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Koch started with oil-related capabilities. They acquired a paper company (short jump from oil due to existing chemical processing capabilities) to build consumer marketing & branding capabilities. After which they could start acquiring consumer-oriented businesses.
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Other examples: INVISTA (nylon and advanced materials) → oil pipeline technologies. Consumer marketing and branding capability → Molex (electronic connectors+sensors) → oil pipeline monitoring Oil futures trading → built trading capability → enabled bets on oil wells.
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Why is this interesting? Take Warren Buffett as an example. Buffett's MO (grossly simplified) is to buy companies with high free cash flow, collect those earnings, and then use it to buy yet another company with high FCF. Rinse and repeat.
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But Buffett is all capital allocation, no operations. Koch is what you get when you combine some capital allocation ability with a crazy amount of operational excellence. Nearly all of Koch's subsidiaries contribute to each other in some way or form.
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Replying to
This is the most maddening thing about the book. He doesn't say! I'm 60% through and I'm hoping that he reveals the decision making models later. But I suspect he won't (because it's too company-specific).
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I'd give anything for a dinner with their internal development group, to be honest. That's the internal team that acts as a 'consulting arm', that builds the knowledge capture processes/tech, and goes into newly acquired companies to integrate into the rest of Koch.
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