Founders - #190 Henry Ford and Thomas Edison
Episode Date: July 10, 2021What I learned from reading The Vagabonds: The Story of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison's Ten-Year Road Trip by Jeff Guinn. ----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investi...ng in a subscription to Founders Notes----Ford generally accepted the responsibilities of his celebrity-he'd worked diligently to cultivate it, realizing early on that his personal fame heightened demand for Model Ts.Ford's Model T changed everything. Thanks in great part to Ford's innovative assembly line, Model Ts were mass-produced on a previously unimaginable scale. In competitors factories, it took workers several hours to assemble an individual car. At the Ford plant, a completed Model T rolled off the line every two and a half minutes.Ford continued tinkering with the manufacturing process, aggressively seeking ways to cut production expenses and Model T prices even more. The best example fostered a popular joke that you could buy any color Model T that you liked, so long as the color was black. Few realized that Ford insisted the cars come in that color because black paint dried quickest, meaning Model Ts could be whipped through the assembly line and off to dealerships at an even faster pace, saving additional time and labor related dollars.The Model T alone would have established Henry Ford as a household name, but he'd further cemented his reputation as a friend of the working man with a stunning announcement. In an era when factory line workers were lucky to earn $2 a day for their labor and toiled through ten-hour shifts six days a week, Ford pledged to pay $5 a day, and to reduce workdays to eight hours. Everyone in America was talking about it.Over the years, as Ford founded and failed with two auto manufacturing companies before succeeding with his third, he endlessly reminisced about the meeting and Edison's words of encouragement: “Young man, that's the thing. You have it. Keep at it.”Ford was a cannier businessman than his hero, much wealthier.They found themselves in complete agreement about the evils of Wall Street and the crass men there who cared only for profit and not for the public. Both were poor boys who made good. Neither had a college degree, and both were disdainful of those who believed classroom education was superior to hands-on work experience and common sense.Like Edison, Ford didn't have many friends. Ford was a prickly man and also a complicated one, burning to make the world better for humanity as a whole while not enjoying personal contact with most individuals.Ford never doubted his own beliefs and decisions, forbidding disagreement from employees and ignoring any from outsiders. Ford's hobby was work. He devoted almost every waking minute to it.When he and the inventor quickly became the closest of friends, Ford felt energized again, thanks in great part to Edison's inspiration.For all of Ford's professional life he'd had to overcome skepticism from other successful men. He had always been the outsider, the one with the crazy ideas and clumsy social graces. Edison sympathized, because in his earliest years of prominence he was criticized for some of the same traits. The inventor not only accepted Ford for the rough-edged man that he was, he recognized in him the fine qualities that offset the carmaker's obvious flaws.Henry Ford was always a man of strong opinions, and one who absolutely trusted his own instincts. He especially disdained anyone identified as an expert: "If ever I wanted to kill opposition by unfair means, I would endow the opposition with experts. No one ever considers himself an expert if he really knows his job."When prominent, better educated men and their hired experts insisted that the future of the automobile market was limited to manufacturing expensive cars for the wealthy, Ford believed that the real potential lay in sales of a modest but dependable vehicle to the growing American middle class; there would be less profit in individual transactions, but the sheer number of sales would yield greater cumulative returns. With the Model T, Ford was proved right, and he reveled in it.Their main goal was to have a good time. But few business magnates in America had a shrewder understanding of marketing than Edison, Ford, and Firestone. If rank-and-file consumers liked what they saw and read about, as they surely would, then sales of cars and light bulbs and phonographs and tires would directly benefit, too.Ford shocked America by resigning as company president. He was going to start an entirely new automobile manufacturing enterprise. Ford Motor Company stockholders assumed the threat was real, and within weeks agreed to sell Ford their shares at a whopping $12,500 a share. (James Couzens, who knew Ford best, held out and received $13,000 for each of his.) Though Ford had to borrow $60 million of the near $106 million total cost, he was still glad to do it. It had been an elaborate bluff, but he was now in complete control of Ford Motor Company.Ford received thousands of letters with the general message that if he were an anarchist, then America needed more of them. Ford was the son of a Michigan farmer, and like most rural Americans of the time his formal education was limited to a few years in local schools and teachers who themselves had often not graduated high school. Then he had to leave school to make a living. Like Ford, many of his countrymen read only with difficulty, if at all. Their understanding of American history was limited. They, too, might not remember the exact date of the American Revolution, but they knew that Henry Ford introduced the $5 workday and a car that ordinary people could afford. They identified with Ford so strongly that newspaper attacks on him were taken as insults directed at them.They were shocked to receive shipments of Model Ts that they hadn't ordered. The edict on these cars was the same-Ford Motor Company must be paid for them. Refusal would terminate the dealer-company relationship. If they refused to accept these additional Model Ts and were fired by Ford, they could be ruined. Or, as the parent company suggested, they could accept the cars, if necessary get loans from their own banks to pay Ford for them, and then aggressively keep trying to sell Model Ts and hang on until the national economic crisis was over. The dealers had little choice but to accept. That provided Ford with enough money to meet his immediate corporate debts-the dealers had to risk wrath from their banks instead.She never complained when Ford spent most of his off-the-job hours trying to build a combustion engine in their kitchen. Clara encouraged Ford to pursue his dream of creating "a car for the great multitudes," remaining supportive when his first two companies failed, encouraging him during the difficult first years of Ford Motor Company, his third.Ford fixated on even the smallest details.Patience was never Ford's strength.Ford had no interest in laurel-resting.Ford’s cars were built to last. Never flashy, in every way efficient, always dependable, much like the man whose company assembled them. And, just as Ford never saw any reason to change himself, he felt no pressure to change the Model T.Ford's stubbornness gave competitors the opening they needed. When Alfred Sloan took over General Motors in 1923, the new boss emphasized a marketing plan based on Americans wanting not just transportation, but selection. Enough people now owned cars so that ownership itself was no longer special. What was going to matter soon was driving a car that reflected the personality, the specialness, of the individual owner.As individuals, Edison, Ford, and Firestone created the means for the "great multitudes" to enjoy leisure entertainment far beyond what was previously imagined. As the Vagabonds, their summer car and camping trips exemplified what they had helped make possible: See what we're doing? You çan do it, too. By their example, the Vagabonds encouraged countless ordinary Americans to pursue their own dreams.----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work. Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
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Before Edison left, he had a suggestion.
The best part of the California trip had been the drive from Los Angeles to San Diego,
free from any demands but their own whims.
While Edison didn't enjoy public appearances,
he did savor time spent with friends away from the crushing daily concerns at work.
Surely Ford and Firestone felt the same.
Why not embark on future car trips, picking a general area and route, and
then going along as they pleased? They could camp. Perhaps John Burroughs would come along and point
out all sorts of interesting plant life and birds, as had been the plan in 1914 during the aborted
visit to the Everglades. Henry Ford was immediately in favor. And besides recreation, the trips would suit business purposes too.
The three men were pragmatic enough to realize that they couldn't go anywhere,
particularly as a group, without attracting constant notice.
Their California adventures had just proven that newspapers couldn't get enough of Edison's and Ford's adventures.
