Entity Dossier
entity

Sam Chisholm

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

Primary Evidence

"Heatley and Jarvis were introduced to Sam Chisholm, the Kiwi then-chief executive of Kerry Packer’s Channel Nine. Sky paid around $350,000 to Chisholm and some of his people to act as consultants—effectively to broker the introductions Sky needed to set up meetings. It felt like a lot of money to pay for not much but it was the price of opening doors."

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

"On the eve of the 1995 World Cup final, the chairmen of the South Africa, Australia and New Zealand rugby unions called a press conference to announce the formation of SANZAR (South Africa, New Zealand, Australia Rugby) and to make the shock announcement that Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, News Corporation, would pay US$555 million over the following 10 years for exclusive rights to televise all international rugby tours to New Zealand, South Africa and Australia and a new competition between franchises that would be established in those countries. It was an astonishing sum of money for a code that had had no TV sponsorship until then. The figure stunned not only the rugby community but other sporting codes too. A final clincher in Murdoch’s enthusiasm seems to have been watching All Blacks star Jonah Lomu’s explosive game in the World Cup semi-final against England. Murdoch executive Sam Chisholm—who had helped open doors for Heatley and Jarvis when they were first signing up TV rights for Sky and who Murdoch had headhunted from Packer’s Channel Nine—says that in a call after that match Murdoch told him, ‘This is amazing. We’ve got to have that guy…’[5](private://read/01jectdbce729daxqkxt7cbe8r/#mn38)"

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

Appears In Volumes