Founders - #394 An Orphan Who Built An Empire: Leonardo Del Vecchio and The Founding of Luxottica
Episode Date: July 13, 2025Your dad dies before you’re born. Your mom can’t afford to take care of you. You grow up without a family and in an institution. You learn a trade and start working full time at the age of 14. You... work all day and go to school at night. You’re precise, meticulous, restless, and work circles around everyone. You’re promoted to run the factory at 18 but the thought of working for anyone else terrifies you. For your entire life you’ll be obsessed with control. You’ll do whatever it takes to escape the harshness of poverty and the pangs of hunger. You organize your life around a simple principle: "I want to be the best at everything I do.” You start your own workshop, create the best product, and your biggest customer wants to become your partner. They underestimate you and abuse you. You destroy them. You take all of their customers. You’re not satisfied with being a subcontractor. You want everything. You make your own glasses, you buy your distributor, you list your company on the New York Stock Exchange, you complete hostile takeovers of much larger companies, you buy entire retail chains, and control everything about your product: from the raw materials to the relationship with the customer. Your competitors call you the hawk because you circle, wait, and then strike. You work 20 hours a day and fuse yourself with the factory. You get married four times, to three different women, and have six kids. You don’t look back, you don’t rest on your laurels, and you don’t go to sleep on wins. You make something great, then you do it again. Your biggest deal comes 60 years into your career. The only thing that could stop you was death. You are Leonardo Del Vecchio. This episode is what I learned from reading Leonardo Del Vecchio by Thomas Ebhardt and The Spectacle of Big Lens: How One Giant Company Will Dominate How the World Sees by Sam Knight. ------ Ramp gives you everything you need to control spend, watch your costs, and optimize your financial operations —all on a single platform. Make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud by going to Ramp and learning how they can help your business control your costs and save time and money. ----- Automate compliance, security, and trust with Vanta. Vanta helps you win trust, close deals, and stay secure—faster and with less effort. Find out how increased security leads to more customers by going to Vanta. Tell them David from Founders sent you and you'll get $1000 off. ----- Join my free email newsletter to get my top 10 highlights from every book ----
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It's amazing to me how across the last three episodes, you had world-class founders,
founders that build the leading companies in their industries,
and they all share the same obsession, and that is investing heavily in technology.
It didn't matter if they were making eyeglasses like Delvecchio,
or tires, or some of the best chocolate in the world.
They all had the same obsession that founders like Andrew Carnegie had,
that John D. Rockefeller had as well.
If you read Andrew Carnegie's autobiography, you'll see one of the main ideas in that book is invest in technology
because the savings compound, it gives you an advantage over your slower moving competitors
and can be the difference between a profit and a loss. Leonardo Del Vecchio builds the most
dominant business in his industry by far one that is still thriving today. And in his biography,
it says his profits must first be reinvested in the
heart of his own company in research and development in automation and technology.
Never skimp when it comes to spending to be at the cutting edge.
It has always been like this.
If there's a new machine to buy, he wants it immediately.
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Leonardo Del Vecchio is the patron, legend, and haunting spirit of the global
eyewear business.
He is its citizen Kane and its captain Ahab.
His father died before he was born, his mother was poor, and he was raised in an
orphanage.
He went to work as a medal engraver at the age of 14.
At 25, Del Vecchio opened a workshop in a tiny village
in the Dolomite Mountains that was giving away free land
to companies that were willing to move there.
Delvecchio built a factory to make parts for eyeglasses.
He had a young family.
He built a house next door to the factory
so he could start his day at 3 a.m.
Over the next half
century, Delvecchio grew his company, Luxottica, into the world's greatest
maker of glasses. In an industry that was traditionally fragmented and small-scale,
the totality of Delvecchio's ambition took his rivals by surprise. This will
remind you of another great European founder, Bernard Arnault.
There's a lot of things that that Delvecchio is going to do throughout his
career, which I'll talk about later, that are very Arnault like.
He sought to control every element of the business from the metal alloys of the
hinges to the stores where eyewear is sold.
In a series of audacious takeovers, Delvecchio acquired brands such as Ray-Ban and Oakley
and Purcell and signed contracts with fashion houses such as Armani, Ralph Lauren and Chanel.
He built factories in China, acquired vision insurers in the US, and retailed chains on
four continents.
Delvecchio was Italy's highest individual taxpayer and the
country's second richest man. A few years ago, people thought his career had run its course,
but at the age of 81, Delvecchio announced the greatest deal of his life in which he also secured
the final missing part of his frames, the lenses, when Lexotica agreed to merge with Esselor. Delvecchio is
referred to as simply El Presidente. In the optical world conversations turn to
the personal charisma and menace of Delvecchio. He's the godfather said Dean
Butler who founded Lenscrafters in 1983. Delvecchio bought Lenscrafters in 1995.
The story there is crazy and again very
Bernard O'Neill like I'll get to that in a little bit. The Godfather is the guy. He
runs it. He runs this industry. Delvecchio built the Empire of Luxottica
on two ideas. The first was to do everything itself. After the company's
initial progression from parts to complete frames in the early 1970s,
it set out step by step to control the entire process of making and selling glasses, from
acquiring the raw materials to selling its own products in its own stores.
No one had done this before Delvecchio.
There is a simplicity to him.
To him, it is a very simple equation.
I make the best stuff.
Why doesn't everybody buy it?
For the first 25 years, Luxottica stayed on the wholesale side of the industry.
Behind the curtain, as it was called.
Selling its glasses through opticians to the public.
In the 1990s, however, Del Vecchio decided he wanted a retail network too.
First, he got Luxotica listed on the New
York Stock Exchange, an almost unheard of move for a mid-sized Italian business. A
move a lot of experts said was impossible. Lexotica later estimated that
that listing was worth about a hundred million in free advertising in the United
States and it laid the groundwork for DelVecchio's hostile takeover of US shoe, a conglomerate that owned Lenscrafters, the country's largest optical chain.
On paper, the deal seemed outlandish. US shoe was five times larger than Luxottica,
and its board did not want to sell. Having its own shops would also put Luxottica in
direct competition with the thousands of optometrists it had been supplying for decades.
A colleague of De Vecchio described the deal this way.
You have to not only be courageous, but a bit crazy.
Luxottica completed the hostile takeover of USU
for $1.4 billion.
Once the deal was done,
De Vecchio promptly broke up USU
until all that was left were the Lendcrafter stores, which he wanted in the
first place, which he then proceeded to fill with Luxottica
frames. That is exactly the formula they have used ever
since said Jeff Cole, the former chief executive officer of Cole
National Corporation, an even larger optical retailer that
sold to Luxottica in 2004. When they buy a company, they spend a little time
figuring it out and then kick out all the other suppliers.
This formula means that when you and I walk into
a Lenscrafters or a Sunglass Hut or David Cluloh
or an Octocost Carol which has 950 branches in Brazil
or a Zhu Lang Glasses in Shanghai or a Ming Long Store
in Hong Kong, around 80% of the frames on display will be made by
Luxottica. Having its own designers, engineers, factories, supply depots, and retail outlets,
and contracts with a hundred thousand opticians around the world means it can also bring products
to market faster and in greater quantities than any of its rivals. It also keeps a larger proportion of its profits
as a result.
