Monday, January 29, 2024

Our Value Proposition, Capital Component

Capital management is a critical component of People, Ideas & Objects' value proposition. Over the next 25 years, the demands on capital are substantial, including achieving profitableĆ’ energy independence and upgrading infrastructure. Historical reliance on investors for funding consumer energy consumption, a result of past producer policies, anticipates a need for $20 - $40 trillion. This figure exceeds the financial community's capacity and, like past policies, may be unnecessary.

Capital Management Challenges

Capital costs, retired to the income statement over decades, are a luxury few industries could imagine in the 21st century. Turning capital over in a much more efficient way is the method we use in the Preliminary Specification. Capital sitting on today's balance sheets represents cash that has been invested. With the Preliminary Specification, this capital will be priced into the commodity costs and passed to the consumer. We attempt to more accurately match the costs of exploration and production to the reality of the markets. Returning the previously invested cash to be reused, repeatedly, for dividends, future capital expenditures, and bank debt repayments.

The demands of $20 - $40 trillion in capital expenditures over the next 25 years can therefore be sourced through the $1 to $2 trillion sitting on producers' balance sheets today. Iteratively, and repeatedly using the same cash to approach these otherwise impossible capital demands. The remaining $5.7 trillion of our value proposition is attributable to our decentralized production models, price maker strategies, increased revenues, and profits realized by the producers. Establishing the much needed market or production discipline. Our recent publication of the greater than $4 trillion in natural gas revenue losses since 2007 is evident of the issue. Reuters recently stated that an additional $2.6 trillion was available to producers in the next two years. Supporting our value proposition of $25.7 to $45.7 trillion over the course of the next 25 years.

Our calculations support the issues and justification of oil & gas investors suspending their support in 2015. There is no greater message of urgent management attention required than a firm's abandonment by their investors. These signal to management that there are serious issues of concern. And issues in which the officers and directors have done nothing about since the 2015 investors' action. It is these enhanced revenues and profits from the Preliminary Specification that will be the only source of producers' future capital needs.

SEC Regulations and Misinterpretations

People, Ideas & Objects hypothesize that the late 1970s SEC’s Full Cost accounting methodology has caused an overcapitalization in oil & gas. Producer misinterpretation of SEC regulations is evident through the ceiling test, which reads that the Capital Assets of the producer cannot exceed the value of the independently evaluated reserves. This has shifted accounting in the industry from a measurement of performance to a measurement of value and fostered misguided ambitions such as “building balance sheets.” Turning the ceiling test, or maximum limit, into a target for each and every producer to achieve each year.

This leads to the following consequences:

1. Overcapitalization leads to a proportionate amount of overreported profitability.

2. Attracting undue attention from investors who overinvest in an attempt to capture those profits.

3. Leading to an overinvestment in productive capabilities, or unprofitable production as we describe it.

4. Which leads to a subsequent overproduction of commodities which follow the economic principles of price makers.

5. Commodity prices have been chronically depressed during the past four decades.

6. Leading to a number of catastrophic price collapses in both commodities.

The Preliminary Specification decentralized production models' price maker strategy is the only reasonable and fair method in which producers can attain production discipline. Remedying these chronically depressed commodity prices by instituting a means of production discipline across the industry. Unaware that it would be the most competitive producer that carried the lowest capital cost in the form of property, plant, and equipment. Having a reduced carrying amount due to operational efficiency or enhanced profitability by reducing property, plant, and equipment on the balance sheet. Ensuring 100% of their production profile was eligible for profitable production.

There is no requirement in the SEC regulations for a producer to attain the limit of the ceiling test. Just as there is no minimum requirement of what the balance sheet value of property, plant, and equipment needs to be. These bloated balance sheets, once again, lead to an equal amount of overstated profitability on the income statement. The disproportionate nature of capital, in a capital-intensive industry, and its vastly overstated profitability are not lost on the current officers and directors. They have created a perception of performance that is false. One in which accountability through poor ERP systems, where little to no software development was undertaken for three decades. (People, Ideas & Objects' competitors have done stellar work in the face of impossible budgets and working conditions.)

The question then became throughout the 1980s of the philosophical question of what is capital? And therefore large percentages of overhead and interest were then capitalized to property, plant, and equipment. These have continued although as a response to People, Ideas & Objects we have seen a reduction in the percentage amount of interest being capitalized with enhanced reporting regarding its makeup. This however has not been the case with overhead. Which has seen the exact opposite in terms of enhanced accountability. Less is known about the nature of capitalized overhead today than at any time in the past four decades. What we know through experience is that upwards of 85% of all overhead in the industry is capitalized.

The issue with the capitalization of overhead and interest is that these costs are incurred on a monthly basis and are part of the organization. They are a cost of the business and therefore need to be priced into the commodity being passed to the consumer each month. The fact that they’re not eliminates the producers' “cash float.” The cash consumed in these costs is not replenished in the following month when they’re capitalized for 20 years and depleted with other capital over that time. Leaving producers so heavily dependent on outside sources of capital and searching for new cash to cover overhead each month.

Shale Production Economics

People, Ideas & Objects believe a number of unique characteristics of Shale need to be taken into consideration. These include:

1. Higher drilling and completion costs.

2. Shale exposes substantial reserves.

3. Prolific initial production volumes.

4. Steep decline curves within the first 2 years.

5. High rework costs to run additional laterals and/or frac.

The SEC’s theory allocates an equal amount of capital cost to each molecule of proven hydrocarbons. Shale exposes a large reserve base for producers to allocate their costs to. Production from the lateral that extends up to 10 miles can be exhausted in as little as 18 months. Leading to the need for costly reworks to re-frac the original lateral or drill another lateral and frac it. Meanwhile, the 18 months' production only recovered 5% of the recoverable reserves (and capital costs). Up to 50% more costs for the second lateral will be added to the costs of each remaining molecule. Within ten years, what appears to be a commercial, viable technology, will become an expensive and costly endeavor due to the method of collecting capital costs on the property and not recognizing them quickly enough.

People, Ideas & Objects resolves this in two ways. First, by recognizing the high Shale costs of capital over the course of its initial production. Second, by recording any secondary, service work, or rework as an operating cost. In this way, the unnecessary asset bloating will cease. And there will be a return of the cash consumed in the high-cost Shale operation on a much quicker basis. Subsequently, oil & gas will be priced at its actual cost. If it attains profitability it will produce, if not it will be shut-in. Producers and consumers will choose to sell or buy on the price of the commodity that is offered. Its marginal replacement value.

Shale is the key to long-term, profitable, energy independence on the continent. There is an abundance that may last for 50 years or more. Prudent use of these resources would dictate that they be produced and consumed based on the market price so that effective decisions can be made as to their cost and use. There is no more costly oil & gas available than Shale, and as such, Shale will dictate what the price of all oil & gas will be. Industry needs to ask “what is that cost?” Are we to deceive ourselves continuously on the basis of “building balance sheets?” Where any production qualifies as profitable due to the fact it consists of operating costs, royalties, a sliver of overhead, and a small portion of the actual capital consumed in the exploration and production process? Or should we attempt to more accurately match these costs to find a more accurate accounting of what the actual costs are and consider more than just the SEC’s ceiling test?

Today we have the obscene, bloated, and out-of-context capital asset balances of the producer firms. Supported by debt and in many cases negative retained earnings and in some cases negative shareholder equity. These are part of the cookie-cutter financial statements that each producer issues with the only differentiating quality being the size of the production profile. To ascertain which producer is the hero and which is the zero, a reader is unable to come to any conclusion. Homogenized financial statements are the opaque method in which performance and accountability are avoided.

Conclusion

As a consequence of these financial statements and their long-term acceptance, a culture has developed around this method of operation, which is oblivious to any alternative and believes in its own processes. In reality, indiscriminate spending, which is assumed to generate profits, has led to a lack of commercial or competitive differentiation or understanding within the industry. Over four decades, the costs of assets involved in oil & gas have inflated, mirroring the rise in prices. The industry's competitiveness has gradually eroded, leading officers and directors to mistakenly believe in their competitiveness. However, by any standard, the assets are bloated and represent a non-performing cash drain on shareholders and banks. Without the annual infusion of capital from investors, the industry would not be sustainable.

Regarding the secondary service industries, they too have experienced abuse at the hands of producers. Confronted with the boom/bust cycle of an unmanaged industry, producers have cut up to 50% of their field-level activity. Observing the desperation in the service industry, they exploit it by offering work at half their previous prices, thus slashing the service industry's revenues by 75% - a situation that has occurred numerous times in the past.

