Founders - #85 Walter and Olive Ann Beech (Aviation Legends)
Episode Date: August 18, 2019What I learned from reading The Barnstormer and The Lady: Aviation Legends Walter and Olive Ann Beech by Dennis Farney. ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledg...e 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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It's the roar.
That throaty growl, a sound so distinct and intriguing that it causes your eye and your
ear to search the sky for its source.
A tiny speck on the horizon draws nearer, and soon a dramatically different looking
airplane comes into view.
It looks mighty and powerful, but at the same time sleek and elegant.
One wonders, who was venturesome and inventive enough to build and design this beautiful maverick?
This book is a story of how that unique airplane and many others came to be,
and the two people responsible for their creation.
They were Walter and Olive Ann Beach, co-founders of Beach Aircraft,
and I am proud to say they were my parents.
These two, both forceful and determined, even if rather eccentric personalities,
combined their individual strengths and talents with uncanny ease and rapport to create an extremely successful company
with an undisputed reputation of excellence in quality
and service. What were their experiences that launched them on the path that eventually led
them together? How did two individuals with rather humble beginnings reach such great heights
and accomplish so much at a time when aviation was young and America was struggling through the Great Depression
and women executives were rare or non-existent.
My mother was a reserved and elegant lady.
She carried herself with dignity.
She was extremely insightful and loyal.
She also could be rather imperious and her varied demeanor commanded respect.
This quality served her well when she took over Beach Aircraft
after my father's sudden death.
She was then a woman in a man's world.
The idea of a woman CEO,
let alone the CEO of a Fortune 500-sized aircraft company,
was almost unheard of in those days.
But she did more than survive.
She took the company to new heights and
became fondly known as the first lady of aviation. It has long been in my mind and heart to have a
biography written about these two remarkable people. Much has been written about the airplanes
beach aircraft made, but little has been written about the man and the woman behind those airplanes.
Very little is known about the warmth of their personalities and the strength of their characters.
How did they meet adversity? How did the two of them, each so strong and so stubborn,
manage to work together? He called her Annie, and she called him popper together they built a
company whose name became a byword for excellence this is their story a very
human story and one that I wanted to tell so this that is actually Walter and
Olive's daughter Mary Lynn Oliver writing in the forward for the book that I read this week and the one that I'm going to talk to you about today, which is The Barnstormer and the Lady, Aviation Legends, Walter and Olive Ann Beach by Dennis Farney.
And I just thought of something I was reading that I'm going to go back to the first page real quick before we jump into the rest of the book.
And where is the sentence
that i'm looking for um okay so it talks about uh that they were both forceful and determined
they were rather eccentric and it says uh what led them to create an extreme this sentence an
extremely successful company with an undisputed reputation of excellence in quality and service.
And the thought just randomly popped in my mind, like, I think that's a good goal for everybody that wants to start a company
or any kind of work that you want to do is that your children can look back. In this case, the daughter, Mary Lynn, is writing those words about 60 years after her father died and about 15 years or 20 years after her mother died.
I don't know why I thought about that just now, but I think that's a really good goal to have your children look back at what you were doing and the kind of person you were and be very proud of you.
So I want to tell you first how I found this book.
I ordered it a few months ago,
maybe a month or two ago. And it was actually, if you listened to Founders number 65 on Kirk
Kerkorian. So Beach Aircraft winds up being this giant, massively successful company.
I had never heard of it before. Before I read, I think the book is called the gambler and it's a life kirk kirkorian which is a fantastic uh book and um that the podcast i did actually a lot of people
liked it so if you haven't listened to it go back and listen to it i think it was interesting
but in that book and i i don't know if i referenced another podcast but in that book um kirk has kirk
deals because he's in aviation as well, so he introduces us,
or I guess the author that's writing about Kirk's life,
introduces us to the presence that was Olive Ann Beach.
And so I was like, oh, okay, I never heard of this person.
Let me go look.
And I searched Amazon.
First I read her Wikipedia page,
and then I searched Amazon and found this book.
And it's kind of like, I have the hardcover version.
I don't even know if there's another version,
but it's almost like it's a family album telling the story of not only
the family, but the work they did. There's tons of pictures and anecdotes. And what it reminds me of
is if you listen to Founders number 52, which is the Republic of Tea, a lot of what I'm going to
talk to you about today comes from Olive Ann's personal, I wouldn't say a lot, but a good portion of what I found most fascinating was she's a very private lady.
She didn't do a lot of interviews.
And so a lot of the insights we're going to have into how she somebody compiled faxes between the three co-founders of Republican Tea.
Going back, they had two years of planning stage, and then when they start launching the company, I think that's when the book ends.
And you see – I don't think they thought it was going to be a book.
You see how they thought and what they were experiencing as it happened. And I think that's incredibly insightful. It's something I referenced when I studied Henry Royce because he took such
notes about his work that eventually Rolls-Royce combined his notes into a book and gave it to
future employees. So they understood like the level of quality that they were expected to meet.
So then as I'm reading this book and I'm learning about both Olive Ann
and her husband Walter, I was like,
originally when I sat down to do the podcast
or when I was thinking about doing the podcast,
I was like, okay, I'll cover both of them combined,
similar to what I did on Founders 51
with the two founders of Banana Republic who were also married
and they were also featured in Founders 52
because they were some of the co-founders of Republic of Tea.
And then you quickly realize like, no, you need to isolate and talk about Olive Ann because Walter dies and he has a massive heart attack. He dies. And for the next
30, 35 years, roughly of the company, it's Olive Ann's show. She's by far the most important character in the
book. Before I jump into the book, I just want to tell you about the private podcast that feed I
have that's reserved exclusively for people that are helping spread the word about this podcast.
So there's multiple ways you can access it. None of it costs money and I also don't give them away
for free. I reserve it exclusively for people that are
willing to leave reviews, recommendations, or talk about the podcast on social media.
So for example, if you're listening to this podcast on Overcast, they have a recommendation
function where if you press that star, it turns gold. If you take a screenshot of that showing
that you've recommended by pressing the star and email it to me at foundersreviews at gmail.com. I'll reply back with a personal email
with that private podcast link. It gives you access to seven podcasts that I've created
that are available nowhere else. If you're listening on places like Apple Podcasts or
Stitcher or anywhere else that you can actually leave a review, leave a review, take a screenshot
of the review, email it to me at foundersreviews atgmail.com. Same situation there. And then something I just started, I think a week or two ago,
which is also helpful,
is if you talk about the podcast,
let's say on Twitter,
and you mention at Founders Podcast,
you can just say,
hey, I recommend this podcast.
If you guys want to check it out.
Some people even mentioned specific episodes they liked,
which I really loved.
I like that idea.
So if you want to do that, that works too.
I will automatically DM you the private podcast podcast link as long as you're following
me uh on twitter it'll let me do that uh let me dm you right away okay so uh that's just a way for
me to say thank you um and hopefully incentivize you um with spreading obviously uh the podcast
okay so let's go ahead and jump into the book.
