable, in the real sense of profitability, everywhere and always. Bureaucrats have always scoffed at our budget as comical. I would ask what their value proposition has been?
This budget has to be secured in whole prior to any work being conducted. People will not commit to a project that will be subject to the financing whims of the bureaucrats mosquito like attention spans. Cancellation would terminate the project and nothing would ever be resurrected in its place. It would be an effective method for the bureaucracy to permanently continue. In addition those that have committed to the project would be left unemployed and most importantly tagged with a scarlet letter from the bureaucrats in terms of their career contributions in the industry. All for working to make things better. We need to begin the task of building and implementing the Preliminary Specification and finish it in uninterrupted fashion to ensure that those that participate are not subject to the consequences of their participation being an issue should bureaucrats be given any means in which to reassert control. We will not be “blind sleepwalking agents of whomever will feed us.” People, Ideas & Objects are offering an out for the bureaucrats to mitigate the personal financial risks they’ve created for themselves. Risks that have the potential to establish a miserable life for them that consists of court and legal issues. One of defending the ill gotten gains they pride themselves on today. We are offering them the opportunity to set in place the solution to their lack of fiduciary duty, manage the business in the interim while we build the alternative and then exit into their previously planned, peaceful and prosperous retirement. The best deal they’ve ever been offered.
Since I’m in such an inquisitive mood today I thought I’d ask a few more somewhat related questions. Is it irresponsible for producers to assume that they can walk away from the oil and gas industry, allowing their production volumes to atrophy and leave the market without any production, chasing dreams of clean energy? This is in fact what they’re doing with their move to clean energy, abandoning the oil and gas industry because it’s in such disarray and so damaged by their bureaucratic destruction. Why don’t they take People, Ideas & Objects offer and leave oil and gas in the hands of new leadership? Are using the revenues from oil and gas to fuel dreams of clean energy, a radical change done in the classic stampede style mindlessness that has become the expectation in oil and gas, and without authorization from shareholders, a new low for these bureaucrats? Understanding all that is discussed on this blog, bureaucrats also need to ask themselves the following questions. Hasn’t enough damage been caused, if not how much more is in the plans? If these points identifying their personal risks don’t motivate them to act, what will? Knowing the general direction and trajectory of the industry. How many more careers need to be destroyed, money lost and how much longer will it take for bureaucrats to achieve these extra destructive attributes they need before they will be motivated to act? Asking for a friend.
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. Anyone can contact me at 713-965-6720 in Houston or 587-735-2302 in Calgary, or email me here.