Entity Dossier
Company

ITT

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Strategic PatternProcess of Bites, Not Grand PlansDecision FrameworkCash Flow Over Earnings as Debt Survival TestRelationship LeverageHighly Confident as Substitute for Actual CapitalCapital StrategyInterest Deductibility as Leveraged Assault FuelCompetitive AdvantageNOL as Bidding War Nuclear OptionSignature MoveSpeed-of-Sale as Debt Survival DoctrineSignature MoveLawyer as Deal Principal, Not Hired GunSignature MoveParis Apartment DisciplineSignature MoveAll Debt Disguised as EquityCornerstone MoveBuy the Whole, Sell Everything But the Crown JewelCornerstone MoveBlind Pool Before the Target ExistsCornerstone MoveBribe the Gatekeeper, Storm the CastleCornerstone MoveBankruptcy's Tax Corpse as Acquisition WeaponSignature MoveStiritz: Poker-Player Odds on Back-of-Envelope LBOsOperating PrincipleBlank Calendar as Competitive EdgeCornerstone MoveOne-Page Analysis Then PounceSignature MoveMalone: Scale as Virtuous Cycle, Tax as ObsessionCornerstone MoveAnarchic Decentralization, Dictatorial Capital ControlRisk DoctrineInstitutional Imperative as CEO KryptoniteDecision FrameworkHurdle Rate as Supreme FilterSignature MoveSingleton: Phone Booth Tender at All-Time-Low MultiplesCornerstone MoveSuction Hose Buybacks at Maximum PessimismCornerstone MoveCash Flow as True North, Not Reported EarningsSignature MoveAnders: Sell Your Favorite Division Without BlinkingIdentity & CultureEngineers Over MBAs at the HelmCompetitive AdvantageConcentrated Bets Over Diversified DribblesSignature MoveMurphy: Leave Something on the Table Then Lever UpCapital StrategyTax Counsel Before Every TransactionOperating PrinciplePer-Share Value Not Longest TrainSignature MoveBuffett: Float Flywheel from Insurance to EmpireStrategic PatternGreedy When Others Are FearfulCompetitive AdvantageTax Arbitrage as Structural WeaponOperating PrincipleProfessional Manager Decay Across GenerationsRisk DoctrineNever Cut Back a Committed DealSignature MoveMilken: Four-Thirty AM Cathedral-Builder With No OfficeCapital StrategyVenture Capital Masquerading as DebtSignature MovePeltz: Spittle-on-the-Check Persistence from Near-BrokeSignature MovePerelman: Borrowed $1.9M to a Boeing 727 in Seven YearsCornerstone MoveManufactured Credibility from Thin AirDecision FrameworkContra-Thinking as Default Mental Operating SystemIdentity & CultureForced Savings as Loyalty HandcuffsCornerstone MoveCash Flow Over Earnings as the Only TruthCornerstone MoveBuy the Core, Sell the Pieces, Erase the DebtSignature MoveKingsley: Mount Everest Desk, Twenty-Year Sounding BoardSignature MoveIcahn: Wrestling-a-Ghost Negotiation Until the Last PennyCornerstone MoveOwner's Equity as the Non-Negotiable DisciplineSignature MovePerot: Obscene Demands Until They Stop Saying NoSignature MoveBuffett: Insurance Float as a Super Margin AccountSignature MoveHuizenga: Close in the Stench Until They Say YesCornerstone MoveSteal the Playbook, Then Outrun the AuthorRisk DoctrineLuck Acknowledged Then Ruthlessly ExploitedIdentity & CultureJoy in the Chase Not the PrizeCapital StrategyHold Your Equity Until It Compounds Past Nine FiguresIdentity & CultureThick Skin Inherited or Forged by FireCornerstone MoveConsolidate Fragmented Industries at Blitzkrieg SpeedCornerstone MoveNobody Got Rich Watching from the StandsStrategic PatternHigh-Growth Industry as the Only On-RampCapital StrategyInsurance Float as Empire FoundationSignature MoveKerkorian: Sell Before the Peak, Never Pick the Bone CleanRelationship LeveragePolitical Access as Wealth Multiplier Not Wealth CreatorCornerstone MoveKeep the Back Door Open on Every BetOperating PrincipleFrugality as Permanent Competitive MoatSignature MoveWalton: Spy on Every Competitor Then Outwork Them AllSignature MoveRockefeller: Silent Desk, Then Swivel-Chair KnockoutSignature MoveSnapping Turtle Reports OnlyIdentity & CultureTotal Immersion or TerminationOperating PrincipleFacts-Only Intelligence SystemCornerstone MoveBet Every Side Then Claim Victim StatusSignature MovePersonnel Surgery as Perpetual Discipline MachineCornerstone MoveBuy a Congressman, Win the Antitrust WarCompetitive AdvantageBigness as Defended RightRisk DoctrineWar Profiteering Disguised as VictimhoodSignature MoveNo Vietnam Surprises AllowedCornerstone MoveSteal GM's Playbook WholesaleSignature MoveColonial Empire Run by Bailing WireStrategic PatternGrowth Companies in DisguiseDecision FrameworkHistory Over Accounting as FoundationCapital StrategyLearn-Earn-Return Lifecycle of CapitalCornerstone MoveCompounding Requires Never Spending the CapitalRisk DoctrinePanic-Proof Through Private ValuationDecision FrameworkCheap Stocks Deserve Their Price Until Proven OtherwiseSignature MoveShelby Jr: Small-Cap Contrarian After Bear MarketsCornerstone MoveCrisis Creates Opportunity: Buy When Blood RunsSignature MoveShelby Cullom Davis: Dowager's Living Room PortfolioCornerstone MoveOwn the Money Business, Never the FactoryCornerstone MoveDavis Double Play: Earnings Growth Plus Multiple ExpansionRisk DoctrineEmerging Market Enthusiasm as Charitable DonationSignature MoveDavis Sr: Margin as Focus Fuel Not Just LeverageSignature MoveDavis Sr: Silver Bullet Competitor QuestionStrategic PatternProfitable Service Over Growth for GrowthOperating PrincipleIncorporating Problem Causers Into SolutionsCapital StrategyMoral Obligation Bond InnovationStrategic PatternBear Hug Takeover StrategySignature MoveRelationship Banking Over Transaction FocusSignature MoveGovernment Partnership During Business CrisisSignature MoveTheater in High-Stakes NegotiationsDecision FrameworkSquare Pegs Into Round HolesSignature MoveCrisis Action Before Complete Data