I'm going to tell you a little bit about her personality.
It says, in one absolutely central way, they were exactly the same.
They're talking about Walter and Olive Ann.
Each was determined to be in control.
Her ladylike demeanor was coupled with a pronounced bent for managing figures and managing money.
So that was her, I would say, her primary skill.
Her husband was like a, that's why it's called a barnstormer.
He was an early like stunt, basically stunt pilot and pioneer in the aviation industry.
But he was integral in producing a lot of their first airplane designs based on what
he would experience in the air.
But it's mentioned many times in the book that the company would have undoubtedly went under and failed
like a lot of the early airplane manufacturers did without her ability to manage resources
and to make sure that payroll was met and that the company was turning a profit.
A little bit more about personality just so you understand who she was as a person. It says, Mrs. Beach had no time for dumb questions,
no time for prying questions at all. She would dismiss them with a little wave of her hand.
In this, she resembled another captain of industry, Henry Ford, who lived by a terse motto,
never complain, never explain. Once somebody asked her why she didn't sit down for more in-depth
interviews. This is her response. She says, they'll ask me why blue is my favorite color, she said.
What makes me laugh and what makes me cry? Maybe I don't want them to know. The few times in her
life that she did grant interviews, she always regretted it. She was an intensely, intensely private person.
And something also you might want to know is they would reference her that she was an iron fist in a velvet glove.
So if you've ever seen pictures of her, and there's tons of pictures in this book of her, she looks absolutely glamorous.
But she was extremely quiet and relentless.
So I think that's where she got the moniker of Iron Fist and a Velvet Glove.
Before I jump back into her personality, I just want to talk a little bit about,
because I find it so fascinating that they started essentially at the beginning of a massive industry.
It kind of echoes what you and I were talking about on the podcast with Empires of Light,
with the beginning of the electricity industry
so it says the lives of walter and olivance spanned almost all of that history meaning
the aviation history from its daredevil years of 1920 barnstormers and wing walkers to today's
multi-billion dollar industry she didn't step down she died in like 1993 and she didn't step down. She died in like 1993 and she didn't step down
From the company I think to like 1980 or something like that So it says a this is a story that of that uniquely American type the entrepreneur
Entrepreneurs don't merely create new products and new ideas
Through their work and their enterprise they do enterprises, they define and create themselves.
Such an interesting thought.
When entrepreneurs fail, their failures can be as spectacular as an airplane crash.
But when they succeed, whole new industries grow up where none existed before,
with economic and social implications beyond their most expansive beginnings.
So Ollivant actually starts out in the aviation industry
working for a company called Travel Air.
They hire her.
I think she's 19 at the time.
And she becomes Walter's secretary.
And the note I left myself is you don't know something,
it doesn't matter.
You can learn.
And here's an example of that.
It says when she first became Walter's secretary,
she had to ask a company engineer to draw her a sketch of an airplane with its essential parts labeled. Back then, in one
associate's words, she didn't know an aileron from a tail feather. I'd actually look up what
an aileron was too, because I didn't know what that was. And it is actually a hinged surface
in the trailing edge of an airplane wing
that's used to control lateral balance.
If you've ever been sitting by the wing of an airplane,
you see it go up and down during the flight.
It's that little flap, I guess I would call it.
My point being here is you have somebody that winds up becoming
one of the most important figures in all of aviation history.
And, of course, no one's born knowing what we need to know.
Everybody learns that.
And so she starts out as a young 19-year-old
not knowing anything to the point where
she doesn't even know how an airplane is constructed,
like what are the important parts,
to basically dominating and becoming
one of the most important people in the industry.
So now I'm gonna jump into some of her mottos and codes,
life codes that we see from her private diary. And this is, the book's going to reference her diary and her private journaling a lot. I think it might be my favorite parts.
So it says, it was dangerous to be irreverent around Mrs. Beach. She's a very serious person.
Grown men would flinch when they were summoned to stand on her blue carpet.
There, only raising her voice,
she would tell them precisely what she wanted done
or where they had erred.
She would tolerate one mistake,
but live by the model,
fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me twice, shame on me.
Few people got the chance to fool her three times.
It says she was very demanding and she was the head of everything.
Olive Ann lived by a code of self-reliance that she learned from her parents.
And now here's some of the codes that she learned from her parents.
Sit on your own blisters, which means live with your own mistakes.
When a job is once begun, never leave it until it's done.
Be the labor great or small, do it well or not at all.
Sit up straight and tall.
Throw your shoulders back and breathe.
This was her recipe for steadying herself in anxiety-pounding situations.
So on the very next page, I love this part. She was always learning.
And of course, you're going to have to, to be able to stay on top of an industry for almost
half a century. And then she's also obsessed with having the power of positive thinking.
This is something in my own life I call PMA, which is positive mental attitude, which I'll
talk about in a minute. So it says, she was perhaps, we're going to get an idea of her early life and her lack of education,
which I hate using that word, but it says she was perhaps more conscious than she let on on the lack
of a college education. Her formal education stopped with a Wichita area business school,
but her self-education never stopped. So I don't even
think she went to high school. I think she skipped high school. And then the business school is like,
they were teaching people how to do like basic, like office management, secretary work and stuff
like that. Her personal desk diaries are full of words and phrases she was teaching herself.
So here's one of them that she wrote. It's in French, I think. It says coup de main.
And it says the definition of that is a swift attack that relies on speed and surprise to
accomplish its objectives in a single blow. Remember coup de main. That's important for
later on. Another one she wrote down, steal true, blade straight. Paste it into the diaries are numerous self-help maxims and testaments
to the power of positive thinking. And here's a short little, almost like a poem that she wrote
and she wanted to memorize. You can't expect your ships to come home unless you send them out.
Stand up to be seen. Speak up to be heard. shut up to be appreciated. No one can make you inferior
without your consent. That's another important motto of hers. No one can make you feel inferior.
That phrase, it seems, is key to understanding this elegant, successful, very private woman.
And what she's calling there the power of positive thinking um i repeat this
over and over again so so much that like i get kind of made fun of but uh i think the combination
of a positive mental attitude and perseverance i think the combination of those two traits is
like the key to overcome almost any problem that you may have and i think it's extremely important
um going back to that way the famous andrew carne Carnegie quote, paraphrase I don't have in front of me, but it's like,
the mind can be brought into sunshine. That's not, hold on, let me look it up real quick because
I'm butchering that quote. That's not, I don't think that's how it starts. It's his most famous
quote. Okay. A sunny disposition is worth more than fortune. Young people should know that it
can be cultivated,
that the mind, like the body, can be moved from shade into sunshine.
I think it's essential for your mind to be in sunshine and not in the shade.
This is just some funny stuff that comes across because I think the beginnings,
like I've talked a lot about, the beginning of industries are just fascinating to me.