Everywhere else in the country, reporters would
vie for an opportunity to write about local visits, and thanks to the recent development
of wire services, their stories would appear in newspapers all over the U.S. Edison and Ford and
Firestone gave themselves a nickname. They would be the Vagabonds, annually joining much of the
rest of America exploring the country by car. What better
way for such rich, famous men to demonstrate their kinship with ordinary Americans? We are really
just like you. Their main goal was to have a good time, but few business magnates in America had a
shrewder understanding of marketing than Edison, Ford, and Firestone.
If rank-and-file consumers like what they saw and read about, as they surely would,
then sales of cars and light bulbs and phonographs and tires would directly benefit too.
Alright, so that excerpt is explaining the why behind the book that I'm going to talk to you about today,
which is The Vagabonds, the story of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison's 10-year road trip. And it was written by Jeff
Gwynn. And real quick, just before I jump back into the book, sometimes I have like ideas about
the podcast or new things I'm doing. And anytime that pops up, I'm just going to put them at the
end of any particular episode. So at the end, at the very end of this podcast, there's just some
new updates and ideas I have.
So if you're interested, make sure you can listen to that at the very end.
Let me go ahead and jump into the beginning of the book.
Really a way to think about, I would say the author was just talking about how shrewd a marketer Ford, Edison, and Firestone were.
And I think Ford's probably the greatest of all marketers out of the three of them.
And you can really think of Henry Ford as like the original influencer. He would definitely do remote towns and small communities. And you can think of these
trips, which is what the entire book is about, not only as vacation, they get to hang out with
friends they don't get to normally see because everybody's busy, but it is primarily, the reading
of the book is, I think the primary reason more so than all that was the fact that it gave them publicity for their business, for their respective businesses.
But particularly with Henry Ford, it shows what you can do with my product.
Hey, look, here's another reason you want to buy it.
In addition to the free publicity. So it says on every on every trip, Ford was accompanied by friends, sometimes other business magnates or else government officials, including I think two presidents, if I'm not mistaken,
or one president, and then they met another one. High-ranking Ford staff members and high-ranking
Ford staff members. His road companions always included the tire tycoon Harvey Firestone and the
much-beloved inventor Thomas Edison. Edison was the only living American whose
fame rivaled Ford's own. So both Ford and Edison are obviously extremely famous and well-known
independently. They get together, of course, the press and the general public are going to be
curious of what they're going, what they're up to. And that's the, so this book is, it goes in
sequential order from 1914 to 1924 when the trips end. Um, now throughout the book, they talk about obviously
the trips they're taking, but then the author has a bunch of digressions and these little stories
that give us insights into, uh, the personality and business, uh, like what's going on in their
businesses between Firestone, Ford and Edison. And that's most of what I'm going to focus on today.
It's most of what I personally found interesting. And this is about Henry Ford's one idea. And when I got to this section, it made me think of a quote I'm going to read to you
from this book I covered all the way back on Founders number 118. It's written by Charles
Sorensen, which is like Henry Ford's, like almost like right hand man for 40 years. The name of the
book is My 40 Years at Ford. And I'll get there in one second.
And it's about this idea that I love.
It's like Henry Ford had basically one idea.
And the reason I love that is because you only really need one idea in life to become wildly successful and build the life that you want.
So it says,
Henry Ford introduced a car that transformed American consumerism and travel.
Previously, automobiles were exclusively for the rich,
costing thousands of dollars for purchase and considerably more for upkeep.
But Ford's Model T changed everything.
Thanks in great part to Ford's innovative assembly line, Model Ts were mass-produced on a previously unimaginable scale.
In competitors' factories, it took workers several hours to assemble an individual car.
At the Ford plant, a completed Model T
rolled out the line every two and a half minutes. And so that was Henry Ford's one idea. It took him
probably what, two decades, close to two decades from having the idea to actually figuring out how
to do the idea. And that's, hey, everybody else is building cars for rich people. I want to build a car so inexpensive that everybody can afford it.
And so that leads me to the quote.
And that paragraph just said, you know, thanks in part to Ford's innovative assembly line.
So that's when I read that part, I was like, oh, that reminded me of what Charlie Sorensen said in 40 Years of Ford.
And this is the quote. Henry Ford had no ideas on mass production.
He wanted to build a lot of autos because that's the only way he could get to his one idea, right?
He was determined, but like everyone else at the time, he didn't know how.
In later years, he was glorified as the originator of the mass production idea.
Far from it.
And this is the most important line in this entire paragraph.
He just grew into it like the rest of us.
And I just love that idea that you have. Okay, I have a goal. I have some, a dream, a product I want to build. I'm not sure
yet. I know what I want to do, but I don't know how to do it. And so I know I'm going to have to
experiment. I'm going to have to go through many trial and error and usually a long period of time,
but I'll eventually get there. And that is really the story of Henry Ford's one idea.
There's also something popped in my mind when this author starts comparing Ford's advantage once he's up and running to
what his competitors, you know, that you guys are taking hours to do one car, I can do one every two
and a half minutes. Reminding what Andrew Carnegie, that's a very old idea. And Andrew Carnegie,
back in the 1800s, was obsessed with investing in new technology.
If there was a new machine, a new process that would help him produce steel more efficiently,
he would always invest in that.
And usually the old timers in his business would criticize him for this. And so the way I would summarize Andrew Carnegie's idea and how he applied this idea to his business
is that you invest in technology,
the savings compound, and sometimes that investment in technology is the difference between a profit and a loss. And so I think it was in his autobiography, he talks about,
hey, if I didn't have these machines, if I didn't have the new process,
some years that was the efficiency I gained from investing in technology,
sometimes was the year between me actually making a profit where the people that were criticizing me, the people, usually older gentlemen,
they were in the business before me, actually had a loss because they failed to invest in technology.
And I think Carnegie had a very important realization there that you have to invest
in technology because the savings, or said another way, the advantages compound. And the
fact that Ford spent so much time figuring out how to make a car as cheap as possible and as fast as possible, and I'm going to go into
detail on that in a minute, gave him a massive advantage. You can't compete with somebody. If
it takes you five hours to make a car and he does in two and a half minutes, you're going to lose.
Model Ts were also utilitarian. Fancy options that drove up the price were conspicuously absent.
Ford passed on the savings to his customers. At the time of its introduction, the Model T sold for as little as half what other cars cost.
From there, Ford continued tinkering with the manufacturing process, aggressively seeking
ways to cut production expenses and Model T prices even more. I can't remember because I've
done what, like five, four books on Henry Ford. But in one of them, it said it got to
the point where he stopped advertising completely, because the only advertising he would do was
constantly lower the price of the Model T. When he lowered the price of the Model T, that was
newsworthy. And then he'd get a bunch of free advertising because newspapers and radio and
everybody else in the country would pick up and let customers know, oh, my God, now that, you know, the Model T used to be $550.
There's a picture of let me find it.
There's a picture in this book of a Model T ad and it says $295.
I thought if I remember correctly, and I don't I'm not entirely sure, but I think he got
that price on to like $250, if I'm not mistaken.