In their factory, I saw robots pinning together a pair of Ray-Ban Wayfarers and basket after
basket of metal frames being dunked in a series of chemical baths to coat and color them. Glasses
may appear to be relatively simple objects, but they involve between 180 and 230 manufacturing
stages to produce.
With its own designers, lasers, and massive machines, Luxottica can take a pencil sketch
to global production in about three weeks. Luxottica has around 27,000 models in production
at any one time. Its plants turn out 400,000 pairs of frames per day. No other company comes close.
400,000 pairs of frames per day. No other company comes close. Delvecchio's second great insight is the one that changed the nature of the optical business forever, and that was to combine it with
the fashion industry. In 1988, he signed the licensing deal with Giorgio Armani. The deal
transformed the glasses industry. After the Armani deal, consumers that wanted fancy glasses could buy Prada, Gucci, and Chanel,
and they were willing to pay for it.
Armani himself negotiated a seat on the board of Luxottica
and a 5% stake in the business.
This started the transformation of glasses
from a medical device to a means of self-expression,
like clothes or sneakers, or as you and I talked about
a few weeks ago with the Jimmy I've been episode our
headphones like beats by Dre
Luxottica bought Ray-Ban in 1999 at the time the label was washed up
You could buy a pair of aviators at a gas station for $19. They were selling Wayfair's at Walmart
Delvecchio paid
645 million for Ray-Ban. Wait till I tell you this story later too. Ray-Ban is now the most valuable optical brand in the world and it generates more than $2 billion a year in sales for Luxottica.
Over the next year and a half Luxottica withdrew Ray-Ban from 13,000 outlets, hiked their prices and radically improved the quality, increasing the layers of lacquer on a pair of wayfarers from 2 to 31.
When speaking to one of DeVecchi's longtime associates, I asked him, how did a man who
started with a small factory in a remote village come to rule the global eyewear industry?
His response, appetite comes with eating.
This is very fascinating because Napoleon said the exact same thing.
He said, appetite comes with eating.
The more I conquered, the more I wanted to conquer.
Larry Ellison said something very similar.
He said, I'm addicted to winning.
The more you win, the more you want to win.
So then this profile goes into the biggest deal of De Vecchio's life.
How did two companies, one in frames and one in lenses come to dominate glasses?
This part is wild because you have to think about this is the company that De Vecchio gets control of.
It is also wild to consider that the biggest deal of his life comes 60 years into his career.
So in 1972, Essel and CELOR, two French optical companies, merged and began to sell aggressively
into the US market.
Essel or specialized in plastic lenses, which were replacing glass.
And it also invented the world's first progressive lens.
The company set out to make sure its products were sold in every optometrist in the world.
Lenses are the pixie dust of the optical business.
Barely anyone knows what they are made of or how they are constructed.
For the last half century, persuading opticians to prescribe Esselor has been painstaking
face-to-face work. The profit
margins within the optical business are closely guarded secret. While opticians
might sell frames for two or three times their wholesale price, it is the lenses
where they make the most money, charging markups of 700 or 800 percent to their
customers. The largest margins of all are on complex progressive
lenses and a protective coating. So think about like scratch resistance for your
lenses, right? Those features cost Esselor a few cents to make and opticians sell
them between 25 and 50 dollars a pop. That is absolutely nuts. A feature that
costs you a few cents to make, the end consumer pays $25 to $50 a pop.
The company supplies between 300,000 and 400,000 stores
around the world, three or four times as many as Luxottica.
If Luxottica has spent the last quarter of a century
buying up the most conspicuous elements
of the optical business, the frames, the brands, the stores,
then Esselor has busied itself with the invisible parts,
acquiring lens manufacturers, instrument makers,
prescription labs, and the science of sight itself. What does that mean? itself with the invisible parts, acquiring lens manufacturers, instrument makers, prescription
labs and the science of sight itself.
What does that mean?
The company holds more than 8,000 patents.
Esselor buys up Belgian optical laboratories, Chinese resin manufacturers and Israeli instrument
makers within the industry.
Esselor is regarded as an unstoppable and developing tide.
The first rumors of these two companies
joining forces began more than a decade ago.
There were considerable obstacles.
The first was cultural.
Esselstyn might be huge, but it has retained
the feel of a traditional French industrial enterprise.
Fifty five percent of its employees are shareholders of the company.
Luxottica, on the other hand, functioned like a monarchy with none
of the management structures of most multi-billion dollar companies.
The corporate governance and headquarters of Luxottica were Mr. Delvecchio's dining
room table.
That was said by one of Delvecchio's managers of one of his US businesses, and he continues
the story.
He says, in the early 2000s, we'd fly to Italy, go to his house, and show him our annual plan.
And he would say, go do that. It's funny, let me pause here.
Cause when I read this section,
it reminded me of something I read
in one of Jeff Bezos' biographies
in the early days of Amazon.
This guy named Wright was building out
the early fulfillment and warehouse centers for Amazon.
And he goes and shows Bezos his plans.
I think it was like a three,
it was gonna cost like $350 million
to build a new warehouse and everything else.
And so he's showing the plans to Bezos
and Bezos goes, this is beautiful.
And then Wright asks Bezos,
who do I need to show the plans to
and what kind of a return on investment
would I have to demonstrate?
And Bezos replies, don't worry about that,
just get it built.
And then Wright says,
don't I have to get the approval to do this?
And Bezos says, you just did.
So back to this,
the companies also saw themselves differently too. Essel or has a moral purpose with Luxottica.
It's all about domination.
That line is going to give you an insight into the Oveco's personalities.
We go through this the most infamous Luxottica deals carried an edge of brutality in 2001.
The company clashed with Oakley the world's hottest maker of sunglasses at the time. Luxottica had just bought Sunglass Hut,
which sold a third of all US sunglasses,
and Delvecchio demanded that all of its suppliers
drop their prices.
Oakley refused.
In the summer of 2001, the company's founder,
Jim Gennard, flew to Milan to meet Delvecchio
and strike a deal.
Gennard had founded Oakley out of the back of his car
in 1975.
At the end of their conversation, he said he hoped the two men would one day be friends.
Delvecchio replied, we will never be friends.
A few months later, Delvecchio swung into action.
Sunglass Hut stopped selling Oakley's.
Sunglass Hut accounted for a quarter of Oakley's business and its share price fell by 37%.
Then Luxottica began to produce Ray-Bans with bright blue and green lenses
that were eerily similar to Oakley's colored shades.
Oakley sued, the case was settled out of court and Luxottica bought Oakley
for $2.1 billion. By that time, Delvecchio appeared ready to retire.
In the summer of 2004, as he approached his 70th birthday, Luxottica's founder handed over day-to-day control
of the company to Andrea Guerrero, a young chief executive.
Guerrero did not want to merge with Esselor.
Delvecchio forced Guerrero out and came back to work.
He was 79 years old.
It became clear that Delvecchio was worried
about what would happen to Luxottica after he dies.
Luxottica is his most precious child.
His most precious child is this company.
DeVecchio has six children from four marriages to three women.
He remarried his second wife.
I'll tell you about that later.
It's a wild story.
DeVecchio came to believe that folding Luxottica into Esselor was the best way for his work
to endure.