So here's a list of flight safety rules uh it says
flight safety rules of that era let's say early 1920s maybe even before uh clearly indicates the
precarious seat of the pants nature of the whole business and there's also like 10 i'm just going
to pull out four of them that made me chuckle pilots should carry hankies in a handy position
to wipe off goggles riding on steps wings or tail of a machine is prohibited
this was the funniest one do not trust altitude instruments and then this was a bizarre one
pilots will not wear spurs while flying and it's just another example that everything big starts
small and when you go and analyze things that are now big and you look at them when they were once small, they just look vastly different.
You see stuff like that.
I think it's humorous.
So a lot of these beach aircraft was founded and the entire history of the company was based in Wichita, Kansas.
And it's bizarre.
Like there's a bunch of other companies,
aircraft companies at the time that get started there.
So the question I had for myself was like,
why was Wichita the air capital?
Like it came up with that nickname.
Like why did it happen in Kansas?
Like that just seems random.
So some people had theories and this was one of them.
They said the sky was usually clear
and the flat planes all around were a forgiving environment for pilots.
It says no territory in the world has more natural emergency landing
fields. Every wheat field in Kansas is one. So that kind of makes sense, but
the author says no, it's not actually why. It's because Wichita
had a lot of money. By 1918,
Kansas was producing nearly 13% of the entire US oil production. So a lot of the entrepreneurs that had made money in oil
production then started in turn funding and starting in some cases, these aircraft companies.
And it says, let me just get the list. Some of them might sound familiar to you.
Beach Aircraft, Cessna, maybe the most famous aircraft company of all time was founded there.
Stearman Aircraft, which in turn would eventually be merged with Boeing Aircraft.
And then later in the book, Learjet also starts in Kansas. Okay, so let's talk more about her
early life. And it says uh when olive when olive ann was
just a girl she went to a soda fountain one day and encountered a boy who would who not only teased
her but also occupied the last remaining stool so she pushed him off the stool and took it for
herself sometimes you just have to do these things she explained decade decades later to a friend
sometimes you just have to do these things. The remark says a great
deal about the inner core of this steely, quietly assertive woman. Her birthplace was a rural farm
house that her father had built with his own hands. The stern maxims that Olive Ann would live by,
sit on your own blisters, for example, sit up straight and tall, were instilled into her from So she definitely came from humble beginnings.
Not only did her father have to build the house they live in,
but she's living in a tiny town at this point, and there's only 600 people.
And it's called Waverly.
It says meticulous and mature beyond her years
she had her own bank account by age
7 and was handling all the bill
paying for her parents by age 11.
So they wind up
her father's carpenter by trade
and they have to move from this
tiny town and
they have to go to where like the big city
for more opportunity and I just chuckled.
It was a growing town approaching 3,000 citizens at the time.
She never attended high school.
Instead, she attended the American Secretarial and Business College.
She also took night courses.
Then at age 17, she went to work as a bookkeeper and office manager for an electrical appliance and contracting firm.
She lived in a boarding house there and on the side kept books
for Joe's garage. So she had her own little, you know, kind of side business here. These two jobs
together earned her $18 a week. By this time, she was already practicing what would become a
lifelong habit of collecting admonitions on the good life and how to live it. And so she collects
all these little maxims and poems that she wants to reference back.
Here's one of them.
It says, I have to live with myself and so I want to be fit for myself to know.
I want to be able as the days go by to always look myself in the eye.
I don't want to stand with the setting sun and hate myself for the things I have done.
To reference Carnegie again, he says the internal judge reigns supreme, I think is the quote,
meaning it's most important that how you, the most important thing is how you feel,
truly feel about yourself and to make sure that you're making yourself
and changing yourself into a person that you can actually respect.
One offered this philosophical advice on the value of perseverance.
That's one thing she definitely never would give up.
The one who sticks to a losing cause, although his fortunes get a fall,
may find that, gaining strength and pride, he's not the loser after all.
Two qualities Olivana never lacked were self-confidence and assertiveness.
One day she marched into a local bank one day
and asked for a loan of $1,000,
a substantial sum at that time,
particularly for someone making $18 a week.
But somehow she talked the bank into giving it to her.
As it turned out, the loan was part of a larger strategy.
After a couple weeks, she repaid it,
having held onto the money.
And now she had a credit rating.
Okay, so now I want to skip ahead to the founding of Beechcraft.
Travel Air winds up getting purchased by another company.
They move from Kansas to New York City.
They're not able to build the airplanes they want,
and so they wind up leaving and starting their own company in the heart of the Great Depression.
It says the company was a huge
gamble for all three of them so there was uh walter olivan and then one of the engineers the other
co-founder uh to be sure walter and olivan left new york with a tidy sum as stockholders they had
sold travel air high and now the depression would enable beach aircraft to buy back into the airplane
business low even so it was about the worst possible
time to launch a new business. It took more than money and more than a promising idea.
It took courage. America came close to rock bottom in 1932. This is the economic environment
they're launching into. It says crude oil sold for 10 cents a barrel. The entire aviation industry produced a total of only 549 commercial planes valued at
little more than two million dollars so the ground floor the entire aviation industry uh it's two
million dollars this time that's insane and they had a very simple um as you can tell like olive
really like to orient around simple ideas and simple
rules.
So the idea for the company was, we are going to build the best damn airplane ever, and
no near depression is going to stop us.
So not only are they going to launch during the depression, but they take this counterintuitive
strategy of making it a super expensive luxury plane, and it works.
So it says, beach aircraft began in a small corner
of the Cessna factory,
leased from the Cessna board of directors.
In the teeth of the depression,
beach aircraft began building,
not a cheap plane tailored to hard times,
but a luxury plane.
With depression era sales
of even inexpensive airplanes plummeting,
they wagered their future on this line of costly airplanes. And the name of the plane was the Model 17.
Almost 100 years later, it was voted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association
the most beautiful airplane of all time.
And there's a bunch of pictures in the book.
I mean, it looks amazing.
It's gorgeous.
So it says, it was Olive Ann who juggled the books, met the payroll, and collected the bills.
There was one occasion in which Walter was worried about a $10,000 unpaid bill from a customer in Texas.
Olive Ann drove down, drove back, and plunked the $10,000 on his desk.
There's your damn money. She said And so why Walter was focused on trying to build the model 17 and then obviously put it into production
She focused on making sure the company was frugal
They were not wasteful as you as I just you just heard they started out. They were like subleasing space
And from Cessna, so they kept all their expenses as low as possible until sales started rolling in but they did not they they manage resources intelligently enough to
make sure they didn't shortchange the actual product that they were making and
then this was interesting so the note I left myself was naysayers are constant
this is how they're starting to so everybody said like this is a stupid
idea of course like you're building an expensive plane let you know, there's a Great Depression going on etc, etc, etc
And so they wind up running an ad and I love what they did here
It says in high good humor the ad compared the model 17 to past inventions that had also drawn initial scorn
So this is this tells you something about not all of Anne and Walter to
That they just didn't they believed in their convictions.