So let's go back to the way he thinks about this and his obsession with eliminating waste and aiming for simplicity.
Aiming for simplicity is a direct quote of his from his autobiography.
He talked about over and over again.
So it says he would find ways to cut production expenses and Model T prices even more.
Oh, here it is.
The best example of a popular joke that you could buy any Model T that you liked as long as the color was black. Oh, here it is. in labor-related dollars. And then the savings not only compounded for Ford, the company,
but also the Ford customer.
Model T savings for owners only commenced with the initial purchase.
Since it was only 1,200 pounds, the Model T weighed half as much
as their competitors, and the cost of body repairs
and replacement tires was accordingly less.
When Ford introduced the Model T, this is bananas.
When Ford introduced the Model T, This is bananas. When Ford introduced the Model T,
Americans owned approximately 194,000 cars.
Six years later, that number increased to 2 million.
So that's 10X in six years.
Ford controlled almost half the automobile market at that time.
The Model T alone would have established Henry Ford as a household name, but he further cemented his reputation as a friend of the working man
with a stunning announcement. In an era when factory line workers were lucky to earn $2 a day for their
labor and they had to work 10-hour shifts six days a week, Ford pledged to pay $5 a day and
reduced workdays to eight hours. Everyone in America was talking about it. And I think that's
just another example of Ford being gifted at marketing, which is really surprising that he was so good at marketing when you realize he was very much a loner, very much a part of society, not in society, I guess is what I'm trying to say there.
And a very strange person, which I'll get in like on an individual level, very, very bizarre person as far as learning if you want to learn how to build i think for like
setting henry ford at least this is my interpretation of reading a bunch of books on him
uh very gifted very few people in history that that you that you could study that could tell
you more about uh building uh building companies he had a lot of good ideas but also one of the
strangest just i don't i wouldn't want to be his friend is what i'm telling you and i'll go into
more detail on that uh there's other examples in the book, too, where it's just like he's just a bizarre person.
Let me go into more of like the origination of Ford idolized Edison.
They want to becoming best friends, even though they were Edison was a good deal older than him.
And this is the origination of that. This is what I'm about to read to you happened in 1896.
And think about
how crazy it is the model t comes 12 years later so it's just a reminder not to quit over the years
as ford founded and failed with two auto manufacturing companies before succeeding
with his third he endlessly reminisced about the meeting and edison's words of encouragement
he's working for edison at the time he's introduced to edison because somebody that
knows edison says hey this ford guy has way to, to make an internal combustion engine reminder that most cars at this time were either steam powered, which didn't work well at all, all are electric, which also didn't work well at all.
Uh, and so Edison says, young man, that's the thing you have it.
Keep at it.
Ford's admiration for Edison blossomed into virtual worship as a result.
Throughout his own business successes, as his hard work and belief in himself cultivated with
the Model T, Ford warmed himself with memories of that encounter with his hero.
And one thing that's also surprising when you analyze their careers is Ford was much,
much wealthier. Ford was a cannier businessman than his hero and much wealthier. Part of this
is because Ford also didn't need to invent his market. He only needed to expand him, expand them.
And I want to also say Ford stuck with what he was working on. The whole thing, and there's
examples later in the book where just Edison jumps around too much. So he had a very hard,
he had a lot of great inventions, a lot of contributions to humanity in general,
but he had a hard time capturing that value more in their friendships
and I guess why they were able to be friends and what they had in common.
Edison had few close friends.
He always suspected that anyone seeking friendship had ulterior motives.
But Ford was already far richer than Edison and almost as famous.
There were other things in common.
They found themselves in complete agreement about the evils of Wall Street
and the crass men there who cared only for profit and not for the public. Both were poor
boys who had made good. Neither had a college degree, and both were disdainful of those who
believed classroom education was superior to hands-on work experience and common sense.
Like Edison, Ford did not have many friends. Ford was a prickly
man and also a complicated one. That's an understatement. Burning to make the world better
for humanity as a whole while not enjoying personal contact with most individuals. Edison
being a notable exception to that. Ford said, I think Mr. Edison is the greatest man in the world.
So the fourth member of the Vagabonds is John Burroughs, the author and naturalist.
And it was a little surprising that he could develop such a close relationship with Henry Ford, given that he criticized cars.
He didn't want people like polluting nature.
And so this is really on how they were able to become friends.
And then you see also see, you also see the complicated nature of Ford.
He did not believe in charity, but with his friends, he was unbelievably generous.
So it says, Ford never doubted his own—and this is more about his personality, too.
This is repeated over and over in every book that you'll read on Henry Ford.
He never doubted his own beliefs and decisions.
He forbid disagreement from employees and would ignore any outsiders.
Ford's hobby was work.
He devoted almost every waking minute to it.
But Ford loved birds all of his life and whenever possible set aside time to observe them.
So Burroughs is an expert on the study of birds and nature in general. Ford sent a message to America.
So he winds up giving Burroughs a Model T.
He did this on several occasions and then would also publicize that.
So it's another form of advertising if you think about that.
And so I would say with almost everything, he has ulterior motives.
So it says Ford sent a message to America.
If old-fashioned John Burroughs loved to ride in them, how much more might younger, more progressive individuals savor the kind of outdoor adventures made possible by car ownership. As for Burroughs, he learned years earlier during his tramps with Teddy Roosevelt
that having a famous patron greatly expanded his audiences for books and public lectures.
So he's doing the exact same thing with his relationship with Ford,
that Ford, Firestone, and Edison are doing on this tenure of vagabonding these auto trips throughout America.
There was more. Burroughs confided to Ford that he feared losing his family farm where he was raised. Relatives living there
struggled to meet the hefty mortgage payments. Ford bought the property outright and deeded it
to Burroughs. Ford's generosity towards his few close friends was boundless. And it's really hard to understand the scope of Henry Ford's wealth.
He owns 100, I think by the time you're in 1919,
if I'm not mistaken,
he owns 100% of the Ford Motor Company.
I think it would be valued at like $500 million in 1919.
It's just outrageous.
This is more about the benefit of being around great people,
how they will inspire you.
This reminds me, so Ford is able to do this in person.
So very few people are going to be able to make relationships with somebody as influential as Thomas Edison.
It reminded me of this podcast I saw a long time ago with Elon Musk where he talked about, you know, he sought, he didn't have many mentors in life.
This is when he was in his early 20s. So he sought mentors in a historical context. And he did that by reading
biographies. And so being around Thomas Edison greatly inspired Ford, just like reading about
great people inspires me and you. So it says Ford twice came close to selling the business. This is
the actual successful Ford Motor Company, the third one. It was as though Ford believed he
achieved what he could.
But Edison always sought the next great thing,
and failures like mining innovation and concrete housing didn't deter him.
He never lost belief in himself.
When he and the inventor quickly became the closest of friends,
Ford felt energized again, thanks in great part to Edison's inspiration.
For all of Ford's professional life,
he had to overcome skepticism from other successful men. He had always been the outsider,
the one with crazy ideas and clumsy social graces. Edison sympathized, because in the
earliest years of prominence, he was criticized for some of the same traits. The inventor not
only accepted Ford for the rough-edged man that he was, he recognized in him the fine qualities that offset the carmaker's obvious flaws.
