Work | Businessman 3

– Meeting with a bank to refinance a term loan. He presents a 72-page information memorandum, complete with sensitivity tables. The loan officer, visibly bored, approves the rate reduction because the numbers are irrefutable.

He is the reason your garbage is picked up on Tuesday, your replacement brake pads arrive overnight, and your dentist has gloves in your size. Businessman 3: the invisible integrator. Long may he run. End of write-up. businessman 3

– Call with a retiring founder who wants to sell his packaging business. Businessman 3 listens politely to the founder’s stories for 45 minutes (he knows this is part of the price of acquisition), then pivots: “Your inventory aging shows $340k of dead stock from 2019. I’ll deduct that from the offer. Non-negotiable.” – Meeting with a bank to refinance a term loan

– Lunch alone. He reads a white paper on tariff impacts on steel fasteners. Takes notes in a grid notebook—no laptop. He is the reason your garbage is picked

He will not be written about in business schools. No biopic will be made. But his suppliers’ employees’ pensions are funded. His customers’ assembly lines never stop. And when the next recession hits, while unicorns burn, Businessman 3 will be quietly buying again. In an economy obsessed with disruption and fame, Businessman 3 is the antidote to fragility. He does not seek admiration; he seeks function . He reminds us that most of commerce is not about changing the world—it is about moving boxes, processing payments, and fixing broken chairs. And doing that with discipline, respect for data, and an unshakeable commitment to the unglamorous middle is, perhaps, the most underrated form of genius.

– Portfolio company board meeting. He fires the underperforming sales VP (missed quota for four quarters) and promotes an internal operations manager. The room is silent. He says, “Sentiment doesn’t ship product.”