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Jul 6, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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it is a fixed measure of value. looking it will the dollars in notes if it went above 1200 that means the fed is creating too much money so it goes below 1200? that means you need to create more so let's the marketplace determine the needs. so you don't have to have an ounce of gold. so with the varied little amount of gold they responded to signals of the marketplace write-up through world war i. so cold in that sense is like the rulerk[y like chamomile has 5,283 does not restrict the bios of highway that you build. just to show how brilliant you are at the time of our existence with a small agricultural nation, up through 1900 with a population increase 25 fold fold, during that period of time the amount of gold mines only went up 3.five told money supply when up 160 folds even though it was fixed. so it make sure it does not restrict supply it just stays fixed. javanese stagnant economy so it is very basic so when people lose sight of that since 1971 we had that terrible decade in the '70s we got it kind of right
it is a fixed measure of value. looking it will the dollars in notes if it went above 1200 that means the fed is creating too much money so it goes below 1200? that means you need to create more so let's the marketplace determine the needs. so you don't have to have an ounce of gold. so with the varied little amount of gold they responded to signals of the marketplace write-up through world war i. so cold in that sense is like the rulerk[y like chamomile has 5,283 does not restrict the bios of...
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Jul 7, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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the money represents value. gold is the best way to fix that value. but if we understand that we could move ahead and get back the kind of growth rates we had before 1971 there are other things we have to do but experience shows us if we don't get the money right in terms of the fixed value you can get other things right to get the taxes right into the spending rate and regulations right if you don't get the money right it is going to undermine everything else because the basis of everything else, the basis of the transactions into trust and investment and because when it works we don't realize what makes it work. it's like air. when it' it's cleanly taken forr granted. when we have pollution by good, a year is important for a yes. so money is in the same way. and one aspect that gets overlooked as we always focus on economics and gdp and the like is social trust. we have a chapter that we are going to discuss for a few moments about how debasing money undermines the fabric social fabric and in ways that go beyond simply the gdp numbers and exchange n
the money represents value. gold is the best way to fix that value. but if we understand that we could move ahead and get back the kind of growth rates we had before 1971 there are other things we have to do but experience shows us if we don't get the money right in terms of the fixed value you can get other things right to get the taxes right into the spending rate and regulations right if you don't get the money right it is going to undermine everything else because the basis of everything...
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Jul 24, 2014
07/14
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CNBC
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eye 254
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' value.lanning an analyst day for the save a lot brand and cooper thinks management will paint a bullish picture and it will have a turnaround and the market is not giving it enough credit for. >> you have a cheap stock, a turnaround story and potential for potential-enhancing breakup. the risk is fairly limited and even if one of these plays out, and let alone beth of them and no wonder cooperman looks value, although you should only buy this for speculation. i'm know crazy about the supermarket business and this feels like rite aid when it was at five bucks even though svu did hit a 52-week high today. it could come in. income up, cooperman recommended atlas energy and that symbol, atls, that's the general partner in two daughter mlps, atlas resource partners and oil and gas producer and atlas pipeline partners and that's a natural gas processing and treatment services play operating in texas, oklahoma. they have a 6% stake. what's the thesis here? simple. he thinks atlas energy is darn che
' value.lanning an analyst day for the save a lot brand and cooper thinks management will paint a bullish picture and it will have a turnaround and the market is not giving it enough credit for. >> you have a cheap stock, a turnaround story and potential for potential-enhancing breakup. the risk is fairly limited and even if one of these plays out, and let alone beth of them and no wonder cooperman looks value, although you should only buy this for speculation. i'm know crazy about the...
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Jul 9, 2014
07/14
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CNBC
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eye 151
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i only care about value creation for allergan's stock holders. >> let's talk about the value creation. you really believe and you're willing to say that if valiant walked away right now your stock would not plummet because of the announcements you're about to make and because of the pipeline? >> you're correct, jim. what we've done right from the beginning is keep raising the floor, if you why like, the value of allergan is a stand alone entity and now the market is waiting to see what we will put on the table at the time that we announce our earnings which would be the next four weeks and the market will hopefully abroad and we'll see how they react to the numbers we propose. >> will customers stick with a valiant allergan? >> i think there's deep concern in the physician community. i hear it daily. in fact, for your viewers, if they're interested, look on allergan.com. there are over 500 physician letters, not solicited by us. they're absolutely impromptu expressing their feelings of anywhere between concern, dismay, anger, what does this mean for innovation, patient care and physic
i only care about value creation for allergan's stock holders. >> let's talk about the value creation. you really believe and you're willing to say that if valiant walked away right now your stock would not plummet because of the announcements you're about to make and because of the pipeline? >> you're correct, jim. what we've done right from the beginning is keep raising the floor, if you why like, the value of allergan is a stand alone entity and now the market is waiting to see...
