He speaks random bullshit. I wish I could make the money he makes with similar shit.But he speaks sense there.
AC Milan president Silvio Berlusconi is launching plans to find new investment for the club.
Il Giorno says an accountant for Berlusconi has been in the Middle East sounding out potential investors about taking a minority stake in the club.
Those close to Berlusconi have also employed a bank to make an assessment of the value of the club, which according to Forbes, is the sixth richest in the game.
He speaks random bullshit. I wish I could make the money he makes with similar shit.
Stephen Elop's description of Nokia's situation was flamboyant but partial (due to his own reasons)..
Business decisions are about choices. The man in the burning platform may have had only one option (or multiple if you think of it as an option tree. You jump to the water - then what? Do you swim or do you yell for rescue? Do you try to break off a plank from the platform and hold on to it to stay afloat?) But that story is stupid because that story attracts you with its apparent simplicity but doesn't go beyond the first choice.... and Nokia surely had multiple options.
And Milan, from a profitability point of view, took one of their multiple options 2 seasons back and is succeeding due to it. From a sporting success point of view, we aren't. Our owner may or may not care about the latter (He would definitely know that we need sporting success for long-term business success as well), but my guess is that he does.
So anyway, irrelevant analogy with Elop's platform fable.
Regardless, stake sale to a suitable investor seems like an excellent idea for any Italian club these days.
The burning platform is the status quo and we along with the most clubs in Serie A are standing on it. The multiple explosions are the ascent of other leagues in comparison. Jumping in the water is the first step to radical change. But his point is it is the water where further options lie and not on the platform.
Milan have only gotten rid of the senatore wages. I dont see selling Ibra and Silva as profitable moves considering we risk much bigger losses in coming years.
What you describe is more along the lines of we are still on the platform with the bucket of water in hand putting out the nearest fire.
The plunge will only start with the selling of this club and only then will real options arise.
You're still assuming that the platform is burning. Hardly. Like I said already, the short-term indicator here is profitability and our decision to sell key players and start with cheap youngsters have improved our bottomline - helped by other things like increased TV money for CL and so on. Financially, in all indicators, Milan are doing better now. So how is the financial base burning here?
Secondly, as I've said, sporting success is required for a Serie A club to make money in the long-term. An Arsenal could pull it off without sporting success because their league is watched by the masses. But Milan needs European success. So we may have a burning platform in 4-5 years, depending largely on how the current Balotelli-El Shaarawy-Montolivo generation develops into a team. That's an ongoing project and certainly not a burning platform in any form.
I think it is self evident the platform is burning. From footballing aspects our rivals are better than us both in domestic and European circuit. Not to mention they have much better long term projects in place with regards to coach and fairly young players. This means just qualifying for competition is an issue let alone success. The damage 1 or 2 years in a row of not qualifying for UCL will put an immediate halt in any project and will trigger immediate sales. And this is speaking IN the short run. Also, I dont think this is an exaggeration since all of our financial indicators are massively affected by which competition we play.
I agree with most of your second paragraph on long term stability needs to be built on success.
The problem with your analysis is that you are analyzing short-term bottomline on how you think we could be affected by our rivals' projects, which are mostly in the beginning stage. 2 years of not qualifying for CL would probably put us in trouble with our current cost structure. So your platform would arrive then. At this point, it is an expected platform in a 2-year horizon and thus not a short-term indicator.
One doesn't jump into the water from a platform that may burn in 2 years if rivals such as Roma or Napoli do better than us consistently in a league as volatile as Serie A.
So considering these facts we are clearly, financially and human capital wise, in very big trouble right NOW.
I don't see what else to reply to except this. You outlined some facts (rivals strengthened, Milan had a poor start, austerity), then some potential scenarios (rivals may win, Milan may continue poor performance) and then jump to this statement.
How are we in big trouble financially right NOW? Elucidate.
Unless you can establish this, your analogy continues to be tenuous.
Ok lets try not to speak past each other. I guess it is my mistake with semantics. Replace the word financial with 'reinvestment'.
There really is no point in having a good bottom line if it doesnt yield results and in football it has to be in terms of human capital (among other things). And we just havent reinvested enough in good human capital from our strong bottom line.
And the signs of not reinvesting those gains, which I am assuming is going elsewhere means we need to get in someone who can. And that means taking the jump. We just cannot delay anymore, our rivals have insured it.
Agreed on the first part.
Disagreed on the second. It is an ongoing project and the way I look at it, we have reinvested and signed/unearthed some important players in year 1 (Mario, El Shaarawy, De Sciglio, NdJ, Montolivo), potentially a few more in year 2 (Poli, Honda, Rami? Saponara?), and we still need to get in 2-3 more key players. Once the HR needs are met (this could include a change in coach if that's needed), then give it a year to see how the performance is. If it doesn't work out, then and then only does the project fail and then you can bring up these questions.
We do have plenty of financial flexibility to be patient for these 2-3 years while the project is maturing.
And if we do end up not qualifying and in turn selling some of the important players you mentioned then I will see it as a fact that we ignored signs of change when we had to (right now). And the analogy would be proven correct.
President Silvio Berlusconi’s “tactical suggestions” were behind Milan’s 1-1 draw with Barcelona, claimed his daughter.
Last night the Rossoneri largely neutralised the Blaugrana in their Champions League encounter, moving to a 4-3-3 with no recognised strikers.
“My father is happy, as some of the tactical suggestions he gave to Massimiliano Allegri were received,” Barbara Berlusconi told ANSA news agency.
Stupid from Barbara to say that to the press, but it`s probably true. Even though he`s senile, he`s still more tacticly astute than Allegri..![]()