Ford was aware that Edison was one of the very few people who genuinely liked him,
and he was profoundly grateful for it.
So this is Henry Ford on experts and why he felt that way.
And I'm going to bring this, there's so many examples in this book that I'm going to point out to you because I think it's really important.
Like this fundamental belief in his own ability, never doubting himself. These are all very,
very positive traits, especially when everybody else from the outside telling you, no, you're
wrong, you're wrong. Internal combustion engine is not going to work. You can't, you have to build
cars for rich people. All the stuff they told Henry Ford that wound up, he was right about,
and they were wrong. It just took a lot of time and determination to to for that to play out to realize that he's right the problem is that trait never
left him even when the circumstances changed so later on when people after I think he sells like
15 million Model Ts people are realizing okay now a lot more people have car ownership now we want
choices and this is we covered this uh back I was in the early 100 somewhere in those episodes where I did.
I think it was like a 10 or 12 part series on all these early automobile founders, the people that actually built the car industry in America.
And so what we saw there was Alfred Sloan, Billy Durant, people like that.
Walter Chrysler, they took advantage of the gap that Henry Ford left because he never he just thought, OK, I'm going
to make the Model T forever. I've already figured this out. I have to change. So, again, it's just
really hard. There's no this is not black or white. It's just so hard to realize when self-belief is
valuable, like relentless self-belief is valuable and when it's actually a liability. Henry Ford was
always a man of strong opinions and one who absolutely trusted his own instincts.
He especially disdained anyone identified as an expert.
Quote from him, if I ever wanted to kill opposition by unfair means, I would endow the opposition with experts.
No one ever considers himself an expert if he really knows his job.
Now, he's probably right about that.
He's essentially saying there's always more to learn. When prominent, better educated men and their hired experts insisted that the future of the automobile market was limited to manufacturing expensive cars for the wealthy, Ford believed that the real potential lay in sales of a modest but dependable vehicle
to the growing American middle class. So he's right about that at the beginning. There would
be less profit in individual transactions, but the sheer number of sales would yield greater
cumulative returns. Ford was proved right and he reveled in it. So he has this wild success, but then it went to his
head. This is really the dangers of an unchecked ego, because then he thinks, okay, I did this
myself. I'm the reason that the company's successful. And a lot of people make the
argument that Ford would have never been successful without the person that was running the company
with him, James Cousins, which I'll go into right here but again the reminder the dangers of an unchecked ego their
relationship nearly approximated one of equals until the model t established inarguable market
dominance and then ford began gradually to resent cousins as only a glorified bookkeeper
the failing was mutual cousins believedousins believed that Ford became so
convinced of his own brilliance that he forgot others also made critical contributions to his
company's success. Ford felt encouraged to offer his opinion on all sorts of non-car-related
subjects and had no doubt about his sagacity regarding everything else. I'm going to define
that term. I had to look it up myself. I've it before couldn't remember what it what it uh meant so in case this might be helpful to
you so that means the ability to make good judgments so let's go over that ford felt
encouraged to offer his opinions on all sorts of non-car related subjects and this is the dumbest
thing he ever did and had no doubt about his ability to make good judgments regarding everything else
and so he starts publishing essentially like a newsletter about a lot of his anti-semitism
he railed on this global jewish worldwide conspiracy that he was convinced of started
talking about politics and war and all other stuff and so cousins says what
are you doing cousins confronted him insisting that the owner's personal politics had no place
in an internal company publication ford disagreed it was his company cousins quit the next day he
went on to a distinguished political career first as mayor of detroit and later as u.s senator but
with cousins gone so was the only check on for Ford's increasing proclivity to say exactly what he pleased and damn the consequences.
And this is he winds up. It's not. So he starts doing this with an internal company publication.
Right. And then he starts he buys his own newspaper and he spends, I think, he loses like five million dollars over like eight years trying to make this company or this this newspaper successful.
And it was just full of just just bizarre.
I mean, here's a problem when I say like, let's study Henry Ford for his great ideas about building companies and nothing else, because this guy winds up being one of the few people, one of the few Americans he gets awarded.
And this is not something you want, not an award or distinguishing you want.
He's one of the few Americansicans that has awarded uh this made-up award i forgot what it's count what what it's called
but it's a made-up award by adolf hitler and i'm if i'm not mistaken in mein kampf hitler talks
about how great a man ford was because they shared these same like this this hatred for jews and this
convince they were both convinced that uh jewish control of banking and and were both convinced that Jewish control of banking and money supply was,
they were essentially, there's a secret cabal of Jews running the world.
And Henry Ford would print this in his newspaper. Examples in this book are just crazy.
This is why the demand for an inexpensive car would skyrocket if you could make one that's
reliable and cheap, which is the wave that Henry Ford rode.
The average American rarely ventured more than 12 miles from home because that was the distance a horse and wagon could comfortably cover from there and back in a day.
So in the year 1918, they decide, because they do different routes every year,
they're like, okay, we're going to go down to the south.
We're going to try to publicize and get more interest and more people buying Ford cars in the South.
I'm only going to read one section here. This blew my mind. Resentment over the Civil War still
lingered in both the North and South. So they're making the point that a lot of people would do,
especially as the years progressed, people might drive from like New York. You could go to New
York from San Francisco on like a very primitive highway, but very few people tend to drive from like New York. You could go to New York from San Francisco on like a very primitive highway.
But very few people tend to go from like New York to Atlanta.
And this is part of the reason why resentment over the Civil War still lingered in both the North and the South.
That conflict conflict. This is just blew my mind. That conflict had concluded only 53 years earlier.
Edison was a teenager when the first shots were fired and Ford was born a few weeks after the Battle of Gettysburg.
So right now in this 1918 trip, they're as close to the Civil War as we are to the year 1970.
So on these trips, a lot of times the cars would break down.
That's why at the very beginning when they start vagabonding, a lot less people do
it. As the cars become more and more reliable, more people do it. And one thing to admire about
Henry Ford is he would do a lot of the work himself. In one example, he gives this poor
farmer a Model T. He says, hey, you can park the Model T in the barn. They try to put the Model T
in the barn. It doesn't fit. So Ford and another guy, they went on spending hours extending the entrance to the barn, doing all the work themselves.
And so this is another example. They break down and they bring it to a mechanic.
They're somewhere out in the south and the mechanics are like, oh, this is, you know, I can't fix this.
And Henry, it's essentially Henry, I'll do it myself, Ford.
The mechanics in town pronounced the damage was unrepairable.
A replacement fan would have to be sent for.
Considerable delay was inevitable, certainly a day at least.
Ford listened to the mechanics, then asked if he could borrow some of their tools.
Using his own knife and their soldering iron, he poked holes in the broken bits of the fan,
stitched them together with thin wire, then soldered the wires in place.