They believed in their ability.
I think they,
they,
the reference it's like,
uh,
they believed in their ability to shape the future through their own efforts.
So they had supreme level of confidence.
And so,
um,
this ad says they basically ignored,
not only do they ignore initial scorn,
but they,
they use it to their benefit and use it as marketing material.
So they,
they talk about the telephone and then in parentheses in the ad, it talks about what
people said when these inventions came out at the time.
It says, oh my God, it talks.
The steam-powered train engine, unimportant.
And the Wright Brothers airplane, both crazy.
But Beach Aircraft has had the last laugh.
As the company put it
the early critics of the beach craft are now busy trying to imitate its many
superior features the beach craft is out in front and will stay there and I think
that counterintuitive point still holds true today so let me give an example
like you could buy a normal, regular plane at this time
for let's say $3,000. The Model 17 was priced anywhere from $8,000 to $24,000. So as long as
you're building one of the best products available, in this case they definitely were, the companies
are able to charge more. It logically follows like they're going to have more money. In many
cases, they have larger margins. And having more money and having larger margins, even though
the aviation industry is not like excessive margins by any means, um, is what actually
helped the company survive and then thrive throughout the thirties. So it's, it's, it's
definitely not the take that somebody that has never done something like this before would,
would approach like, Oh, the depression. okay, let me make the cheapest plane possible.
Well, if you make the cheapest plane possible, one, you have less overall dollars.
Let's say you're selling a plane for $2,000 instead, and your margins are smaller.
So what are you going to do?
You're going to go out of business.
You can't do that.
This is a little bit more about Olive's personality,
and then this is going to be bad times ahead.
So there's many coups that
Olive Ann has to deal with. One happens when Walter gets extremely sick and then another happens
when he dies and both the motivation for the coup is because they didn't think women should be
running companies. So it's obviously just an indication of like the time that we're in and
the environment that she's having to work through. Before I get there to World War II, though, there's something that's interesting.
There was races for airplanes, like the car industry before it,
provided a unique marketing opportunity for these companies.
In fact, there's a movie being made about this because Ford, some of the early attention and publicity that Ford got was by building race cars.
And he used that publicity to spur car sales for, obviously, for normal people, non-race cars.
Well, the same thing is playing out in airplanes.
And they used it, Beach used it to establish early credibility.
And then, of course, after the credibility follows sales orders.
It says, beach airplanes continue to compete in air races.
They competed in the 1936 Mile Higher Air Race in Denver, Colorado.
A beach stagger wing, which is one of the planes they created
or they were manufacturing, won that race.
And two more beach planes finished in the top five.
This led to an often repeated company boast. It takes a beach craft finished in the top five. This led to an often-repeated company boast,
it takes a beach craft to beat a beach craft.
There's two traits of Olivana that may seem contradictory,
but I don't think they are.
She was enamored with business.
In fact, she'd ask to be driven around Wichita,
and she would keep a list and notes of all the new businesses.
But at the same time, she made a point of laying her work aside when the day was done.
And this is, I think, something that a lot of people struggle with
because it is also a counterintuitive point that, you know,
okay, if I just put in more hours, if I just keep working, I'll make more progress.
And sometimes I think it's better to, as hard as it may be, to put it down
and let like your, just have more time to think
about it um so you know let's say you end your day at five or six o'clock whatever the case is
and then for several hours like your brain on a conscious and subconscious level like you're going
to be thinking about all the stuff you're doing during the day and i think that's why a lot of
people always talk about like oh i had an insight it was in the shower the next morning like it's uh
elon's talked about this even though he doesn't abide by that that it's like oh it's not
that you're having the idea in the shower it's just like the he's down i think he has like a
typical geeky way of uh of describing he's like oh i'm downloading last night's computation
but dev olivan definitely was interested and had a passion for business but also knew when to turn
it off i guess is the point i'm trying to make um so now we're going to get into the note of myself was speed the speed was made
necessary and we plus we all have potential than we know more potential than we know rather um so
now this was the very beginning of world war ii and says, now the concern wasn't finding jobs for existing workers.
It was finding workers to handle a gush of wartime orders. So the growth of this company
due to World War II is staggering. It says, the company was building planes and hammering
together new factories as fast as it could. In only 83 days, it erected two sprawling assembly
buildings exceeding 300,000 square feet.
Remember, they started in a tiny little sublease from Cessna.
Skeptical onlookers questioned whether such monstrous structures were even necessary.
Soon, Beach would outgrow even these structures and had to be forced to expand into hastily erected tents outside.
Congress had appropriated money for only, so in April 1940, it says Congress had appropriated money for only 47 new airplanes.
Only a month later, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt called upon the aircraft industry to gear up for producing 50,000 new planes.
So it goes from, okay, we're going to pay for 47.
Oh, no, not 47.
Make that 50,000.
So that's what I mean.
We all have more potential than we
know, and the speed was made necessary. So it says, by June 1940, Beach had a backlog of orders
totaling 1.2 million. By September, so what is that? July, August, three months later, by September,
it was 22 million. So what, almost 22 times. A few months later 82 million the payroll jumped from 700 employees before the war
to 6 000 and then jumped again to 17 700 so an additional 7 17 000 employees uh the factory
began turning out uh new models it's called the model 18 uh before the newly expanded assembly
areas even had heat oh this is what i meant about we all have more potential than we know.
In addition to that is, so they're having to, they're working in a factory, right?
And they have to get the work done because it's literally life and death at this point.
Okay?
So it says before the newly expanded assembly areas even had heat,
the temperature within the buildings was kept barely above freezing.
So they had to have these like – they're not even space heaters because I don't think they exist at the time.
But basically they had to have artificial ways to heat it up, heat the area, like the factories up before they had like central heating.
Because the tools would freeze to the side of the airplanes.
And so that's what I mean about we all have more potential
and we're way more adaptable than we have even an inkling of thought of.
You just have to be forced into that environment
and then you're going to adapt.
They didn't by choice want to make planes
and deal with steel and aluminum and all the,
and,
and all these tools in an environment where the temperature is freezing,
but they had to,
and guess what?
They survived.
They adapted.
It's not easy.
And that's not the point.
The point is that,
you know,
humans are much more capable than we think.
I listened to an audio book a few months ago.
This guy named David Goggins is called can't hurt me. And I only, I didn't finish the second half of the book because I'm
more interested in like, as you could see from the podcast, like the beginnings of people's lives.
And especially like this guy had a really just messed up. He was an, his dad was really abusive,
beat the crap out of him and his mom and sold drugs and had guns everywhere. And he just took
that like pain and suffering and used it as fuel, right?
But he says something in the book that I thought was interesting,
that he's convinced that most humans are living at 40% of their actual capabilities,
that we just got used to like not tapping into our potential.
And I really like that idea.
So he used that in like a physical form.
He's like 300 pounds at the time.
