What "The Mailroom" makes me think about
At the moment of writing, I’m on page XXII, what some of you may recognise as the introductory pages of the book. Not nearly enough to write a review. But I discovered the title in the FT weekend edition and reading a few pages it already feels alive with the buzz of making it big from the bottom up to the most powerful circles of Hollywood. For that is the topic of the book, tales of those people that started in the mailroom and now rule the woods of holly.
What the mailroom made me think about was IBM. I read the autobiography (I think it’s this one) of the founding of IBM around 15 years ago while lounging on the beaches of Cuba. It made a strong impression on me because it was raw. The book was also badly bound, falling apart bit by bit, which no doubt added to the memory. But what made the IBM story so compelling is that it wasn’t about the “consulting biz” it is now, having gotten rid of 95% of its hardware business, but it was about going from typing machines, to calculators, to huge room-filling computers, to the personal computer. Like the Mailroom, the story is maybe a little dated, but both are about dreaming big and thinking about and experiencing the radical steps that life, business, an industry, society can make. As such, still being on page XXII of the Mailroom, I can still say that it is an inspiring read.
The other thing the Mailroom reminded me of is my love for post-1900 history. Nothing like Word War I, II, of the Cold War, I’m not very interested in humanities continuous attempts to destroy themselves. More about the chaos that made lots of adventures possible. Business opportunities like the ones that Ray Croc discovered in plastic cups and McDonalds, crime in the early 20s and 30s which was really entrepreneurism, the development of cinema as discussed in my Hitchcock / Truffaut pieces. The Mailroom, IBM.
When I look at today, (P.S. I’m just lounging in the garden in the burning sun, reading the book and pounding away at this post), it all seems rather dull in comparison. The real opportunities, which often come from unplanned chaos, seem to be more located in emerging economies like China and India, than in European countries like France where when you get fired you get a (scandalous) 50,000 euro “bonus.” Even the Internet, which has attracted a lot of free spirits in the past and present, seems to continue to get more consolidated, structured, encumbered by taxation and the personal interests of national organisations operating in a nationless environment. OK, I’m drifting…
Read the Mailroom! I predict it’s a good read, particularly during the hopefully more chilled out summer days.
Vincent
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