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Jul 19, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 66
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however, if the silver coin value against the gold coin value were allowed to fluctuate then the argument for the maintenance of a system may have stood a chance. but the silver lobby saw fit to fight for the peg. using statistics supplied to me by the survey, i was able to graph for you the production during the time period we're discussing. you can see the silver production just continued to grow the entire time. there's no way that a pegged system could survive that kind of growth. it's my belief that that pegged system is the reason for silver's primary failure to reemerge as the monetary instrument. in reading the politics of those times i would say i would have been a democrat. they were fiercely independent and cared for the production of individuals' rights and their ability to provide for themselves. the term free silver meant that an individual with silver could bring their silver to the u.s. mint and receive silver dollars in return but the government could not allow ten $1 silver coins to equal $10 in gold. there had to be another solution. so the u.s. government silver was no
however, if the silver coin value against the gold coin value were allowed to fluctuate then the argument for the maintenance of a system may have stood a chance. but the silver lobby saw fit to fight for the peg. using statistics supplied to me by the survey, i was able to graph for you the production during the time period we're discussing. you can see the silver production just continued to grow the entire time. there's no way that a pegged system could survive that kind of growth. it's my...
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Jul 12, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 66
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what is valued by our company is too. the reason why people love lyft and what it is because we bring these people in the car and say hey, be nice to each other. treat each other with respect. you might be delighted with the conversation that happens. the suggestion of a fist bump is an artifact of that. here is a way to break the ice and connect with this other person. what it has allowed us to do in every city that we have been in across the country, we would bring a driver who normally would not be doing this. they do at five to 10 hours a week, but they're out there having a good time and enjoying themselves because you're being treated with respect. on the passenger side, your delighted by a much better driving experience. >> what if you don't want to do the fist bump? do you have to? >> no. you can politely decline. >> uber has been cutting prices aggressively. now you're about the same price in new york. what differentiates you from uber? why should i take the risk when new york city said officials don't want you t
what is valued by our company is too. the reason why people love lyft and what it is because we bring these people in the car and say hey, be nice to each other. treat each other with respect. you might be delighted with the conversation that happens. the suggestion of a fist bump is an artifact of that. here is a way to break the ice and connect with this other person. what it has allowed us to do in every city that we have been in across the country, we would bring a driver who normally would...
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Jul 15, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 64
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what kind of values do they offer?> you get value from different chains. there are fast food chains that focus on pricing. they get the 90 nights and offers and the one dollar 99th and and then you have the fast casual, where we focus on quality of the food, on service, and we provide value as well. and value can differ based on the equation of price, service, quality, and ambience. >> from the marketing perspective, what about promotions? what will promotions play in valuing a restaurant business? >> promotions work in a big way. it gives an incentive for the customer to come back more often. you promote a price point. other times you promote a limited-time offer. our blt rotisserie chicken worker fits in that category. it is a limited-time offer. other times it is emoting different times of the year at promoting different times of the year. you promote holidays or thanksgiving. they can vary from price to a limited-time offer two different parts of the year. >> you're opening a new base. >> we are delighted to serve
what kind of values do they offer?> you get value from different chains. there are fast food chains that focus on pricing. they get the 90 nights and offers and the one dollar 99th and and then you have the fast casual, where we focus on quality of the food, on service, and we provide value as well. and value can differ based on the equation of price, service, quality, and ambience. >> from the marketing perspective, what about promotions? what will promotions play in valuing a...
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Jul 29, 2014
07/14
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KCSM
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let's not say british values. let's say human decent values, which are acceptable to all humans. we are making it inclusive. >> but inclusiveness seems to have added fuel to an already fiery debate about what it means to be british. >> every religion has got their own right to their beliefs, but at the end of the day, i still think that this is great britain, and i do think that our beliefs and our religions and things like that should also be put first. >> the accusations of islamization are currently being reviewed, and more snap inspections are planned for the future, but the role of islam in british society is set to stay high on the agenda, especially ahead of next year's general election. >> this year, 2014, marx many important anniversaries in europe's history. the first world war broke out exactly 100 years ago. the second world war started 75 years ago. the berlin wall fell 25 years ago. and our summer series, we visit people who helped bring down the iron curtain. >> the first part of our series takes us to the border between austria and hungary. it was here that a peac
let's not say british values. let's say human decent values, which are acceptable to all humans. we are making it inclusive. >> but inclusiveness seems to have added fuel to an already fiery debate about what it means to be british. >> every religion has got their own right to their beliefs, but at the end of the day, i still think that this is great britain, and i do think that our beliefs and our religions and things like that should also be put first. >> the accusations of...