Primary Evidence

"Pantry Pride, meanwhile, cognizant of the deal that was in the works, was desperately trying to entice Bergerac. Don Engel enlisted Harold Geneen, Bergerac’s old boss at ITT, to pay Bergerac a visit. Geneen, on behalf of Pantry Pride, offered to give Bergerac his parachute, as Perelman had offered before; to give him a second one, which he would be able to cash in in two years; and then to sell him a division, one of the health divisions of his choice, at a favorable price, and finance it for him. “He didn’t spell out favorable price, but these things are understood,” said Bergerac. “So the package they were offering came to close to a hundred million dollars.”"

Source:The Predators' Ball

"Stiritz focused on sourcing acquisitions through direct contact with sellers, avoiding competitive auctions whenever possible. The Continental Baking acquisition was sourced from a letter he sent directly to ITT chairman Rand Araskog, thus circumventing an auction."

Source:The Outsiders_ Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success

"Pantry Pride, meanwhile, cognizant of the deal that was in the works, was desperately trying to entice Bergerac. Don Engel enlisted Harold Geneen, Bergerac’s old boss at ITT, to pay Bergerac a visit. Geneen, on behalf of Pantry Pride, offered to give Bergerac his parachute, as Perelman had offered before; to give him a second one, which he would be able to cash in in two years; and then to sell him a division, one of the health divisions of his choice, at a favorable price, and finance it for him. “He didn’t spell out favorable price, but these things are understood,” said Bergerac. “So the package they were offering came to close to a hundred million dollars.”"

Source:Predator's Ball

"Anschutz’s triumphs in railroads, real estate, and telecommunica¬ tions do not exhaust the range of his activities. His other ventures have in¬ cluded uranium and coal mining in Colorado and tungsten and antimony mining in South America. In addition, Anschutz has acquired profes¬ sional franchises in hockey and soccer. The stock market has been an¬ other productive field of activity for Anschutz, who cleared close to $100 million on sallies into ITT and Pennwalt. At one point he invested $60 million in cement producer Ideal Basic, clearing a $30 million profit on a deal that looked extremely iffy.60 All in all, it is easy to forget that Phil An¬ schutz made his first billion in oil."