Recently, producers have sourced cash through the service industry by delaying payments for over 18 months, eroding the faith, trust, and goodwill in producers. Service industry investors, who have seen their equipment scrapped and sold off to unrelated industries to stay afloat, have learned harsh lessons about their role in oil & gas that will take a generation or more to unlearn. Sudden shifts in producers' business models towards clean energy have left them feeling that their interests might lie elsewhere. If producers are committed to clean energy why would they continue investing in oil & gas. I argue that rebuilding the service industry is essential from the producers' perspective. If they were more invested, perhaps they would show more respect for the industry. Therefore, it is believed that any rebuilding of the service industry's capacity and capabilities must be initiated by the producers' philanthropic goodwill. They broke it; hence, they should fix it. Additional capital will need to be generated by producers to provide for these sources of capital.

There are few options for the industry to actively commence the rebuilding of the greater oil & gas economy. Profitability and prosperity were never genuinely earned but rather surreptitiously acquired through inappropriate means. We have argued this point since 2012 and have not seen any change in producer behavior. Change will not occur with the current producer officers and directors, whose culture will resist every step and ultimately prevail. Producers must rely on profitability to source their capital needs. In a capital-intensive industry, the majority of costs passed to the consumer would typically be capital in nature, but this has not been the case either today or at any time in the past four decades. The trust, faith, and goodwill in the producers by the investment community have been destroyed. Only the People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification is structured to rebuild a dynamic, innovative, accountable, and profitable oil & gas producer. Without profitability and a rapid cycle of capital management, the future of the industry remains uncertain. The fact of the matter remains, if officers and directors made the industry profitable, they would have had unlimited resources to do what was necessary.

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Our Value Proposition: Introduction

People, Ideas & Objects has prepared a solution that resolves many of the issues facing the industry today. What’s potentially more valuable is the ability to reorganize the industry in a way that will promote innovation throughout and accommodate the necessary changes over the next few decades. We have recently been highlighting the production discipline that would be gained in the industry and the need for that capability when trillions of dollars are being realized by other parties and not the producers. This is an issue we have consistently highlighted in our promotion of the Preliminary Specification. As this issue is prevalent today, we find other areas of the Preliminary Specification that have the potential to be collectively of equal and possibly greater value. We will be breaking down some of these larger attributes of our offering and discuss them individually over the next few weeks. This will include:

Over these next few weeks each of these topics will be visited to reflect the value the industry and individual producers can gain from the implementation of the Preliminary Specification. 

Society today is incapable of accomplishing anything of material consequence without the ability to have software define and support the organization of the people involved. It may still be available otherwise, however it would not be on a competitive basis. I’m not of the opinion that Tesla is in the business of selling cars to make money from the sale of the car. It serves as a platform from which to build, with software and services that promise far greater prosperity than what mere car sales could provide. This is the value of software in business today. It introduces new business models that are unique to the methods of how money is made in an industry. Without software, a business model will fail. The oil & gas industry's current business model has failed catastrophically.

We have a group of officers and directors that are of the mindset that they can compete with a 1950s business model of the industry. This will involve the consolidation of producers into ever larger bureaucracies to insulate those officers and directors that are today in legal jeopardy due to the consequences of their inaction of managing the business appropriately. They feel the need to drill wells is the business. They assume the remainder of the business will be handled by the market. It has now been realized the industry is poorly managed and there are substantial values freely available to be poached from under the noses of the producers. Just from a word processor, a printer and a pen.

These are the attributes of value. Profitability is the only concern of the corporation, theoretically speaking. The past forty years have diminished that thought and other goals and objectives have come to share that space. Without profitability, particularly in a primary industry such as oil & gas, there is little of anything to go around at the end of the day. The performance of the producers' assets falls well below what is necessary to sustain the entire oil and gas economy's prosperity. The service industry has been particularly affected by the habitual cost cutting and roller coaster ride of the producers' unnecessary maintenance of boom / bust cycles. It is an unreliable employer in which no one can bank a mortgage or family upon. Revenues from the oil & gas assets, although reported as profits, are nothing but the gross margin and therefore do not maintain a competitive criteria. Spending money is profitable, guaranteed. This has eroded the expectation over the past four decades to the point where the industry's asset performance does not cover its long term cost structures.

At the same time the leadership have left what is unquestionably the most difficult and challenging future for the industry in a position where it hasn’t the wherewithal to conduct even a small portion of the task ahead. In order to begin to do so, the first and only task is they need to understand the ways and means of earning profits. There is no government, no investors that can or will undertake to fill the role that the industry needs to do for itself. The size of the task is too large. Profits are the only source of cash large enough to begin to deal with the challenge ahead. Larger bureaucracies, emerging from consolidated producers, will undoubtedly struggle to adapt and earn significant profits after finalizing their deals. The culture of the industry, as displayed over the past decades should provide the evidence of their continued failure. 

Drilling, issuing shares and consolidations have amounted to absolute destruction of all value throughout the oil & gas economy. Industry can not and will not be able to build from the shallow base that it has built for itself. The pursuit of the holy grail of “Petroleum Reserves” has proven to be a fallacy. If they’re unable to produce them profitably they’re worthless. And now the great share swap will be their solution to put the industry right?

Leadership, responsibility, accountability.

Officers and directors are the leadership, responsible, and have had the authorization to employ the resources of the firm to resolve these issues. They’ve failed unquestionably. Had decades of opportunities to resolve their difficulties and chose not to. Catastrophic damages have occurred and they will be held accountable for their (in)actions. They’ve now limited their choices to People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification to be implemented on an urgent basis if they should so choose. If not People, Ideas & Objects have alternatives on how to fund our developments. 

Should they decide to forgo the deadlines of February 16 or April 12, 2024, our alternative will be the implementation of Profitable Production Rights. Leaving them to explain to their shareholders why they’re losing at least 5% more of their revenues due to the inability to make a decision. A continuation of the waste we have seen from these officers and directors. 

Monday, January 22, 2024

Willful Misconduct or Negligence?

 The jeopardy that officers and directors of the producer firms find themselves in today is maybe unique in the history of business. Over the past twenty years they’ve had to tolerate many difficulties such as the financial crisis, Covid and Shale disrupting their business model to name just the highlights. Meanwhile there has been a lingering issue of production discipline continuing in the background. Production discipline challenges the practice of placing 100% of production on the market at all times, regardless of market capacity to absorb the volume or control commodity prices. People, Ideas & Objects detailed in our January 15, 2024, blog post the consequences of overproduction, or unprofitable production due to lack of production discipline, including repeated price collapses since July 1986.

A Summary of the Issue

Producers' assumption that the market can clear any level of production is incorrect. There are consequences and the primary one is that oil & gas commodity prices are determined under the economic principles of price makers. Any surplus production reduces the price below the marginal cost of all oil & gas, creating unprofitability. Creating a situation where today we can quantify the difficulty in the natural gas side of the business due to its breakdown from the standard heating value of 6 to 1 to as low a pricing as 40 to 1 per barrel of oil. As for oil prices, we can only assume they were sold at a discount, though the exact amount is difficult to determine.

  • Overproduction is best considered to be production that is unprofitable. 
  • Based on the financial status of the producers, the service industry and the greater oil & gas economy, nothing has been produced profitably for decades. 
  • If not for the incremental investments made by investors throughout the 1990s, 2000 - 2015 period the industry would have failed long ago. 
  • The destruction and incineration by unprofitably producing 780 TCF of natural gas over the course of this century. Why has so much damage been allowed to develop? 
    • Involving the deliberate avoidance of recognizing, understanding and remedying what has become a $4 trillion dollar natural gas revenue hole in their operations. 
    • Unquantified and much larger financial issues with oil. 
    • An issue that was recognized, understood and a solution provided to them by People, Ideas & Objects in the form of the Preliminary Specification in 2012.
    • Where producers investors abandoned their further support of producers capital needs in 2015. An act that should obtain 100% of the officers and directors focus to resolve, yet nothing was done.
    • Where a 2016 opportunity began with the development of LNG export markets to realize a global price, and rehabilitate the domestic natural gas price, was lost and is irretrievable without People, Ideas & Objects.
      • 2024 shows minimal opportunity now exists to enter the global market through LNG contracts until later this decade.
  • Leaving only the Preliminary Specification available for producer officers and directors to institute the production discipline necessary to rehabilitate their domestic natural gas price. 
  • And establish a marginal global oil price. 
  • Attaining People, Ideas & Objects objectives of preservation, performance and profitability.