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Jul 13, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 48
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i think what he meant is that so he represents value, was trying to portray what the value of money is. argue, is silver money, and that is one of our questions and part of our topic today. silver is an important part in the change in our current economic environment, but it is much more than that, much more complicated and now, for this presentation, i had to take a u.s. aspect, so i could not look all over the world. do touch on things going on all over the world, but i am very u.s. specific, and it makes it easier for a short conversation, and more enjoyable, so that is what we will be covering today. we have records of over 5000 of 200 82ritten text loss, a code, that silver and wheat worthy per porsche -- a laws,n text of over 282 weresilver and wheat used. bc, there was a naturally occurring alloy called electrum, and they learn how to in a processmetals that continues on through the ages, and at that time, the 635 bc, andid say the slide says another day. that is because that is a picture of a coin from that day. at about the time of the middle ages, silver became the most promi
i think what he meant is that so he represents value, was trying to portray what the value of money is. argue, is silver money, and that is one of our questions and part of our topic today. silver is an important part in the change in our current economic environment, but it is much more than that, much more complicated and now, for this presentation, i had to take a u.s. aspect, so i could not look all over the world. do touch on things going on all over the world, but i am very u.s. specific,...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 1, 2014
07/14
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SFGTV
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all your values you stated are good ones. i just want to make sure one of those values is also providing reliable service so people can get a cab when they want to get one because that has not emanated from the agency very much. >> absolutely. and we'll have to, as an industry, have to provide that service in order to provide. >> thank you. >> supervisor kim. >> i didn't realize you were in the audience, otherwise i would have asked the question of you. but san francisco had recently passed the fair chance ordinance, but i hope you will reconsider and actually fall in line with how we do criminal conviction backgrounds checks, in terms of seven years, not just the entire adult life. that was one quick comment. i have to say, and, you know, i don't have a really nuanced understanding of our taxi industry, but we are losing not just clients and riders, we losing drivers. and i think sfmta is going to have to have a real deep look at our system that we have a real high cost of entry to becoming a taxi driver and that's a system
all your values you stated are good ones. i just want to make sure one of those values is also providing reliable service so people can get a cab when they want to get one because that has not emanated from the agency very much. >> absolutely. and we'll have to, as an industry, have to provide that service in order to provide. >> thank you. >> supervisor kim. >> i didn't realize you were in the audience, otherwise i would have asked the question of you. but san francisco...
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Jul 9, 2014
07/14
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CNBC
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>> it mind hurt book value by $1 a share.umbers, but as far as the ultimate hit to citigroup, that he can handle it. the stock is very inexpensive after that. pull back the lens, what's taking place here? i respect the regulators. i was a reg later at the federal reserve in washington, d.c. in the late 1980s. having said that? understand the transparency of how we're getting to these big numbers of like $7 billion? jpmorgan, about $10 billion for their mortgage settlement and they had five times the amount of mortgage securitization. better transparency and i don't think it will prevent the next financial crisis and actually punishing the right people. punishing, you know, the ex-ceo cluck prince or the -- chuck prince or countrywide. getting to the financial root of the crisis. i read a lot about it before it happened. >> you did. >> what's that $7 billion due to citi's ability to pay back capital of shareholders? whether dividend or share buyback? does that push it back? >> we call this the big brother -- >> even further. >
>> it mind hurt book value by $1 a share.umbers, but as far as the ultimate hit to citigroup, that he can handle it. the stock is very inexpensive after that. pull back the lens, what's taking place here? i respect the regulators. i was a reg later at the federal reserve in washington, d.c. in the late 1980s. having said that? understand the transparency of how we're getting to these big numbers of like $7 billion? jpmorgan, about $10 billion for their mortgage settlement and they had...
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Jul 11, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 77
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what is valued by our company is too. the reason why people love lyft and what it is because we bring these people in the car and say hey, be nice to each other. treat each other with respect. you might be delighted with the conversation that happens. the suggestion of a fist bump is an artifact of that. here is a way to break the ice and connect with this other person. done inallowed to be every city across the country. we rating that would bring in a higher-quality driver who normally wouldn't do this. maybe they do it for 5-10 hours a week, but they are out there and having a good time because they are being treated with respect. on the passenger side, you're delighted by the experience. >> what if you don't want to do the fist bump? do you have to? >> no. [laughter] >> uber has been cutting prices aggressively. now you're about the same price in new york. what differentiate you from uber? why should i take the risk when new york city said officials don't want you there? >> as a passenger, there is no risk. we do count
what is valued by our company is too. the reason why people love lyft and what it is because we bring these people in the car and say hey, be nice to each other. treat each other with respect. you might be delighted with the conversation that happens. the suggestion of a fist bump is an artifact of that. here is a way to break the ice and connect with this other person. done inallowed to be every city across the country. we rating that would bring in a higher-quality driver who normally...
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111
Jul 5, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 111
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values.to this day, there is this kind of saintly afterglow that the u.n. has. look at this ramshackle organization. ask yourself why they treat the secretary-general like the pope. this was the vision globally. dulles was very much it art of it. then there was a specific release to dimension. -- middle eastern dimension. the notion in the middle east was that what we need to do is create an economical -- ecumenical alliance with the muslims. that is what we are doing in the middle east. hocking, the professor had this idea of the global culture being infused with religious values, he said that missionaries have to go out and stop behaving like preachers and start behaving like ambassadors of the west. what happened in the middle east is that they actually did become ambassadors of the united states. they just transposed the hocking/rockefeller/dulles view of what missionaries should do and transposed onto the united states. hocking believed that the great enemy of christians on the global sc
values.to this day, there is this kind of saintly afterglow that the u.n. has. look at this ramshackle organization. ask yourself why they treat the secretary-general like the pope. this was the vision globally. dulles was very much it art of it. then there was a specific release to dimension. -- middle eastern dimension. the notion in the middle east was that what we need to do is create an economical -- ecumenical alliance with the muslims. that is what we are doing in the middle east....
