Israel Blogging: Other Rough Conference Thoughts
Some thoughts and tidbits from the Israel Rough Conference:
- Rio Tinto and BHP were both no-shows, apparently because of the BHP’s attempted takeover. [UPDATE: Apparently, someone from Rio was in the audience, though he did not speak at the conference.]
- ABN-AMRO’s diamond and jewelry division has now officially confirmed it is moving to Fortis.
- DTC managing director Varda Shine said that investigative agency Kroll wouldn’t be double-checking every DTC client profile, just a "representative sample."
- The plight of artisanal diggers was brought up exactly twice. While you don’t expect to see a dollar-a-day digger up on stage with a laptop, artisanal miners do produce an estimated ten percent of this industry’s output, and it would be nice to have that issue addressed more in-depth at future rough conferences.
- This industry still misses the De Beers cartel pretty badly. This was apparent throughout the conference. First, there was the calls for an industry-wide generic marketing effort. Even Lev "The Man Who Broke The De Beers Cartel" Leviev, in his speech, seemed to be pining for a simpler time, and at one point he called on producers to adopt a "uniform marketing strategy." (He later insisted he didn’t mean a cartel, but it is hard to see the difference.)
- I was impressed with Israeli Diamond Institute chairman Eli Avidar, and the ways Israeli manufacturers in general were finding creative ways to deal with a new reality which doesn’t necessarily favor them.
- Finally, much of the conference was — oh, how can I put this kindly — incredibly boring. And I am not the only one who feels this way.
The fault wasn’t with the moderator, or the speakers, and certainly not the subject matter. It was with the format. It was all speeches, some of which were just glorified commercials for their companies. Conferences work best when there is interplay, when we hear debate and disagreement, when people talk frankly and we hear the unexpected. There was little of that here. (A rare suprising moment came from Namdeb’s Inge Zaamwani. Asked who the top-ranking woman at De Beers was, she said "the consumer.")
It wasn’t all bad — Gareth Penny always gives good Powerpoint. But when getting cross-examined by airport security on my way out of Israel, the El Al security woman seemed incredulous that I was just at a conference featuring two days of speeches about rough diamond production. "It was kind of boring," I said. "Sure sounds like it," she responded. Actually, it didn’t have to be that way. But it was.
rabbimarketmaker commented:
Dear Rob Bates & fellow JEWLERS, first off i cant believe the
kind of warm pat down RB got on exiting the caos, anyway let me
vent a bit, TLV it was all a complete waste of everyones
time...anyone in the future contemplating ever thinking of going
& combining it with a dose of a bit of alturistic
tourism...just forget about it & pocket/$ave...the D.org did
not properly prepair just like el al, to have enough seats @ the
initial confrence opening, nevermind the second rate matzoh ball,
due to over subscribeship...i initially thought, well it must mean,
that thousands of int'l intrested parties, must have wanted to
attend, {of course after hearing RB was actually going} to get in
the ground floor skinny directly from all the horses mouths...but
when they very rudely told me in typical israeli falaful salad like
screwball way, that the hall had been over subscribed too, seating
only less then five hundred poeple...i then really felt that i was
truely back to the future,presently unholy-land, & what kind of
professional confrence does this to themselves, when knowing
fairwell that thier are folks coming from all over the world to
attend...how can you turn anyone away...i know the official air
line EL AL, actually does this on a regular basis to hedge thier
bet, on getting a full seated plane...anyway talking about
unholy...i must mention that the open public records of violence on
the streets nevermind @ night-clubs, but in broad daylight is
beyound anything iv ever imagined...just a few of the staistics are
that thier are actually more houses of ill reputs then thier houses
of worship...& that actually every few minutes thier is a
parked car, stolen for parts, taken off the streets of central tel
aviv, & that for a small country thier are actually on averages
a thousand people a week between the ages of 13-26 that are
actually caught {what about the rest of them} & able to be
arrested for assualt & battery of sorts...anyway all this
amounts to why two thirds of anyone making aliya, makes the right
of return to thier domocile asap...im glad i have at least been
able to gather these pieces of actual public information...&
have been able to contribute in some way to this list...& that
actually when i read rob bates was attending...like so many other
native new yorkers, i am sure thats when thier was a rush on
attendees & you know of course the rest of the story...shabaat
shalom


















