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The Rural Voice, 1986-08, Page 10BUY A TRACTOR NOT A FINANCE PLAN Lobbs mid summer sale on all models of KUBOTA TRACTORS Special Discounts on M Series tractors with a 3 year No Cost to the Customer Warranty. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THE ®KUBOTA YOU ALWAYS WANTED. LOKUBOTR BUILT TO LAST The dealer tees make the difference. H. LOBB & SONS LTD. BAYFIEID ROAD•484.3409 8 THE RURAL VOICE COMPULSORY OPERATION TO REMOVE EGO I think the first thing they should do to anyone who is con- templating going into business is to give him/her a compulsory operation to remove his/her ego. More of us in business pro- bably get ourselves into trouble because of our egos than about any other cause. Without egos, we might go ahead, listen to our own ideas and struggle along. Because we want to seem suc- cessful, efficient and modern, we get ourselves in over our heads. Temptation has returned to me since I got back into the publishing business. When we started up a new newspaper last fall we went out and got equip- ment that would have been among the best available when I got out of the business nine years ago and is still good, dependable equipment today. We get along just fine with this equipment that cost us very little money to buy. Yet things have changed so rapidly in printing equipment in the last few years that this equipment is about three generations old. Some publishing companies are now installing the latest computer equipment, equip- ment where an entire page, com- plete with advertisements and words of the news stories, can be assembled on the screen at once. You can move things around, see how things will look before you make a final decision, press a button and have the page reproduced in seconds. It's a pretty sexy machine ... not to mention pretty pricey. But it's easy to tell yourself that it's so "efficient" that you just can't afford to be without it. It would do so much to increase our "pro- ductivity." The problem with the argument is that we're already getting along quite nicely with the equipment we've got. We've got a small, very hard-working staff and it's unlikely that even this magical new equipment would cut out many hours in staff time. Even if it did, it would only hurt employees who already get too few hours work to give them a steady income. Someday we may have some of that sexy equipment but for now, I've managed to stifle my urge. My wife, and the company's bank account, will be pleased. E. F. Schumacher expressed it in his book Small is Beautiful, a book that's just as meaningful to- day as it was in the 1970s, even if it's out of fashion now. "Ap- propriate technology" he called it and used it to argue against send- ing tractors to small, impoverish- ed Third World countries when hand tools would do. We've seen the horror stories for ourselves now: pictures of rusting, tireless, cannibalized trac- tors and trucks in the grassed fields of those countries. The vehicles are expensive junk because the poor people couldn't afford to buy the gas or the parts. Where the machines did work, they just put people out of work, and forced more poor people into the slums of the cities. We tried to take changes that happened over 200 years in Europe or North America and make them happen overnight in the Third World. But appropriate technology is just as important here in Ontario. We go to trade shows and we see all this shiny equipment and our ego, the pressure to be modern and efficient, and the arguments about how we've got to increase our productivity often cause us to get more equipment than we real- ly need. If only that ego could be snip- ped out there might be more former businessmen still in business. ❑ Keith Roulston is the originator and former publisher of The Rural Voice.