At this point what we’ve documented is that the decisions and understanding of the officers and directors, since at least 2007, have been incorrect and flawed. Overproduction due to a lack of production discipline is an existential issue to the industry. Assuming oil & gas commodities follow the price taker principles was absolutely incorrect. Therefore assets in the form of petroleum reserves, in this instance at least 780 TCF, were not managed appropriately for their shareholders. Secondly, the value of those reserves was not maximized. Revenues realized for 2023 averaged 26.4% of what the 6 to 1 oil price would have achieved. Our analysis shows approximately $4.03 trillion in revenues have been unrealized due to officers and directors inactions since July 2007. Reuters recently published industry could realize an incremental $2.6 trillion in revenues as a result of digitalization. ERP systems will be a foundation of that effort. Would these revenues have assisted industry in:

  • Deferring the excessive investments being made by investors from 2007 to 2015?
  • Maintain a profitable and prosperous North American oil & gas industry?
  • Ensured a competitive, robust, capable service industry was healthy and prosperous?
  • Maintained market participation in LNG.
  • Investors participate in an undiluted share of the financial benefits of a well managed oil & gas and service industries?

Legal jeopardy in the form of willful misconduct has been attached to the officers and directors and they stand to lose their Officers and Directors Insurance coverage if they are found to have not responded to a threat in their producer firm. The threat has become a reality and as such there were material losses. People, Ideas & Objects warned them extensively and provided a solution, however it was counter to their best interests personally in the form of disintermediation. Additionally investors had suspended support for the past eight years due to their dissatisfaction with the performance of the producer firms. People, Ideas & Objects understood their actions to be significant. Damages have been and will continue to be realized until officers and directors decide to act to develop the Preliminary Specification. Therefore, is this willful misconduct or negligence?

It will be nine years ago that investors began the process of removing their support. Causing a variety of actions by the producers management to make up for the short fall in investor activity. Not in any specific order, the process involved seeking funding from the following. 

  • Producer banks continued to fund them, however as investors did, banks have curtailed their exposure to oil & gas.
  • Sales of properties to other producers was able to raise capital budgets.
  • Reductions in field activity levels and offering only discounted prices on any field work reduced producers' capital costs substantially.
  • Retroactively changing the terms of payment schedules with the service industry to 18 months.

Based on the financial status of the producers, the service industry, and the greater oil & gas economy, it appears that nothing has been produced profitably for decades. Without the incremental investments from investors between the 1990s and 2015, the industry would have likely failed. Petroleum reserves are only valuable assets if they can be produced profitably. Industry consumes cash, therefore it carries a net negative present value. 

With only 30% of the drilling capacity that was available to them in 2015. Producers announced in the first week of January 2024 that record production of both oil & gas was achieved. This occurs while others such as OPEC are removing several million barrels per day from the market. Production discipline is a business issue and not an engineering or geological issue. Officers and directors hold to their opinion that spending money is profitable. Therefore and in consequence, business issues can be "muddled through."

It's important for officers and directors to understand their legal obligations and the potential consequences of their actions. Decisions that significantly impact a corporation should always be made in good faith, with due diligence, and in the best interests of the company and its stakeholders.

Global LNG Markets Open

2016 saw the beginning of a substantial buildout in LNG facilities in the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere in the U.S. As they stand today the export capacity of these facilities is 14.6 BCF / day. There are 10.8 BCF in incremental capacity under construction. 19.26 BCF / Day approved however not under construction. The existing capacity increase would have been a major benefit to the oil & gas producers over the past seven years. Except it was not realized. The value of taking the highly depressed North American natural gas prices from the Gulf of Mexico to the lucrative ports of Japan and the Netherlands does not appear to have occurred. Since we raised this point in a series of posts entitled “This One’s Nuclear, Part I,II,III & IV we have learned of Chesapeake and ARC Resources getting involved in the business of shipping gas overseas. Not to be outdone, on January 8, 2024 Shell announced they had signed an agreement with Ksi Lisims LNG for 2 million tonnes per annum. An LNG facility that doesn’t exist, isn’t under construction, hasn’t been approved by regulators or decided to be built. And now, Exxon and EQT have joined the party. 

Even they don’t have gravitas to secure space on anything but vaporware contract access to prospective LNG facilities. Confirming our analysis and proving that there are a multitude of business issues that prove willful misconduct. I’ll reiterate, the only method for producers to eliminate others from continuing to poach the value from natural gas production is to implement the Preliminary Specification.

Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale

July 4, 2019 People, Ideas & Object publish a White Paper with the above title. Detailing how North American based oil & gas producers could deal with their overproduction or unprofitable production and deal with the high cost of Shale based production. We received a wide distribution of this .pdf and engaged in a specific discussion around the application of the Preliminary Specification to the issue of overproduction or unprofitable production. No response was received from any of the producer firms in terms of participating in development. 

We’re aware of a group of oil & gas investors who had expressed dissatisfaction with the performance of the producers. Who had specifically asked some officers and directors about the Preliminary Specification, to which they received the following response.

Officers and directors responded with two specific comments. 

  • The solution was crazy and would never work.
  • They couldn’t shut-in production without seriously damaging the formations and its reserves. Making the comment that “the formation would fold over on itself.” 

April 2020 proved this was untrue when 25% of world’s oil production was taken offline. Upon resumption not one producer announced they had incurred any damage to their formations. Production eventually resumed as it was prior to the lockdowns. Why this reasoning was used is unknown. Producers frequently shut-in production for a variety of reasons.

  • Production is shut-in during hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico.
  • During annual plant turnaround operations.
  • Workovers and service rig operations. 
I'll reiterate that producers disregarded this solution without any direct conduct with People, Ideas & Objects.

Clean Energy

As odd as the 2019 declaration that the Preliminary Specification was crazy and unworkable. In late 2021 producer officers and directors declared Shale would never be commercial. Two years after the publication of our White Paper and not one response from a producer firm. Yet declared the frontier of oil & gas not viable? The movement of producer firms' financial resources would then be dedicated to clean energy?

  • An industry of which producers have no strategic competitive advantage. 
  • No firm in the world has commercialized any clean energy projects. 
  • All firms are heavily dependent upon government subsidies. 
  • Is lead by European wanna-be teenage dictators. 

Those people involved in pushing the technologies of Shale in the producers and service industry learned that producers were no longer committed to oil & gas. Why would rig operators invest in new rigs to watch them be cut up for scrap metal and producers chase solar farms? We were led to believe that this “investor demanded” initiative into clean energy was the direction expected. 

  • Except no investor in their right mind would authorize or volunteer to invest their revenues and cash in unrelated industries of which no competitive advantage exists. 
  • Especially after watching the producer argue with investors and refuse to earn a profit for decades. 
  • Have consistently refused to listen to any discussion of the issue or alternative solution to deal with the lack of their commercial oil & gas operations. 
  • Yet, overnight, and without shareholder approval, changed the direction of the firm into unrelated fields in which they held no competitive advantages. 
  • Explicitly taking, in an unauthorized manner, the investors revenues that investors had built and would need to rebuild the oil & gas industry with. 
  • To allow officers and directors to invest in some industry where we know accountability is substandard of the governments. 

This is best represented in this Forbes article that argues the Exxon Annual Meeting was a pretentious play worthy of Shakespeare.

‘The Vote’ (A Play In Three Acts By ExxonMobil Productions) 

Realizing clean energies evident folly producers return to “Shale” in the Permian and undertake a campaign of “consolidation” to “remediate” the industry. Is this a permanent commitment or until the Annual Meeting is over? At the beginning of 2024 we can’t be too quick to criticize their lack of action. Just as the switch to the clean energy industries opaque accountability, consolidation solves which mythical issue? 

Conclusion

This is un-qualifying on every level and in so many different perspectives for the officers and directors. There is a unique personal situation they’ve created for themselves. Where their personal financial jeopardy is at risk from officers and directors willful misconduct.