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Jul 22, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 65
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health plans are focused on value. by finding the right balance for consumers between quality, affordability, and choice. plans are constructed on the premise of ensuring the highest quality at the lowest price to deliver that value to consumers. the milliman report i mentioned finds that high-value provider network allow for more affordable coverage options with 5% to 20% lower premiums compared to broader network plans, while placing an emphasis on quality and effectiveness of providers. the mackenzie report found similar results. many consumers are looking for this type of balance that delivers value, affordability, and choice. regarding choice, the recent mackenzie report that paul summarized in his presentation shows that consumers now have expanded choice of network offerings on the exchanges. broad networks are available to close to 90% of the population. networks are available to 92%. this increased pref laens of marrow networks gives consumers a wider range of value proposition and prices among health plans. i
health plans are focused on value. by finding the right balance for consumers between quality, affordability, and choice. plans are constructed on the premise of ensuring the highest quality at the lowest price to deliver that value to consumers. the milliman report i mentioned finds that high-value provider network allow for more affordable coverage options with 5% to 20% lower premiums compared to broader network plans, while placing an emphasis on quality and effectiveness of providers. the...
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Jul 3, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 81
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one's own personal value, as the value of the work you do as the primary thing that gives you value.as to be deconstructed from the top. people have to be able to see their boss's boss, part of what i bring to this, is i am a whole and happy person. i spend time with my family. realizing other people around them can do parts of the work. that culture will begin to trickle down throughout the companies, that's what we don't see right now. >> i think it's a feedback loop. the more time you spend the work, that's where you get the identity from. it was interesting, i once found a futuristic -- an article in a steamer trunk, i bought at a yard sale once that talked about, a future is talking about the future from 1950s, and he was saying that the hardest thing for americans is going to be to learn how to deal with leisure time, technology is going to make it so that we only work four days a week. >> the jetsons. >> ultimately that cell of technology turned out to be exactly the opposite. it made everywhere our workplace. >> i hope you guys get some time off in the next few days, to celeb
one's own personal value, as the value of the work you do as the primary thing that gives you value.as to be deconstructed from the top. people have to be able to see their boss's boss, part of what i bring to this, is i am a whole and happy person. i spend time with my family. realizing other people around them can do parts of the work. that culture will begin to trickle down throughout the companies, that's what we don't see right now. >> i think it's a feedback loop. the more time you...
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i think it gets back to the issue that i wrote about about the values gap. which is presumed to exist between russia and the west in the west but which russia does not see. we does have a real disconnect in terms of the reality of what is going on in russia and as a result of that disconnect a lot of positive information about the changes in russia is simply not taken into account which only exacerbates the differences the apparent differences. in fact if you wanted to overcome this crisis and to prevent such crisis from occurring in the future you would literally pursue the opposite policies from the ones that the west is pursuing instead of isolation you should try people to people diplomacy instead of sanctions you would argue as people used to argue back in the nineteen seventies in the one nine hundred eighty s. that there should be expanded commercial ties because that conditions and makes both economies co dependent on each other and that would be the real solution to preventing unexpected political outcomes. you know but a lot of me i don't think we'
i think it gets back to the issue that i wrote about about the values gap. which is presumed to exist between russia and the west in the west but which russia does not see. we does have a real disconnect in terms of the reality of what is going on in russia and as a result of that disconnect a lot of positive information about the changes in russia is simply not taken into account which only exacerbates the differences the apparent differences. in fact if you wanted to overcome this crisis and...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 21, 2014
07/14
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SFGTV
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eye 39
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it did not attribute any value to the subemerged lots. we are only paying for the lots that are dry. although as you will note in the report about half of the property is actually underwater. so, we are not in a position where we are paying for anything that isn't of value. the conclusion of value puts us * at about $50 a square foot for land. i would say in san francisco, that's a pretty good price. the assumption of development is is approximately 86 units that the whole property could yield if it were a standard residential development. the appraiser looblgd at when this could had been because there would be entitlement process bass -- because it's reflective of and the housing requirement they went through a entitlement process. there is a risk factor 245 -- that brought that price down. that brought it down by $3.5 million for the property assuming it was clean. then we looked at the environmental investigation and that there would be a reasonable buyer and seller and that's how we arrived at that net price of $2.975 million. i'm hap
it did not attribute any value to the subemerged lots. we are only paying for the lots that are dry. although as you will note in the report about half of the property is actually underwater. so, we are not in a position where we are paying for anything that isn't of value. the conclusion of value puts us * at about $50 a square foot for land. i would say in san francisco, that's a pretty good price. the assumption of development is is approximately 86 units that the whole property could yield...
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Jul 20, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 97
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they summed it up with four core values that direct every single decision they make. >> core value numbers safety first for our family and theirs. >> safety first for our family and theirs. >> yeah. >> i imagine that was very deliberate. >> it was. because our family is everybody inside the company. we care about them as much as we care for the customer. >> the second value is to deliver wow through service and exceed every customer's expectations. mike and his team go over ideas on how to do this on every single meeting from simply wearing floor covers to sitting ways to interact with the customers. >> when you're in front of the customer, hey, ms. jones, how are you doing, i did my greeting, is it okay where i parked, is it okay that i put my tools right here. >> michael jackson has been with the company for years and says he still learn something new from every one of these gatherings. >> it helps you see things in a different light. if you're going to houses constantly and you don't have any interaction with someone other than the customer, sometimes you can get steal. >> the third va
they summed it up with four core values that direct every single decision they make. >> core value numbers safety first for our family and theirs. >> safety first for our family and theirs. >> yeah. >> i imagine that was very deliberate. >> it was. because our family is everybody inside the company. we care about them as much as we care for the customer. >> the second value is to deliver wow through service and exceed every customer's expectations. mike and...