Esselor controls almost half of
the world's prescription lens business and has acquired more than 250 other companies in the past
20 years. Between them, Esselor and Luxottica play a central, intimate role in the lives of
a remarkable number of people. Around 1.4 billion people use their products.
In many conversations, people describe the arrival of Esselor Luxotica as both extraordinary
and somehow inevitable at the same time.
That struck me as the kind of contradiction you come across more often in a person than
in a business.
And it's true because Esselor Luxotica, the business of vision itself, is to an amazing degree,
the legacy of a single man. Okay, so that was a profile written almost a decade ago about this
legendary merger between Luxotica and Esselor. And I wanted to start there because I think it's
going to give you a great overview of the person I want to talk to you about today, which is obviously
Leonardo Del Vecchio. This is another book. So the book that I read for this is another book that was translated for me
by my friend Cameron Priest.
The last few episodes, we've translated books from French and Italian.
And so I spent a week reading the book and I spent the last three days rewriting
all of my notes and highlights.
And what I want to do is tell this remarkable life story.
I couldn't have said it better, which is like, well, you're describing this,
you know, dominated the eyeglass and eyewear industry.
In hindsight, it looks completely predictable.
It's extraordinary and inevitable at the same time.
And what you'll come to learn now is that is the exact description of the
orphan that builds this empire and the legacy of a single
man and this business continues to thrive.
Delvecchio passed away a few years ago, but the business that he built that he
gave his life to continues to thrive.
And as a matter of fact, the founder of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, just spent
three and a half billion dollars buying a 3% stake in Esselora Luxotica.
And before he died, Delvecchio did the deal with Mark Zuckerberg to
produce the glasses that Metta is making.
So I want to start with Delvecchio's childhood.
Once you understand his childhood, this will, without a doubt, be one of
the most remarkable founder stories you'll ever hear.
So this is at its core.
This is a story of a poor orphan who will come to dominate an industry
and build a $30 billion fortune.
It's an orphan who built an empire.
That might have to be the episode title's an orphan who built an empire. That might have to be the episode title,
an orphan who built an empire.
So Delvecchio's dad was a fruit peddler
who died from pneumonia
when Delvecchio was in his mother's womb.
His dad is only 49 years old when he dies.
Delvecchio is the youngest of four kids.
So now his mom has to go work in a factory
to support her other kids.
She has to walk 40 minutes each way to her job every day. She had nobody to take
care of young Leonardo, young DeVecchio. So he essentially spends his days on the
street. After several years his mom realizes this is not sustainable. She's
terrified of what's going to happen to him if he stays on the street all day. So she goes to an orphanage and begs them to take in and care for her son.
He is seven years old when this happens.
Can you imagine thinking that your mother abandoned you when you were seven?
This is how Delvecchio describes his childhood.
We were a poor family.
My mother was a widow.
I grew up without a father and in an institution.
Growing up without a family is something you can't explain
unless you've lived it.
It marks you.
He lives in the orphanage for seven years.
The orphanage has very strict and precise rules.
And you'll see that he actually adopts these rules
in the way he runs his life and runs his business.
So at the time you sleep in a dorm, there's 10 other beds in each room.
You wake up at 6 a.m. No matter what you line up shirtless, even in January when it's freezing, you eat breakfast at 7.
You go to school until it's night.
You are taught to work tirelessly.
You were told to fight against your inherent laziness.
You were told perseverance makes the difference and that talent isn't enough.
And what's interesting about this, and there's several stories in the book, but there's several
Italian entrepreneurs of the 20th century that were at the same orphanage.
They follow remarkably consistent and similar paths.
They all started out as great craftsmen first, then industrialists.
And they said they were united by maniacal attention to the quality of their product
and never satisfied with what they achieve.
And keep in mind, this is Leonardo and glasses.
Guy goes on to build one of the largest publishing houses in Europe.
Another one is the best manufacturer of bicycles.
Later in life, one of these entrepreneurs that were raised in the same orphanage that
go on to build a fantastic career as well talks about this.
He says, I'm a lucky man. I was born poor. And this gave me a certain understanding of the facts of
life. All of their stories are united by the same thread. They know the harshness of poverty, the
pangs of hunger, they become skilled craftsmen, thanks to a trade learned at the orphanage.
They seek independence from a young age are not satisfied with their first success and continue to grow their businesses
into becoming leaders in their respective fields. Young Leonardo De Vecchio is orderly and precise.
He says at this time, I liked to study and the trade that he learns in the orphanage is engraving,
which he doesn't know it at this time is going to lead to his career in glasses.
So he finds a master ready to take a minute as an apprentice at a metal factory.
He is 14 when he leaves the orphanage and starts working full time and really
more than what full time.
And from this point for the rest of his year, for the rest of his life, he
has a singular obsession to be the best.
The way he thinks about it is if he is the best at what he does, he will never
again be forced to suffer the hardships of his childhood.
He will never have to be poor again.
He will never be forced to rely on anyone other than himself.
So the company he works at he works there during the day and then the company sends him to school at night.
So he's taking drawing and engraving classes at night.
Learning to draw is essential to be a great engraver.
And this is important because it's engraving that first puts him in contact with eyeglass frames.
He's handed a pair of aluminum eyeglass frames and he's asked to engrave decorations on the temples.
This is the very first time that a young Leonardo D'Avecchio will handle the object that will change his life.
He quickly understands that he's good. He's very precise. He's meticulous and he's restless.
Almost immediately he wants to start his own business
as soon as he can, because he does not like
having to rely on other people.
He refuses, and there's a line in the book later on
that says Delvecchio cannot be controlled.
He refuses to let other people have command over him.
I think Delvecchio is a great example
of the wisdom that Charlie Munger had
when Charlie Munger said, hey, it really helps.
Don't read business books, read the biographies because it helps to tie the ideas to the personality
that developed them.
If you grew up like Delvecchio, if you experienced what he experienced, of course, like if you
look at his entire 60 year career, it's just him gaining more and more and more control
over what he's doing.
This relentless methodical march for deeper and deeper vertical integration.
And you see it when he's 14.
He's also wicked smart.
He understands two important things about himself from an early age.
One, doing one's job well, whatever it may be,
being the best at it is non-negotiable for him.
And the second thing he realizes is that he's got a lot more drive and passion than other people around him.
He said, I've always thought of myself as privileged for the passion I had inside and
for my enormous desire to do.
So by the time he's 18 years old, he's promoted to run the factory.
He is now the head of the factory for a few years.
He keeps his position.
And so he winds up getting married and having kids early on.
And so he's making enough money, right?
He's running the factory. He's in his late teens, early twenties, and he could have just stayed in that position.
He would have never been poor, but there was no way that he was ever going
to stay working for anyone else.
So this is when he starts his first company.
He decides to open his first workshop in a tiny spot that he calls the hole.
By day, he's still working his day job at the factory. And at night, he works for himself. And so Delvecchio begins to produce molds for various industries. He starts out as a subcontractor. It is a strictly family run business. It's Delvecchio, his wife and his brother are helping him out as well. And he doesn't quit his job right away because he needs a fixed salary as a guarantee for the loans required to start the business. This is how he's going to transition from how he buys his first machines and he
starts to transition from artisan to industrialist. He's very much a craftsman at this point.
