Entity Dossier
entity

New Zealand Herald

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Relationship LeveragePay Consultants to Open Doors
Signature MoveGood Cop While Gibbs Plays Bad Cop
Competitive AdvantageMonopoly Infrastructure as Chokepoint
Capital StrategyHidden Cost of Frivolous Spending
Cornerstone MoveSell Before the Floor, Buy the Next Thing
Signature MoveNever Consider Failure as a Possible Outcome
Risk DoctrineBrierley's Bluff-Bid Brinkmanship Lesson
Cornerstone MovePhone Call to the Top, Then Show Up Anyway
Signature MoveStagger Contracts to Break Supplier Cartels
Cornerstone MoveExclusive Rights as Subscriber Magnet
Signature MoveResign from Everything When Time Becomes the Priority
Signature MoveCut-Throat Competition Even at the Dinner Table
Decision FrameworkRide Winners, Cut Losers at Ten Percent
Identity & CulturePhone Stops Ringing Test of Friendship
Strategic PatternState Broadcaster Arrogance as Opening
Operating PrincipleLucky Timing as Honest Accounting
Capital StrategySubscriber Economics Over Advertising
Risk DoctrineAnimal Intuition to Exit
Identity & CultureFree Market Conviction from Regulation Experience
Strategic PatternDiscontinuity Hunting as Core Strategy
Competitive AdvantageStructural Value Recognition Over Market Timing
Cornerstone MovePrivatization Partnership Arbitrage
Capital StrategyIntellectual Freedom Through Financial Independence
Signature MoveWalk Away as Negotiation Weapon
Signature MoveCash Preservation as Freedom Doctrine
Cornerstone MoveZero-Money Leveraged Takeovers
Signature MoveHands-Off Management Through Trusted Operators
Relationship LeverageRelationship Leverage in Government Asset Sales
Operating PrincipleManagement Avoidance as Operational Principle
Signature MoveSingle A4 Sheet Analysis
Risk DoctrineRisk Elimination Over Risk Taking
Decision FrameworkPsychology Over Numbers in Deals
Signature MovePartner Selection Over Capital

Primary Evidence

"By early 1992, with Sky’s subscriber numbers grinding upwards but not reaching forecasts, revenue consistently lower than expected, the company in debt and its shareholders still having to put in more money, Sky was desperate for some wins. Heatley was convinced that rugby was the answer. On 11 March 1992, his eye was caught by a short Australian Associated Press report from London in that day’s *New Zealand Herald*. Just three paragraphs long, the article said that the Cricket World Cup, which was at the time being hosted by Australia and New Zealand, and in which the England team was a favourite, was leading to bumper sales of satellite dishes in Britain. ‘The form of [England batsman] Graham Gooch and the England team have sparked tremendous interest in the cricket extravaganza, shown exclusively on satellite television station British Sky Broadcasting,’ the article said. ‘According to the latest figures by the *Financial Times* satellite monitor, sales of new dishes were 78,000 last month, up from 41,000 for the same period last year.’[4](private://read/01jectdbce729daxqkxt7cbe8r/#mn27) This was exactly the evidence Heatley was looking for. He immediately fired a copy of it off to Nate Smith. ‘Nate, if the powers that be in America want any more evidence of what we need to do here, send them this,’ he wrote, attaching a copy of the AAP story.[5](private://read/01jectdbce729daxqkxt7cbe8r/#mn28) If Sky could get exclusive rights to the All Blacks tour of Australia and South Africa it could attract another 20,000 to 30,000 subscribers at least, he added, seemingly making up numbers in his enthusiasm."

Source:No Limits: How Craig Heatley Became a Top New Zealand Entrepreneur

"By early 1992, with Sky’s subscriber numbers grinding upwards but not reaching forecasts, revenue consistently lower than expected, the company in debt and its shareholders still having to put in more money, Sky was desperate for some wins. Heatley was convinced that rugby was the answer. On 11 March 1992, his eye was caught by a short Australian Associated Press report from London in that day’s *New Zealand Herald*. Just three paragraphs long, the article said that the Cricket World Cup, which was at the time being hosted by Australia and New Zealand, and in which the England team was a favourite, was leading to bumper sales of satellite dishes in Britain. ‘The form of [England batsman] Graham Gooch and the England team have sparked tremendous interest in the cricket extravaganza, shown exclusively on satellite television station British Sky Broadcasting,’ the article said. ‘According to the latest figures by the *Financial Times* satellite monitor, sales of new dishes were 78,000 last month, up from 41,000 for the same period last year.’[4](private://read/01jectdbce729daxqkxt7cbe8r/#mn27) This was exactly the evidence Heatley was looking for. He immediately fired a copy of it off to Nate Smith. ‘Nate, if the powers that be in America want any more evidence of what we need to do here, send them this,’ he wrote, attaching a copy of the AAP story.[5](private://read/01jectdbce729daxqkxt7cbe8r/#mn28) If Sky could get exclusive rights to the All Blacks tour of Australia and South Africa it could attract another 20,000 to 30,000 subscribers at least, he added, seemingly making up numbers in his enthusiasm."

Source:No Limits: How Craig Heatley Became a Top New Zealand Entrepreneur

"The stories and pictures went worldwide through network stations and the web. In Britain all the major dailies carried pictures of the Aquada: the ‘ultimate boy’s toy’. One declared that the launch ‘resembled an action sequence from a James Bond film’.[10](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477408-606132179-10) Gibbs couldn’t have dreamed of a better product launch. Back home in New Zealand, the local media adopted the story with gusto, celebrating a Kiwi entrepreneur’s success on the world stage. A *New Zealand Herald* reporter immediately tracked down Terry Roycroft to see if he’d been treated well and reported that he was ‘chuffed’ with the breakthrough and felt himself very well looked after by Gibbs.[11](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477408-606132179-11)"

Source:Serious Fun

Appears In Volumes