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80
Jul 19, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 80
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first of all you have to be guided by your values to the best that you can apply them. for mes that means being true to who we are as americans, respect for a human rights, universal reapplied but you have to keep in mind america's interest and sometimes there is a conflict. the third part of the balancing effort, your security and there's often a conflict. what i do is try to gather as much information as i can and stay in touch with value interests and security mentally as i go through the exercise of gathering information, consulting people, listening hard, not being afraid to change my mind. i go into it thinking that is what must do and come out on the other side. give you a couple of examples that i write about. it was very difficult with the uprising in egypt, if people believe they have all the answers, be a little wary because the complexity of the problems we face today don't deliver any easy answers to anyone unless you are straight ideologue and you don't care about evidence and we went back and forth. i went back on how i and several of the president's inci
first of all you have to be guided by your values to the best that you can apply them. for mes that means being true to who we are as americans, respect for a human rights, universal reapplied but you have to keep in mind america's interest and sometimes there is a conflict. the third part of the balancing effort, your security and there's often a conflict. what i do is try to gather as much information as i can and stay in touch with value interests and security mentally as i go through the...
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109
Jul 26, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 109
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i'm simply illustrating this is a question of subjective value judgment. but i guess just to circle back to respond to the gentleman's question, i'm not really saying that the holocaust was worse. unique is altogether an unfortunate term. i'm just using it as a shorthand for the fact that i think we see it as being show in a category by itself, and i think i'm correct in making that assertion. yes, the gentleman on the right. >> yes. could you comment on the unique role of ideology, specifically daniel gold haggen's postatlanta in hitler's willing executioners that germany did develop a unique strand of anti-semitism that was so virulent that it can be called external that story and -- >> yeah. >> -- and budget shared by others. >> yeah. the gentleman refers to a very controversial and also very popular, commercially successful book in 1996, "hitler's willing executioners," actually based on his ph.d. thesis in political science at harvard. and the book is exceptionally well written with a lot of passion, and it makes a very forceful argument. and i think
i'm simply illustrating this is a question of subjective value judgment. but i guess just to circle back to respond to the gentleman's question, i'm not really saying that the holocaust was worse. unique is altogether an unfortunate term. i'm just using it as a shorthand for the fact that i think we see it as being show in a category by itself, and i think i'm correct in making that assertion. yes, the gentleman on the right. >> yes. could you comment on the unique role of ideology,...
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Jul 24, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 69
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is the real value of the coin as a current see or a transaction service -- is the real value of the coin the real value of as a currency or a transaction service? you are out with a new piece "awesome gold," yet you say it could never replace the dollar or the euro. please explain. >> there has been a lot of focus with the bubble and value of as ain itself on bitcoin store of value, that it might be a currency, and i think that ignores how good it is at being a transfer. one of the things i think we are seeing right now is that the and thef transactions number of wallets within bitcoin is still increasing even after the collapse in value. what that says to me as there will be a nice long stable growth in actual use instead of the hope that it will become something that replaces the dollar. >> tony, what can you tell us about the adoption of bitcoin? obviously, it's run into a lot of challenges, but there are people out there singing its praises for the future. >> i think you are starting to see the technology emerge. bitcoin itself is a technology. we use it as a currency, but you can al
is the real value of the coin as a current see or a transaction service -- is the real value of the coin the real value of as a currency or a transaction service? you are out with a new piece "awesome gold," yet you say it could never replace the dollar or the euro. please explain. >> there has been a lot of focus with the bubble and value of as ain itself on bitcoin store of value, that it might be a currency, and i think that ignores how good it is at being a transfer. one of...
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105
Jul 2, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 105
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i do agree with you that we should have -- that are -- our values, universal values, if you will, should be a significant component of our foreign policy. but you run into -- you run into horrendous tradeoffs in the middle east very quickly. our closest arab allies, saudi arabia. are we going to -- are we going to stop having them as our closest allies? no, we're not going to. we promote a democracy in iraq. and that opened the door to iran. having an enormous amount of influence. and right now, we could've done it better, i believe. but these are not -- these are not simple problems that can go away if we just put values forward. >> well, we're coming to the end of our session. so the last question will go to professor levine who has been waiting patiently. >> thank you. it was a very interesting panel. i have a question about the historical analogies you've all used. i was very struck that comparisons made between today in the 30s, michael duran between today in the 50s and aaron friedberg, and we're talking about world war i in the teens. from which, i conclude that some of the issues
i do agree with you that we should have -- that are -- our values, universal values, if you will, should be a significant component of our foreign policy. but you run into -- you run into horrendous tradeoffs in the middle east very quickly. our closest arab allies, saudi arabia. are we going to -- are we going to stop having them as our closest allies? no, we're not going to. we promote a democracy in iraq. and that opened the door to iran. having an enormous amount of influence. and right...