  • Officers and directors are personally responsible for any judgments from lawsuits they may incur as a result of being an officer or director of a firm. 
    • They pledged their personal assets before they became officers and directors.
    • They carry Officers and Directors Insurance to cover the risk they are liable to their shareholders and others for judgments. 
    • Insurance premiums are paid by the firm. In normal cases, insurance is maintained by the firm for a period of time (statute of limitations) after the officers and directors have left. 
    • Insurance coverage does not apply to a situation where officers and directors knew, or should have known, of a situation that caused or will cause damage to the firm and its investors. It would be difficult to assert they were unaware of these damages considering the following:
      • Would insurance coverage be maintained for an undetermined willful misconduct / negligence question that potentially leads to $4 trillion in damages?
  • People, Ideas & Objects have been dedicated to resolving this issue since:
    • The Preliminary Research Report was published in May 2004.
    • This blog began in December 2005.
    • The Preliminary Specification was published in August 2012.
    • However, having a solution available only proves negligence.
  • I have failed on two previous occasions to bring advanced ERP systems to oil & gas. Oracle and IBM made similar attempts. Prompting their exit from the industry.
    • Our conclusion regarding these failures is that producers maintain old and inadequate ERP systems and accounting procedures to facilitate continued opaque accountability. 
    • We were and are offering enhanced accountability, which was not what the market asked for.
    • People, Ideas & Objects have repeatedly warned producers of the detrimental nature of overproduction and its consequences with our value proposition at $25.7 to $45.7 trillion over the next 25 years. We’ve calculated $4 trillion dollars for natural gas deficient revenues in North America since 2007.
    • Reuters has published that there is an incremental value of $2.6 trillion dollars to be captured in the next few years through digitalization of the industry. We include ERP software in that digitalization as it would be the foundation. 
    • If others are aware of trillion dollar issues in oil & gas why are officers and directors not. Therefore are they liable to their investors if they take no actions?
  • Oil & gas investors have expressed dissatisfaction over the past nine years. With no action taken by officers and directors.
    • Investors asked specifically about a solution, the Preliminary Specification, and were told untruths as to why it was not appropriate.
  • When People, Ideas & Objects asserted oil & gas was never profitable. 
    • Officers and directors made specious claims that are not supported by basic, common logic or understanding.
      • During 2011 - September 2014 oil prices averaged approximately $95.
      • In September 2014 oil dropped to $86.07. Producers announced they would be profitable at $70.
      • In December 2014 oil dropped to $68.62 producers announced they would be profitable at $55.
      • In February 2014 oil dropped to $43.85 producers announced they would be profitable at $35.
      • In August 2015 oil dropped to $36.17 producers announced they would be profitable at $30. And so on.
      • Innovation claims were the reason. What People, Ideas & Objects assert is this is nothing more than innovative historical accounting.
    • However, innovations in historical accounting put Bernie Madoff in prison, even though he never reported a loss, either. 
    • When a producer is able to drill at best 5% of their total producing well inventory in a year. How could that 5% reduce the capital costs of all their prior exploration and production costs in such a material way?
    • Is there more to what has occurred in this willful misconduct by the producer officers and directors?
  • Insurance coverage will be null and void as a result of willful misconduct for any lawsuits stemming from the trillions of dollars in waste they’ve caused. 
    • They were warned, and didn't act. 
    • Investors raised concerns, yet officers and directors did nothing.
    • Opportunities to rehabilitate markets were not realized.
    • Untruths, blaming and viable scapegoats were used to deflect any fault. 
    • “Muddle through” is standard operating procedure.
    • The lack of production discipline continues. 
  • Today officers and directors may be able to ensure their insurance will not be canceled by acting to resolve the issue.
    • If steps are taken today to mitigate the issue and correct the error by moving forward with funding and the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

To summarize, in my opinion legal jeopardy has been attached to the producers officers and directors on the issue of willful misconduct. It is material and will need to be addressed within the following deadlines. This is an industry wide initiative and I will not be participating in the messaging or promotion of the following deadlines outside of this blog and X. The producers are able to encourage their working interest partners to participate in these developments and organize themselves. For People, Ideas & Objects to cold call after we’ve been ostracized for two decades from the industry, would demand another century or two of effort to complete.

Deadlines

People, Ideas & Objects have set February 16, 2024 as the deadline for producers to exercise their $30 million U.S. option of keeping the Preliminary Specification available to them for the purposes mentioned today. 

April 12, 2024 is the deadline for their participation in the development of the Preliminary Specification. This will provide the producers with the opportunity to go before their investors during their Annual General Meeting and ensure they have sought to correct the problem. 

People, Ideas & Objects will not commence any developments until such time as all the proceeds are secured by the April 12, 2024 deadline. If either deadline is missed we will defer back to our Profitable Production Rights method of financing. Budget information and a producer's individual share can be determined there.

There is a sense of urgency and enough time has been wasted. The consequences of what has occurred we feel are tragic and few options exist. Action is required. Expectations upon us will be difficult to manage and we’re beginning to meet those expectations with these deadlines. Effective February 19, 2024, or potentially April 15, 2024, assuming producer officers and directors pass on People, Ideas & Objects deadlines. If officers and directors do not fulfill their fiduciary duty in meeting these deadlines. Would that bring about a different set of legal consequences they would have chosen to pursue.

Potential members of our user community may want to take note of the progression of these activities.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

This One's Nuclear, Part IV

 People, Ideas & Objects observed North American oil & gas producers exhibiting disconcerting behavior. In October and November 2023, I highlighted how natural gas mismanagement and lost market development opportunities impacted pricing. Prices plummeted in July 2007 from a 6 to 1 ratio against oil to as much as 40 to 1 in 2023. We discussed how producers lacked production discipline. Suffered from chronic and systemic overproduction, and could resolve these issues through our Preliminary Specification. Since November 2023, the natural gas crisis has worsened. Reaching a magnitude of over $4 trillion in lost revenue during that 16 year period. A critical shortfall in LNG contracts is hindering producers' ability to stabilize the market for the foreseeable future. Their sole solution is to implement the Preliminary Specification's decentralized production model's price maker strategy. Enforcing production discipline based on the only fair and reasonable basis, profitability of the Joint Operating Committee. It is necessary for them to adopt People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service providers drive towards preservation, performance and profitability.

Oil & gas prices in North America have worsened because of chronic overproduction. Adopting our decentralized production model will introduce the most equitable means of production discipline available to producers. If the Joint Operating Committee earns a “real” profit, then it produces; if not, it’s shut in for these business benefits:

  • Shutting in unprofitable properties prevents the dilution of a producer's profitable properties' performance, leading to their highest corporate profitability.

Reserves, safeguarding the firm's assets is a role of officers and directors.

  • Producers keep their reserves in order to produce them profitably at a later date.
  • Producers reduce operating and storage costs by leaving overproduction of oil & gas as reserves.
  • Reserves do not need to cover the additional costs from prior losses.

Deployment of their strategic competitive advantages of their earth science & engineering capacities and capabilities.

  • While shutting in a property, producers will work to innovatively restore the properties profitability.

Performance & Profitability.

  • Making independent business decisions based on actual, factual, standard and objective accounting which determines a Joint Operating Committees profitability. Does not constitute collusion, despite what officers and directors suggest.
  • North American producers benefit when they produce all their properties with marginal prices.
    • Prices will reflect the replacement value of production. Price makers only initiate new production when profitable.
    • Markets provide one thing: the price, which incorporates all information buyers and sellers need to make effective decisions.
  • Producers with profitable operations will have their capital repeatedly returned when recognizing depletion in the price of the commodity. Investors in effect were subsidizing the consumer's energy consumption by paying the capital costs of the commodity.

Overhead burden is reduced, shared and made variable, based on profitable production.

  • Our Cloud Administration & Accounting for Oil & gas Software & Service will be a shared resource for all producers administrative and accounting needs. 
    • Reduces the need for each producer to build redundant, unshared and unshareable administrative and accounting capabilities. 
  • With the Preliminary Specification, shutting in production results in a null operation. All producer costs, including overheads, become variable based on profitability.
  • Producers recoup overhead costs as cash in the subsequent month when they include these costs in the commodity sales price. In today's producer business model overhead is capitalized and cash is recovered over a twenty year period.
    • Creating the dependence on outside sources of capital.

Future capital needs will exceed any expectation that the past “investor-funded model” could finance. The Preliminary Specification provides the financial resources to support dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil & gas producers. 

It’s crucial for producers to broaden their competitive scope in capital markets, leveraging innovative strategies outlined in the Preliminary Specification. Investors have alternatives in other industries, and oil & gas must offer competitive returns. 

  • Competing in capital markets will foster the production discipline necessary across the industry.
  • Producers who continue to neglect profitable production, dilute earnings with incurred losses. Continuing to fail to compete in the broader capital market and against peers.
  • Why continue to lose money when significant capital demands are on the horizon.
  • Profitability drives value creation, supplying the financial resources necessary for the producers. 
    • But also generating value in the secondary and tertiary industries that support oil & gas.
  • Businesses and industries operate on profitable business models. 
    • Oil & gas producers have relied on investors to generate the cash they needed.
    • Investors were deceived by the specious financial reporting that were conducted for several decades throughout the industry. 
    • That’s over, they need to admit that and realize that profitable operations will provide them with all the money they need.
    • However, today we can state unequivocally that the culture doesn’t know how, where or what that would involve for their organization to begin to earn profits. 
    • Operations of the industry on this basis, for four decades, has diminished the assets performance criteria to well below standard.

