Learn From Navy Admiral–A Whizbang Barterer
April 7th, 2008 · by Bob Meyer · No CommentsHere’s a story that happened a few years ago…it illustrates the point that how you look at what you have, in this case empty Navy warehouses, is creativity at its best.
A decade ago Admiral William “Bud” Flanagan was the commander of the Atlantic Fleet. As the czar of the 55-square-mile Norfolk Naval Base he oversaw an $11 billion budget, and he busily charted a course that changed the U.S. Navy…by embracing the ever-expanding use of barter.
Under the Navy’s new rules, a commander who saved money or generated outside income can use the funds to buy new ships, planes or other equipment.
So Adm. Flanagan traded empty Navy warehouses with the nearby Norfolk International Terminal, which was cramped for space. The terminal agreed to load cargo onto Navy ships as payment, saving millions in outside labor costs.
Flanagan also worked with local developers—trading a landfill area with 440 somewhat-shabby Navy apartments for the building of better naval housing elsewhere.
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