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Jul 11, 2014
07/14
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CNBC
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in the context overvalue or union value or wrongly value things going on.oes it differ versus those who keep buying no matter the price. >> the first thing we found was that everyone's brain tracks the price bubble. that's significant because in this particular experiment, the fundamental value of the stock was absolutely clear and transparent the entire experiment. yesterday we had bubbles that went way above 100 a subset of these guys had essentially warning signals going on, and -- everyone that didn't have that went through the bubble, lost everything they had form the ones with these warnings signals, they were the ones with the most money in the experiment. >> would it be fair to say, reed, whether it's dutch tulips, whether it's gold, railroads, or maybe hows of ten years ago people are often city buying even when everything in their body and brain tells them they know it's overvalued. >> a lot tine ago. a long time ago group behavior was a pretty good proxy for value. if you're at a field and eating the yellow flowers and 98% of everyone else is rea
in the context overvalue or union value or wrongly value things going on.oes it differ versus those who keep buying no matter the price. >> the first thing we found was that everyone's brain tracks the price bubble. that's significant because in this particular experiment, the fundamental value of the stock was absolutely clear and transparent the entire experiment. yesterday we had bubbles that went way above 100 a subset of these guys had essentially warning signals going on, and --...
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Jul 11, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
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all that value, it's over $13 billion in medallion value. see a big controversial regulatory battle playing out, what is happening is -- you have these wealthy medallion holders doing everything they can to protect this asset. it defies all logic. it is worth for the driver, worse for the passenger. passengers pay more, drivers earn less. up a newhere to open alternative for folks. more money,paid provided cheaper and better experience for passengers. >> new york has been hard on the sharing economy. what are you guys doing behind-the-scenes change that? sidecar tried working out in new york, and they left. >> behind-the-scenes, we are explaining all of the detailed safety procedures that we take every driver three. what we are doing is brand-new. most people don't understand all of the details of our operation. we sit down with them, we walk them through all of the safety procedures. we get themin lyft, understanding how we operate, what we are about. where we are headed. we were together to find a way to regulate this. in the past, it had
all that value, it's over $13 billion in medallion value. see a big controversial regulatory battle playing out, what is happening is -- you have these wealthy medallion holders doing everything they can to protect this asset. it defies all logic. it is worth for the driver, worse for the passenger. passengers pay more, drivers earn less. up a newhere to open alternative for folks. more money,paid provided cheaper and better experience for passengers. >> new york has been hard on the...
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Jul 2, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
tv
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looks quite good value. elsewhere in europe, there is value. the next interesting phase of the cycle is whether the stronger growth in western economies is going to feed through to the benefit of some of the emerging economies. that could be the next phase of the investment cycle. the u.k., the big question is interest-rate increases. in an environment where rate increases could be on the cards in the next nine months, is that an environment of positive equity going forward? >> it would be raising interest rates because the economy is growing strongly. that should be a positive signal. why are we persisting with interest rates that were set in an enormousofa economic crisis? we have to be starting to normalize. >> are you in the cabinet that says we need to start the normalization in 2014? why wait until 2015? >> definitely. we should be starting the process early. the authorities are beginning to worry about lending into the housing market in the u.k. they are beginning to get concerned. one way of making people more cautious about borrowing i
looks quite good value. elsewhere in europe, there is value. the next interesting phase of the cycle is whether the stronger growth in western economies is going to feed through to the benefit of some of the emerging economies. that could be the next phase of the investment cycle. the u.k., the big question is interest-rate increases. in an environment where rate increases could be on the cards in the next nine months, is that an environment of positive equity going forward? >> it would...
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Jul 21, 2014
07/14
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CNBC
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addressing content costs that, i say there is value in the original content in the u.s., there is value around the world and, pacific, they will be shifting more of their original content investment because of the original playoff. >> let's talk about the payoff. netflix, 10% of that will get spent on the original content. that is driving things. is that a concern? >> of course. that's a concern. one of the main concerns for the bears literally $250,000 in the stock. it will come home to roost. >> i guess the magnitudes they see growth the stockholders will continue to be rewarded. >> as much as this quarter. there is other stuff coming out. i don't know a thinking about bo jack horseman, i'm looking at the roster, hemlock grove ul patly, despite the few content which should be cash gen rative, there are comforts, the european expansion is what everybody wants to see, no question to worry about. >> time for pops and drops, cbs outdoor, karen. >> enough to deal, ben wagner another outdoor company with great locations, they will be acquireing them. it should be a treat. good deal. >> pop
addressing content costs that, i say there is value in the original content in the u.s., there is value around the world and, pacific, they will be shifting more of their original content investment because of the original playoff. >> let's talk about the payoff. netflix, 10% of that will get spent on the original content. that is driving things. is that a concern? >> of course. that's a concern. one of the main concerns for the bears literally $250,000 in the stock. it will come...