People, Ideas & Objects, our user community and their service providers enable producers to restore oil & gas market prices and capture replacement costs as cash for reinvestment, dividends, and debt reduction—consistently and repeatedly. Only then can they tackle the next 25 years, a period that will be the most challenging in the industry's history. Instituting a new culture based on the seven Organizational Constructs of the Preliminary Specification

Producers firms' officers and directors have not engaged in any material or exceptional activity in retirements or resignations. It’s important to note that People, Ideas & Objects received no contact from the producers about our product since raising the LNG issue in November 2023. Clearly, they feel in control and will continue with their regular operations, despite facing a serious existential crisis with no support for their capital structure. Operational field capacities are at best one third of prior years and diminishing. From the eia.gov

They see consolidation as the solution to their unidentified and unexpressed issue. They have a culture that does not generate value, no plans or vision, or understanding of how to generate profit. They only mock those such as People, Ideas & Objects and now Reuters for raising trillion-dollar issues. And when issues materialize, officers and directors will “muddle through.” What will “muddle through” do with the higher cash flows necessary to meet the future capital needs? Will they begin using them prudently or revert to their cultural propensities?

Eighteen months ago, producers renounced shale's commercial viability for their clean energy adventures, only to be corrected. And in late 2023, finding that $4.0 trillion in natural gas revenues passed through their fingers. That non-participants of the oil & gas industry in fact have realized their revenues. Revenues that were available to them since August 2012 through the publication and development of People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification. A decade lost! What will they say in their defence?

Or perhaps officers and directors realized they can’t leave now. If they do, their officers and directors insurance will be null and void as a result of not doing anything. The threat existed and now it’s real, and without the Preliminary Specification it will be lost on a prospective basis. The warning was being made on this blog and our Preliminary Research Report since May 2004. They can not say they were unaware. If they did, their officers and directors insurance wouldn’t cover them. Their fiduciary duty assumes they knew of the risk. And would therefore be subject to having their personal assets used to compensate investors.

People, Ideas & Objects rewrote the Preliminary Specification in 2023. I adhere to the U.S. dollar budget requirements detailed in the Profitable Production Rights model. If industry wishes to engage, People, Ideas & Objects is keeping the following option open until February 16, 2024. 

  • Industry will need to send a non refundable option of $30 million U.S. to extend the offer until April 12, 2025. In time for the Annual Report season.
  • Then pay the development funds by April 12, 2025. These funds support the development of the Preliminary Specification.
  • If they miss either of these deadlines, they’ll face consequences by holding themselves personally accountable for the destruction we warned about, has manifested and they’ve disregarded for nearly two decades. 
  • Accountability demands they do something to correct this. 
  • None of that means anything to them. However, if they don’t they’ll only make their personal situation more complicated. It's the officers and directors' decision. 
  • If they miss the February 16, 2024 deadline, we will reinstate the full Profitable Production Rights funding method. 

People, Ideas & Objects deadlines are structured to deal with the sense of urgency necessary for industry to resolve its issues and realize its opportunities. Time is of the essence. Our value proposition of $25.7 to $45.7 trillion dollars over the next 25 years is now recognized elsewhere, is valid and available through development and implementation of the Preliminary Specification. The argument we’ve put across in support of our business model has been met with consistent lies, blaming and what we call viable scapegoats from the officers and directors of the producer firms. They thought we were seeking attention by putting out ridiculous numbers to gain attention to what we were doing. On the contrary we were doing our job and had a clear handle on the scope and scale of what was not being managed appropriately. Today the oil & gas and service industry are in shambles. An active rebuilding is necessary on an all hands basis. Any rebuild, particularly one in the 21st century, needs to be organized first and foremost. And doing so outside of an ERP system would fail. This development needs to be outside the control of the current officers and directors for two reasons. 

  • To avoid their cultural influences and establish the seven Organizational Constructs of the Preliminary Specification as the replacement culture. 
  • It appears since the LNG contracts and the opportunity to remedy the prices in the past decade were missed. Officers and directors did not know or understand the issue.
    • If they don’t understand the issue, how will they solve it?
    • If they have to avoid the Intellectual Property of People, Ideas & Objects what will they use?
    • Who will conduct the research over the next decade to build that business model?

I’ve been seeking to resolve this since the July 1986 oil price collapse. Organizing my first approach in May 1991. Undertaking the necessary and difficult decade of research to resolve the issues and exploit the opportunities in oil & gas. A task that has not been undertaken by producers or any of People, Ideas & Objects competitors. 

Please contact, and join me in making North American oil & gas producers dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable. Only through profitability can the industry continue and obtain the preservation, performance and profitability we need from these two critical products. Everyone in oil & gas clearly understands why profits are necessary and what happens when they’re not earned. Oil & gas has its most challenging and demanding future ahead of it. It will demand the best of everyone and no one can be left out of this rebuilding process. If someone is looking for urgent, challenging and important work they’ll need to look no further than here.

Friday, January 12, 2024

A New Year

 People, Ideas & Objects had a good year in 2023, and since November, we documented approximately $4 trillion in lost natural gas revenues due to producer officers and directors' mismanagement. This validates the Preliminary Specification value proposition and proves our hypothesis, and is now the only method for North American producers to create future value. Their ability to close the price gap between North American and global natural gas prices hinges on the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production model's price maker strategy to enforce production discipline. Without it, they're producing gas at a loss for the century. From Henry Kissinger's 2022 book "Leadership: Six Studies in World Strategy."

Looking forward, the scope and scale of the difficulties and the amount of financial destruction being authored by North American producers continues. Recently Reuters Lee Cibis wrote.

Digitalization has the potential to unlock up to $2.6 trillion worth of revenue in the oil & gas sector by 2025. Upstream leaders and service providers alike need to keep up to date on the digital developments to seize this opportunity for increased production efficiencies and profits.  

Digitalization, trillions and profits are words that may cause Ms. Cibis difficulties, although I appreciate the company. Reuters calculations are going to be global for both oil & gas whereas ours focus on North America and natural gas for the period 2007 to present. 

Since we have revised the Preliminary Specification and we're now focused on the future we will blog less frequently in 2024 and we’ll be publishing more on X. Expect two blog posts weekly, Monday and Wednesday at 7:30 AM Eastern time. 

Our need for more time to enhance the firm's research capabilities causes our drop in publications. Last year, I investigated hyper specialization in service provider organizations and strategies to address related issues. We will accompany our recommendations with conclusions once the research is complete, expected in 2024. People, Ideas & Objects acknowledges our limited influence on the complexity of developing service providers. The market's invisible hand provides this, aligning with our philosophy. Our research aims to review and advise on service provider development only, leaving it to the market otherwise. Preparing and organizing our research, our third competitive advantage, requires time and precedes any output.

We found one issue: the vast number of research projects we need to undertake. We are evaluating tools and methods to manage the abundant information more efficiently and start adding value to the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil & gas producer—a task that will yield results in the future.

We discovered something valuable to enhance our user community vision. Examining ChatGPT 4.0 reveals a clear difference between two user classes. The Preliminary Specifications user community vision suggests the need for Intellectual Property (IP) rights to support gainful employment, obtained through education and experience, and one of three IP access levels. First, outright ownership of IP, such as copyrights, trademarks, patents, and trade secrets. Second, licensed access to others' IP via contracts. Third, employment with a firm owning or licensed to use IP. These tiers are prevalent across People, Ideas & Objects, our user community, and their service providers.

Custom instructions of Preliminary Specifications Intellectual Property enhances ChatGPT Large Language Model (LLM) for our user community and service providers, increasing the value of their work and the IP of People, Ideas & Objects. We plan to include not just the blog and wiki content but the entire user community's documentation in our software development. This will encompass developers' code and Oracle Cloud ERP tool documentation, enabling our community to iterate faster and quickly find answers to complex questions that might otherwise have been missed or neglected. ChatGPT and our LLM bring together the comprehensive details of this knowledge for our user community and service provider organizations. A fallout consequence of IP being a foundation of AI is that the focus will remain within the domain of concern. Limiting the distractions and unnecessary diversions. At the same time unlicensed access to this IP will fall under the copyright provisions. Fair use will allow ChatGPT to use however none of it will be publishable or otherwise usable of our user community.

ChatGPT’s progress promises many benefits in the future. Leveraging these technologies will benefit our user community. Moreover, I use over half a dozen apps that employ AI to gather vast information based on their features. The Preliminary Specification includes an Artificial Intelligence module designed to steer industry efforts towards productive AI. Focusing the resources of industry on one shared resource and spreading the costs per boe produced. Oracle's late 2022 automation initiative prompted our rewrite of the Preliminary Specification, followed by their significant Generative AI capabilities in 2023. We have integrated these into the Preliminary Specification. AI is here to stay, and its value will increase with use. It’s currently receiving a lot of attention, like the .com bubble, and may just be as consequential as the Internet.