Source:How to Be a Billionaire : Proven Strategies From the Titans of Wealth

"ments. Such strategy placed ITT in an ideal situation to parlay World War II into an economic triumph. Behn was one of the few who could make meaningful long-range plans — no matter which side won. He waited, watching the fortunes of war, until a discernible pattern of victory emerged. Then, shazam — although ITT had been accused of Axis collaboration at the beginning of the war, Behn emerged as a conquering Allied hero, of sorts. He was the man with strong political influence and business interests all over Europe. As the Allied armies mopped up, Behn was personally on the scene to restore the ITT empire before the military governors could piece things together. And even more remarkably, ITT managed to carry off the role of victim of World War II and file a $30 million claim for damages which recently the United States government has seen fit to pay. So, with discreetly applied pressures and much chutzpah, Behn managed to have it both ways. If the Germans had won, who could tell what rewards would have befallen the faithful industrial empires of Krupp, Siemens, Mercedes, and the several German equivalents of ITT."

Source:Tales of ITT - an Insider's Report

"When Geneen began picking up the pieces at ITT in 1959, he used a lifelong study of General Motors as his model. GM’s organizer, Alfred Sloan, was his personal hero; and the job of remaking ITT became a casting job in the General Motors’ mold. Finance was made a direct reporting function throughout ITT, engineering respon- sibility was centralized, and a large technical staff began to grow into dominance. ITT managers made in-depth studies of the policies under which General Motors op- erated. “If it’s good enough for General Motors, it’s good enough for ITT,” was the new anthem; and the Geneen- directed juggernaut began to roll on that high-octane formula."

Source:Tales of ITT - an Insider's Report

"As Geneen’s pet project we received a disproportionate amount of attention from important lobbyists, and legisla- tors, especially Congressman Bob Wilson from San Diego, who had parlayed his association with Geneen into hotels and other local investments. He was determined to bring a major manufacturing complex into his back yard. ITT needed a close political associate who would insure Ad- ministration support in the company’s antitrust battles; in Wilson they had the Republican party’s chief fund raiser and a close friend of the President. Nixon was a Southern"

Source:Tales of ITT - an Insider's Report

"managed by their presidents. The organization consisted of a loose confederation of fifty-three companies and divi- sions, most of them involved in telecommunications and electronics businesses. Each company guarded its technical secrets and markets against incursion by the others as jealously as they did by competitors. The ITT system was plagued by financial mismanagement, excessively high production costs and duplication of effort. Geneen himself could not have written a better scenario in anticipation of his arrival on the scene."

Source:Tales of ITT - an Insider's Report

"On organization: “Around here, we run a colonial em- pire with 400,000 employees in sixty-seven countries; and we're writing our own management book in the process.” On managers: “Personnel surgery is the only thing this company needs on a continuing basis. You build discipline in a company and the company will perpetuate itself."

Source:Tales of ITT - an Insider's Report

"ITT, Litton, and Ling-Temco-Vought"

Source:The Davis Dynasty

"help him. I advised him as ITT swooped in and, one after another, bought Canteen, Grinnell, Avis, Rayonnier, Levitt and Sons, Continental Baking, Scotts Seed, Pennsylvania Glass, and Airport Parking."

Source:Dealings

"When the Nixon Watergate tapes were released, I was at last able to fill in some of the missing pieces of the story. On a Saturday in July 1977, in the back pages of the New York Times, a story appeared that quoted several of the newly released tapes. In one of them, Nixon tells Erlichman that he had never met Harold Geneen and had no interest in ITT. But nevertheless he was incensed over McLaren’s antitrust policies. He couldn’t tolerate his anti–big business bent."

Source:Dealings

"I urged Hal to purchase Hartford Fire Insurance. It was one of America’s oldest companies and, more significant, it had a strong, conservative, cash-heavy balance sheet. It would, I explained confidently, anchor the corporate strategy Geneen had been hoping to realize: its acquisition would make ITT an international conglomerate with a comfortable, financially sound balance between its U.S. assets and its foreign holdings."

Source:Dealings

"Harold Geneen, the chairman of ITT."

Source:Dealings

Appears In Volumes