And he wants to join the Navy. They're like, no, you're too fat. Like you got to lose weight. form. He's like 300 pounds at the time and he wants to join the Navy
They're like no you're too fat like you gotta lose weight and he had to lose like a hundred pounds
I forgot to let's say 100 pounds in 40 days or something like that. Then he starts running
He's never ran in his life. So it's running 100 mile races and he just realized like oh I had all this on Pat tap
Untap potential before I would just sit at home. I'd come home from work
He was like an exterminator like a people like like go to businesses and kill insects. I'd come home from work. He was like an exterminator, like people that go to businesses and kill insects.
And he'd come home and just watch movies and drink milkshakes.
And that same person that would just sit on the couch and drink milkshakes a few years later is running 100-mile races.
He's like, we're not even tapping into our potential.
That's something I definitely believe.
And I think reading all these books definitely reinforces that. But I just thought that was fascinating that, you know, we had this huge, I mean, World War Two was the largest world
war in human history and in our species history. And you had people doing extreme things to meet
an extreme demand. So it kind of illustrates that in a small way, not a small way, meaning the
magnitude of what they're doing, but like a small amount of time, I should say.
So this is a failed, another one of the failed coups against Olive.
It says, as events unfolded, Walter and Olive Ann both wound up at the same time in the same hospital.
So he winds up, Walter has like something called encephalitis, which is a painful affliction of the joints.
And like your spine, like you have inflammation in the brain.
You have headaches, stiffness of the neck.
You can die from this.
He doesn't die from it, but he dies from a heart attack shortly thereafter.
But it says, as events unfolded, Walter and Ollivand both wound up in the same hospital at the same time.
She was in the hospital to deliver their second daughter, Mary Lynn. That's the person who wrote the introduction that I referenced earlier.
With both beaches out of action, a dangerous power vacuum developed at beach headquarters.
Remember, this is not only are they both in the hospital, but they're having their
companies growing exponentially.
And lower level executives moved to fill it.
They mounted a corporate coup and appears that they had support for it in high places.
So what does that mean it says the company's eastern bankers wondered whether beach aircrafts could survive without
walter so did the reconstruction finance corp these are all the companies that are granting
them uh loans during for the wartime expansion which had granted the company large loans to get
the war work started uh but the plotters made the fatal mistake of underestimating olive and this
she's this woman was gangster even while in the hospital she had taken the fatal mistake of underestimating Olive Ann. This woman was gangster.
Even while in the hospital, she had taken the precaution of having a direct line installed to Beach headquarters.
It says, meanwhile, word reached Mrs. B that one of her new executives was saying that Walter would never come back,
and he knew just the right replacement, himself.
Mrs. Beach ordered the self-promoter and 13 other new men fired.
This is more about
Olivane during the war years. During the war years,
Olivane worked 10 to 12 hour days. In addition
to everything else, she took her turn in a
volunteer corps of
women workers who called themselves the
Gardettes, joining them as
they kept an eye out for any saboteurs
who might threaten the factory
complex at night.
And in a particularly insightful one-sentence summation of her personality,
this article that they're writing about Beach at this time, it says,
Her genius lies in commanding respect.
She had an instinctive talent for managing money and, when necessary, finding more of it.
So the note I left myself on the next page was,
Tough times don't last.
Tough people do.
Oh, and I should, I guess I should tell you, I think Walter's, Walter's already died at
this point, if I'm not mistaken.
So it says the company's wartime buildup turned out to be a short-term liability, but a longer
term opportunity.
And you'll see what I mean by like, they knew they were going to get through tough times
if they adapt and they could find like creative solutions out, which is what I mean by like they knew they were going to get through tough times if they're if they adapt and they could find like creative solutions out which is what I'm about to read to you here
and then realize that they're not going to have to do this forever because eventually
things will return you know the regression the mean or they'll get a little easier
it had required beach to fast expand its manufacturing facilities to the point that
the company now had considerable more capacity than they could utilize immediately so this is
after the war.
On the other hand, the government-mandated buildup enabled Beach to expand under favorable government loans.
So that's a good thing, right?
However, despite its best efforts, Beach Aircraft did lose money in both 1946 and 1947.
Oh, so Walter's not dead yet.
Scratching for business wherever it could be found, the company entered one of the most unusual periods in its history.
It started producing an array of products that had nothing at all to do with aviation.
This is what I mean about being good and resourceful, not just wasting money. As a subcontractor, Beach built vending machines, metal pie plates, refrigerator components, and even the great American corn harvester.
The company also began
to design an automobile. So they're just trying to find any kind of opportunity to sell products
to utilize their excess capacity that they had in the factory. Of course, as soon as World War
II is over, the government's not going to be buying 50,000 planes a year.
Okay. All right. So now we're at the point where we're at the point this is
we're in the 1950s because he dies in 1950 okay yeah I think he's dead by now
all right so the quote something that's integral and understanding olive is she
well first of all the one quality I the one quality she demanded above all else was loyalty,
but there was not, there was very little,
I'm going to just say from my reading,
I don't think she believed in shades of gray.
You're either with her or against her,
and she's kind of ruthless to this aspect.
So you can be partially loyal.
You were either loyal or you were gone.
So there was a number of, so now this is Bill Beach.
This is – okay, so Walter's brother, R.K., okay, he tried to do a coup after Walter died, and she disappears him is how the book describes it.
So she kicks him out of the company, which is her husband's obviously brother.
His son, Bill Beach, years later is talking about this. And he says there were a
number of people who went to dad, which is her husband's brother, right? And essentially they
said, a woman can't run this company. Bill Beach said in an interview for this book, he laughed.
Well, that proved wrong, didn't it? R.K. Beach, that's the uncle, was summarily forced out and
became a kind of non-person within the company.
So it's kind of a crazy ruthless aspect of her personality. It's not only like she'd erased you
from company history, but no one would be allowed to talk about you again. It was kind of crazy.
So this is the son again. It says, for me growing up in the Beach family, this is a different son.
His guy's name is Walter. But it says, for me growing up in the Beach family, this is a different son. His guy's name is Walter. But it says, for me, growing up in the Beach family was always very
confusing and more than a little intimidating. There was this hierarchy of power that was always
in play. And Olive Ann, of course, sat at the top of the mountain. He says, I was aware from an early
age that people could disappear from the family. Once they were gone, they were rarely, if ever, spoken of again.
Nothing seems to have dented Olivan's quiet self-assurance and her determination to lead
the company she had co-founded. So let's talk a little bit about her management style now that
she's in complete control. She was crisp and direct, a woman who wasted little time on small talk. Oh, it's a woman after my own heart.
Olivane said what she had to say directed what she wanted done to be done
and didn't invite an extended discussion.
She was just a force.
You never took anything for granted with her.
You always had to be at your best.
It was her way or you could leave.
This is another stepson that also worked in the company.
Beach Aircraft was very much a family-run business.
She believed in hard work for herself and her employees
and viewed hard work as a pleasure
and a privilege in and of itself.