The punctured point of the radiator was also
soldered tight the ignition was switched on and the packard ran perfectly ford's repair work took
two hours and so we see two things there for again henry i'll do it myself ford but also he just
doesn't he he wants to figure and that's a positive trait he wants to figure things out for himself
mechanic said it's impossible gonna be at least a day for his idea.
I think I can do it. And he wound up doing it. Let me there's a little.
Let me give you a little summary of Harvey Firestone.
I might read his autobiography, too, because he went to building a massively successful company.
And this is like a brief overview of how that happened. By 1918 harvey firestone was a businessman of considerable national stature he was very much self-made
firestone left the family farm to work as a bookkeeper for a coal company he was a salesman
for questionable health related aids and finally a dealer in horse-drawn carriages in the mid 1890s
firestone wrote in his memoir for the first time it struck me that my future was right there on the wheels of my buggy.
Using his meager savings as a startup money,
Firestone eventually established a company manufacturing rubber tires for automobiles.
He realized that the solid rubber wheels utilized on early cars
would not hold up sufficiently on the country's rough roads.
And this is how you know there's an opportunity for
a better product, right? Rich men bought the earliest American cars and they universally
hired an assistant who not only served as a chauffeur, but provided the muscle necessary
for frequent tire changing. And this is fascinating. You know the product is so bad
that you have to hire somebody to replace the tires over and over again.
There's obvious room for improvement here. And that reminded me of Paul Graham has a series of essays on his website, Paul Graham dot com that are fantastic.
One of them is this this this essay called Schlepp Blindness.
And when I got to this section of the book, it made me think of what I remembered from reading Paul Graham's essay on Schlepp Blindness.
I just want to pull out a couple a couple quotes from that essay, if you don't mind.
So let's define this.
There are great startup ideas lying around unexploited right under our noses,
which is what Firestone discovered, right?
But he discovered that, let's see, what is that, 130 years before Paul Graham's writing the same thing?
One reason we don't see them is a phenomenon I call schlep
blindness. Schlep means a tedious, unpleasant task. The most dangerous thing about our dislike
of schleps, our unpleasant tasks, is that much of it is unconscious. This is not the entire essay.
This is just a few paragraphs from it, obviously. Your unconscious won't even let you see ideas that involve painful schleps. You just assume that's the way things example I know of schlep blindness is Stripe,
or rather Stripe's idea. For over a decade, every hacker who had ever had to process payments online
knew how painful the experience was. Thousands of people must have known about this problem.
It's just like thousands of people must have known about Harvey Fierston's problem, right?
The problem that his product's going to solve, rather. Thousands of people must have known about
this problem. And yet when they started startups, they decided to build recipe
sites or aggregators for local events. Why? Why work on problems few care about, care much about,
and no one will pay for when you could fix one of the most important components of the world's
infrastructure, which is what Stripe did, right? Because slept blindness prevented people from even considering the idea of fixing payments.
That is exactly what is happening in the story of Firestone.
People didn't even think, hey, instead of inventing a better tire,
let me hire a guy that has to drive me around.
And for the inevitable tire failures, whether they're flat or they explode, he's going to have the muscle to change the tire for me.
I just think that's another example of human nature not changing.
Firestone envisioned better, longer-lasting tires.
Due to extended trial and error, he developed a new tire that had better tread and better traction on roads of all kinds.
Though Firestone now had a superior product,
he lacked the means of making tires widely known to potential customers.
He had no money for advertising and no distribution.
Firestone, this is another thing.
So the tires, Firestone tires would only fit Firestone rims.
We were ready to go to market, but there was no market to go on.
In 1905, Firestone had heard that Henry Ford
planned to manufacture a fleet of 2,000 cars that would sell for an unheard of $500 each.
So that gave him an idea. If I could induce Ford to put these cars with our rims, then we would
have 2,000 customers who had to use our tires, to the exclusion of all others. Firestone met with
Ford, who agreed to test his tires. Ford found them preferable both for their road performance and their price.
Firestone offered them to Ford at $55 a set, compared to $70 charged by his competitors.
Firestone borrowed frantically to finance production for the huge order.
In 1908, when Ford began producing Model Ts by the tens, then hundreds of thousands,
he remained loyal to the manufacturer who had
earlier sold him quality tires at a reasonable price. Firestone tires became one of the best
selling brands on the market and Firestone's fortune was made. And in addition to that,
they also had a lot of, they shared a lot of the same business philosophy. They shared several
business philosophies. They disdain planned obsolescence, believing customer loyalty was
best retained by providing reasonably priced commodities that could be dependent upon to last a long time.
Ford and Firestone were mutually convinced that the most work efficient employees were those who
felt they had a true stake in the company's success. So they paid higher wages, as well as
offering various forms of profit sharing. In particular, both believe that companies could be efficiently run by only one man
whose orders must be carried out by efficient subordinates.
And now we reach an example of what I mentioned earlier that Ford's great to listen to about company building,
but he was an absolute weirdo who wanted to control the behavior of all those around him.
The carmaker had strong opinions about diet and nutrition, abhorring manufactured sweets in particular.
Edison asked Harvey Firestone Jr. to fetch him a pop from the general store.
Ford loathed sugary soft drinks,
but couldn't bring himself to criticize his idol's indulgence on one.
He still seethed, and he's mad about this for a few hours.
And a few hours later, when Harvey Firestone Jr. purchased Burroughs some caramels from another shop, which was Burroughs' favorite kind of candy, Ford couldn't restrain himself.
Harvey Firestone Jr. was poisoning John Burroughs.
Ford stormed over, snatched the box of caramels out of the young man's hands and flung it on the street.
Okay, so there's another section I found interesting.
This is how Ford came to own 100% of the Ford Motor Company.
Ford was determined to be the sole controlling voice of Ford Motor Company.
He owned 58.5% of the company.
For many years, he resented the half dozen or so fellow stockholders
whose views sometimes conflicted with his own.
He was
definitely a dictator, right? Especially when two brothers, John and Horace Dodge, I've also done
podcasts on them as well. It's an archive, I think 115. So I don't remember the exact number, but
they were wild people. They're really fun to actually read about. They're crazy. And unfortunately,
they went up dying in the flu epidemic in 1919, maybe 1920.
I forgot when it was, but they died relatively young. Unfortunately, they were wild that they
were probably destined to die young. When two brothers, John and Horace Dodge, successfully
sued him for putting too large a share of profits into the company rather than paying appropriate
dividends to shareholders. Ford shocked America by resigning as company president.
He said he was going to start an entirely new automobile manufacturing enterprise.
The Ford Motor Company stockholders assumed the threat was real and within weeks agreed to sell
Ford their shares at a whopping $12,500 a share. James Cousins, who was his alter ego and the
person that quit, knew ford best held out and
received thirteen thousand dollars for each of his shares though ford had to borrow sixty million
dollars of the near 106 million dollar total cost he was glad to do it it had been an elaborate bluff
but he was now in complete control of the ford motor company so we see his faith his unrelenting
faith in himself,
and that bluff worked out.
This is an example where
his delusional optimism didn't work out.
This is when he starts his newspaper.
Ford had his own newspaper,
and he put the Dearborn Independent
to work on his behalf.