Monday, December 18, 2023

The Preliminary Specifications Bibliography

I'm pleased to provide an updated Bibliography for the Preliminary Specification. And it's also a good time to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. We'll see you in 2024.

Academic Research & Books

Bailey, Ronald. Post Scarcity Profit: Economist Paul Romer on Growth, Technological Change and an Unlimited Future. Reason Magazine. (December 2001). https://reason.com/2001/12/01/post-scarcity-prophet-2/

Baldwin, Carliss Y., Where do transactions come from? Modularity, transactions, and the boundaries of firms, Industrial and Corporate Change, Volume 17, Issue 1, February 2008, Pages 155–195. https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/dtm036

Baldwin, Carliss Y., Clark, Kim B., Where do Transactions Come From? A Network Design Perspective on the Theory of the Firm. Harvard Business School. May 2006. https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/document?repid=rep1&type=pdf&doi=2f68bbe46c7392e726a1af85e1863c889eb44f66

Bryan, Lowell L., Joyce, Claudia. The 21st-century Organization. (2005). McKinsey & Company. https://michaelsamonas.gr/images/Mixalhs/resources/21st_Organization.pdf

Carrol, M., Rosson, M., (October 1998). Interfacing Thought: Cognitive Aspects of Human - Computer Interaction. Cambridge MIT Press, pp. 80 - 111. https://www.amazon.ca/Interfacing-Thought-Cognitive-Human-Computer-Interaction/dp/0262532212

Chandler, Alfred D., The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Belknap Press: An Imprint of Harvard University Press; Revised ed. edition (Jan. 1 1993). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0674940520 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0674940529 https://amzn.to/4503zvC

Chesbrough, H., Teece, D., (August 2002), Organizing for innovation: When is Virtual Virtuous? Harvard Business Review. 80 (8) 127 - 134. https://store.hbr.org/product/organizing-for-innovation-when-is-virtual-virtuous-hbr-classic/R0208J

Christensen, C. M., (1997). The Innovator's Dilemma. New York, HarperCollins Publishers. Inc. https://www.amazon.ca/s?k=the+innovator%27s+dilemma&i=stripbooks&hvadid=599429907053&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=9001316&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=e&hvrand=2181510476241427953&hvtargid=kwd-300611435248&hydadcr=16958_13463073&tag=googcana-20&ref=pd_sl_6dwz4yzhbb_e

Coase, Ronald H., (1937), The Nature of the Firm. Economica, 4: 386-405. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0335.1937.tb00002.x https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1468-0335.1937.tb00002.x

Coase, Ronald H., The New Institutional Economics. American Economic Review 88 (2). (May 1988.) pp. 72 - 74. http://www.compilerpress.ca/Competitiveness/Anno/Anno%20Coase%20New%20Institutional%20Economics.htm

Colpan, Asli M., Hikino, Takash, Lincoln, James R., Economic Institutions and the Boundaries of Business Groups. The Oxford Handbook of Business Groups. (2010) 9780199552863, Oxford University Press pp. 629–649. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199552863.003.0022 

Date, C. J., An Introduction to Database Systems. Pearson; 8th edition (July 22 2003). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0321197844 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0321197849 http://www.amazon.ca/dp/0321197844

Davenport, T., Beck, B, Beck, J., (2002 March / April). The Strategy and Structure of Firms in the Attention Economy. Ivey Business Journal, pp. 48 – 54. https://iveybusinessjournal.com/publication/the-strategy-and-structure-of-firms-in-the-attention-economy/

Dosi, Giovanni and Gambardella, Alfonso and Grazzi, Marco and Orsenigo, Luigi, Technological Revolutions and the Evolution of Industrial Structures: Assessing the Impact of New Technologies Upon the Size and Boundaries of Firms. Capitalism and Society, Vol. 3, Issue 1, Article 6, 2008. https://ssrn.com/abstract=2209120

Dosi, Giovanni, (1995/01) Hierarchies, Markets & Power: Some Foundational Issues on the Nature of Contemporary Economic Organizations. Journal Article, Industrial and Corporate Change, Volume 4, Issue 1, 1995, Pages 1–19, https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/4.1.1-a https://www.ioea.eu/pdf/textes_2007/Dosi_ref1.pdf

Dosi, Giovanni., (1988). Sources, Procedures, and Microeconomic Effects of Innovation. Journal of Economic Literature, 26(3), 1120–1171. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2726526

Farrell, D., (2003, October). The Real New Economy. Harvard Business Review, pp. 104 – 112. https://hbr.org/2003/10/the-real-new-economy#:~:text=In%20fact%2C%20an%20important%20dynamic,improving%20productivity%20across%20the%20sector.

Forsberg, K., Mooz, H., Cotterman, H., (2000) Visualizing Project Management. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.. ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0471648485 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0471648482 https://www.amazon.ca/Visualizing-Project-Management-Frameworks-Mastering/dp/0471648485

Giddens, A. (1984). The constitution of society: outline of the theory of structuration. Berkeley, University of California Press. https://a.co/d/92YWfl2

Glover, M., Prawitt, D., Romney, M., (1999), Implementing ERP. Internal Auditor February. https://www.google.com/search?q=Implementing+ERP.+Internal+Auditor&rlz=1C5CHFA_enCA730CA732&oq=Implementing+ERP.+Internal+Auditor&aqs=chrome..69i57j33i160l2.1004j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

Habermas, Jurgen.  The Theory of Communicative Action. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/habermas/

Hagel, J., Brown, J., (2002). Break on Through to the Other Side: A Missing Link in Redefining the Enterprise pp. 1 – 23. Retrieved November 20, 2003. http://www.johnhagel.com/

Hagel, J., Brown, J., (2002). Compendium Overview pp. 1 – 7. Retrieved November 20, 2003. http://www.johnhagel.com/

Hagel, J., Brown, J., (2002). Control vs. Trust – Mastering a Different Management Approach pp. 1 – 10. Retrieved November 20, 2003. http://www.johnhagel.com/

Hagel, J., Brown, J., (2002). Orchestrating Business Process – Harnessing the Value of Web Services Technology pp. 1 – 13. Retrieved November 20, 2003. http://www.johnhagel.com/

Hagel III, J. & Seely Brown, J. (October 2001) Your Next IT Strategy. Harvard Business Review, 79 (9) 105 - 113. https://store.hbr.org/product/your-next-it-strategy/R0109G

Hanson, Victor Davis, The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won. Basic Books; Illustrated edition (Oct. 17 2017). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0465066984 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0465066988 https://www.amazon.ca/Second-World-Wars-Global-Conflict/dp/0465066984

Harper, Stephen, Right Here, Right Now: Politics and Leadership in the Age of Disruption. Penguin (Oct. 9 2018). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0771038623 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0771038624 https://www.amazon.ca/Right-Here-Now-Leadership-Disruption/dp/0771038623/ref=sr_1_1?crid=FXTQS9S3553D&keywords=right+here%2C+right+now&qid=1702312851&s=books&sprefix=right+here%2C+right+now%2Cstripbooks%2C169&sr=1-1

Hayek, F. A., The Constitution of Liberty: The Definitive Edition (Volume 17.) University of Chicago Press. (April 2011). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780226315393 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0226315393 https://www.amazon.ca/Constitution-Liberty-Definitive-F-Hayek/dp/0226315398/ref=sr_1_1?hvadid=667162488719&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=9001316&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=e&hvrand=18394470049021819216&hvtargid=kwd-323973891034&hydadcr=23307_13656903&keywords=the+constitution+of+liberty&qid=1702666371&sr=8-1

Hayek, F. A., (1945). The Use of Knowledge in Society. https://www.econlib.org/library/Essays/hykKnw.html

Henderson, R., (2002). The Next Tech Boom. MIT Technology Insider Newsletter September 2002 pp. 6 Retrieved September 18, 2003 , from the MIT Enterprise Technology Review World Wide Web: http://www.technologyreview.com/

J Hill, L.C Thomas, D.E Allen, Experts' estimates of task durations in software development projects, International Journal of Project Management, Volume 18, Issue 1, (2000), Pages 13-21. ISSN 0263-7863, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0263-7863(98)00062-3 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0263786398000623

Hood, Tom, Seven Skills Every Accountant Needs in the Age of Automaton. CEO Maryland Association of CPAs, Oracle Blog. https://blogs.oracle.com/modernfinance/7-skills-every-accountant-needs-in-the-age-of-automation

Jiang, J. J. & Klein, G. (2001). Software project risks and development focus. Project Management Journal, 32(1), 4–9. https://www.pmi.org/learning/library/software-project-risks-development-focus-2000

