RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:TH's website issues So you expect nothing new? Maybe reassuring words?
I don't expect they reveal their capital market strategy, who they have engaged with, what the feedback was, when they expect to see results etc etc. I don't expect anything of substance or any admittance of failure. I don't expect them to commit to do certain specific things in the future or give guidance of when their present strat might begin to bear fruit or how or when they will change their present strat if it doesn't work.
As Wino says I expect the best will be a shared frustration in the present situation.
I think if the company commited to some type of public statement that might give them the space to say something new.
Letter from the CEO
Beloved Shareholders,
...
palinc2000 wrote: Of course Wino wont be privy to any material information not yet in the public domain whether or not he reports he goes public,
qwerty22 wrote: You will be going public here though? Don't you think that's going to limit what they say? If this is a productive process you should encourage the company to put out a statement. Letter to shareholders from the CEO type announcement.
Wino115 wrote: Wasn't planning on any written stuff agreed upon with them. This shouldn't be confrontational and I certainly don't want that. Like I said, I will bet my bottom dollar on it they are equally frustrated and agree we are working toward the exact same goal. We just have a view on who we should draft for the team to win the cup.
SPCEO1 wrote: I agree. Let's just let Wino handle this however he thinks best.
palinc2000 wrote: I dont think having them agree to a wrtten summary of the meeting is s good idea ....
Creating a sense of legal liability is not the way to have an open , frank discussion ... on the contrary !
scarlet1967 wrote:
I am not overly optimistic but since you have made the effort I would like to point out few things although you probably know:
1-You are not as good as they you are BETTER.
2-It seems you have already prepared your pitch with few requests, don’t let them bargain it is NOT a negotiation.
3-You can elaborate on your requests but most of the conversation should be about their responses.
4-Stay on topics don’t let them distract you from the purpose of the meeting.
5-If they can’t present solid plans to address the issues schedule another meeting as soon as possible so the company can respond with concrete solutions.
6-Leave the door open for future conversations so the company can interact with the shareholders on an ongoing basis.
5-Ideally everything should be in writing but since this is an informal meeting it would be a good idea if you could draft a summary of the meeting and email it back to the company for their review/approval before reporting back to the investors so there is an element of liability to the whole exercise.
Wino115 wrote: The only person I contacted was Paul. Although, I have noticed a ton of people with familiar names pinged my LinkedIn.
Bucknelly21 wrote:
great who contacted you wino?