And one thing I love about reading all these biographies is there's always these examples
and anybody that creates something great. And the way I think about this is like, how
bad do you actually want it? Like how bad do you actually want this to happen? He is working 20 hours a day. And one of the
things that helps push him and to work way harder than anybody
else. He knows he never says he there's a line in the book where
it says he never stops because he knows he is good. He
understands the key to success is in his pocket. This is what he
said, I realized I was good. Because when I delivered my
finished work, I immediately got new orders and never had to make changes. Even though I was young, I realized that I
had something more than my competitors. That is one of the most important lines in the
book. If you think about where he's at in his life. In fact, it reminded me of one of
my favorite stories from Larry Bird, the basketball player. Larry Bird went to a tiny college,
he went to a small school and people didn't think that he could make it in the NBA.
And then they told him that you're not going to be able to make it in the NBA.
And so Larry's talking about this later in his career after he's won multiple championships
and had a Hall of Fame career.
And he said, oh, that I won't be able to get my jump shot off, that I'm not quick enough,
that I won't be able to rebound.
And so after he was drafted in the NBA, before the first season starts, he goes and plays
with all the rookies.
And Larry says this, it took me three days of rookie camp and I found out, hey, this league is nothing.
I can play in this league and I will dominate in this league.
The reason I bring that up is because you're going to see Delvecchio throughout his entire career.
He cannot understand why his competitors don't have the ambition that he has are satisfied with the small stakes.
He'll repeat this over and over again.
Don't work as hard as he does and are incapable of making the quality, the
same quality of product that he is.
And so as soon as he can, it's just a year that he's doing both jobs.
After a year, he resigns from his day job and devotes himself full
time to building his business.
He is 23 years old.
And from this point at 23, until he dies, I think. He's 23 years old. And from this point at 23 until he
dies, I think he does at 87 years old, he follows one, only one categorical imperative, excellence.
He says, if you want to stay in the market, you must always seek perfection. And it's not perfection
as a disease, not as an abstract ideal to refer to, but perfection as a fact. He has several great
and important ideas. Number one, he realizes there is less competent competition in the eyeglass
sector. And so he's going to focus on the industry completely.
He starts out as a subcontractor. This is what his
first business is producing molds and small metal parts for
eyeglasses. Two, he also realizes that this sector is
the most profitable. He says among the small metal parts that
he was making, the parts for glasses gave me the most profit.
Three, he realizes to his customers quality is more important than price.
You need to remember this idea. He's going to use this idea so many times over the next 60 years.
When my clients were ordering new molds for eyeglass temples, they were not so much interested in the product's price as in the quality and in the fact that the molds were made to perfection.
And this is how the book describes this turning point in his life.
Leonardo understands that he can expand into an industry that promises high
profit margins to those who are able to produce high level products.
Remember his obsession with quality is important.
And it's also even more important because he decides to direct that his
obsession with quality to an industry that will pay for it.
And again, he repeats that he sensed that he had something extra
compared to his competitors.
His guiding strategy is very simple.
I want to be the best at everything I do.
That is all.
This is very important because the application of that idea leads directly
to the beginning of Luxottica.
The way he founds Luxottica is that one of his best customers, remember, he's
a subcontractor at this time, he's going to start at the very bottom of the
industry and then just Sherman marched to the sea and absolutely dominated over
the next 50 years.
So one of his best customers wants to become his partner.
So they are two wildly successful entrepreneurs.
They own a company called Metal Flex.
They have more demand than they can fill
and they wanna start a new factory.
So they propose partnering with Del Vacchio
to run that new factory.
He will be a minority shareholder.
They want him to run it.
He was worried about being a minority shareholder there.
He said this would castrate his ambitions.
Remember, this is a man obsessed with control.
Maintaining control was important to him
and he would never, ever compromise that.
And even though he's very young at this point in the story,
he had very clear ideas about his future.
So he forms a limited partnership
and he's the general partner
so he can maintain control of the factory.
He insisted on operational control despite not owning the majority of the company.
So he sets up the factory in this town of Orgordo because the mayor is giving away
free land for companies that will come create jobs.
It used to be a mining town.
Once the mine closed down, the population was dwindling.
And so the mayor actually did something smart.
It's like, Hey, you know, you can have the land just come here, build
factories, build businesses and hire the people that are living in the town.
Now the degree to which Dovecchio will thoroughly dominate this village and really anybody,
anybody in his life and his entire industry, he's going to turn this village that was depopulating
into a Luxottica town.
At one point, there's like 4,000 residents of the village and there's 4,500 people working
at this factory.
And so he is 26 years old.
And again, the book makes this point several times I think is important to point out.
This is the start of his empire, but he didn't know it at the time.
He never did.
He just sees an opportunity for growth and he pursues it.
His entire career is one step at a time with a clear and simple idea to be the best.
And if you want to be the best at what you do,
then growth is necessary.
Now Delvecchio's relationships with his partners
is gonna remind you a lot of Rockefeller.
So the Metal Flex owners, what they thought is like,
oh, we found a way to expand our business.
But what they didn't see is that they created a threat.
So before setting up the factory,
they say come work at the Metal Flex headquarters so you can actually learn how to build these businesses.
So they had him do everything from delivering parcels to customer to customers at the post office to receiving the best. And he also takes note of everything names addresses
people he studied every detail of the industrial activity,
understood who the most promising customers were, which
products were the most popular information that would prove
useful a few years later to compete directly with his former
partners. This is another great example of the maxim that you
and I see over and over again in these books, if you know your business from A to Z, there's not a problem you can't solve.
He's going to run through these dudes like a hot knife through butter.
This is an example of his early employees describing him,
but also another example of how bad do you actually want it.
I would wake up and it was still dark.
I would open the shutters and check the factory on the other side of the river.
I would always find the light on before dawn.
I would tell my brother who also worked in the factory wake up,
the boss is already there. In 1961, Delvecchio invest 500,000
lira for 33% of the company. So that's about 6000 euros today.
So he puts in 6000 euros for 33% of this company. 60 years later, his
shares will be worth 25 billion euros from 6000 euros to 25
billion in 60 years. My friend Moses Kagan had this great tweet
and something me and him bond over is this obsession of not
interrupting the compounding of finding what you're meant to do
and do it forever.
And he was looking at resumes, if I remember correctly, and it's just like, you know, people
just jumping around every year, two years, three years, whatever the case is.
And this is what he said, by jumping around like this, you're giving up the benefits of
long-term compounding and long-term compounding is one of the most powerful forces in business
and life from 6,000 euros to 25 billion in 60 years.
And all of this happened in a remote location.
The town that he sets up his first factory in doesn't even have a single paved road.
And I actually think there's a benefit that people overlook here.
He benefits from being in such a remote location.
The early employees had no other options.
They gave everything to the company because it was their only opportunity to provide for their families. Some of the early
employees stayed for 50 years. Their sons and daughters worked in their
factory. Their grandsons and granddaughters worked in the factory. And
they're willing to follow Delvecchio because he leads from the front. This is
what he says, I used to come to the factory at five or six in the morning.