Jiang, J. J., Klein, G., & Chen, H.-G. (2001). The Relative Influence of IS Project Implementation Policies and Project Leadership on Eventual Outcomes. Project Management Journal, 32(3), 49-55. https://doi.org/10.1177/875697280103200307

Jiang, James & Klein, Gary & Means, Thomas. (2000). Project Risk Impact on Software Development Team Performance. Project Management Journal. 31. 19-26. https://doi.org/10.1177/875697280003100404

Klein, Peter, The Capitalist & The Entrepreneur. Ludwig von Mises Institute (Feb. 13 2019). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1933550791, ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1933550794 https://www.amazon.ca/Capitalist-Entrepreneur-Essays-Organizations-Markets/dp/1933550791

Klein, P. G., Economic calculation and the limits of organization. Rev Austrian Econ 9, 3–28 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01103327 or https://cdn.mises.org/rae9_2_1.pdf

Langlois, Richard N., The Austrian Theory of the Firm: Retrospect and Prospect (May 2007). Working Paper First Draft, George Mason Law School Conference, May 23 - 25, 2007, “Austrian Market-based Approaches to the Theory and Operation of the Firm.” https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Richard-Langlois/publication/228918886_The_Austrian_Theory_of_the_Firm_Retrospect_and_Prospect/links/0deec519e188f8b8bd000000/The-Austrian-Theory-of-the-Firm-Retrospect-and-Prospect.pdf

Langlois, Richard N. and Foss, Nicolai J., Capabilities and Governance: The Rebirth of Production in the Theory of Economic Organization (January 1997). Druid Working Paper No. 97-2, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=77668 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.77668

Langlois, Richard N., Capabilities and the Theory of the Firm (December 1994). https://www.academia.edu/51155727/Capabilities_and_the_Theory_of_the_Firm

Langlois, Richard N., Capabilities and Vertical Disintegration in Process Technology: The Case of Semiconductor Fabrication Equipment (January 1998). https://richard-langlois.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/1617/2019/09/mesa97.pdf

Langlois, Richard N., Competition Through Institutional Form: The Case of Cluster Tool Standards (July 2004). University of Connecticut Economics Working Paper No. 2004-10, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=594542 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.594542

Langlois, Richard N., (2004). Chandler in a Larger Frame: Markets, Transaction Costs, and Organizational Form in History. Enterprise & Society, 5(3), 355–375. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23700119

Langlois, Richard N., Comment on 'Technological Revolutions and the Evolution of Industrial Structures' (by Giovanni Dosi, Alfonso Gambardella, Marco Grazzi, and Luigi Orsenigo). Capitalism and Society, Vol. 3, Issue 2, Article 7, 2008. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2209176

Langlois, Richard N., 2009/01/01 “Economic Institutions and the Boundaries of the Firm: The Case of Business Groups.” University of Connecticut, Department of Economics, Working papers. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199552863.003.0022 https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Richard-Langlois/publication/46450875_Economic_Institutions_and_the_Boundaries_of_the_Firm_The_Case_of_Business_Groups/links/0deec519e189326c5c000000/Economic-Institutions-and-the-Boundaries-of-the-Firm-The-Case-of-Business-Groups.pdf

Langlois, Richard N., (2007), The Entrepreneurial Theory of the Firm and the Theory of the Entrepreneurial Firm*. Journal of Management Studies. 44: 1107-1124. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.2007.00728.x

Langlois, Richard N., The institutional approach to economic history: Connecting the two strands, Journal of Comparative Economics, Volume 45, Issue 1, 2017. Pages 201-212, ISSN 0147-5967, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2016.04.004 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0147596716300075

Langlois, Richard N., Modularity in technology and organization, Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Volume 49, Issue 1, 2002, Pages 19-37. ISSN 0167-2681, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0167-2681(02)00056-2 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167268102000562

Langlois, Richard N., "Modularity in Technology, Organization, and Society" (1999). Economics Working Papers. 199905. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/199905

Langlois, Richard N., "Organizing the Electronic Century" (2007). Economics Working Papers. 200707. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/200707

Langlois, Richard N., "Schumpeter and Personal Capitalism" (1996). Economics Working Papers. 199605. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/199605

Langlois, Richard N., "The Secret Life of Mundane Transaction Costs" (2005). Economics Working Papers. 200549. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/200549

Langlois, Richard N., Transaction-cost Economics in Real Time, Industrial and Corporate Change, Volume 1, Issue 1, 1992, Pages 99–127. https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/1.1.99

Langlois, Richard N., "Transaction Costs, Production Costs, and the Passage of Time" (1995). Economics Working Papers. 199503. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/199503

Langlois, Richard N., “The Vanishing Hand, the Changing Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism.” (2003/4/1) Industrial and Corporate Change. Volume 12, Issue 2. Pages 351-385. Oxford University Press. https://www.edegan.com/pdfs/Langlois%20(2003)%20-%20The%20vanishing%20hand.pdf

Langlois, Richard N., The Corporation and the Twentieth Century, The History of American Business Enterprise. Princeton University Press (June 27 2023).  ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 069124698X ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0691246987 https://www.amazon.ca/Corporation-Twentieth-Century-American-Enterprise/dp/069124698X/ref=sr_1_1?crid=10T238PV16C7O&keywords=langlois&qid=1689618224&s=books&sprefix=langlois%2Cstripbooks%2C449&sr=1-1

Langlois, Richard N., “The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism: Schumpeter, Chandler and the New Economy.” Routledge; 1st edition (June 23 2014). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1138806226 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1138806221 https://amzn.to/3zJwpCk

Langlois, Richard N., Robertson, Paul L., "Firms, Markets and Economic Change: A Dynamic Theory of Business Institutions." Routledge; 1st edition (1995). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0-203-19923-5 ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0-203-19926-X https://books.google.ca/books?id=iPeHAgAAQBAJ&dq

MacDonald, J., (1998). Systems Engineering: Art and Science in an international context. International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE). https://homepages.laas.fr/kader/se.pdf

McIntosh, M., Electronic Commerce and Enterprise Integration: Drivers for the Business in the New Economy. June 13 - 14, 1999. Saint John, New Brunswick.

Mills, Mark P., Why Chips Won’t Change the Game: Government Subsidies Can’t Overcome Regulatory Obstacles to American Industrial Competitiveness. August 2022) City Journal. https://www.city-journal.org/why-chips-wont-change-the-game#.YyPRiCL3Z6s.link

Mills, Mark P., The “New Energy Economy:” An Exercise in Magical Thinking. (March 2019). The Manhattan Institute. https://media4.manhattan-institute.org/sites/default/files/R-0319-MM.pdf

Orlikowski, W. J., (1992, August). The Duality of Technology: Rethinking the Concept of Technology in Organizations. Organization Science, (3:3), 398–427. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2635280

Porter, M. E., (1998) Competitive Strategy Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors. New York, The Free Press. ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0684841487 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0684841489 https://www.amazon.ca/Competitive-Strategy-Techniques-Industries-Competitors/dp/0684841487/ref=asc_df_0684841487/?tag=googleshopc0c-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=293006031037&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=1210013701671932249&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9001316&hvtargid=pla-432954142559&psc=1&mcid=15e505e921bd305085e6e9c51e492644

Porter, M. E., (1998). On Competition. Boston, Harvard Business Review Press; 1st edition (Sept. 9 2008). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781422126967 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1422126967 https://www.amazon.ca/Competition-Michael-Porter/dp/142212696X/ref=sr_1_3?crid=2T5ZL6B63TCUR&keywords=On+Competition&qid=1702600221&s=books&sprefix=on+competition%2Cstripbooks%2C128&sr=1-3

Porter, M., (March 2001). Strategy and The Internet. Harvard Business Review 79 (3) 63 - 78. https://hbr.org/2001/03/strategy-and-the-internet

Procaccino, Verner, Overmyer, Darter (Jan, 2002). Case study: Factors for early prediction of software development success. Information and Software Technology, 44 (1) 53-62. ISSN 0950-5849, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0950-5849(01)00217-8 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0950584901002178

Paulk, M., Curtis, B., Chrissis Mary B., Weber C. V., (August 2002). Capability Maturity ModelS™ for Software, Version 1.1. Software Engineering Institute Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh. https://insights.sei.cmu.edu/documents/1092/1993_005_001_16211.pdf

Robertson, Paul L.; Jacobson, David; and Langlois, Richard N., "Innovation Processes and Industrial Districts" (2008). Economics Working Papers. 200803. https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/econ_wpapers/200803