Her personal motto was slowly we go.
She preferred a more incremental approach.
I'm gonna expound on this in a little bit. She's also
something she's criticized for, but the note I left myself, which I'll talk about in a little
bit, is I'm not at all convinced that she didn't take the right approach. She gets criticism if she
didn't. I might argue that she did. There was advantages to her incremental approach. It held
down development costs and allowed the company to get maximum use out of existing manufacturing equipment.
The criticism is that there was a serious downside to this incremental approach.
It kept beach aircraft from fully embracing jets, even as competitors were turning to them in the 1960s and 70s, which I'll talk about more.
So not only was she relentlessly resourceful, but she also taught her daughters.
They had two daughters. Obviously, they don't have a have a father the father dies and they're still young they have an inheritance
from their dad's estate and the daughters get something like a 1.2 million dollars something
like that and it says olivan used the trust fund as a way of teaching her two daughters about
investment and money they had always enjoyed their vacations in the mountains in colorado
now she suggested that they they together find and buy a vacation cabin in their own names.
They did.
Eventually, Mary Lynn became sole owner and as of 2009, the cabin continued to be in family
ownership more than a half a century after its initial purchase.
Oh, so this is something interesting though.
Something at the time, so they make 4.8 million in profits, right?
But this was before taxes
and they had at the time they had this thing called a wartime excess profits tax imagine this
being able to be passed today and i'm not saying it should have been but i think with world war
ii is the one example of like everybody making sacrifices where now there's a lot of countries
that can fight wars and the citizens don't even know what's going on you know it's kind of the
opposite of what like if you're going to fight a war and if you're going to go
overseas and kill people i think like people should have to say like citizens should have
to sacrifice for that so it says um this wartime excess profits took away i guess it's almost like
a 75 tax it says total taxes took a bite of 3.1 million so they made 4.8 million they had to pay massive uh tax and it was 1.7 right
um so she hits a crisis um as crazy i wrote i don't sometimes i confuse myself with notes a
crisis as read from her personal notes royce and banana republic oh i was talking about my
i love the fact that companies and i wish everybody did this where they they take
notes about their processes about how they think about their products about how they do customer
how they support their customers and i wish like every company published these documents because
i think they're so valuable and so what i was referencing myself is that what i referenced
earlier how royce took henry royce took such notes that turned in a book and helping in a
republic the founders been in Republic do the same thing.
All right.
So anyways, she's going through a crisis in – is this 1954?
1953.
Okay.
So it says, finally, there are some maxims embodying the power of positive thinking and common sense.
This is something that's very important to her.
She says, success is the sum of small efforts repeated day in and day out.
Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off the goal.
He who thinks by the inch and talks by the yard should be removed by the foot.
Happiness is a matter of habit.
Gather it fresh every day or you may never get it at all.
You can't have rosy thoughts about the future when your mind is full of blues about the past.
Now, remember, she's running a hugely complicated enterprise.
You know, her husband, somebody she's known for maybe 20 years, the father of her children, dies unexpectedly.
And she's having to deal with this.
And we're kind of seeing what's going on internally.
Like, how is she able to survive this it says in the fall of 1953 and continuing through 1954 the pace and volume of her entry entries suddenly intensify she was struggling with her biggest corporate crisis
since becoming beach ceo the crisis moves into an even more dangerous phase when the banks seem to
be losing faith in beachcraft so not only do you have to deal with internal coups from underlings, but banks are trying to basically cut her off.
It was a bad time. A November entry reads simply, trying days. It was followed by a December entry
that reads, road rough-ins. Immediately following this entry, she wrote that an unidentified someone mentioned bankruptcy
my hair turned red this is evident in another entry that reads uh visited so she's making
some progress visited with national city and fourth national bank of wichita again she's
deciding to replace the bankers that are giving all this trouble, making good progress, working towards goal. By late April, she could elatedly declare victory.
Happy day.
Telegram of cancellation of V loan sent to First National in New York.
So before they could knock her out, she does the actual knockout blow
and says, you know, we're prepaying everything,
and this telegram is basically saying, hey, we're going to prepay,
and then you need to consider this telegram like the end of our business relationship.
We want nothing to do with you anymore because they weren't supporting you during tough times.
Olivane celebrated this occasion, which, remember, I bring this up because, one, this goes on for almost a year.
And, two, like from the outside, it's like, okay, the company is making millions of dollars.
They're doing tens of millions of dollars in sales.
Everything seems from the outside you might
it might appear everything's okay but people are not we as a species we tend to broadcast the things that are going well and hide the things that are going bad everybody has bad things that
are happening to them don't be fooled don't be brainwashed into this like this is very important
to understand that beach aircraft is undoubtedly success It's a successful company until it winds up being sold like for its entire existence
It was successful, but that doesn't mean it was easy
That doesn't mean every time was bad and I think that people need to understand that
Um, so it says
Oh, remember I told you to remember the term coup de main
So he says um, olivine celebrated the occasion which seems to have caught first national by surprise
In many ways and for a good long time coup de main she exalted in her diary So he says, So the author continues, continues if there was times where her first fierce determination flagged and it is almost certain that there were little evidence of those times appear in her diaries beyond those entries
meaning the interest i just read to you steal true blade straight in which she's almost she
wrote that over and over again in which she almost seems to be talking to herself summoning up her
courage only occasionally do self-doubt surfaces in this entry a speech a good one i wrote but i'm
afraid i won't be able to give it justice for why I don't have the answer. So this part reminded me of one of the documentary I'd recommend
anybody interested in entrepreneurship watching. It's on HBO. It's called The Defiant Ones.
And I don't know if you know who Jimmy Iovine was. I've heard his name, but I didn't know
much about him until I watched the documentary. And he's one of these people that have just
insane careers that don't make any sense. starts out. He kind of like a loser
winds up getting a job at a recording studio answering the phones
Becomes a producer at 22 23 years old starts working with people like Bruce Springsteen and John Lennon Lennon
Has massive hits as a producer then founds Interscope Records who in this like first few years of its existence becomes one of the most successful record companies of all time.
Signs people like Marilyn Manson, Nine Inch Nails, Tupac, Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre.
Goes on to found Beats by Dre with Dr. Dre.
Sells it a few years later for $3 billion to Apple.
Anyways, he has this really, I think maybe his most important idea
is his idea about fear. And is what olivian is is experiencing
here in her diary entry and he says um i'm just going to read this quote that i took notes on one
time he says you need to learn to turn fear into a tailwind instead of a headwind fear is as powerful
as the force if you can harness it is an asset and you will have a big, big advantage. That has been
my whole thing. And this is what I mean, the most important idea I think that I've heard from him.