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Jul 28, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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you canook value -- criticize because we trade at a high book value. a tangible book value.bly over three times. when you look at our 20 ,omething percent growth analysts have us making $300 million a year. earningsremendous capabilities. >> which are best advice to jamie dimon? he is very ill right now. what is your number one advice for him? them get you down. i think he is one of the best bankers. these are great guys. to be beating these guys -- sometimes i get really obsessed because they get mad because a guy makes to $20 million and hundreds of thousands of people are working for him. if you can sing, dance, or play ball, you can make $100 million. there's a problem with that. yourw much is it hurting business now that private equity firms and big hedge funds are getting into the direct lending business? itright now, i'm not seeing -- is not impacting us like it was in previous years. i haven't seen that. >> thank you so much. longhorns? >> u t. 78. david zelman with prosperity bancshares. there's a newke global crisis to worry about everyday. we will look at how worr
you canook value -- criticize because we trade at a high book value. a tangible book value.bly over three times. when you look at our 20 ,omething percent growth analysts have us making $300 million a year. earningsremendous capabilities. >> which are best advice to jamie dimon? he is very ill right now. what is your number one advice for him? them get you down. i think he is one of the best bankers. these are great guys. to be beating these guys -- sometimes i get really obsessed because...
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Jul 5, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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you have to be guided by your values to the best that you can apply them. being true who we are universal rights but keep in mind america's interest. sometimes there is conflict with the effort of your security. what i'd do is try to gather as much information that i can to stay in touch man sought mud dash mentally to gather information to consult people and listen hard. not being afraid to change my mind. i may go into the process thinking this is what we must do but to give you a couple of examples, it was very difficult with the uprising in egypt to know what to do. people believe they have all the answers because of the complexity of the problems we don't deliver any easy answers unless you are the ideologue. we went back and forth and i read about how we were more cautious about what it would mean when mubarak would leave power and the others were incredibly committed and had did reasons why the united states should get behind his leaving but it was a constant balancing act and that nobody was 100% satisfied. with the unfortunate results left the big
you have to be guided by your values to the best that you can apply them. being true who we are universal rights but keep in mind america's interest. sometimes there is conflict with the effort of your security. what i'd do is try to gather as much information that i can to stay in touch man sought mud dash mentally to gather information to consult people and listen hard. not being afraid to change my mind. i may go into the process thinking this is what we must do but to give you a couple of...
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Jul 7, 2014
07/14
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LINKTV
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it's a very high value produce. the abundance and variety of new produce can be seen in the local markets. follow-up studies have shown that incomes have risen threefold. and scientists point to a more global benefit. plants, through photosynthesis, remove carbon from the air, countering the effect of human greenhouse gas emissions on the climate. as a result of its success, the lessons learnt from the loess plateau rehabilitation are now being applied all over china. but could such projects work elsewhere in less centrally controlled societies, with fewer resources and different soils? ethiopia, perhaps more than any other country, has come to symbolize the vulnerability of humankind to environmental catastrophe. this is a country whose problems have been increased by war and civil conflict. and now human-induced climate change is predicted to make matters worse. as on the loess plateau, centuries of subsistence farming practices have stripped the land of natural vegetation. the dry gullies bear the scars of flash
it's a very high value produce. the abundance and variety of new produce can be seen in the local markets. follow-up studies have shown that incomes have risen threefold. and scientists point to a more global benefit. plants, through photosynthesis, remove carbon from the air, countering the effect of human greenhouse gas emissions on the climate. as a result of its success, the lessons learnt from the loess plateau rehabilitation are now being applied all over china. but could such projects...
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Jul 24, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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that might accrue in value.f the things we are seeing right now is the number of transactions within bitcoin and the number of wallets within bitcoin is still increasing, even after the collapse in value of bitcoin. it's a -- what that says to me is that there will be nice, long, stable groups -- growth and actual use of it instead of something that willingly place the dollar. -- that will replace the dollar. >> tony, what can you tell us about the adoption of bitcoin? obviously, it has run into challenges, but there are people out there singing its praises for the future. >> that is right. i think you are sorting to see the technology emerge. bitcoin itself is a technology. we are using it as a currency, but you can also use it as a payment system or as a distributed lender, to prove property rights. what gets people excited is its utility. it is not necessarily its scarcity, but what you can do with it. we are starting to see a number of businesses adopting it, because the value proposition is clear. it is low
that might accrue in value.f the things we are seeing right now is the number of transactions within bitcoin and the number of wallets within bitcoin is still increasing, even after the collapse in value of bitcoin. it's a -- what that says to me is that there will be nice, long, stable groups -- growth and actual use of it instead of something that willingly place the dollar. -- that will replace the dollar. >> tony, what can you tell us about the adoption of bitcoin? obviously, it has...
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23
Jul 6, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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the problem is the value problem. these different states have different not the groups have come with different values ps i have no interest in moving to china given the values. i may have no interest in moving to india or pakistan or afghanistan given who will take power legitimately and of course the religious use on those people. i'm not interested in madison american. i believe in the wall of separation of church and state, that's almost unheard of. while that is our values and that is what is going to be a take at this issue for nice tired thinking through when you intervene on how you intervene in what purpose to intervene about value projection you intervene. >> thank you. ted rogan from the heritage foundation. extraordinarily interest being discussion i look forward to reading the book. one of my favorite line in the days as john stuart mills ss intervention. we are in the midst of an extraordinarily erudite. he says he now, how do you deal with the problem of the british empire india any half a line, which e
the problem is the value problem. these different states have different not the groups have come with different values ps i have no interest in moving to china given the values. i may have no interest in moving to india or pakistan or afghanistan given who will take power legitimately and of course the religious use on those people. i'm not interested in madison american. i believe in the wall of separation of church and state, that's almost unheard of. while that is our values and that is what...