Ford and the editors he'd hired realized
they must completely refurbish
the Independent's editorial and art content
if it was to attain the kind of circulation necessary to equal and eventually surpass Ford.
So it says Ford never aim low.
This is what I mean by being delusional.
So it's like, OK, we need a new editorial, a new art content because our circulation is going to pass that of nationally influential papers like the New York Times.
That obviously never happens. He winds up either closing or selling the paper. that of nationally influential papers like the New York Times.
That obviously never happens.
He winds up either closing or selling the paper.
I want to say eight years later, and I know he lost at least $5 million on doing this.
And this is the paper where he was publishing these exposés
on this Jewish global conspiracy.
And he was obviously very anti-war.
He's basically a newspaper that just espoused his personal opinions.
And the only way that circulation would grow is because he made dealerships for dealerships give subscriptions to everybody that bought a Model T.
So I don't know if he forgot about that.
He later on, he's like, oh, look, it's circulation is growing. And then I forgot what it was. It was like just a small percentage points of, let's say 5%, for example, of circulation growth was people
that actually bought the paper on their own and wasn't just given a subscription with their
purchase of a Model T. So again, just, you can be good at one thing and that's great because you
only have to be good at one thing, but some, you know, knowing, I guess it goes back to
Buffett's and munger's
idea of your circle of competence if you don't know where that ends it could be very dangerous
also in the book he winds up fighting and and suing and this is where you know he winds up
being correct because he felt this i think it was the chicago tribune libeled him so he winds up
fighting this case for many, many years.
The judge, the jury winds up ruling in his favor, but didn't award him any damages.
So this is, let me just read my note to you.
I'm going to read my note to you before I read this section.
So Ford testified and didn't know trivia like the date of the American Revolution or the definition of the word Bollyhoo.
Who cares? A business is just an idea that makes someone else's life better. That's Richard Branson's quote. Still the best description of why there's unlimited opportunity.
Because if you look at, hey, a business is just an idea that makes someone's life better.
That means there's unlimited opportunity for us to pursue. Right.
Ford served others, which is one thing I learned from,
one of the most valuable things I learned from Henry Ford
is the fact that business is just service.
You're just in service of others, and so you never lose focus of that.
And then finally, you only have to be good at one thing.
That is Paul Orfala, which was the founder of Kinko's.
I covered a few weeks ago, maybe a month or two ago by now.
And his realization that, hey, wait a minute. In school, they told me how to be good at everything.
I have to be good at gym class. I have to know physics. I have to study economics. I have to be
good at math. I have to study history and reading and writing. And he's like, but in life, you only
have to be good at one thing. And he's like, I don't know how copy machines work, but I know I
can sell what comes out of them. And he built a fabulously successful life just being good at that one thing.
And then my own. This is I'm taking credit for this idea. I undoubtedly learned it from somebody else.
I hope this isn't somebody else's quote, but it might be. Never underestimate humans ability to focus on the inconsequential.
All right. So that's a long note. Let me read the section. The case went to the jury. Their verdict was announced in Ford's favor. The Tribune had libeled him.
He wanted a million dollars damages.
They gave him six cents.
Both sides claimed vindication.
It was the unanimous conclusion of most major publications on both coasts and in big cities throughout the U.S.
that Ford had been humiliated and might never recover in public opinion.
That's not true.
The New York Times compared Ford's witness stand quizzing to a history test in school.
And he did not receive a passing degree. But customers don't care if he does.
This is a point that I was trying to make. Customers don't care if he knows if he doesn't know the date of the American Revolution or the definition of the word value.
He built a car that I can afford and it is reliable. That's all they're going to care about. They have their own lives to worry about. The San Jose Mercury Herald predicted that the future mention of Ford
will be accompanied by laughter and ridicule. Ford received... Now, so that's their response
from the media, right? But here's what is the average person in America. Ford received thousands
of letters with the general message that if he were an anarchist, that was part of what happened in trial, then America needed more of them.
Ford was the son of a Michigan farmer.
And like most Americans of the time, his formal education was limited to a few years in local schools
and teachers who themselves had not graduated high school.
Then he had to leave school to make a living.
Like Ford, many of his countrymen read only with difficulty, if at all.
Their understanding of American history was limited.
They, too, might not remember the exact date of the American Revolution, and this is the most important part,
but they knew Henry Ford introduced a $5 workday and a car that ordinary people could afford.
They identified with Ford so strongly that newspapers' attacks on him were taken as an insult directed at them.
And that whole section really is, to me, just a reminder.
I think that's one of the greatest ideas I've ever come across, the greatest realization, the greatest facts of life, whatever you want to call it.
The fact that you just have to be good at one thing.
If you were serving other humans and you're good at that one thing, it could be making a pizza, making a car, inventing a light bulb, making tires. It
doesn't matter what it is. You can build a fantastically successful and independent life.
That's super motivating for me. So this is the cost of losing focus. This is on Thomas Edison.
I saw, I want to say this is a tweet. I looked for it, couldn't find it. But a long time ago,
the way I remember it is somebody's mentor died and they, they, they were honoring their, their mentor that died and said, Hey,
the biggest advice this guy gave me was, you know,
several decades older than me. And he said like, rabbit eye kid,
quit jumping, focus, like stop jumping from idea to idea and just focus.
And it's great advice. And we see Thomas Edison didn't, uh, didn't do that.
I mean, you gotta, that's what you want to do.
You gotta do it and just deal with the fact
that you're not going to be as successful as you could be
if you just focus on one thing.
But Edison, to me, what I learned from studying him
is he just jumped around too much.
Time and again, he invented things with long-term market appeal
only to lose interest or miscalculate
what form of his inventions consumers wanted to buy.
Examples were plentiful.
Edison invented the phonograph
and his company was first to bring it to stores. But for nearly a decade after that, he focused on
other projects while competitors built and marketed their own phonographs. So that's just a way to
replay recorded audio, mostly music. He thought, if you read that book, The Wizard of Menlo Park,
I think it was Founders Number Three, something like that. It's one of the first books I did.
It was really funny because he's like i'm gonna invent this and then
what people are gonna do is they're gonna use it you know if like people have wine cellars at their
house he thought they were gonna have a collection of audio sermons like preachers and they would
just have like a room in their house that had you know me i don't know like you'd have 100 bottles
of wine you'd have 100 different sermons. He's way off by that.
But it was a fundamentally important invention if he just stuck with it.
It's like inventing the iPhone.
Like, yeah, I'm going to work on something else.
Their own phonographs over time depriving the originator of what could have been an Edison-dominated business.
Edison not only invented the incandescent bulb, he created the most efficient generator systems to light them.
Edison's company was poised to power every major American... It's remarkable. This came from one person. Edison's company was
poised to power every major city. And by 1919, almost half the households in America had
electricity. But Edison didn't financially benefit. Years earlier, he sold his interest
to competitors, and they eventually formed General Electric. So GE, rather than Edison,
raked in the substantial profits.
And it's another thing Peter Thiel
in his book Zero to One talks about.
He's like, it's not just enough to generate
or to produce value.
You've got to capture that.
You've got to find a system to capture
some of the value that you're giving to consumers.