Robertson, Paul L., Langlois, Richard N., Institutions, Inertia and Changing Industrial Leadership, Industrial and Corporate Change, Volume 3, Issue 2, 1994, Pages 359–378. https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/3.2.359

Romer, Paul M., Endogenous Technical Change. The Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 98, No. 5, Part 2: The Problem of Development. A Conference of the Institute for the Study of Free Enterprise Systems. (Oct 1990) pp. S71 - S 102. https://web.stanford.edu/~klenow/Romer_1990.pdf?utm_source=Stanford

Sasser, W. Earl, and Josep Valor. "Information at the World Bank: In Search of a Technology Solution (B)." Harvard Business School Case 898-054, September 1997. (Revised October 1997.) (Knoop, C, I., Valor, J., & Sasser, W.E. Case 2: Information at the World Bank: In search of a technology solution (A). (September 1997) Harvard Business School Case 9-898-053.) https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=25473

Schmidt, Roy & Lyytinen, Kalle & Keil, Mark & Cule, Paul. (2001). Identifying Software Project Risks: An International Delphi Study. J. of Management Information Systems. 17. 5-36. https://doi.org/10.1080/07421222.2001.11045662 https://www.researchgate.net/publication/220591356_Identifying_Software_Project_Risks_An_International_Delphi_Study/citation/download

Schumpeter, Joseph A., (1942) Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy: 82 - 84. Harper Perennial Modern Classics; unknown edition (November 4, 2008). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0061561614 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0061561610 https://www.amazon.com/Capitalism-Socialism-Democracy-Joseph-Schumpeter/dp/0061561614

Seely Brown, J., Duguid, P., (1998, Spring). Organizing Knowledge. California Management Review Vol. 40 No. 3 pp. 90 – 111. https://doi.org/10.2307/41165945

Simmons, M. R., (April 2001). 30 TCF by 2010? Can North America meet its gas requirements? The Energy Forum. New York, New York.

Sobel, Russel S., Clemons., The Essential Joseph Schumpeter (Essential Scholars). The Fraser Institute (April 22, 2020). ASIN : ‎B087LSPQGY https://www.amazon.com/Essential-Joseph-Schumpeter-Scholars-ebook/dp/B087LSPQGY

Tichy, N. M., (1983) Managing Strategic Change: Technical, Political and Cultural Dynamics. John Wiley & Sons. Wiley; 1st edition (May 3 1983). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0471865591 ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0471865599 https://www.amazon.ca/Managing-Strategic-Change-Technical-Political/dp/0471865591

Volkoff, Olga, "Using the Structurational Model of Technology to Analyze an ERP Implementation" (1999). AMCIS 1999 Proceedings. 84. https://aisel.aisnet.org/amcis1999/84

Westland, J. C., & Clark, T., (2000). Global Electronic Commerce. Cambridge, The MIT Press.MacDonald, J., (1998). Systems Engineering: Art and Science in an international context. International Council on Systems Engineering (INCOSE). http://www.incose.org ISBN: 9780262528474 https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262528474/global-electronic-commerce/

Winter, Sidney G., Toward a Neo-Schumpeterian Theory of the Firm. Industrial and Corporate Change, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 125-141, 2006. https://ssrn.com/abstract=914693

Whittaker, B., What Went Wrong? Unsuccessful Information Technology Projects. 1 March 1999 Information Management & Computer Security. ISSN: 0968-5227 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/09685229910255160/full/html#:~:text=Common%20reasons%20for%20project%20failure,-Common%20reasons%20for&text=Poor%20project%20planning%20(specifically%2C%20risks,the%20project%20plan%20was%20weak).&text=The%20business%20case%20tor%20the,areas%20or%20missing%20several%20components.&text=A%20lack%20of%20management%20involvement%20and%20support

Yergin, D. and J. Stanislaw (1998). The Commanding Heights. The Battle Between Government and the Marketplace that is Remaking the Modern World. New York, Simon & Schuster. Touchstone; Revised ed. edition (April 2 2002). ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 068483569X ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0684835693 https://www.amazon.ca/Commanding-Heights-Battle-World-Economy/dp/068483569X/ref=asc_df_068483569X/?tag=googleshopc0c-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=293014791721&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=6078239189220152082&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9001316&hvtargid=pla-564388576043&psc=1&mcid=7a3a8d91189d3885a33307614ee85cb7

Yermack, David, Journal Article Corporate Governance and Blockchains (March 2017), Review of Finance, Vol 21, Issue 1, pp. 7 - 31, SN 1572-3097. https://doi.org10.1093/rof/rfw074 https://academic.oup.com/rof/article/21/1/7/2888422

Zollo, M., & Winter, S. G. (2002). Deliberate Learning and the Evolution of Dynamic Capabilities. Organization Science, 13(3), 339–351. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3086025

YouTube & Video

Botsman, Rachel, Ted Talks, We’ve Stopped Trusting Institutions and Started Trusting Strangers. https://youtu.be/GqGksNRYu8s?si=CTh4BxLIxttv9FMx

Catz, Safra, Driving Impactful Business Results: Oracle CloudWorld 2022. https://youtu.be/1QQO5yZw0Zs

Ellison, Larry, Keynote Presentations Oracle Corporation. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=larry+ellison+keynote

How does the Blockchain Work: Simply Explained. https://youtube.com/watch?v=SSo_EIwHSd4&si=BWxyrzJeODAZ3WbT

Oracle CloudWorld 2023. https://www.youtube.com/@Oracle/playlists

Project Open Wonderland. https://youtu.be/oyxbmjQivZI https://youtu.be/am_qWxc0tVs https://youtu.be/9hoOMZmyngI https://youtu.be/1xI04ZmSsvI

Tapscott, Don, Understanding Blockchain in Under 7 Minutes. https://youtube.com/watch?v=isuAPyuqS7Y&si=mzn-YrEB1rRWC0iO

Tapscott, Don, Ted Talks, How the Blockchain is Changing Money and Business. https://www.ted.com/talks/don_tapscott_how_the_blockchain_is_changing_money_and_business

Warburg, Bettina, Ted Talks, How Blockchain Will Radically Change the Economy. https://youtu.be/RplnSVTzvnU?si=LvdfZaV7Cw8nwDaz

Blogs & Articles

Boaz, Nate, Fox, Erica, A., Change Leader, Change Thyself. (March 2014). McKinsey Quarterly. https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/leadership/change-leader-change-thyself

Borodovsky, Les @SoberLook (Twitter / X). https://t.co/5su7faaWB7 https://twitter.com/SoberLook

Wall Street Journal

Miss Your Office? Some Companies Are Building Virtual Replicas. https://www.wsj.com/articles/miss-your-office-some-companies-are-building-virtual-replicas-11590573600?st=6kza04nhx7khkoa&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

Big Oil’s Talent Crisis: High Salaries Are No Longer Enough. https://www.wsj.com/articles/big-oils-talent-crisis-high-salaries-are-no-longer-enough-194545be?st=d0wyewt94cbnvnp&reflink=share_mobilewebshare

Vendors

ARK Investments Cathie Wood. https://twitter.com/CathieDWood

Oracle. https://www.oracle.com/erp/

Oracle Cloud ERP. https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/saas/applications-common/23d/faser/index.html#COPYRIGHT_0000

Oracle Blockchain. https://cloud.oracle.com/blockchain

Oracle Sponsored IDC Whitepaper. https://go.oracle.com/LP=65050?elqCampaignId=117657&src1=ad:pas:go:dg:paas1&src2=wwmk170927p00089c0001&SC=sckw=WWMK170927P00089C0001&mkwid=sE7Ycdvy5%7Cpcrid%7C254634085580%7Cpkw%7Coracle%20blockchain%7Cpmt%7Ce%7Cpdv%7Cc%7Csckw=srch:oracle%20blockchain

Investopedia 

Price Maker Definition. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/pricemaker.asp

Price Taker Definition. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/pricetaker.asp

PriceWaterhouseCoopers. http://usblogs.pwc.com/emerging-technology/the-blockchain-challenge/

PriceWaterhouseCoopers blockchain validation. https://www.pwc.com/us/blockchain-validation

SAP

The Intelligent Enterprise. https://www.sap.com/documents/2017/02/c675c3b0-aa7c-0010-82c7-eda71af511fa.html

SpaceX and Swarm. https://www.starlink.com/

Wikipedia. 

Definition of Collusion. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collusion

Quotations

Friedman, Milton. “Only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes politically inevitable.” https://mfidev.uchicago.edu/about/tribute/mfquotes.shtml

Simon, Herbert A., “In an information-rich world, the wealth of information means a dearth of something else: a scarcity of whatever it is that information consumes. What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it.” https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/8502027-in-an-information-rich-world-the-wealth-of-information-means-a