When I feel fear, I have trained myself to move forward. The fight is never over with fear. It
is never gone. You have to harness it. So specifically that one sentence, when you feel
fear, you have to train yourself to move forward understand that everybody feels fear it's it's completely natural to the
human experience but what's unnatural is going forward in the face of fear and so that's what
he's talking about like for many people when they feel fear it's a tailwind it pushes them back it
stops them it slows them down jimmy's like no no one thing i did is I learned I used it as fuel to speed me up
to get me to where I'm going so I think that's important so this is gives you an
idea of the scope of the organization she was running Beach now counted more
than 40 ongoing projects ranging from contracts and subcontracts for both
commercial and military aircraft they had advanced secret research projects in
aerospace and the company's annual report for the fiscal year ending September 30th
recorded revenues of nearly $104 million.
More maxims.
And it says, the hallmark, this is something in her diary,
the hallmark of the adult is that he is willing to pay for what he wants.
Also, he knows the cost.
And the note I scribbled to myself when I read it,
I was like, I wonder what was going on in her mind
when she wrote that.
So we always talk about this idea of books that are original links.
I explained at the beginning of the podcast
that Kirk Kikorian and the book on his life
linked me to Olive Ann and the book on her life.
And now I just found another book. So I've heard, you've heard, you've probably heard the term
Learjet, right? I've heard the term, don't know much about it. Had no idea that it was named after
the person that started the company, Bill Lear. So this is an example of this book now linking
me to him. I've already put, found some biographies on him. I just got to figure out which one I'm going to read.
So he'll eventually pop up in a new Founders episode eventually.
And you'll see why, because he's a misfit.
He's a rebel.
He's a madman.
He's a crazy person, which I love to study.
He says, Bill Lear is typically described as a man you could hate one minute and love the next.
But this wasn't the case with Olive Ann.
She thoroughly disliked him all of
the time uh but bill lear was a genius there's absolutely no doubt about that this is what i
mean like what wait till the what i'm going to read you right now he's credit with more than 150
inventions including the car radio the 8-track stereotype player and the autopilot for jeff
for jet air packilot for jet aircraft.
But his best known creation of all was the Learjet.
How do you do?
It would typically take a person multiple lifetimes to do all that.
That's insane.
He invented the car radio, the HX stereo player, autopilot, and the Learjet.
The Learjet was this mass-produced, inexpensive, and speedy business jet.
When he came to Wichita in 1962, he had been refining the Learjet. The Learjet was this mass-produced, inexpensive, and speedy business jet. When he came to Wichita in 1962,
he had been refining the Learjet design for three years.
Now he was ready to build.
What irritated her, Olive, most about Lear,
he soon began hiring away beach engineers.
So he hires away one of her friends, and she just couldn't believe it.
He says, Mrs. Beach just couldn't believe that anyone would leave beach
for another company.
So he hires away Jim Greenwood, and she just couldn't believe it. He says, Mrs. Beach just couldn't believe that anyone would leave Beach for another company.
So he hires away Jim Greenwood and that's the quote I just referenced.
And this is hilarious, her response later on.
Because once again, there's no, what I referenced earlier,
there's no black and white, like,
or excuse me, there's no gray, it's black or white.
Jim, you're on my team.
Now you're off my team, so you're dead to me.
One day, Greenwood, as a Learjet employee, bumped into her on a commercial flight.
Hello, Mrs. Beach, Greenwood ventured. Oh, Mr. Greenwood, Alavan replied. If I had known that
you were going to be on this flight, I would have tried to think of something nice to say to you.
I read that and it made me chuckle. I think it's hilarious. Okay, so Lear starts this company.
The first year, he gets $52 million in sales the first year.
And so what happens is everybody, you know, they're making these like little,
I don't even know, I guess you call them turbo props.
This is what everybody was flying before the introduction of the jet.
And so this is where people were saying like her
slow, we go incremental approach was like people thought it was detrimental. I'm not, again,
not at all convinced that this wasn't the wrong, like this was the wrong strategy. I think if I
was in her shoes at this point in the company history, I would have done the exact same thing.
I think it was the smarter thing to do, actually.
I think the criticism she's getting is wrong.
And so I guess before I tell you, like, the criticism, I should tell you what the criticism was.
The criticism was that she was too slow to embrace the new trend in the industry and create an entire new.
She wanted to incrementally approve the existing product line and not scratch everything
they're doing and building a jet, which is a completely different product.
Right.
And at this point, Beach Aircraft has been around for almost 30 years.
The two co-founders that created most of the products were her husband, he's dead.
And the engineer who's, he's not really, he was the other co-founder, he's not really
involved in the companies like off sailing. had like a love of sailing starts writing sailing textbooks and
all this other stuff um and like are you going to put your company in a precarious financial position
like i understand what their point is the future is jets if you don't um if you don't embrace the
trend for jets right then you're going gonna miss out on that but it's also
like there's a lot of businesses that have like staying power so you might not have this huge
growth they might not be doing 52 million dollars in in sales uh the first year but you're also
competing with a company that was created from its foundation to build jets as opposed to taking
a huge organization kind of trying to turn the ship around on a dime and do an entirely new product line.
Like, and the reason I bring that up is like,
okay, so let me read this part and then let me tell you why.
And why, so this is her reasoning.
She goes, with the cost of developing them,
meaning the new like incremental approach
for the turbo props or whatever you want to call them,
with the cost of developing them
already pretty much written off,
a large percentage of each sale
flowed right down to the bottom line as profit.
On the other hand,
the Learjet appeared to be the wave of the future.
And so this is how the corporate history
puts these decisions.
Compared with pure jet power,
the turboprop offered many advantages.
Great savings in initial and operating costs,
so they're cheaper.
Ability to operate anywhere
without limiting noise factors safe easy fast transition for
the pilot accustomed to handling propeller driven piston powered aircraft
and the executive who like to take over the controls himself would have little
that was new to learn to handle the company's the name of the product is
called King Air with the proficiency of a veteran professional.
Building the King Air turboprop was another example of Olive Ann's slowly-we-grow approach,
and it proved to be a highly profitable decision. Within 90 days of the initial announcement of the new model, advanced deposits for future deliveries already totaled $10.8 million.
This was just the beginning. The King Air turboprop would be in continuous production for the next four and one half decades. And as of 2009 was still in production.
So she got a lot of, this is maybe her most criticized decision. It's like, oh, you missed
this huge wave. She even had a chance to buy Learjet and wouldn't because she hated that guy.
But you know what I thought of when I, so as as i'm thinking as i'm reading about like the back
and forth and like the pros and cons of this decision it made me think of there's a quote
by charlie munger that i came across in the in the tower of charlie munger and i'm going to read it
to you and it says over the very long term history shows that that the chance the chances of any
business surviving in a manner agreeable to a company's owners are slim at best
so that in light of that decision given the competition and had the size of the company
and what their expertise was I think it was the right decision it's decision I would have made
I would have tried to increase profitability and understood that like the cut, like you're not, you're, you're better off managing
what you're good at already than trying to do something new. I know there's other companies
that are, that have succeeded somewhat. Amazon, of course, being the outlier there that they started
off selling books online. They had this huge retail business. And then because of their,
their dedication to experimentation and their skillset, they now have a bunch of other hugely profitable businesses, AWS being one example. But in this case, you have a 60-year-old CEO. All the good product people are
gone. Yes, of course you optimize what you already have. There's still a market there.