Really whenever I woke up and I would stay until midnight. The company is
my life. So this is when he starts to take control of Luxottica and he has to break up
with his partners. What they didn't understand they never treated him as a real partner.
This is a guy that it's the best in the world at what he does. He has pride. He has drive.
He's doing all the work and he realizes, oh, you're not I'm not a partner to you. I'm just like a supplier to be
squeezed. So they try to push them on price, they drop in on
the factory without telling him and Delvecchio realizes, oh,
this is not a long term solution. And I'm at risk right
now because I have way too much revenue concentration with
metal flex. And so he does something really smart before he
breaks up with his partners, he starts looking for other
customers. And he also realizes even though he's younger and has way less money than his partners,
he's like, wait a minute, I have a form of leverage here because no literally nobody
else can match the quality of my product.
Think about it as quality is his survival strategy.
And he would tell his employees like, listen, we're going up against these giants.
And there's not just the Italian companies, the German companies, Austrian companies.
And he's and he says an obsession with perfection. And he was convinced
of the fact that the only way to grow in a world of giants is to offer the best products. And so
there's all this fighting going on between him and his partners. And then they realize, uh-oh,
we created a competitor. So we need to destroy this guy. And the way we're going to destroy him
is they were the ones that were guaranteeing the company's credit.
You need a credit line from a bank for the factories to survive.
So they're like, we're going to pull the credit.
And this is where I mean there's like this Rockefeller esque situation going on here.
They're convinced we're going to pull this credit.
We're going to we're going to strangle this guy.
This guy can't get far without us.
And the reason I compare compared to Rockefeller is because
They didn't know who they were dealing with
So they pull their credit Leonardo calls all his employees together and he says like tears in his eyes
He's like, I'm afraid I can't pay the salaries this month. He's crying, but he's also refusing to give up
He said we will move forward on our own if you don't feel secure. You can leave
They all stay. He doesn't lose a single
employee. And so he has two ideas. He goes to his second largest customer, right?
Because he just lost his first customer and they pulled the credit. And so this
guy named Boris Killot was making a ton of money importing Italian eyewear into
the United States. He owed the factory 35 million lira. And so DeVecchia goes to him explains what's going on. He's like, I
will die if I need this money now. If you don't pay me, I
can't pay my employees and then therefore you don't have the
product that you're making a ton of money importing into the
United States. So Boris gives him the money. And then since
the bank pulled his credit line in true Rockefeller fashion,
what does he do? He goes bank to bank to bank
until he finds another bank willing to extend him credit.
This is a line from Rockefeller's autobiography.
What if, because people don't understand,
I guess you do because you've probably heard the podcast
and you've hopefully read a bunch of biographies
on Rockefeller, but one of his advantages
is that he always went into battle, Rockefeller,
better capitalized than his competitors.
And most of that was debt from banks.
So this is Rockefeller and his autobiography talking about this.
He goes, what if the president of a bank refused to make me alone?
That was nothing that made no difference to me.
It simply meant that I must look elsewhere until I got what I wanted.
So then with the bank credit, which his partners didn't think he could ever get, Leonardo says, Hey, I'm gonna
buy you out, I want to buy you out of our partnership. He
offers them 45 million lira each for a steak that less than 10
years earlier was worth 500,000. So you all put in 500,000 each,
less than 10 years later, I want that steak, I'll give you 45
million lira for that. And it's amazing how dismissive of him his
partners still were. They didn't believe he actually had the money. So when they set the date for
closing, they don't even bother to show up because they don't think it's real. Eventually, he buys
them out and he says it was one of the greatest days of his life. He now answers to no one else.
The book says he was literally bursting with joy having achieved a goal that was fundamental to him.
And Delvecchio tells a friend at the time that he's amazed that they agreed just when the factory,
after years of shared sacrifices, could start to bear fruit.
He said it's a little like David who kills Goliath.
A paradox where those who did not have money buy, while those who were well off financially decided to sell.
And then what happens next?
He takes most of their customers.
He is a true predator.
This is something that will reoccur
throughout his entire career.
Those who compete against him,
they call him a true predator and they call him a hawk
because they says he would circle, wait, and then strike. And so what just occurred
in Leonardo Rovecchio's life reminds me of this story about a
young john D Rockefeller. This is from this book called
conspiracy, which was was which was written by Ryan Holiday. And
I want to read this excerpt to you. Rockefeller found himself
stuck with bullying corrupt business partners, he wants to
break with them, but he can't because they control the votes.
They're squeezing his business
to death. They abuse him talk about forcing him out. What is
he to do? Quietly Rockefeller lines up financing from another
oil man and waits. There's a confrontation. One of them tries
to threaten him. You really want to break this up? Yes, he calls
their bluff. They go along knowing that the firm's assets
will have to go to auction. They're sure they're a win Rockefeller doesn't
have that money. He bids they bid he bids they bid Rockefeller
wins the auction. A few weeks later, the newspapers announced
his new partnership, revealing who had backed his bid and the
news that Rockefeller at age 25 is an owner of one of the
largest refineries in the world.
This is what Rockefeller said.
On that day, his partners woke up and saw for the first time that my mind had not been
idle while they were talking so big and loud.
They were shocked.
They'd seen their empire dismantled and taken from them by the young man they had dismissed.
Rockefeller had wanted it more.
You could take out the name Rockefeller and put in Del Vecchio.
And that story is almost exactly the same.
60 years later, Del Vecchio's business is thriving so much that Mark Zuckerberg
pays three and a half billion dollars for 3% of it.
And metal flex doesn't exist.
And from here on in the rest of his career, it's just step by step,
vertical integration. He's obsessed with controlling everything.
He is not satisfied with a slice of the market. He wants everything.
And he has a bunch of very simple ideas that he builds his career on.
The way I think about what's happening in his life, he's like, number one,
I'm better than anyone else. I know my product is better too. I want control.
I want to eliminate intermediaries everywhere I find them. And this
takes decades and decades. This is something that happens
overnight. Three. So the logical next step is three, I should build
my own glasses. And this is what he says, I produce the semi
finished goods necessary to make the glasses. Why give this
advantage to the final assembler, I can do everything in house.
Why should I allow others to benefit from my expertise? The answer is self evident.
We must manufacture a finished product. And he just has this great mindset early he sees
where he's vulnerable. And he's like, well, if I just analyze my company, honestly, right,
I see my vulnerability. And if I was on the outside, this is what I would do. And so it
says for him, company growth is a natural consequence of the
choices of creative destruction.
Companies are obligated to continuously develop.
Whoever stops is lost.
They risk being crushed by the competition and overtaken by
more dynamic entrepreneurs.
I think has been obvious up until this point, but this guy is extreme.
He says it is forbidden to get distracted, to rest on one's laurels, to be complacent, to enjoy success and personal achievement.
So think about what he just said. It's forbidden to enjoy success and personal achievement.
This is something that's going to reappear over and over again. His work is by far the number one
priority in his entire life. For Delvecchio, Luxottica comes before everything else.
He always puts the company before everything else,
even his own family.
He gets married four times and has six children.
