Entity Dossier
Person

Irving

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Capital StrategyFamily Reputation as Credit LineSignature MoveManagement by Suggestion Not OrderSignature MoveNegatives Fuel Forward MomentumCompetitive AdvantageCultivated Image as Negotiation ArmorCornerstone MoveImprovise the Entire Machine Then Scale ItRelationship LeverageEccentric Genius on RetainerCornerstone MoveRide Two Tailwinds Nobody Else Sees YetRisk DoctrineQuit First Then Figure It OutIdentity & CultureMistakes Tolerated Speed RewardedSignature MoveDecision Speed as Competitive WeaponCapital StrategyGovernment Money Before Private ScaleSignature MoveSecond-Hand Equipment Until Forced OtherwiseCornerstone MoveEquity Stakes for Distribution LeverageCompetitive AdvantageCableLabs Royalty-Free Standards PlayCornerstone MoveStock Architecture to Lock ControlCompetitive AdvantageBlackout as Franchise LeverageCapital StrategyTax-Sheltered Growing AnnuityCapital StrategyInsurance Company Capital Over BanksSignature MoveNever Bet the Whole FarmStrategic PatternWarrants as Industry Coordination CurrencyDecision FrameworkEmpathy as Negotiation ArchitectureSignature MoveThrow the Keys on the TableSignature MoveOwn a Small Piece of a Winner You Can't RunOperating PrincipleDecentralized Cowboys with Centralized BenchmarksRisk DoctrineWhat If Not as Decision FilterStrategic PatternScale Economics as Survival DoctrineSignature MoveAsk One Sharp Question to Crack Open IntelSignature MoveCash Flow Not Earnings as CurrencyCornerstone MoveBuy the System, Pay With Its Own Cash FlowIdentity & CultureIntrovert's Edge Through ListeningDecision FrameworkFree Lunch Gut Check Decision FilterOperating PrincipleWrite Great Last Chapter RecoverySignature MoveFive A's Mistake Recovery ProtocolSignature MoveTrailing as Combined Training-AuditionDecision FrameworkExcellence Reflex as Core Hiring TraitOperating PrincipleCharitable Assumption as Default ModeStrategic PatternContext Over Location DoctrineSignature MoveConstant Gentle Pressure LeadershipSignature MoveEnlightened Hospitality Priority OrderCornerstone MoveContext-First Restaurant CreationIdentity & CultureAgents Not Gatekeepers CultureSignature Move51-49 Emotional-Technical Hiring FormulaCornerstone MoveEmerging Neighborhood Location StrategyStrategic PatternCommunity Investment as Rising TideCompetitive AdvantageTurn Over Rocks Information Strategy

Primary Evidence

"K.C. Irving was a master of vertical integration. Why sell someone else’s gasoline when you have an automobile dealership and service stations and when you can refine it yourself? One of his grandsons explains, “One company building and buying from or selling to one another and building a base that would allow you to export or expand into new markets and new products elsewhere. It was good then, and today it’s still just as good for us.”9 Another of K.C. Irving’s firm beliefs was in work, focus, work, and"

Source:Harrison McCain - Single-Minded Purpose

"thing. Building one from scratch was quite another. By the time Wallace arrived, the McCain brothers had a fair idea of the challenges ahead. Yet neither Harrison nor Wallace ever lost faith. I once asked Harrison if he ever regretted leaving a secure, well-paying job with Irving. “Christ, no,” he said, “no sense looking back. We were in it and that was that. Best years of our lives, best years of our lives.”"

Source:Harrison McCain - Single-Minded Purpose

"So, I turned down Steve Ross’s offer of $150,000 a year and lots of perks, and Irving’s offer to run the largest cable operator in the U.S., to join Bob Magness, a down-on-his-luck cable operator whose company was running fast but deep in debt. Starting pay: $60,000 a year. I look back on that decision, and I smile at how naive I was at the time. You are unafraid of what you don’t know."

Source:Born to Be Wired

"Irving, on the other hand, invested in or acquired other peoples’ businesses, especially when the ideas that defined these companies were compelling to him. His passion wasn’t to operate the companies, but rather to bet on the quality of their senior leadership. Evaluating human potential was every bit as important to him as any business idea."

Source:Setting the Table

Appears In Volumes