Entity Dossier
entity

PacTel

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveComplexity as Strategic Protection
Signature MoveQuality First Spending Philosophy
Strategic PatternRegulatory Capture Through Service
Cornerstone MoveBack Door Contract Engineering
Signature MoveUltra-Delegated Management Style
Capital StrategyDebt as Growth Accelerant
Relationship LeveragePartnership Through Shared Experience
Identity & CultureVirtual Executive Presence
Relationship LeverageSilence as Information Weapon
Signature MoveFuture-Focused Hiring Standards
Cornerstone MoveLeveraged Cash Flow Growth Spirals
Signature MoveAnthropological Customer Vision
Competitive AdvantageGuerrilla Strategy Against Incumbents

Primary Evidence

"Now McCaw told Milken that McCaw Communications wanted help to buy more cellular licenses. But Milken saw a new threat to Craig McCaw. "You're exposed," Milken said. McCaw was trying to grow two capital-intensive businesses at once while facing deeper-pocketed competitors on both fronts. He couldn't grow in both cable and cellular for long. Milken warned McCaw that his company was too deeply in debt. There was an irony—the foremost apostle of debt telling Craig McCaw that his financial strategy was too risky. According to Perry, McCaw didn't show much reaction. He just took it in thoughtfully and said merely, "Hmm. Okay." But Milken was right. The Southwestern buyout of Metromedia's cellular business showed how the bigger boys were prepared to snatch licenses that McCaw needed. Previously, McCaw had been annoyed by industry talk that his company was spread thin. To his face, the chair- man of PacTel had called his company a "house of cards." "I was tired of hearing about how much leverage we should take," McCaw says. Hearing the same message from Milken gave it a new urgency; it "hit McCaw right between the eyes," Stanton said later. McCaw had to focus his company on one business or the other."

Source:Money From Thin Air - The Story of Craig McCaw

"and failed—to block the deal in the courts. PacTel's victory brought a fundamental change in the cellular indus- try's strategic landscape. But that victory wasn't complete. It faced a shotgun held by Craig McCaw. When the San Francisco cellular partnership was formed, McCaw had insisted on the right to force his partners to set a sale price for their half of the license. The trick was that, if they set too high a price,"

Source:Money From Thin Air - The Story of Craig McCaw

Appears In Volumes