So a lot of people think that Learjet looks good because it's 52 million in sales. It's 52 million
in sales because jets are a lot more expensive than turboprop planes and you have an entire market that is not looking at jets and you
already have like you're the standard bearer for quality and excellence in this turboprop industry
and what what it just said let me go back to that quote real quick um uh cost of our research and
development right cost development was already written off at this point. So a large percentage of each sale
flowed right down to the bottom line.
This was the smart financial decision.
It's like she's being criticized
for not competing with them.
She competes with them.
She probably lost.
And then, so okay, you compete with them, right?
You lose and now your company's
at a precarious financial position.
You go bankrupt.
How is that smarter?
Sometimes you have to know,
hey, what Charlie Munger said,
everything, we're temporary beings.
I talk about this all the time,
but not only are we temporary,
the businesses are temporary.
The businesses, your business,
the business you want to do,
the business that you might start in the future,
then maybe one you run in your past,
maybe you're not even running a business.
Maybe businesses you admire.
You usually have one or two really good products, good ideas,
and you live off of that. That's successful. There's nothing wrong with it. This idea that
we have to constantly throw everything away and not constantly... I don't buy that. I don't think
it's a good idea. It just did not make sense. When I'm reading this, I'm like, I don't understand
this criticism. What do you expect this person to do? And it winds up being like the company survives.
It winds up merging with Raytheon.
She winds up the stock for the Beechcraft shareholders.
It goes up like 4 or 5x in wake of that merger.
She did a good job.
I don't understand this criticism.
It's like this fake world where we know what the future is
and it's all predictable and the ideas are going to work out. That's if we're not awash in a sea
of chaos. That's ridiculous. All right. So now I want to fast forward to the end when she actually
steps down at 76 years old. Before I get into that, I just want to remind you, as you've seen, I presented this
podcast ad-free. My business model is very simple. I give half of my podcast away for free. The
people that want to get the other half, they're available on what I call the Misfit Feed. The
Misfit Feed comes from that famous Apple ad. It's called Here's to the Crazy Ones. It starts out
like, here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs,
the square holes. I just think it's a's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs and square holes.
I just think it's a better name than just saying subscriber or whatever the case is.
Anyways, usually podcasters are like, oh, please sign up and support me, the podcast.
You're doing that, but honestly, by accessing these other podcasts that are available nowhere else, first and foremost, you're supporting yourself.
And then secondary, hopefully you enjoy my work and you're learning from it and you're supporting me.
So if at all, if you're learning from this and you want to get more and support the ongoing production of these podcasts, please look at, there's a link below.
You tap it within, I've put a stopwatch on this for like I think 10 to 20 seconds, maybe 10 to 30 seconds from the time you tap that link to the time that the
private feed is automatically installed in your podcast player of choice. And you can be listening
to the Misfit feed, the exclusive podcast available nowhere else. Okay. So back to Olive
Ann Beach real quick. It says, this is an article talks about referencing her stepping down. It says
an aviation era, the independent reign of olive
and beach 76 the last founder of a major founder and manager of a major aircraft firm is coming to
an end the quiet small town kansas girl who cast her lot 55 years ago with walter beach
um a sometimes raucous ex-army pilot and barnstormer has made her biggest decision
often called the first lady of aviation by Beach Publishers, Olive Ann Beach is praised by both supporters and detractors with such comments
as, she thinks she's indestructible and maybe she is. Beach is the last of the builders started
during aviation's golden years of the 1920s and early 1930s that still is controlled and run by a founder or immediate family member and then i
want to close on this which actually hit me in the heart when i read it it was really sad i'm not
trying to make you sad but you know these fundamentally like the story of companies
stem from the story of people the founders that started a company the people that work there the that buy the product, like all of it is a story of people. We can't
lose sight of that. So this is her nephew talking. She no longer seemed intimidating to me. And by
that time I had grown very fond of her. I remember one New Year's Eve, 1987 I believe,
when on a whim I decided to drop by her house and wish her a happy new year.
We sat in her breakfast room, drank strong coffee, and talked.
She seemed generally pleased that I had come by.
I think I stayed for at least an hour.
It was one of those few times, if not the only time,
that I ever just sat alone with her and talked, casually and openly,
without the family or a bunch of other people around. It remains one of my fondest memories
of Aunt Anne. In her final years, I remember how sad I felt watching her decline,
watching the once towering presence become a little old lady watching her sharp mind and sharp wit fade I've seen the same thing happen to many other people but an aunt but an
aunt and it seemed particularly poignant poignant given the imposing presence she
had once been in my life I carry part of all of and with me to this day think she
said to me and to others her sense sense of taste and dignity, her generosity.
And as I've grown older, I discovered the deep wisdom that lies in her simple life motto,
slowly we go. Her life, and now skipping ahead, this is about five years later,
her life ended peacefully at her home on the morning
of july 6 1993 she simply slipped away in her sleep she was gone now the small town girl with
bangs and a determined gaze the slender young woman with fashion model looks the corporate
executive who brooked no nonsense the wife and mother of two the elegant first
lady of aviation who blazed a trail for other women to follow she had forged her life molded
into a shape of her choosing by sheer strength of will no one can make you feel inferior without
your consent she had reminded herself in her desk diary,
in a phrase that had become her guidepost.
And no one ever did.
So that is where I'll leave the story.
If you want to learn more, as normal,
these are just the highlights and notes I took.
It's a tiny, tiny part of the book.
There's so much more to learn.
I might even do a – Walter seems like a crazy guy too to do a podcast.
Maybe I'll do a podcast on him in the future.
I'm not sure.
But if you want to buy the book and support the podcast –
so first of all, if you want to support yourself by buying the book,
you get something interesting to read.
You support the author for taking all the time and effort to write books
that we can all learn from, and then you support me and the podcast because there's a
link below or you can just go to amazon.com forward slash shop for founders podcast it's
what's known as an amazon affiliate link if you click if you buy a book using that link amazon
says a small percentage of the sale to me at no at no additional cost to use. It's a way to passively basically support the podcast.
And more importantly, support yourself because there's very few activities that are a better use of your time
other than spending time with family, taking care of your health, and working than reading.
And it's just a fantastic, beautiful book.
Got the hardcover.
Tons of pictures.
There's even some pictures of Olive Ann in here
with Walt Disney, which I particularly enjoyed.
Pictures of their products.
Just an amazing story.
And one I don't think I'll forget.
All right, so that's it for me.
If you want to support the podcast,
unlock all my exclusive episodes available nowhere else.
Don't forget, click that Misfit feed
or tap it in your show notes in your podcast player.
And I will be back next week
with another biography of an entrepreneur.
Thanks for listening.