This is a great illustration
that Edison failed to do that.
He created an unbelievable amount
of value for humanity
he captured a the tiniest tiniest i mean he's not poor we're not we're not gonna you know we're not
um we're not gonna feel sorry for the guy but he could it's just a he could have done a better job
they eventually formed general electric and g rather than edison raked in potential profits
edison's company films so he invented you could think of almost like the early movies right
edison company films were huge hit during huge hit during the early years of motion pictures.
They were two-wheelers.
The longest was 25 minutes.
But moviegoers soon wanted longer films, and four-wheelers became the norm.
Edison, though, liked two-wheelers better and wouldn't produce anything longer.
Ticket sales for his films declined, and by 1918,
he sold off all his film interests. The same was substantially true for recorded music.
For years, Edison's recording dominated, but Americans began enjoying jazz and wanted those records. Edison hated jazz. He insisted that his company release only recordings of more
traditional music, like symphonies and operas, that he personally preferred. Predictably,
competitors' recordings soon outsold Edison's,
and by 1929, Edison's companies no longer produced entertainment records.
Edison's vagabond friends lamented his business judgment.
Ford said, Edison is easily the world's greatest scientist.
I am not sure that he is also not the world's worst businessman.
He knows nothing of business.
Firestone agreed.
Mr. Edison thinks almost wholly creatively
and does not give the same thought to commerce
that he gives to creation.
And the point that Ford and Firestone are making,
the one Edison missed,
is that you have to do both.
You have to create something valuable
and then capture that value.
All right, so moving on.
There's a lot of times when I'm reading
this, try to put myself in the shoes of the people involved in the story. And something I talked to
you about over and over again is the fact that you want to analyze things by like, what side of the
transaction do I want to be on. And one of the main themes on the history of entrepreneurship
is the importance of control that if something is important to your business, you want you don't
want to be just relying on the good graces of other humans right you want to control that decision and so this is we're going to see what henry ford did to avoid borrowing
money from banks during an economic downturn and it clearly sees like yes some people can become
wealthy and they still do to this day um owning car dealerships but in this case ford has all of
henry ford had all the power and And so it says, Ford dealers had a
strict financial arrangement with their parent company. When they ordered cars, they paid for
them in advance rather than as they sold. The premise was that with their money at stake rather
than the company's, they would work even harder to sell the cars. Okay, so they got to pay for
them in advance. You can't give me the money when you sell the car, right?
Since the Model T was constantly in high demand, there was no hardship for the dealers.
They considered themselves lucky to be affiliated with Ford.
But the 1920 economic slump left Ford dealers anxious to move the cars they had on hand and reluctant to order more.
So they were shocked when they started to receive shipments
of Model Ts that they hadn't ordered. The edict, which is coming from Henry Ford, on these cars
were the same. Ford Motor Company must be paid for them. Refusal to do so would terminate the
dealer-company relationships. If they refused to accept these additional Model Ts, they were going
to be fired by Ford and they could be ruined.
Or as the parent company suggested, they could accept the cars and if necessary, get loans from their banks to pay Ford for them.
See what he did? So he doesn't want to borrow. He's going to make you borrow.
And then aggressively keep trying to sell Model Ts and hang on until the national economic crisis was over.
The dealers had little choice but to accept.
That provided Ford with enough money to meet his immediate corporate debts,
and the dealers had to risk wrath from their banks instead.
And then as they go, so the book goes in chronological order.
Every chapter is based on a year and about the trip they're taking,
but also they have these flashbacks.
And so this is a flashback about what was Henry Ford doing when he was in his 20s, which I always love studying. In August 1923,
Henry and Clauda Ford had been married for 35 years. When they met at a country dance in 1886,
Ford was 23 and Clauda was 20. He was farming and he hated it.
So they wound up getting married.
The Fords moved to Detroit.
Ford took an engineering job at Edison Illuminating Company.
His wife never complained when Ford spent most of his off-the-job hours
trying to build a combustible engine in their kitchen.
It's remarkable.
She encouraged Ford to pursue his
dream of creating a car for the great multitudes, remaining supportive when his first two companies
failed and encouraging him during the difficult first years of the Ford Motor Company, his third
company. She forgave his obsession with work, accepted his constant certainty that whatever
he thought had to be
right. And I got, I came across this point. This surprised me. I don't know if I've ever,
maybe I read it before and I forgot, but, and then even overlooked his extended affair with
an employee that resulted in a child out of wedlock. I don't remember him having a child
out of wedlock. It's wild. And then in return, Ford didn't listen to anyone. If if Ford listened to anyone other than himself, it was his wife.
She convinces him later on not to not to run for president, which he wanted.
I think he was going to run like 1924, something like that. But that that statement seems to be accurate, that he listened to very few people.
But he did seek the counsel and listen to to her influence and a part
part of that is because he believed that she she was actually one of the few people that actually
held uh wanted what was best for him and just a bunch of one sentence descriptions of more henry
ford traits spread out through some pages over a few pages patience patience was never Ford's strength. Ford had no interest in Laurel resting.
Ford fixated on even the smallest details
and then a sentence about the friendship
between Ford and Edison.
A primary, if unspoken rule
in the close friendship with Ford
was that neither, him or Edison,
would burden the other
with admissions of uncertainty or weakness.
They were both extremely, extremely proud men.
They're not going to admit to other people any kind of uncertainty, doubts, weaknesses, or anything like that.
This is another reminder that products have the personality traits of their creators, of their founders.
The Model T was a car built to last.
It was never flashy, in every way efficient,
always dependable, much like the man whose company assembled them. And just as Ford never saw any
reason to change himself, he felt no pressure to change the Model T. So that's why we have this,
what we talked about earlier, this self-belief that I'm right and you're wrong. At the beginning
of his career served him really well. We start to see that falls apart. I did this three-belief that I'm right and you're wrong, at the beginning of his career served him really well. We start to see that falls apart.
I did this three-part series embedded in that other series
from the early automobile pioneers.
I did a three-part series on Billy Durant and Alfred Sloan.
Billy Durant, one of the most important people.
I would say him and Ford are the most important people.
Maybe Henry Leland too because he was so influential
and a generation older than these guys.
But the most important people at henry leland too because he was so influential and a generation older than these guys but the most important people at the very beginning this foundation of what becomes
this gigantic industry right and so billy durant is he was the founder of gm the idea person he had
the vision and it took alfred sloan the professional ceo to come in and actually apply the vision
and that in this book it talks a little bit about that gap that I mentioned earlier, that Ford left his competitors and that GM drove
right through. Ford's stubbornness gave competitors the opening they needed. When Alfred Sloan took
over General Motors in 1923, the new boss emphasized a marketing plan based on Americans
wanting not just transportation, but selection. And that's what Billy Durant knew that way before
Sloan did. And that's why he was buying up. buying up he wound up you know doing all these fan shenanigans
of buying up all these different uh car manufacturers that serve different needs
it was a completely almost it was the opposite strategy that ford pursued right
enough people now own cars so that ownership itself wait let me read that again uh New boss emphasized the marketing plan based on Americans wanting not just transportation, but selection.