He divorces his second wife after just three years,
gets married again, has more kids, divorces her too,
then remarries his second wife again
10 years after they get divorced. There is a 47 year age gap between his oldest child and his
youngest and later when he's in his 80s because he's like 85 when the book is
written when he's in his 80s he says he only has one regret and that is not
spending more time with his kids when they're young and I don't believe him
and the reason I say that is definitely driven because he wants to be the best in the world. He wants
to see what he wants to do. But he's also driven by fear that I don't think ever ends
a fear that somebody else is going to come along somebody better and take what he gave
his life for. So let's go back to the story where he's like, okay, I'm going to eliminate
intermediaries anywhere I find them. I think I can build my own glasses. Everybody tells them you can't build your own glasses.
You should just stay a subcontractor.
So he develops some prototypes for his own glasses.
He travels from the little town back to Milan.
Milan is having this huge fair.
And he's like, this is where this, this exhibition, this is where I'm going to
sell my own glasses, attempt to sell my own glasses for the first time.
And something he doesn't know, but he's doing this at the perfect time.
There is, this is, there's a wave starting that he's going to serve for decades.
There is an eyewear boom glasses and sunglasses are changing from a medical
device and they're turning into a fashion accessory and a cult object.
And he's going to benefit from not only more people buying them, but the fat margins that come along with this. So to vacuum himself, he travels,
he's selling this, he brings some of his employees, but he's so desperate for
orders. He doesn't know what to charge. So he sets the price really, really low.
So he said, okay, you can buy and again, there this affair. So you have
wholesalers coming to buy product. And so he's like, Hey, we're going to sell our frames for 600 lira each very first day, they get swamped, their booth is swamped
immediately. Every day of the fair, there's so much demand that like Sotica increases the price
every day, within three days, their price is triple. And again, it goes back to the excellence
of the product. This guy is working 20 hours a day. He's obsessed with being the best at what he wants to do. And
the wholesaler seeing this immediately. There's a great line about this. When he left for
the Milan fair, he was still full of doubts and fears. When he comes back, he's full of
orders. By the time the fair is over, they have gathered orders for two years of production
and they have no idea how they're going to
keep up with all these requests. But he is certain of one thing that he was right that
Luxottica was ready to sell their own glasses under their own brand. And he does another
thing smart. This is this is in the 70s early 70s when this is happening. He continues to
spend to grow. So most of the profits are reinvested into research and development and
new machinery. This guy's obsessed
with watching his costs. He keeps this like coin on his
desk that says every euro saves another year on profit. And what
Delvecchio has in common with most of his huge entrepreneurs
that you and I talked about, they manage their costs down to
the penny, but they invest heavily, they empty the clip
when it comes to investing in technology.
So says most of the profits are invested
in research development and new machinery.
The 1970s started a virtuous cycle.
New orders determined the need to increase production,
which in turn led to the need to expand apartments
and invest in new machines,
for which it is mandatory to obtain new orders
and increase market share.
Increasing volumes lead to a reduction
in unit production
costs, which allow for a more competitive pricing without compromising profit margins.
And so it continues more control, more vertical integration.
Now he's like, okay, I'm making my own glasses.
I want to own my own distribution.
He would sell to distributors who would then sell to opticians and the end user, which
is the retail stores.
And so his first step is I only want to work with the best. So now they're making
my own glasses, I needed to sign with the literally the best
distributor. And then once he does that, he's like, I need to
own them. So it says he only wants to work with the best.
This applies to partners outside the company as well. He finds
the person he thinks is the best distributor. This is this guy
named Mr. White, who's one of the largest shippers in America.
At first, Mr. White says no, Leonardo doesn't flinch, he
comes back a year later as a bigger company with better products, they finally
sign a partnership. Then you already know where this is going. You know where this is
going. He goes, actually working with distributors is too risky. Look, Sonica is at the mercy
of other people's choices. This is a situation I cannot live with. So he
starts another phase. He goes, I want to grow my company by
acquisition. How am I going to grow my company by acquisition?
Well, I need to raise more money. So he raises more money by
selling stock in his company. He also gets more banks to loan
him more money. He uses that money to keep pressing his
advantage to keep controlling more and more parts of his
business, the more he vertically integrates, the higher his profit margin
becomes, which allows him to keep controlling more parts of his business.
So he buys his largest American distributor. So Mr. White, right, and his
partner. This is so funny. The guy, you know, a few years ago said, I'm not gonna
sign a deal with you, not realizing that, you know, a few years, a few years in advance, DeVecchi is going to own your whole company, man. So
he buys his largest American distributor, Mr. White and his partner are fighting. This
gives DeVecchi the opportunity to buy out Mr. White's partner. So he buys 50% of this
company for $11 million. This is wild. This is how this guy's just risk on. Okay. He buys 50% of his largest
American distributor for $11 million at a time when his entire company is just doing
a 14 million in revenue. And Delvecu describes this when he's an older man. He says this
was a decisive turning point because now I am one of the largest distributors in the
world. Four years later, he buys the other 50%. And again, he just
said it's forbidden to rest in your laurel. So what does he do? Buying distributors is
not enough. He wants to own the retail stores that the distributors sell to. distributors
sell to opticians who sell glasses to the end consumer, he is missing the relationship
with the end customer, which he says is quote, indispensable to understanding how tastes and trends
change on which lines to focus on and where higher margins can be extracted.
And so we're going to get into how he breaks into retail, but there's another thing that reappears throughout his entire career.
He wants high barriers to entry. He does not want competition.
So he winds up, remember that company that, uh, he was a,
he was first an engraver at the one that sent him to school at night,
25 years later, he buys that company. was a he was first an engraver at the one that sent him to school at night. 25
years later, he buys that company. So he buys the company that he first worked
at as an engraver 25 years earlier. Why? Because that company owns a valuable
patent. They own the patent on the elastic hinge on the temples of eyeglasses.
Again, think about this idea of fear. How can I stop anyone from taking what I have from me?
One way to do that is to increase the barriers to compete with me.
Then what does he do?
He moves into fashion and he's drastically, this is just gonna blow your mind.
He drastically expands not only his revenue, but his profit margins at the same time.
So question he's having is like, okay, how do you transform a commodity product into
a customized one?
If he can move into the higher end fashion market, he could
greatly increase his profit margins.
So this part was surprising to me because I've never bought, I
don't think I've ever bought.
I have it like para ray bands, but I've never bought like luxury
glasses.
It said in the book that the sale prices for some of these luxury
brand glasses that are made by like the high end fashion houses,
they could be 10 to 20 to 30 times the cost of production. So they give an example of their for some of these luxury brand glasses that are made by like the high end fashion houses, they could be 10 to 20 to 30 times the cost of production.
So they give an example of their manufacturing some of these glasses.
Some of these companies are manufacturing these glasses that cost $30 and then turning
around selling them to the end consumer for 900.
So the first person he works with is Giorgio Armani.
And again, Armani wanted to work with the best and he believed that the best was Delvecchio.
So this is where he signs that agreement and he insists to get 5% of the company.
Delvecchio wisely gives him 5% of the company.
Why is that important?
Because Armani is another turning point for Delvecchio.
Armani Glass is alone.
This is a single brand.
They signed a bunch of them.
Armani Glass alone will account for 10% of the overall revenue of Luxottica.
That is nuts, but also not only the 10% of revenue, but it opens the door.
So then he starts signing up with another who makes our money's glasses.