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umbrella of freedom of expression of opinion this isn't subject to any sort of particular cultural value or not it's actually defined in the universal declaration of human rights all of the countries in the world have signed up to these principles one of them is a mystery why did countries mean so that if i have to whatever principle but to me if there is a very extensive field of psychology reach i think conclusively shows that we all have our own biases and some of those biases. i says aren't conscious so i wonder if clearly impartiality is a form of deception in and of itself no i don't i mean i think you're wrong here i think we can make distinctions about quality of information and we have to there is a clear distinction between information which may be politically biased in favor of one side or another and actually that is quite a common phenomenon and i am not against out of who i think is perfectly natural it's human it's part of the human community there's a distinction between violent form of vyas open propaganda distortion of the information demonizing the enemy deceptive hand
umbrella of freedom of expression of opinion this isn't subject to any sort of particular cultural value or not it's actually defined in the universal declaration of human rights all of the countries in the world have signed up to these principles one of them is a mystery why did countries mean so that if i have to whatever principle but to me if there is a very extensive field of psychology reach i think conclusively shows that we all have our own biases and some of those biases. i says aren't...
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Jul 6, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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we have to be stand up for our values. we have to be calling out the people who are saying and doing things that are antithetical. not just to the united states the people of of good faith ever. >> you say it's part policy, part storytelling. what is your number one story from the bookmarks do you have a favorite? >> i hope people read the book. i have a lot of favorites. but i think, well, probably can i pick three? real quickly. well, i tell in some detail how i negotiated a cease-fire in gaza. and the people who are interested in how you negotiate with governments and between governments can get a pretty broad inside view of that. the situation in gaza was deteriorating. israel is calling up 75,000 reservists. they were not going to tolerate, nor should they have, rockets coming from gaza striking their territory. i was in cambodia with president obama, and argued that we had to try to stop it. and i flew from cambodia to israel and went into a late-night meeting with prime minister netanyahu and his inner security team
we have to be stand up for our values. we have to be calling out the people who are saying and doing things that are antithetical. not just to the united states the people of of good faith ever. >> you say it's part policy, part storytelling. what is your number one story from the bookmarks do you have a favorite? >> i hope people read the book. i have a lot of favorites. but i think, well, probably can i pick three? real quickly. well, i tell in some detail how i negotiated a...
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81
Jul 16, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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i would argue there is a lot of value in cnn. think perhaps there is someone out there that could conceive of a way to extract more value. i do think that there are a number of companies out there that would covet owning cnn. >> senior media and into tenant analyst -- entertainment analyst , -- thank you for weighing in. >> thank you. >> is the pc rebounding from its slump? you can watch us on your tablet, phone, computer, bloomberg.com, apple tv, amazon fire tv. >> intel reporting big profits and strong sales this quarter. they said demand in general starting to recover among consumers who are mine laptops again. is the worst really over in pcs and what about tablets? >> really interesting. who knows better than the chief bean counter. fromeo joins me right now santa clara. , the resultsas were still really strong. the guide is even stronger. it seems like a lot of that was driven by corporate demand. >> yes. i think at the highest level, what you see is our strategy playing out. there was some momentum in the pc segment of the
i would argue there is a lot of value in cnn. think perhaps there is someone out there that could conceive of a way to extract more value. i do think that there are a number of companies out there that would covet owning cnn. >> senior media and into tenant analyst -- entertainment analyst , -- thank you for weighing in. >> thank you. >> is the pc rebounding from its slump? you can watch us on your tablet, phone, computer, bloomberg.com, apple tv, amazon fire tv. >>...
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Jul 26, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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we care about them as much as we care for the customer. >> the second value is to deliver wow throughce, and exceed every customer's expectations. mike and his team go over ideas on how to do this at every meeting. from wearing floor protecters, tucked in shirts, to suggesting ways to interact with customers. >> let's look at it in front of the customer, i did my greeting, okay where i parked? put the floor protecters in, my tools, right here and right now for you. >> michael jackson has been with the company for five years and still learns something new from every one of these gatherings. >> it helps you see things maybe in a different light sometimes. going to houses constantly, no interaction with someone other than the customer, sometimes you can get stale, sometimes you can forget a step. >> the third value is to always have the highest level of integrity. to do right even when nobody is watching. >> a he's been with them for eight years, and he keeps coming back. >> above and beyond is the standard. set high expectations for their service technicians. they don't try to oversell
we care about them as much as we care for the customer. >> the second value is to deliver wow throughce, and exceed every customer's expectations. mike and his team go over ideas on how to do this at every meeting. from wearing floor protecters, tucked in shirts, to suggesting ways to interact with customers. >> let's look at it in front of the customer, i did my greeting, okay where i parked? put the floor protecters in, my tools, right here and right now for you. >> michael...