Enough people now own cars so that ownership itself was no longer special.
What was going to matter soon was driving a car that reflected their personality, the specialness of the individual owner. And this applies to much more than just, like a lot of people buy products
because not solely for the benefit of the product,
but what that product says about them to other people.
The Model T was no longer the near exclusive vehicle
for auto campers.
So auto camping is what vagabonding was.
You get in the car, you get in your Model T,
you pack it full of camping gear, you drive out.
And then when it gets dark, because you can't really drive at night at this time in history,
you camp out in the wilderness, on farmland, whatever the case is, right?
So that's what they started doing.
What happened is as more people started owning cars and cars got better,
they didn't want to camp anymore.
They wanted to have sleep in an actual bed.
So entrepreneurs started opening motels
and restaurants and places to service
all these Americans that are now
hitting the road, which is what the
vagabonds were trying to popularize.
And it wound up growing into something
bigger than they ever anticipated.
This contributed to a turn
in the gradual demise of auto camps
and the emergence of motels. After buying an attractive Chevy to drive in, few wanted to
clutter their flashy image by cramming the car full of bulking camping gear. They wanted to stay
in places that included some kind of convenient parking and what the market demanded savvy
entrepreneurs were pleased to make available. Henry Ford acknowledged none of this.
And so the last trip was in 1924.
This is also when Edison's getting older.
He can't keep going on these trips anymore.
Ford's business, he starts to lose market share. He eventually does.
He creates a new Model A
and then eventually adapts GM's strategy
that they pioneered.
And he'll start doing multiple models that change.
He did not want to do that. And that's kind of the end of this complete dominance. Obviously Ford's around
today, still really successful, but you know, when in the Model T's day, he dominated the entire
industry. So that starts to slip. So this is the end of the Vagabonds and I'll close here.
The Vagabond summer car trips ended for good on August 20, 1924. At the time, Ford and Firestone didn't realize it, but Edison probably did.
A year later, Firestone called on Edison in New Jersey to tell the inventor that it was time to plan the Vagabond's 1925 outing.
The 78-year-old Edison responded that he didn't believe he could this year.
The inventor cited mild stomach ailments and concerns about the sales end of his business.
And while there were still considerable
interest in Ford and Edison as individuals,
widespread public appeal of their
summer trips with Firestone had run
its course. A contributing
factor to the end of the trips
wasn't the vagabond's expectation of too much
attention being paid to them, but too
little attention. Which is why
I mentioned earlier, I think there was ulterior motives, like it was primarily a business trip, at least it appears to
me. The Vagabonds are remembered to this day. Nearly 14 decades after Edison invented incandescent
bulbs and the power grid systems to efficiently and economically light them, Thomas Edison remains
one of the most iconic and beloved figures in American history. Henry Ford's legacy is more
complicated, but the Model T still reigns as the most famous
and most popular car in American automobile history. As individuals, Edison, Ford, and
Firestone created the means for the great multitudes to enjoy leisure entertainment far
beyond what was previously imagined. As the vagabonds, their summer car and camping trips exemplified what they had helped make possible.
See what we're doing? You can do it too.
By their example, the Vagabonds encouraged countless ordinary Americans to pursue their own dreams.
And that is where I'll leave it.
To get the full story, read the book.
If you buy the book using the link that's in the show notes in your podcast player,
you'll be supporting the podcast at the same time.
That is 190 books down, 1,000 to go, and I'll talk to you again soon.
Okay, so I just have two quick things I want to update you on.
The first is that I'm now offering a lifetime plan.
I started doing this just as an experiment for new subscribers,
but I also don't think it's right when companies offer better deals to new customers than already existing ones.
So you don't have to do anything.
You can stay on the plan you're on if you prefer.
But if you want to switch over to a pay one time, have lifetime access plan,
I will leave a link in the show notes and you can do that.
Now,
here's the problem. They're all separate systems. So this process is a little bit janky,
but you'd sign up for the new lifetime plan, right? And then you'd have to cancel,
log in and cancel your other one. I don't have a way, unfortunately, to do it automatically.
I also would definitely do that for you. If you want to stay on whatever plan you're on now,
you don't have to change anything. So far, the response to the new lifetime plan has been so
good that I think I might've stumbled on something here. I don't know if it's
a sustainable, viable way to do to make sure I can do founders for the rest of my life. I would very
much like to get to 1000 books, if not more. And that would take obviously a very long time.
But I do get suspicious when everybody says that you can't do this, that you have to do subscription,
or that you have to do ads, you have to have reoccurring.
I'm not sure about all that.
And the people that say that could be right or they could just be repeating something they heard and didn't actually investigate for themselves.
So I think the one way to figure this out is let me see if there's another alternative here.
And I like the simplicity of, hey, pay one time, have access forever, turns founders more into like a tool, into a reference. And that's really the way I think about it. I told you before, I don't really think of this as a show at all. I think there's a lot of great ideas in these books. And just like
when you buy a book, you can constantly reread it. Well, if you have a lifetime access to founders,
you can re-listen to episodes as much as you want. But I do have a lot of uncertainty around this.
I'm not sure if this is the right move. So I'll leave the link there.
It's there if you want to do it.
If not, don't worry about it.
And then the second thing,
and I'll obviously tell you if I discover something new
or if my thinking on this evolves,
maybe this is the permanent default moving forward.
I have no idea yet.
But I am excited so far
from the limited tests that I have done.
And then the second thing is just in terms of I want to update you on show notes.
And that ties into this whole idea of using – thinking founders just like a reference, just like a book or an audio book or anything else.
Instead of just putting the show notes, like my highlights in – or some of my highlights into like the actual show notes. So you can only read my podcast player. I'm actually just going to link to my personal website that has the show notes for whatever
particular book.
And most of that, what I mean by show notes is most of it is just highlights from the
book.
And what I do is I go back, I use this app called Readwise, which is fantastic.
In fact, one of the founders is a misfit and listens to this podcast.
But what it does is it helps you remember the
stuff that you read. And so whether you want to get the daily email that sends you like 10 or 15
different highlights, or what I use it for is primarily a gigantic database that I can search
and constantly remind myself of, you know, I have tens of thousands of highlights in there from
hundreds of books. And so what I want to do is if you let's say you listen to the podcast episodes, really interesting, and you
want to remind yourself of this, you can grab it's just a web page, you can grab it, the link that I
leave in the show notes. And it'll have maybe, you know, sometimes it's 10 highlights, sometimes
it's 20, sometimes it's 60. And that way, you can read over them in the future and kind of remind
yourself what what are some of the key lessons that you learned from that book or from that podcast. And then on that page on every web page,
you'll see if you want to get on my personal email list. I think what I'm going to do is just
as I do new highlights for every new book, I can just email this to you. So you have them as well.
And again, that's optional. So that's it. I just want to let you know this new lifetime plan if
you want to take advantage of that.
And then if you want to review a lot of the lessons that we're learning in the podcast, there's a new way to do that as well.
Thank you very much for your support as always.
And thank you very much for listening.
And I'll talk to you again soon.