So he starts signing agreements with other fashion houses like Valentino,
Chanel, he's saying he's St.
Laurent, Ralph Lauren, delicious goes on and on and on.
And so the DeVecchio is like, Hey, I need a bigger stage.
I still need more resources because I need to get to that end user. So he says, it's time to go public. And he was
like, Okay, you're like a medium sized Italian business. You're obviously going to list on
the Milan stock exchange. He goes, No, I'm not. And this is what he said about that.
If you have to sail, it's better to choose the big C rather than the small one. He lists
on the New York stock exchange. The company is 30 years old
and Delvecchio is now a multi-billionaire.
I mentioned this earlier,
but he estimated that going public gave the company
a hundred million dollars in free advertising.
He is now one of the wealthiest people in the world
and he's asked the secret to his success.
This is what he says,
"'There is no secret.
It's decades of hard work.'"
Then he's asked a follow up question. Why are you still
working? He replies, because I enjoy it. And so now he has more
resources, he has more currency. And this is where he launches
this hostile takeover of Lenscrafters. He launched a
surprise hostile to offer to buy the US shoe corporation, which
owns Lenscrafters, which is the largest optical store chain in
the world. US shoe, this is the largest optical store chain in the world.
US SHU, this is the nutty part, was a conglomerate that had a stock market value five times higher.
Their market cap was five times higher than Luxottica, and its board of directors did not want to sell.
So this is a debt heavy deal.
Delvecchio is going to use leverage financing.
He raises money through bank loans, bond insurance, bridge financing from major European and American financial institutions.
And his plan is immediately when he grabs out when he takes control of this asset, he just
literally sells off every single thing. He doesn't care about anything else but Lenscrafters. That
winds up helping. He does this for 1.4 billion. And I think he recruits around 500 million from
selling off the other pieces. And it was
helpful for him to get financing for this because he's like,
listen, if you just take lens crafters, if you ignore
everything else, you can in us you corporation lens crafters
actually highly profitable. They're throwing off a ton of
cash flow, we're just gonna take that cash flow to service the
acquisition debt. And so it was at this point in the book, you
know, because he makes the point over and over again, he just
felt like he was competing against very weak competition. They he'll talk about this later. It the book, you know, because he makes the point over and over again, he just felt like he was competing against very weak competition.
They he'll talk about this later.
It's like, you know, if they could get enough to have a house by the sea, they didn't want
to work anymore.
He's like, I don't give a shit about having a house by the sea, even though he has a house
and helicopter and all kinds of crazy stuff.
And there's something that Warren Buffett said, that I think was simple and profound
if you think about it for a while. There's a beautiful genius to what Buffett said.
He says the important thing is to keep playing and to play against weak opponents and to
play for big stakes.
I think Delvecchio is an example of exactly that repeatedly for decades.
Again, what do you do?
He kept playing.
He played against weak opponents
and he played for big stakes.
At every turn, Delvecchio surprised
how slow his competition is
and how limited their ambitions were.
He had no ceiling to his ambition.
He'd still be working in the business.
He was working in the business, I think he died at 87.
He died from, I think pneumonia.
The only way to get this guy to stop was to kill him. And one of the things I loved about him is he trusted his own judgment.
He didn't care what other people thought about him or the way he ran his business. The perfect
illustration of this is when he buys Ray-Ban. There are other bidders for Ray-Ban. Look at what
he does here. So Bosch and Loam are the ones that own Ray-Ban at this time. They need to get rid of
it. You know, Ray-Ban had was like hugely popular in the 60s, 70s and 80s.
You know, by the 90s, it's like a failing brand.
They're still doing 500 million a year in revenue, but they're losing 50 million a year.
So they're like, just please take this.
Get this $50 million hole away from us.
Now why would Leonardo want a failing brand with decreasing quality and a cheap price point member when he
buys Ray Ban, you can literally buy them at gas stations, they're
selling them at Walmart's, the price point is less than $20. And
somehow, Delvecchio transforms it into a luxury brand with fat
margins. So what is going on? What does Delvecchio see that
other people don't see? Says like, like, Sotica was still too focused on prescription glasses, contrary to the trend in the sector
where sunglasses represented over 60% of the market.
Moving towards sunglasses follows the same logic that Leonardo had adopted a decade earlier
when he ventured with Armani into the world of designer glasses to target segments where
competition is not on price but on product and
service. Sunglasses have a much higher fashion content than prescription glasses. They are a
product where brand and fashion are decisive and above all they have a higher turnover.
People buy sunglasses to renew their look much more frequently than they switch to a new prescription frame.
Now there are other bidders for Ray-Ban at the time.
All the other bidders are offering between $300-400 million.
But they also move slow and over complicate the process.
Delvecchio grabs a sheet of paper and a pen and he asks the question, how many pieces
does Ray-Ban produce each year?
How much will it cost us to produce a single piece?
Next question, how much can we sell the glasses for?
Having obtained the answers, he does a simple multiplication and arrives at his final price.
Six hundred and forty million dollars.
At the time, everyone else tells him he is overpaying.
He doesn't give a fuck what other people think.
He says, but I knew the glasses sector well and what Ray-Ban could give me.
It would open the doors of any optician in the world.
They, meaning the other bidders, could not understand that.
And he was right.
They're screaming, you're overpaying.
You're so stupid.
He now sells more than 10 times the amount of Ray Bans as when he bought the company.
Now what was one of the most surprising things about reading this story is he makes the same
exact mistake that Sam Walton did. They're the same person in the sense that they're going to
dominate their industry. They're completely obsessed. They think about it all the time.
So he steps just the same thing what Sam Walton did. He stepped down, let's somebody else be CEO,
and then is just unbelievably unsatisfied. One wants to do the work themselves anyways. And two unsatisfied
with you know, what other they're going to want to this is their baby. This is their
life. They want to run it, you should never step down. It's fascinating that, you know,
two brilliant people can make the same exact mistake. So he says, you know, he tried to
transform himself, they used to call him the craftsman president. Because you
know, he was in the factories, he was doing the work, like, he
wasn't in an office, he never, I'll tell you about this in a
little bit. It's like, there's only one office that's empty in
the Del Factor and in the factory, and it's the back.
Yes, he was on the factory floor is in the stores. So he tries to
transform, he fails at doing this transform himself from
craftsman president to shareholder president.
But the problem is he's struggling in a role
that's very different from the one he had built up
over the previous 50 years.
And then he also doesn't like how much attention
that the new CEO, you know, De Vecchio's very, very quiet.
So he doesn't like the fact that he sees his CEO,
the one he hired, on the front pages of the newspapers
in Italy for reasons that have nothing to do
with selling glasses. And he can't understand
why this guy doesn't understand that you have to dedicate all
your time to the factory. And what DeVecchio would say is
factory above all, there is so much to do that a CEO should
have little space to focus on other things. The CEO should
fuse with the factory, live there full time. That is what
he's saying. So he went up firing him and comes back to
run the company. He wants Esselar
remember that the CEO that was running before did not want
Esselar. He needs to become a leader. This is what Dopeke
believes he needs to become a leader in the corrective lens
segment as well, where he finds high margins, which you and I've
talked about over in Oregon today, but also significant
barriers to entry patents, excuses, suvity, excuses suvity,
still didn't say that right.
Advanced machinery and lots of specific technology. Now what was fascinating is
when this deal comes together it's announced Luxottica and Esselstyn have
reached a 50 billion euro merger agreement. The world's largest lens
manufacturers tying the knot with its absolute leader in frames and eyewear
sales. That makes sense right? But everybody thought that Delvecchio was
selling out. So it says the structure hides a substantial truth, it'll be Delvecchio who has control.
At first glance, it seems that he was the one who was selling for the first three years,
the management will be perfectly equal between the French and the Italians. Just wait, three
years in Delvecchio will be able to assert the weight of his controlling stake as stipulated
in the agreements that they both signed.
It is the majority shareholder of the Italian company who becomes the majority shareholder
of the group after the merger.
In other words, Delvecchio wins again.
And so remember, his greatest deal came 60 years into his career.
He's in his 80s.
So at the time, young people are asking him, how did you manage to accomplish all that
you did?
This is his answer. I've always tried to improve every time I achieve something,
I started thinking about how to make the next step.
I see this over and over again. The way I summarize this is no rear view mirror,
no resting on laurels, no sleeping on winds,
make something great and then do it again. And then the book ends perfectly.
In the end, his strategy has
always been only one. I want to be the best at everything I do. That is all. Okay,
so now you know what I think are the most important parts in the story of the
life and career of Leonardo Di Vecchio. What I did is I told you I had 29 pages of
notes for all the reading I did about him. I then condensed those 29 pages into
a list of about 50 short sentences that I
think will give you a sense of the man and how he ran his life and his business.
So I just want to run through them.
He followed a few simple, but essential rules.
Those who have competed against him, call him a true predator.
Rivals called him a hawk.
He would circle, wait and strike.
He believed the world belonged to those bold enough to take it.
Those who owe their well-being to him revere him like a deity.
He devoted his entire life to mad and desperate work at the expense of children and marriages
with the ambition to be the best always.
He had a will of iron and a fierce stubbornness to follow his own intuitions.
He was always looking ahead.
He was never satisfied.
At 87 he had no intention of letting go.
He knows no boundaries.
Every strategy of his starts with the product.
His choices always head in one direction.
Excellent.
He would insist on seeing and improving every new design every week.
He had a fear that never left him, that someone better might come along and take everything
away from him.
He said what you don't take for yourself, others will take from you.
You mustn't nurture potential competitors.
If you get distracted or rest on your laurels,
as I've seen several entrepreneurs who started with me do,
someone comes along to snatch your market away from you.
The difference between me and many entrepreneurs who started with me?
They felt they had made it when they could afford the apartment by the sea.
I never got tired of moving forward.
He had a passion for order, cleanliness and control.
He'd show up at factories running a finger across machineries to check for dust.
He uses simple words that get straight to the point.
He has a great talent for simplifying the most complex situations just like he did when
he bought Ray-Ban.
He said, I follow every model we sell in every country on every line.
He has no desire to talk about the past.
He's in his 80s when he said that.
He never feels at ease.
His moves are all born from the need to protect his business, his employees, and his brand.
A longtime associate of his was asked asked how did a young orphan from
the outskirts of Milan manage to dominate a global industry? His answer when describing
Delvecchio, so much passion. On his desk is a plaque with the phrase engraved
�simplicity, transparency, clarity, humility.� Also on his desk is another plaque with the words,
every euro saved is an extra euro in profit. He said, here we produce, we don't talk. Our story
is told through the excellence of our products, the processes required to make them, and the
cleanliness of our financial statements. His passion does not lie in the office. His fixation always
remain with what happens in the factory. I like to see the new models born, study the
designs, the making of the prototype all the way through to the complete collection. He
has never changed his mind. His profits must first be reinvested in the heart of his own
company in research and development in automation and technology. Never skimp when it comes to spending to be at the cutting edge. It has always been like
this. If there is a new machine to buy, he wants it immediately. Here's a great description of
Delvecchio's career. A man who was trained in the field, who bet on a few simple and powerful ideas,
on the quality of his products, on his spirit of
conquest, and on a hunger that no achievement has managed to satisfy. It all starts with the product.
This I just want to be the best at what I do is such a powerful idea. Ask yourself, am I the best
at what I do? If not, how can I be? Delvecchio started out by making a mold that turned out to be the best product on the market
and everything developed from there.
It happened naturally, step by step,
almost without realizing it.
He said, some have a passion for the mountains,
some have a passion for cycling.
My passion has always been the factory.
He understood decades ahead of his competitors
that the winner would be the one
who places the customer at the center and manages to retain him. He's described as having
the same charisma Steve Jobs and having a reality distortion field effect on those around
him. He shaped reality to his liking. His requests were very clear. His employees would
describe him as easy to understand. He watches every penny, doesn't tolerate waste and invests heavily in technology. He said,
I have great respect for money. I have always invested my money in the company to keep it
competitive. He says, I have a respect for money and the effort required to make it.
He maintained a great perspective. Some would say, you're working so hard, how difficult
your life would be. He would say to to remain alive is a privilege, as is being fortunate enough to get up in
the morning and make frames all day, feeding dozens of families.
He lived by a simple but powerful principle, one's own work must be done to the best of
one's ability.
There is only one office that is always empty, his.
He is never at his desk. The office is not for him. He is a trench man, a factory man. He said, I'm always around the factory. I talked directly with everyone explaining why and how we do things this way. What is he saying?
He's using word explaining. He's really what he's saying. He's teaching. This is what Jim Sinegal, the founder of Costco said, if you're not spending 90% of your time teaching, you're not doing your job. That is a
direct quote from Jim Sinegal. I'm always around the factory. I talked directly
with everyone explaining why and how we do things this way. He explains his very
simple strategy for the factory. You have to do things well, then better and then
always better. Innovation has to be continuous. He had so many ideas that he
had to keep a tape recorder next to his bed. He would wake up in the middle of the night with a solution to a problem or an idea to expand his business
He would record the idea and then he'd go back to sleep
He was driven for decades by a deep need to be autonomous
He does not want to depend on other people
He believed that complacency kills others took vacations at the sea. I kept moving forward
He experienced a lot of change in his lifetime
His first son Claudio is 47 years older than his younger Clemente
Claudio grew up in a small attic room overlooking the factory Clemente grew up the son of a billionaire
He says I follow the performance of our 1500 reps every day. He's in his mid 80s. It's the weekend and he's obsessively checking every single individual store sales data on his iPhone.
He says, I have never been satisfied.
He was described as simply a man who sees far, much farther than others.
Delvecchio could never be controlled.
He has taken over the world of frames by destroying the competition,
humiliating his Italian rivals,
buying out the Americans,
annihilating the French and Germans.
And finally, Delvecchio found his reason for being in his work.
And that is where I'll leave it.
I would say for the full story read the book,
but the book's not even available in English, unfortunately.
I will leave as many of my notes as possible in the show notes so you can see on your podcast player.
And make sure on my personal email list, I email the top 10 highlights from every single book and episode that I make.
I'll leave that link down below. You can sign up for free. And it's also available at davidsenra.com.
That is 394 books down, 1000 to go. Thanks for listening and I'll talk to you again soon.